The Glenn Beck Program - May 09, 2022


Best of the Program | Guest: Jack Barsky | 5⧸9⧸22


Episode Stats


Length

42 minutes

Words per minute

145.29108

Word count

6,211

Sentence count

5

Harmful content

Misogyny

1

sentences flagged

Hate speech

8

sentences flagged


Summary

Summaries generated with gmurro/bart-large-finetuned-filtered-spotify-podcast-summ .

In this episode, we talk about the 14th Amendment, abortion, gay marriage, interracial marriage, and abortion, and why the Supreme Court's decision in 1967 banning interracial marriages and gay marriage was a mistake.

Transcript

Transcript generated with Whisper (turbo).
Misogyny classifications generated with MilaNLProc/bert-base-uncased-ear-misogyny .
Hate speech classifications generated with facebook/roberta-hate-speech-dynabench-r4-target .
00:00:00.000 hey stew stew hello yes oh hi yes hi yes thank you oh it's gonna be a good it's gonna be a
00:00:06.200 good broadcast i wasn't listening to you holy mother here is today's podcast for monday a lot
00:00:14.720 of great stuff on it did you want me to expand well we talked to a former soviet spy yeah that
00:00:22.200 was great that was a pretty cool fire thing the fire thing was was great as well probably not the
00:00:27.440 way you should have reinforced it maybe you should have said like hey everybody's yeah that's right
00:00:32.400 glenn everybody's talking about those fires of food processing plants that was great or not i just
00:00:37.160 said it was great also uh we talked to pat gray he was on as well and it was a wonderful show the
00:00:44.100 show is much better than well look stoop talks very little today's show so it's great here it is
00:00:57.440 imagine that every state were free to choose whether to allow black people and white people
00:01:13.340 to marry some states would permit such marriages others probably wouldn't it seems unthinkable as
00:01:23.320 a scenario in 2022 that's because in 1967 the supreme court unanimously ruled that barring international
00:01:32.040 uh barring interracial marriage as 16 states still did violates the 14th amendment's guarantee of equal
00:01:41.560 protection under the constitution the freedom to marry or not marry a person or another race resides
00:01:48.400 with the individual and cannot be infringed by the state said the court more than half a century on
00:01:56.540 this court case is considered one of the court's great rulings and yet it was not universally admired
00:02:04.520 at the time southern states complied only grudgingly alabama didn't repeal its ban on international
00:02:13.060 marriage or interracial marriage until 20 or the year 2000 that's the point of having a federal 0.75
00:02:20.200 constitution says the new york times op-ed it is supreme the guarantees and rights in that document
00:02:29.460 apply to all americans equally whether or not they live in the south or the north no matter where they
00:02:35.560 live the court system and the supreme court in particular exists to protect those rights when
00:02:42.680 state and local authorities refuse to leaving the matter to individual states and political
00:02:49.100 process means that millions of americans will be denied their fundamental rights in this case the
00:02:54.980 right of a woman to decide what happens inside her own body i mean unless it's you know a vaccine 1.00
00:03:01.760 the draft opinion relies heavily on the lack of mention of abortion in the constitution therefore argues that
00:03:11.020 the document cannot be the basis for the right to terminate a pregnancy the constitution also says
00:03:17.520 nothing about here comes the fourth grader the constitution also says nothing about interracial
00:03:22.660 marriage that didn't prevent the judges from finding in the 14th amendment the guarantee that no couple
00:03:29.380 may be treated differently because of the color of their skin because that that that's specifically what the
00:03:38.040 14th amendment is talking about it's specifically talking about you can't take somebody and that lives here in 0.67
00:03:46.720 america and treat them differently because of the color of their skin because they are different in some way
00:03:56.640 now if the left i suppose we're arguing that men could have abortions as well
00:04:03.980 then maybe but see you this this is missing the point entirely the point is in the constitution it doesn't say
00:04:14.700 you can kill babies that you claim are a lump of cells there is nothing there are no right you know how many
00:04:23.920 do you know how many things the constitution actually allows the federal government to do
00:04:30.660 what are the what are the number of things that the government is allowed to do the federal government
00:04:38.060 allowed to do according to the constitution what's that number i don't know the number but there's very
00:04:43.260 few of them i mean the the the common defense um you have the courts you have the post office
00:04:50.460 i mean you have 17 things in the constitution only 17 how many millions are they doing right now
00:04:59.140 oh and to point out not only is uh gay marriage and interracial marriage not not there neither is
00:05:06.940 marriage marriage like the the old school that's not it's a state issue it's not a federal issue to
00:05:13.380 this day it's not a federal issue and by the way marriage marriage wasn't an issue at all that that that
00:05:19.520 was a church and human to human thing shouldn't be a government issue at all should be that that all
00:05:25.460 started because of the progressives interracial marriage banned because of the progressives
00:05:31.220 um i would say that planned parenthood had a lot to do with that i just want to point that out here
00:05:37.200 yeah and we should point out that you know the guy the guy i don't know if he this president
00:05:40.560 freed the slaves you remember this guy he had a big hat pretty tall i don't know kind of a weird
00:05:45.820 looking dude uh got married smirnoff with the big i don't think it was smirnoff it was another one
00:05:51.500 another one of our past presidents all right uh he got married uh without a marriage license that's
00:05:56.300 weird so did george washington so did george washington because that was not the way they
00:05:59.900 thought about it at all in short constitutional rights are meaningless unless they apply across the
00:06:05.060 entire country let me rephrase that for the new york times in the fourth grader that wrote this
00:06:10.000 in short constitutional rights are meaningless unless they apply to all people all people now
00:06:18.060 our argument here in in the state would be that that clump of cells doesn't suddenly turn into a tumor
00:06:29.120 it always turns in to a human being you have a right to life no one is allowed to take that
00:06:39.980 life from you unless you've done something and you've been tried in a court of law
00:06:46.960 no innocent life is supposed to go away because the government says so that's the extremist point of
00:06:56.460 view but the constitution is there to say these are a few of the rights that come from god
00:07:07.200 so they come from you don't have you could say it's a higher power you could say it's the stars
00:07:13.000 it's stardust the things that make us whatever it is rights come from them you know the trees the
00:07:24.320 forests i'm speaking right directly to the progressive left the forest gives us our rights
00:07:30.780 rights and no one can change them and no one can just issue rights that's really important because
00:07:40.260 that's what the government wants you to believe that the government can give you rights the supreme
00:07:46.900 court is not taking away abortion rights the supreme court is saying it's up to the people in the state
00:07:55.000 the federal government can't do anything about it why because it's not their job when it comes to
00:08:05.860 something like this it has to be decided by the people this is the least dictatorial ruling i have seen in i
00:08:14.960 don't know how long all right so what's happening well michigan attorney general dana nestle very upset
00:08:27.220 very very upset because the supreme court is overturning roe versus wade and she said i am not to have
00:08:35.920 i am not going to enforce any laws that say i have to break into a doctor's office and stop abortion
00:08:47.240 i just won't do it again that's not what the supreme court said it's your state laws well michigan has a law
00:08:58.800 in the books from 1931 by the way the height of the progressive era you really hung on that h in
00:09:10.240 height for some reason that seemed to uh it criminalized abortion uh with she says with
00:09:19.980 no exceptions i mean except for the exception exception for rape and incest but other than that
00:09:28.700 no exceptions okay well if you don't like it i think the democrats control michigan i think actually
00:09:39.440 the mob does but the democrats control michigan you have a very pro-choice governor change the law
00:09:46.800 you can't go off as the attorney general i know george soros is telling you differently but you can't
00:09:54.700 just say as the chief law enforcement officer in your state you can't say no we're not gonna pay
00:10:05.880 attention that law what you do is you change your law this is not a federal law this is in your state
00:10:12.520 ask the voters it really it really amazes me how stupid people really are she knows better than this
00:10:24.060 all these people new york times they know better than that that's a fourth it is honestly a fourth
00:10:31.540 grade opinion it really is it shows you have no understanding how this system works at all
00:10:37.460 but then again why should people why should people be smart when they're spoon-fed everything they're
00:10:44.580 supposed to believe and then told you must believe it cnn reported on friday that the leak of the supreme
00:10:51.160 court draft opinion uh probably a right-wing political uh leak and it's going to lead to
00:10:59.840 right-wing political violence what what are they even talking about cnn has learned the u.s capitol
00:11:09.420 police are bracing for large demonstrations that are being organized by far-right groups
00:11:14.120 to protest abortion rights what far-right groups what i mean you always say far-right groups which
00:11:21.600 is wrong far-right groups are nazis nazis love abortions they were killing children in the millions
00:11:28.380 what are you what are you talking about the nazis are upset about killing children they love it
00:11:35.160 the recently installed non-scalable fencing outside the court building was visible
00:11:41.680 uh as cnn reported several members of law enforcement have expressed concerns that people
00:11:47.360 who are committed to committing act of violent extremism could use roe versus wade opinion for
00:11:52.400 a justification of that yeah where did they say that it was going that it was going to be
00:11:58.560 the the the vast right wing where are they saying that cnn did say i should caution there are no
00:12:08.100 specific credible threats oh okay okay all right i get it sure sure now um a lot of people have been
00:12:21.840 saying these things about the uh the right um while they put up the fence i was shocked shocked to see
00:12:31.480 the progressive left calling to burn the supreme court and the country down i don't know about
00:12:38.660 anybody else you know those those pro-life conservatives were really upset oh man they had
00:12:46.420 some heated arguments around the dinner table yesterday yeah they did meanwhile uh the acts of
00:12:53.540 violence or illegal activity uh seems to be things like a catholic church burned in boulder colorado
00:13:00.740 uh it was vandalized i saw i shouldn't say i shouldn't say burned or or broken into or terrorist
00:13:07.660 activity this is vandalized vandalist uh vandals vandals did this now that was the vandalism mostly
00:13:17.420 peaceful it was mostly peaceful um but it was mostly also anti-religious and uh and it was um you know
00:13:25.220 pro-choice so but it was but a peaceful sort of fire starting uh bomb throwing you know uh sort of
00:13:34.020 oh good threatening if abortion isn't safe neither are you sort of way right and that you know that 0.77
00:13:40.420 that's a in a peaceful sense there was tranquility involved in those words amen amen and they also uh
00:13:48.200 scribbled uh on the side of a another uh clinic um the the in madison wisconsin uh it was a a pro-life
00:13:57.760 uh office they they they scribbled or actually very nice cursive handwriting so you know that it was the
00:14:05.040 right um 1312 was also on there which every conservative who doesn't know what 1312 means
00:14:14.280 right i mean that's i didn't we start all of our come on we start all of our meetings with hey
00:14:18.880 hail 1312 what is 13 13 12 12 all cops are uh the b word i'm not sure i think i know what b word but
00:14:28.200 so many words have been banned when somebody says the b word well we wouldn't want to designate the
00:14:33.360 gender of the police officer exactly right that would not be either one of it could be either one
00:14:38.060 of those so uh we don't know but 13 12 that was the tip off to me that it was definitely definitely
00:14:45.520 right-wing church goers
00:14:47.900 uh welcome to the oh by the way um antifa also um the pro-abort men of antifa uh were um putting out
00:15:01.960 hits on pregnancy centers in portland also this uh this weekend they bash windows and put
00:15:07.920 f cpcs which again come on we all know what that means
00:15:12.880 this is the best of the glenn beck program and we really want to thank you for listening
00:15:20.360 this is from the uh audio podcast the agent
00:15:31.680 the year was 1988 and jack barsky had been in the united states for over 10 years like anyone living
00:15:45.040 in the hustle and bustle of new york city the sight of the skyline peppered with so many tall buildings
00:15:51.360 never got old he had made this city a home a home he knew better than most native new yorkers
00:15:58.060 having explored nearly every street by foot or by bicycle
00:16:02.460 he loved his job as a software developer at metlife
00:16:06.780 he adored his co-workers and he finally felt like he was fitting in
00:16:11.900 he was meant to be here
00:16:13.720 he lived in a modest apartment with his wife and young daughter
00:16:17.800 and they considered looking for a bigger place now that there were three in the family
00:16:22.100 even though his days were long and his commute to and from manhattan made it even longer
00:16:27.420 he rushed back home every night to see his little princess one last time before she went to bed
00:16:33.380 jack barsky was living the american dream
00:16:37.860 but this dream was about to take a sudden an unexpected turn
00:16:43.500 has taken refuge there the news watch never stops it's 42 degrees in clear in new york going down to 29 degrees in midtown
00:16:57.160 i would probably wake up typically about uh
00:17:02.500 seven uh have a bowl of cereal
00:17:06.440 and get on my way
00:17:09.060 i lived in queens
00:17:10.860 i had about a 12 minute walk to the subway
00:17:14.060 this was in december
00:17:15.680 it was still dark at that time
00:17:17.940 i'm not a morning person so i'm just like
00:17:20.140 walking sort of in a daze
00:17:21.980 i went along a path that i had communicated to the center
00:17:28.620 they needed to know this because there was a spot on that path where they were able to put signals
00:17:35.380 so every morning when i get to a supporting post for the elevated a train
00:17:40.640 i would just take a look and nothing ever was there
00:17:43.660 but on this cold december morning jack noticed something different as he approached the subway station
00:17:49.260 this is really odd
00:17:51.220 i get a little closer and there was this red dot
00:17:53.760 the fist-sized red dot
00:17:55.880 that screamed at me
00:17:58.020 what it was saying is danger
00:17:59.920 get out of here
00:18:01.100 immediately
00:18:02.740 don't go back home
00:18:04.820 don't go to work
00:18:06.700 retrieve your reserve documents
00:18:09.680 i had a set of canadian documents that i had hidden in a park someplace
00:18:16.260 and make a beeline to the canadian border
00:18:19.200 where eventually you get further instructions and that's how we get you out of here
00:18:23.660 that's all i knew
00:18:25.180 danger do this
00:18:27.400 this was part of the plan
00:18:28.700 jack had received a signal
00:18:30.500 a code red
00:18:31.940 the red dot was a signal from the center
00:18:34.380 the home of kgb headquarters back in moscow
00:18:37.200 and was part of an elaborate system of graphic signals used for communication
00:18:41.620 in the 10 years he had spent in america
00:18:44.780 jack had regular secret communication with other russian agents
00:18:49.060 agents he never actually met in person
00:18:51.600 but until today jack had never received the danger signal
00:18:55.500 this is uh from the podcast
00:18:59.220 the agent and jack barsky is with us now
00:19:02.600 hi jack how are you
00:19:03.800 i'm good
00:19:05.120 good morning and thank you
00:19:07.540 i feel honored to be
00:19:09.180 uh called a friend of uh
00:19:11.820 the glenn beck program
00:19:13.660 can i can i have that in writing
00:19:15.660 it'll probably get you in more trouble with the fbi and others i think at this point jack
00:19:21.820 um but uh uh but thank you so much
00:19:24.900 you're uh you're an amazing man who lives an amazing life
00:19:28.340 and had we talked in the 80s i wouldn't have said that
00:19:32.580 um but you have turned into a great friend of the united states
00:19:38.380 uh and um and i think what
00:19:41.580 you know i'm not going to i'm not i'm not going to reveal anything that is in the uh the agent
00:19:46.360 um i just wanted to talk to you jack because
00:19:49.740 something is happening here with this ukraine situation
00:19:54.560 and i feel like everybody's pushing for war
00:19:59.060 and uh i'm i'm i'm not so excited about that because
00:20:04.340 uh this seems like this could quickly
00:20:07.600 uh become a nightmare of uh world war proportions
00:20:13.100 uh you you are so right
00:20:16.520 and uh i and you know we we had to we have to expect that russia makes a lot of noise
00:20:23.320 you know this is what what putin does
00:20:25.200 and you know they threaten
00:20:26.860 but what's happening in the united states and in other western countries
00:20:31.120 we have a bunch of armchair warriors
00:20:33.440 who are playing politics
00:20:35.400 uh with a situation that could easily uh be uh be accelerated
00:20:41.240 into what you just call the world war three
00:20:43.580 uh the first time i cringed when uh when uh our president called uh putin a war criminal
00:20:50.640 did that move the needle one way or the other
00:20:54.680 i said just shut up don't talk act 0.89
00:20:57.680 because that you know that going back and forth can could easily
00:21:01.880 you know putin just might get triggered by that
00:21:05.200 he is he is not uh very amenable to being criticized
00:21:10.300 and that's uh uh that's a fact it's a proven historic fact
00:21:14.620 um jack tell me because i've gone back and forth in my head
00:21:19.520 other than them being incredibly different people
00:21:22.840 um ronald reagan called russia a uh you know an evil empire
00:21:28.760 and called for the destruction of it and i know reading history
00:21:33.420 that the kremlin uh i think it was um uh and drop off
00:21:38.660 really was quite a paranoid guy and thought for sure that
00:21:43.300 that uh the united states under reagan would
00:21:46.340 you know launch missiles in a first strike
00:21:49.020 what's the difference between then and now
00:21:51.800 well first of all uh you you're right about
00:21:56.020 and then in his paranoia he thought and and i i was aware of that uh
00:22:01.880 he uh he started an opera called the operation ryan where every
00:22:06.080 everybody uh every kgb agent who operated in the west
00:22:10.160 had to look out for signs of war uh but there was
00:22:14.920 in those days the soviet union was already weakened
00:22:20.460 uh and uh and there was more fear than
00:22:24.540 you know active aggression the soviet rulers did not
00:22:28.260 want to go to war and i said i think uh vladimir putin is is is very aggressive
00:22:34.980 and he's he's and he's maneuvered himself into this
00:22:38.200 uh position he can't he's on a one-way street with no side street to
00:22:43.400 to get off yeah um and the do you think he's
00:22:48.480 in his speech that he gave where he talked about a new russia being born
00:22:54.320 uh was that misinformation or or is this uh do you think he really believes
00:23:02.240 that oh no he has not made made a secret of
00:23:07.820 that you know he right he uh a couple of years ago i think he wrote
00:23:11.160 an essay a lengthy essay uh about what he wants to do and he
00:23:16.020 wants to restore russia's greatness not the soviet union mind no mind you
00:23:20.420 russia's greatness and you know he this is this is his
00:23:24.500 his life okay that this is him he is russia and uh and he has
00:23:31.360 you know he's he's convinced himself that uh
00:23:35.260 some greater power i think he pretends to be a believer now
00:23:38.780 like he does pretend to be a believer i don't know if he does believe in god but
00:23:43.360 uh he thinks uh he's been appointed to do just that
00:23:46.920 that's a little frightening um so so what what are we doing
00:23:54.680 that we i mean we came out for the first time jack that i know of
00:23:59.520 and confirmed that we sunk the russian flagship
00:24:04.680 in the black sea um and that we confirmed that we are giving them
00:24:09.920 uh all kinds of targeting information to target their generals
00:24:14.300 we are just beating our chest in a very terrifying way
00:24:19.500 well i don't know who we is there's some some leaker right and yeah
00:24:24.460 and then then the media uh printed it uh the uh the pentagon and uh and uh
00:24:30.240 biden have denied that now we do we do admit that we provide intelligence uh
00:24:36.520 uh but you know to say that we contributed to the destruction
00:24:42.340 make make this uh statement uh that we have proof uh that's an exaggeration my god this
00:24:49.100 country is uh is populated by leakers and everywhere everywhere you go with it 1.00
00:24:53.900 where you're supposed to keep things secret it leaks out
00:24:56.800 so what do you see happening here jack as you're sitting watching all of this stuff
00:25:04.720 unfold somebody who grew up under that system you probably know geopolitics at least um
00:25:12.960 from a historic sense probably better than most so you you understand uh what's going on here
00:25:21.420 you you need to uh put yourself into the shoes of uh vladimir putin his leadership and the russian
00:25:29.620 people in general and uh uh putin looks at this conflict as a conflict between himself and the
00:25:39.920 west not just ukraine he he isn't just saying it he believes it because this this kind of thinking
00:25:47.960 is is rooted in in in russian history are they the russian people and the russian leaders have
00:25:54.880 always been paranoid for a good reason ever since uh the russia was founded it has it has been attacked
00:26:02.040 from all sides from the north east west south uh it was the mongols it was the turks 0.82
00:26:09.020 uh it was the the vikings it was napoleon and it was hitler so uh there's a there's a there's a
00:26:17.120 paranoia uh gene in in the russian dna and and putin believes that that uh you know that the west is
00:26:25.360 coming after him and this only gets worse uh as we shut down all of the financing and pull all of our
00:26:36.160 people uh out and when i say our people pull all of our all of our financial systems and any of our
00:26:44.140 businesses out of russia that has to speak volumes it does but i don't think it is as powerful as uh
00:26:53.000 as americans like to believe because putin we know that he's not stupid he expected that and when when
00:27:02.560 you look at what what's happening right now the ruble has stabilized uh putin still is uh is uh he i think
00:27:11.760 in the last two months he got more oil and gas revenue than in the five months before uh the you
00:27:19.220 know and and he has allies i mean right now china is allied allied with him and and uh india is uh at
00:27:29.000 best neutral right so so he is not you know the this is this is like uh uh his his economy is uh is
00:27:39.100 like a set of gears that will have some to deal with some sand but i don't think we can bring him
00:27:45.260 down to his knees so jack do you feel we are close to war well you're obviously closer to war than we
00:27:54.140 were right just a few months ago right uh are we close to nuclear war um you know it's part partially
00:28:03.080 wishful thinking but partially also uh there's some there's some reality behind that uh my believing
00:28:10.680 that we're not that close i mean putin in his speech in his speech uh did not threaten nuclear uh you
00:28:18.600 know the exploding some some nuclear missiles he he was it was like status quo let's go keep on going
00:28:25.880 you know and i believe this uh this conflict is going to drag on for a long time well and that's
00:28:33.160 better than the alternative you bet but uh there's a there's a secondary war here and the secondary war
00:28:41.800 is economic all right because you know western europe is is i think in great danger we as the united
00:28:49.320 states economically are not as much in danger because we we have all the natural resources western europe if
00:28:55.400 they can't they they're so dependent on on with regard to their energy uh that uh they if that
00:29:02.680 war drags out uh for a long time they will be severely weakened well we're not doing anything with our
00:29:09.320 energy and i i tell you jack i look at this and i think if i were a you know former soviet spy and still
00:29:18.360 could think like the other side uh i'd be thrilled with what america was doing right now we we are
00:29:25.160 dismantling ourselves you know we have gas prices going through the roof we haven't even hit the
00:29:30.440 summer uh you know we could be at five dollars a gallon uh for the summer and maybe seven or eight
00:29:36.280 dollars for trucks which will just cripple the nation i just want to make one statement uh which is
00:29:44.360 not necessarily political because you know there's one thing about you know talking about the ideology that
00:29:50.120 uh uh runs rampant in in in in the democrat party but we are currently led by a bunch of people who
00:29:59.560 don't know how to get things done they don't know how to execute and you know we're shooting ourselves
00:30:07.400 in the foot and this this and you know this you know that the uh uh the energy policy is driven by
00:30:15.320 ideology and that's global warming it's almost a religion oh yeah it is absolutely with uh
00:30:23.720 being the patron saint right you know you lived in east germany how old were you when you left east
00:30:31.480 germany uh when i left east germany i was 26 because i went first to moscow to improve my english and and
00:30:42.760 when i left my when i came to the united states i was 29. so you're 29 years old you were recruited by
00:30:50.120 the kgb you were you were trained um in all of these things and you being from east germany i would assume
00:31:00.200 you know you were very well aware of the spying that they did and the uh manipulation of of people
00:31:07.160 that they did did you notice that did you know that when you joined the kgb that they were
00:31:12.760 uh or was this patriotic kind of our side versus their side i i was not not i was a patriot but i
00:31:22.120 also was a revolutionary i was uh going to contribute to you know build the paradise the workers paradise
00:31:31.400 on earth and and i was ideologically 100 behind uh the soviet union east germany kgb the stasi
00:31:40.840 uh simply uh simply because of ignorance you know uh this this this is what happens in a
00:31:47.800 in a in a state where uh where all communication is is regulated and it's owned by the state uh we
00:31:54.840 we never we never got the truth the best of the glenbeck program
00:32:12.120 welcome to the glenbeck program uh your personal inflation rate coming up in just a second i want to
00:32:19.320 share with you from national review and jim garrity there is a there is a great story on
00:32:26.360 the food facility fires i've been asked about this uh over and over again and we looked into it and
00:32:35.640 it's there's just it doesn't seem to be out of the normal believe it or not now there are some some
00:32:42.840 things like well for instance uh national review writes in a typical year how many plane crashes
00:32:49.240 do we have into food processing plants what's your guess how many planes crash into a food processing
00:32:55.800 plant i mean you say seven a week yeah 300 no none yeah none okay zero uh a bad year maybe one one okay
00:33:05.720 so so far this year we've had two that's okay that's may yeah and so you would think hmm there's
00:33:15.000 something wrong but two i mean it's really unlikely but okay okay maybe okay all right so let's look
00:33:21.240 let's look at everything that's been happening a plane crashed into an idaho potato and food processing
00:33:26.360 plant killing the pilot police say uh gem straight processing in uh hayburn east idaho at about 8 35
00:33:35.400 in the morning on wednesday the pilot was the only person in the plane and died during the crash
00:33:40.360 police said none of the employees of the processing plant were injured okay so it had to be a kamikaze 0.99
00:33:46.040 food plant guy okay because he flew the plane into the plant then just a couple of weeks later
00:33:53.160 covington uh georgia firefighters responded to a plane crash that killed two people thursday
00:33:59.320 at the general mills food processing plant the small plane crashed apparently after taking off from
00:34:05.160 runway at the covington municipal airport six tractor trailers were damaged as a result of the crash
00:34:11.960 both occupants of the plane died however local officials were grateful the plane did not strike
00:34:17.080 the plant building which could have resulted in greater loss of life so if you want to go for the plane crash
00:34:26.360 idea yeah two plane crashes in or near food processing plants is weird it is weird um but
00:34:38.040 well let me go on february 5th massive what these are the headlines massive fire swept through wisconsin river
00:34:45.000 meats on thursday destroying part of the facility the then february 22nd the shearers food plant in
00:34:52.840 hermiston oregon caught fire after a propane boiler exploded march 17th a structure fire at the walmart
00:34:59.960 distribution center in plainville indiana broke out about noon on wednesday a thousand employees were
00:35:06.280 inside but none were injured one firefighter suffered minor injuries march 22nd a fire broke out at a
00:35:13.880 nestle hot pockets plant in george in jonesboro arkansas um it happened on march 16th the facility was still
00:35:23.400 closed as of march 21st march 25th officials believe a deep frying machine is behind the fire that destroyed
00:35:31.000 a potato processing facility in belfast april 13th firefighters from several departments and on in
00:35:38.360 maine helped battle a massive fire that destroyed a butcher shop and meat market in center conway new
00:35:44.840 hampshire and april 30th soybean processing tank caught fire at the purdue farms plant in chesapeake virginia
00:35:52.840 okay i mean that's a lot right that's a lot okay so here's how we have looked at it and this is
00:36:03.000 exactly the way jim garrity has looked at it not all the fires or crashes did significant damage in the
00:36:10.760 chesapeake soybean facility fire the plant manager said the fire had little to no impact on their
00:36:16.920 operations in the georgia crash the plane didn't hit the building no employees were harmed and general
00:36:23.720 mills spokesperson said the plant didn't experience any disruption and remains fully operational
00:36:29.480 operational uh the pilot in that crash by the way was identified as a student pilot and the other
00:36:36.040 person was the flight instructor so i mean unless it was some sort of anti-food processing plant
00:36:46.120 flight instructor that took that plane down and missed the plant that's probably not one to count
00:36:55.160 second none of the fires so far have been declared cases of arson this is really important because i you
00:37:01.560 know i went looking at these and i thought to myself i don't know that seems like a lot um but when we
00:37:08.120 really started looking none of them have been deemed arson um the um uh and that's from coast to coast
00:37:17.480 if any of them had been deemed arson if two of them i would have been like oh let's look into this
00:37:22.760 um in any given year there are half a million fires reported to local fire departments about
00:37:28.440 5300 of them are manufacturing or processing facilities that comes to about 440 per month
00:37:37.080 and if there are fires in 440 manufacturing or processing facilities a month from coast to coast
00:37:43.960 wouldn't we expect at least a handful of these to be at food processing facilities
00:37:49.560 in fact the list uh above stretches the definition of food processing facilities
00:37:55.880 because the walmart distribution center also stored clothes and cardboard and the new hampshire fire
00:38:01.800 happened at a local butcher shop third if you were a terrorist or a foreign agent or somebody in the
00:38:08.840 deep state choke attempting to choke off the american food distribution network would you start with a
00:38:15.320 the potato chip maker in oregon or the source for hot pockets in arkansas then move on to a soybean
00:38:24.920 processing tank in virginia if you were nefarious terrorist group or hostile foreign power and had not
00:38:32.440 you know not merely one suicide pilot but two of them as in the case of the georgia crash
00:38:39.960 who why were they there why not use that third person to bring down another plane you wouldn't bring a passenger along
00:38:50.920 and would you really aim for a potato processing plant in southern idaho than the georgia plant where they make cinnamon toast crunch
00:38:59.400 um the u.s had as of 2017 the u.s had 36 486 food and beverage processing establishments
00:39:14.120 what's most likely happening according to jim garrity is the botter meinhoff phenomena
00:39:22.280 you may not know what the biter monhoff uh meinhoff phenomena is but you've experienced it 1.00
00:39:29.400 have you ever gone to buy a car and then suddenly they're everywhere oh yeah oh for sure that is
00:39:39.080 that is that phenomena it's a frequency illusion that when things start to happen and we are now
00:39:47.080 looking at food shortages we all know it we also all know some things aren't being done by our government
00:39:53.720 that are right we also know uh there are people that you know uh like catastrophe and uh you know
00:40:03.000 swim in really calm waters of catastrophe as they look at it never waste it so we have these things
00:40:11.160 percolating and as you see one fire and then another these are not out of the normal and they're
00:40:19.720 not arson uh they're not terrorist strikes and they don't seem to be affecting big plants and that's
00:40:28.120 what you would go after are the big plants that's really good news that's really good and that sort of
00:40:33.000 thing happens to everybody i mean on the left it happens all the time one recent example was the
00:40:37.160 australian fires remember how big of a deal this was everyone was on you know online they were running
00:40:43.400 fundraisers and it was a big deal i'm not saying the australian fires a few years ago were not
00:40:48.040 but everyone was saying that like this is global warming and look how terrible this is and the
00:40:52.600 environment and weather weirding and all of this and at the end of the year they there was less
00:40:58.200 uh less square mileage uh burned in australia than average that you're less than average isn't that
00:41:05.160 crazy crazy yeah and why is it happening to them this is like when you're buying a new car you're
00:41:10.920 focused on that when you're worried about global warming you're focused on that when you're worried
00:41:17.000 about food shortages and you see things that you've not noticed before it's because you weren't paying
00:41:23.720 attention to it that way how many times have we paid attention to a forest fire in australia well we
00:41:31.240 paid attention that year because the people who are running the news are talking about forest fires
00:41:36.920 yeah and global warming that is what happens and you get down the and i think this happens all the
00:41:43.160 time with global warming every time there's a moderately strange weather event that's slightly
00:41:48.520 out of the ordinary this is what it's blamed on every single time and everyone's a meteorologist
00:41:55.160 and if you really want to know what's going to cause food shortages it's russia and ukraine and our
00:42:01.960 response to it that's really what is going to cause the the the most problems of getting food
00:42:09.560 all around the world what about china and the covid shutdowns that they're still kind of going
00:42:14.440 through massive that's big as well have you seen have you seen the uh shanghai ports the satellite
00:42:21.080 photos from 2020 and then today incredible difference it is it's today it's backed up like crazy oh it's
00:42:29.080 like you're looking at the the stars in the sky there are so many the ships out there we are headed
00:42:34.520 for real real trouble you know in the next i don't even know three to six seven months when it comes to
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