The Glenn Beck Program - May 07, 2026


Best of the Program | Guest: Luke Rosiak | 5⧸7⧸26


Episode Stats


Length

58 minutes

Words per minute

164.90454

Word count

9,639

Sentence count

293


Summary

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

Transcript

Transcript generated with Whisper (turbo).
00:00:00.000 Hey, on today's podcast, we talk about the hantavirus and, you know, this is going to be a real problem because I don't know about you, but I don't trust any of the people that are telling us we should freak out and it might be real.
00:00:12.560 I have no idea yet.
00:00:14.780 Unfortunately, we won't know for a few weeks, but if this is real, it could be a really bad thing.
00:00:19.360 But we go into that. Also, we we talk a little bit about what's happening in L.A. and what's happening with care in L.A. specifically that you don't want to miss.
00:00:34.500 And I don't know how to tell you this, but scientists have just come out and said they think that time travel can happen.
00:00:42.120 And I started the show with this one because I don't think, I think we're living in a time
00:00:47.800 when science is going to try to wrestle us away from God in any way they can.
00:00:52.600 And it's just the way you look at things.
00:00:54.660 I want you to listen to what they think they have discovered with quantum particle entanglement
00:01:03.580 on time travel, and ask yourself, isn't that the way God probably would work, seeing that
00:01:12.460 if God designed this whole thing, he's the ultimate scientist?
00:01:16.360 It's a fascinating conversation.
00:01:18.660 You don't want to miss a second of today's podcast.
00:01:20.460 Here it is.
00:01:21.680 The last few years have taught me something that I don't think enough people want to admit.
00:01:26.420 The system we count on every single day in this country isn't as sturdy as it looks.
00:01:31.420 All it takes is a little trouble in the wrong part of the world and shipping bottleneck, a shortage of one key ingredient, major disruption overseas, and everything changes.
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00:02:22.640 Hello, America.
00:02:23.920 You know we've been fighting every single day.
00:02:25.640 We push back against the lies, the censorship,
00:02:28.500 the nonsense of the mainstream media
00:02:30.460 they're trying to feed you. We work tirelessly to bring you the unfiltered truth because
00:02:35.540 you deserve it. But to keep this fight going, we need you. Right now, would you take a moment and
00:02:40.980 rate and review the Glenn Beck podcast? Give us five stars and lead a comment because every single
00:02:46.140 review helps us break through Big Tech's algorithm to reach more Americans who need to hear the truth.
00:02:51.840 This isn't a podcast. This is a movement and you're part of it, a big part of it. So if you
00:02:57.140 believe in what we're doing you want more people to wake up help us push this podcast to the top
00:03:01.560 rate review share together we'll make a difference and thanks for standing with us now let's get to
00:03:07.560 work you're listening to the best of the blend back program all right there's a couple things
00:03:22.800 we have to talk about we're going to get to indiana and what happened i mean this is really
00:03:28.280 good news unless you're a republican rhino uh what's happening is exactly what i said would
00:03:33.940 happen you don't pass the save act you are going to lose every single vote you come up for you
00:03:40.840 don't have the balls to stand up and do what 80 percent both left and right want from congress
00:03:47.580 you don't have the balls to stand up republicans you're toast the next election and you're seeing
00:03:52.260 it now and the results in indiana we'll get into that also i want to talk to you a little bit about
00:03:55.900 the la debates uh spencer pratt is killing it at least in pr and they hate him for it we got to get
00:04:04.040 him on because i love him for it um they're he's driving them out of their minds uh also coming up
00:04:11.500 in just a few minutes uh let's see we got a couple of guests on today we have luke uh rosiak uh he's
00:04:18.700 the guy who just did the he exposed the scam uh in ohio he's got a lot more to say about that
00:04:25.500 um one other bit of business note if you watched my uh speech at ellis island
00:04:33.380 uh many people say it was the best speech i gave it felt like it at the time it's very empowering
00:04:39.800 it's i mean it is really you're gonna walk away with a real understanding of america
00:04:45.340 you can find it glenbeck.com slash torch make sure you watch that speech
00:04:49.460 but if you like that and you know somebody
00:04:53.380 who's struggling and just needs a good understanding of the
00:04:57.380 world I just did an interview with this kid who
00:05:01.340 I just absolutely love I just think he is so smart
00:05:05.240 his name is Dallin Mom and he just started a podcast I think he has like a hundred
00:05:09.060 subscribers on YouTube 64 okay
00:05:12.580 i'd like to get him up to 10 000 subscribers because i think this kid gets it he is uh he
00:05:20.300 takes a view of the world through empowerment and art and um and god and he just gets it and
00:05:30.520 he did this interview with me um i don't know a few weeks ago and it just posted today
00:05:35.240 uh and uh i just think it's a great interview the way he asked the questions the way he wove
00:05:43.140 the whole story together it comes out as a really empowering podcast so if you want some
00:05:49.860 information in inspiration and people i don't make any money off this i don't you know i just
00:05:55.300 think this i think this kid has something i think he's really good uh momentum theory uh the
00:06:00.980 momentum theory podcast with Dallin mom. It's episode 21. You can find it on Spotify, YouTube,
00:06:06.380 or Apple tweet that out for me, if you will, Ricky. So you can find it momentum theory podcast.
00:06:12.820 This is available now. Okay. Let me bring in, uh, Michaela because do we have the jingle Sarah
00:06:19.480 anywhere of the, you know, she's always concerned about the birth rate, you know, and the sperm
00:06:24.840 count and everybody, everything else. Michaela is, uh, is our, uh, millennial, uh, producer
00:06:32.560 who is very Maha. Do you have the, do you have the jingle Sarah? You don't. Okay. Um, but, uh,
00:06:40.480 we were talking in our meeting this morning and I said, I have to talk about the Hanta virus now.
00:06:46.880 And I know I've been avoiding it. I hate to say it. I've been avoiding it like the plague.
00:06:50.860 and of course Miss Maha steps up and she's like you have to talk about it and you have to talk
00:06:56.620 to Annie Jacobson about it uh and so I thought well I gotta get Michaela on to talk about it
00:07:02.520 because I haven't been following it I mean I know what it is but I've just so dismissed this is the
00:07:06.720 problem with them overplaying their hand last time I've so dismissed it that it's like we're all
00:07:12.640 going to die of something bring it on there you go uh Michaela hey I'm calling you from my
00:07:23.120 coronavirus bunker so if I lose you it's because I've died of the virus
00:07:27.020 so do you think this is something to worry about are you all sad about this
00:07:33.620 well we said this morning when we were chatting that there's so many ways to die
00:07:38.760 so i would prefer to focus on all the ways we can live but i do want to tell you a little bit
00:07:44.180 about the hansa virus first and then i can give you some of my official doctorly advice since i
00:07:49.760 have a bfa in acting right right right and i believe your husband went to clown school
00:07:56.300 literally went to clown school so he did he did literally do that so everyone listening should
00:08:02.280 take this very seriously from me this is very medical advice okay so the hansa virus
00:08:07.420 yes the hanta virus is now going viral because there was a cruise ship in argentina where three
00:08:14.660 people suddenly caught it and died it's really more of like a family of viruses and in the u.s
00:08:20.100 it has a 38 mortality rate when people get it so that's the bad news okay but wait wait wait
00:08:26.500 this is something that has been this has been around forever right we've known about the hanta
00:08:32.500 coronavirus forever and i guess you have to eat rat poop or something usually to get it and they
00:08:37.420 still don't know how these people got it they don't know if it's how it's being transmitted
00:08:41.420 but they got it on this ship right typically you have to inhale rodent feces or you have to eat
00:08:48.040 rat poop like you said so very few of us get it interestingly gene hackman's wife died of this
00:08:53.320 um so i don't know exactly how that happened yes that was last year but they're typically
00:08:59.960 it's spread just by interacting with rodents so if you try to limit your interaction with rodents
00:09:05.120 you should be fine but there's one strain the andes virus the andes virus which is found in
00:09:11.440 argentina which transmits human to human that's where this cruise ship came out of that's why
00:09:16.860 people are concerned but the issue is it takes eight weeks for symptoms to show up so these
00:09:22.100 people on this cruise ship all get off they scatter to the winds potentially carrying a
00:09:27.320 human to human virus but we don't know but well that just seems like a stupid idea why didn't we
00:09:33.680 i mean do we not learn from movies can people who are in charge just watch some more movies please
00:09:39.340 oh my gosh you wouldn't be working on ai and you wouldn't you would have put these people in like
00:09:44.360 you know plastic bubbles or they would have gone down in the basement in some place in atlanta
00:09:48.280 and never be heard from again i mean can we can we not hold them for five weeks
00:09:53.740 yeah they're already gone but luckily there's already been a vaccine in the works for this
00:09:59.480 it started a long time ago in 2024 maderna was working on mrna vaccine and the university of
00:10:04.680 bath is already working on a vaccine so the great news is as soon as your baby is born you can
00:10:09.160 probably vaccinate them against the hanta virus soon oh that is great tell me more bill gates
00:10:14.520 they've been working on a vaccine unbelievable so you know here's the problem okay go ahead
00:10:23.480 let me tell you the good news you're seven times more likely to be struck by lightning than to get
00:10:28.900 the hanta virus that's good unless you live in tampa uh okay so but but the covid when it first
00:10:37.600 started it had a mortality rate they said of 13 but it was more like three percent wasn't it
00:10:44.060 we found 5.3 for alpha okay uh and this has a mortality rate we know of of 40 so this one if
00:10:55.040 it actually does go airborne as well it's kind of bad kind of bad that would be yeah that would be
00:11:00.080 pretty bad but yeah but right now i think my most professional medical advice would be to
00:11:06.960 not eat rat poop and carry on okay see this is the kind of advice you get from from people on
00:11:13.800 this program and i think that's good advice i'm gonna live i'll live by that one well here's the
00:11:18.720 problem about i'm gonna go out and eat rat poop today i would say limit that for the next couple
00:11:23.120 of weeks and then if you're like i'm gonna go somewhere with a lot of rats like a rat farm or
00:11:27.560 a rat petting zoo right the next couple of weeks i would just pull that back and then you should be
00:11:32.320 able to continue on eating rat poop from there hang on hang on i'm just gonna whisper this
00:11:36.840 into yesterday hey don't eat rat poop now somebody might think i'm gonna eat rat poop and
00:11:44.000 they're like i don't know where that prompting came from but somebody did whisper a soothsayer
00:11:49.980 account on x i am a soothsayer is the handle in 2022 they tweeted 2023 corona ended in 2026
00:12:00.480 hantavirus so you know did you check into this deeper than what you'd had i have been looking
00:12:06.860 i went into the wayback machine nothing pulls up they only have about five tweets in their timeline
00:12:11.280 i can't even locate where the account originates from you know elon actually updated the settings
00:12:16.640 you could do that i can't figure out where they it's possible that they quote predicted a bunch
00:12:23.760 of things like this and then deleted everything else when it just so happened that hantavirus
00:12:28.280 popped up in 2026 it also is possible that fauci gates or any of these clowns you know the world
00:12:36.200 the world health organization put that tweet out it's possible that this is the person that is
00:12:41.220 already working on the vaccine right i mean that's the problem with this jason i want to bring you in
00:12:46.820 this and don't go anywhere michaelix i'd like to hear you on this because you're in a you know a
00:12:50.900 different age group me i've had enough of this i've had enough of this they have so discredited
00:12:56.780 themselves if they come with a virus i mean with a vaccine on this thing i'm not taking the vaccine
00:13:02.400 i'm not taking it and you know what they'll do they'll lock you up if you haven't taken the
00:13:07.160 vaccine they'll do exactly the same thing they did last time and then you know our kids won't
00:13:11.620 go to school and we'll have masks and um nobody's learned anything from the last time and if they
00:13:18.280 wouldn't have overplayed their hand last time if this turns out to be a real virus a real problem
00:13:24.420 they would have saved more lives had they not overreacted with coronavirus and covid you're
00:13:33.020 acting like so distorted that you're you're acting like it was almost kind of like a big
00:13:38.200 trial run to see what they could do to us during the covid pandemic and they have things like
00:13:42.540 kill switches and cars now or something that they could totally abuse as if that's happening
00:13:47.720 Michaela, that's how I look at it in my generation.
00:13:51.400 How does your generation look at this?
00:13:54.580 Well, I'm particularly, I'm more worried about panic.
00:13:58.060 So essentially, if we start to panic, we're more likely to extinct ourselves via doom
00:14:02.720 scrolling, worrying about the Hantavirus and accidentally doing that instead of having
00:14:07.660 more babies, for example.
00:14:09.220 I'm more worried about that.
00:14:10.880 I mean, I think what happens is we fixate on these things and they prevent us from,
00:14:14.800 as we said this morning, if we're going to die, die with your boots on, but live with your boots
00:14:18.780 on. And a lot of our generation gets crippled with fear. We're the people that were told
00:14:22.760 the world's going to catch on fire, and then it's also going to freeze. And it doesn't matter
00:14:27.400 because by the time you're out of college, you're going to be dead from a pandemic. And it's just,
00:14:31.240 it's noise that stops people from going out, starting a business, getting married. And
00:14:35.460 I personally think that even if this is a real virus, there's nothing we can do about it right
00:14:41.900 now i i don't trust the medical establishment just like most people my age i mean i'm a really
00:14:47.620 agreeable person and i am so disagreeable to my doctor everything they say to me i'm like but
00:14:52.560 really where did you learn that fauci like that's my first response and it's probably gonna be that
00:14:59.120 it is no it is and it is and by the way notice she worked in because she does it every time you
00:15:04.820 talk you could talk to her about anything and she will work in my generation's not having enough
00:15:10.000 babies which brings me to the jingle again uh here's your millennial sperm count update
00:15:15.980 there you go uh it's so michaela number one problem above hantavirus i know i know and i
00:15:24.260 actually agree with you on that it's just you seem a little obsessed by it uh but uh thank you very
00:15:29.280 much i am obsessed with the continuation of the species glenn i have to say that's something
00:15:33.840 i'm never gonna forgive you though for making glenn talk about sperm
00:15:39.760 yeah love you mean it everybody makes everybody very comfortable oh thanks dad let's talk some
00:15:45.940 more sperm or rat poop it's your choice that's what i come on for that's what i bring to the team
00:15:50.600 okay good good good it's what you always wanted you're growing up and you're like i want to go
00:15:55.100 on the glenn back program someday and talk about sperm and poop well dream come true hi mom i hope
00:16:01.220 You're proud.
00:16:05.880 Michaela, I just love you so much.
00:16:07.460 Thank you for coming on.
00:16:08.880 I will tell you, that is the biggest problem.
00:16:12.580 Nobody believes anything.
00:16:15.880 Nobody believes anything.
00:16:18.300 And what are they going to do?
00:16:19.780 They're going to have to get more draconian because people don't believe anything.
00:16:25.080 Why would it?
00:16:25.800 You know, the problem here is you were working on a vaccine.
00:16:28.660 You were working on a vaccine.
00:16:30.200 wow you started a couple years ago what a coincidence you know what other vaccine you
00:16:34.000 were working on covid i mean these guys are there this is a death cult it's a death cult
00:16:41.720 and one of these viruses is going to be real i don't know maybe it's this one but one of them
00:16:47.200 is going to be real and they have so discredited themselves that's why fauci needs to go to jail
00:16:53.920 that's why you know you know jason remember when we were talking about um the covid vaccine and
00:17:00.400 this is early on early on and we showed the actual system of wire transfers of money
00:17:10.240 going to the treasury uh was it the treasury or the fed the fed right the fed the fed so these
00:17:18.200 these companies that are making the vaccine and selling them we were showing you the documents
00:17:23.080 on how they were wire transferring their share of the profits to the Fed.
00:17:29.240 I still don't hear very much talk about that, and that's absolute proven fact.
00:17:34.920 It's no credibility, no credibility.
00:17:39.080 So just hold on to God.
00:17:40.840 God will tell you what to do.
00:17:42.400 Just pray, pray to serve him, pray to build his empire, pray to be on his side,
00:17:50.180 pray that the Spirit is with you always.
00:17:52.460 live your life in a way that the Spirit can always, and then never disobey the Spirit.
00:17:57.780 Never disobey the Spirit. Do exactly what you're told. No matter how crazy it sounds,
00:18:03.560 do exactly what you're told. That is the only thing that will save any of us from here on out.
00:18:08.660 Everything else has lost its credibility. You know what hasn't? Even your church can lose
00:18:13.240 credibility. God hasn't lost credibility. I know I can still trust God.
00:18:18.120 the direction of this country isn't just being decided in washington it's being decided in our
00:18:24.800 culture in our economy and in the choices that every single person makes every day who do you
00:18:30.620 support take your cell phone plan for instance the big wireless companies don't really care what
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00:19:20.220 Now back to the podcast.
00:19:21.780 This is the best of the Glenn Beck program.
00:19:25.060 You know, I want to talk to you from a place of experience and struggle myself even currently.
00:19:32.700 You know, I used to think that if I would just work harder, I'd push harder, you know, I tried harder, I'd remain angry enough or whatever.
00:19:41.680 or have formed enough. I could keep the walls from collapsing. And I catch myself in this all
00:19:48.680 the time too. What am I going to do to save the Republic? I'm not going to save the Republic.
00:19:52.400 You're not going to save the Republic. Maybe together we can, but we can only do what we can
00:19:59.140 do. And if you look around you right now, absolutely everything feels unstable. The economy,
00:20:05.120 the culture, politics, wars breaking out, our families, prices climbing, paychecks somehow
00:20:11.280 or another feel smaller every single month people it's screaming at each other online my gosh i
00:20:16.400 don't even i don't even go there anymore i just don't look at it because you read some of the
00:20:20.800 comments and you're like what is happening we're turning into animals meanwhile you're just trying
00:20:25.320 to keep your family afloat you're trying to pay the mortgage you're trying to hold your marriage
00:20:29.280 together you're trying to raise decent kids that is i mean that feels the world feels like it's
00:20:36.080 lost its mind just trying to keep your kids safe and on a decent track oh my gosh feels like you're
00:20:43.240 drowning doesn't it and that pressure does something to people and it did something to me
00:20:50.540 you know bad not all at once just slowly and quietly and it turns you and it it makes you
00:20:58.060 more angry and more bitter when i was in my 20s and 30s um i was really a control freak i mean i
00:21:05.740 still kind of am a control free i know what i know and i know what i like and i we go for that
00:21:10.880 you know i do my best but i had to control everything you know and i i got in this place
00:21:16.520 to where i thought you know if i can just get ahead of the next disaster or if i could just
00:21:20.800 get the next promotion if i could just get that raise buy that house afford that car if i could
00:21:27.160 just win the next argument if i could just if i could just get people to see things what i want
00:21:31.780 them to see then maybe i'd feel okay no no those things would happen and then i would feel more
00:21:40.300 empty it might might make me feel good for a minute and then i was like but i'm not happy i'm
00:21:45.980 not i don't feel better and and then i'd be like well because i have to have the next thing i have
00:21:51.860 to do the next thing and every time that would happen it would leave me empty and it would build
00:21:57.260 on itself and I'd feel worse and worse and worse. The tighter you grip onto life, the faster it
00:22:03.280 slips through your fingers. And after a while, you don't recognize yourself anymore. How many
00:22:08.620 of our friends are completely different than they used to be? And I don't mean in a good way.
00:22:17.080 Are we different?
00:22:18.240 i don't know about you there are there are times i'm exhausted all the time
00:22:24.860 i'm angry for reasons i can't really even put my finger on
00:22:29.300 i'm numb to the things that i should be grateful for i'm distracted when i should be present
00:22:36.680 what i did in my 20s and 30s is i then medicated and you might know people are doing i mean i did
00:22:45.720 it with drugs and alcohol and work really um but some people medicate themselves just by outrage
00:22:53.060 and anger or isolation or buying things that you don't need or pretending everything's fine because
00:23:01.000 you don't want to think about it because if you think about it you'll know it's going to fall
00:23:04.500 apart you know on bad days now i don't i don't drink or work i mean i guess i work a little more
00:23:11.900 than I probably should. But I do find myself at times in endless scrolling. And on really bad
00:23:19.540 days, sometimes I will recognize it and I'll go, what am I doing? You should stop. And then I say,
00:23:27.960 yeah, I will in a minute. And 30 minutes later, I'm still doom scrolling. And I think that's where
00:23:33.380 a lot of people are right now. We haven't necessarily hit rock bottom, which kind of
00:23:38.540 scares me but we are spiritually exhausted we are emotionally way underwater we are isolated feel
00:23:46.300 alone and you know there's a really strange thing that i discovered you know when my old life started
00:23:53.260 breaking apart the answer i found was not gaining more control the answer was admitting i can't
00:24:05.680 change any of this stuff i don't have any control over anybody else the world what happens what
00:24:12.080 happens to me the only that was really the turning point the realization that the moment i stopped
00:24:20.520 saying i got this and admitted no i don't i don't have this in fact i have no idea what i'm doing
00:24:26.400 uh and uh i don't control any of this but that's okay i can only control how i react to things
00:24:34.080 people tend to carry more things and this i guess one of the things i really want to make sure
00:24:40.160 that i share with you today you're carrying too much you're carrying burdens that don't belong
00:24:45.980 to you you were or you were carrying burns you were never meant to carry by yourself okay
00:24:50.240 you're solving problems that cannot be solved by you by yourself
00:24:56.300 we try to predict the future you know fix the country save our kids survive the economy hold
00:25:03.660 our relationships together, and then somehow or another still sleep well at night.
00:25:06.820 No wonder people are cracking.
00:25:10.760 I want to challenge you to engage in radical honesty.
00:25:17.380 Radical honesty is the only way we survive, and it starts with looking in the mirror and
00:25:26.180 dropping the act.
00:25:28.760 You're in control.
00:25:30.180 this is really a hard thing to do because we're really we react to fear too much
00:25:40.320 and we think we're all alone and we we somehow or another life convinces us or maybe social media or
00:25:47.780 this happened to me before social media so somehow or another we just convince ourselves
00:25:51.580 that everybody else is better than us that we have some flaw or something that we hang on to
00:25:57.540 from our childhood or whenever
00:25:59.380 that makes us really special in a bad way.
00:26:03.420 It's not true.
00:26:04.780 It's not true.
00:26:05.520 It is so weird.
00:26:07.160 We blame everything else,
00:26:09.480 but in our quietest moments,
00:26:11.380 really, we blame ourselves.
00:26:14.180 We are self-hating egomaniacs.
00:26:21.060 And we have to...
00:26:27.540 We just have to start with ourselves and start looking where we got so bitter and where it's
00:26:33.740 taken root. Yeah, we have to start saying, fear has been driving a lot of my decisions and it's
00:26:40.340 got to stop. Fear of losing my job, fear of not being able to, whatever it is. Admit the resentment
00:26:46.160 that you might feel, the pride, the damage that you have done to yourself or others.
00:26:52.640 one of the biggest problems we have as a society is we blame everything else we blame the media
00:26:58.880 we blame the politicians we blame our parents i'm in the i'm in the end phases i think of my last two
00:27:06.640 in the phase of blaming us for you know mom and dad for everything i think we're going to be come
00:27:12.060 up to the end of this soon but we're in it right now and i just love it as my favorite time of
00:27:16.200 childhood. But we always blame something. Radical honesty. Just start telling the truth
00:27:23.880 about you. And it's hard, but it's freedom. And then the part that everybody misunderstands
00:27:35.160 and everybody hates because they misunderstand it, surrender. People think that surrendering
00:27:39.860 means to give up or to surrender to the chaos or to surrender to the mob. No, it doesn't. It
00:27:45.980 doesn't mean that it means to surrender to the understanding that i'm not god you're not god
00:27:53.700 um i can't control anything that happens to me i can't control other people i can't stop bad
00:28:00.160 things from happening i can't stop i can't stop anything i really can't life is not fair it's not
00:28:07.080 and i can't change that but i can choose how it affects me
00:28:12.260 because i can't carry the entire weight of the world on my shoulders and you can't either
00:28:18.460 we were never supposed to
00:28:20.840 and if we can begin by getting rid of the illusion that we can force life to obey you
00:28:29.320 i can't i can't even control my kids i hate to admit that maybe that makes me a bad parent but
00:28:34.380 i can't even right they don't even listen my mike when my kids come to me and dad i learned
00:28:39.320 something about history oh really you did huh yeah you know that artifact is sitting in my office
00:28:45.420 that you walk by every day and i've told you that story a million times is it really they don't
00:28:50.140 listen this thought that we can control things it just destroys you it's an illusion so
00:28:59.120 So, engage in radical honesty.
00:29:04.240 Tell the truth.
00:29:05.760 Begin today.
00:29:07.060 Make a decision today.
00:29:09.220 Tell the truth.
00:29:10.020 Make amends.
00:29:11.000 Be dependable.
00:29:13.120 Stay sober or sober-minded.
00:29:16.320 Love your family deeply.
00:29:20.340 Spend every minute present with them.
00:29:24.860 Admit when you're wrong.
00:29:27.560 Turn off the phone.
00:29:29.640 Help the person in front of you.
00:29:31.900 Say hello to the person in front of you.
00:29:34.860 They might be nasty and bitter.
00:29:36.660 Oh, well, that's their choice.
00:29:38.580 I'm going to be nice.
00:29:40.880 Get your soul in order.
00:29:43.380 I know somebody who's really successful, and I said, what is your secret?
00:29:46.400 And he said, before I go to bed, I learn something new.
00:29:52.340 Every day, I have to learn something new.
00:29:55.560 I have to expand my world a little bit every day.
00:30:01.220 I have this thing that sits on my coffee table at home,
00:30:08.680 and it's 40 different things that you can do that might scare you.
00:30:15.380 Do one thing that scares you every day.
00:30:18.860 Just start with maybe one thing a week.
00:30:20.920 better yet just think of this just make a list of the things this is really this is this is fun
00:30:30.280 in the end it's scary to do but it's fun in the end make a list and keep this list of the things
00:30:35.720 that you're really afraid of in life what is the worst that someone could find out about you
00:30:42.420 or say about you or do to you put it out there put it on put it in writing and then just ponder
00:30:50.100 and like that's really pretty stupid you won't feel that way at first but you will if you keep
00:30:54.460 that and you keep looking back you will if you fear some revelation about something that you're
00:31:00.640 doing stop doing that that makes that fear go away and then make amends deal with it as openly
00:31:10.400 and as positively as possible once you do that if that's one thing you're afraid somebody's going
00:31:17.080 to find out about whatever it is, stop doing it, make amends, deal with it as openly as you can in
00:31:23.080 a positive way. The power over you is gone. And if somebody says something, you're afraid of
00:31:29.680 somebody saying something about you that's not true, that's their problem, not yours. Don't
00:31:34.120 make it your problem. If you lose friends over lies, they weren't your friends anyway.
00:31:38.660 And I know that sounds small, but it's not.
00:31:44.200 A society only survives when enough ordinary people choose to live their lives with integrity while the world around them has lost its mind.
00:31:54.860 And I think people deep down are starving for this right now.
00:31:59.440 Honesty, truth, integrity.
00:32:01.660 We get slogans and rage and political messiahs.
00:32:05.140 That's not going to save us.
00:32:06.260 we need solid ground everything i told you this would happen years ago i remember saying over and
00:32:14.460 over and over again there's going to come a time when everything you thought you could trust
00:32:18.060 everything you thought was solid will be liquid we're there so look for things that are still
00:32:25.400 solid the only things that are real salt that are actually solid are eternal and immovable
00:32:32.040 that's the key don't look for anybody who's telling you new things today you know what's
00:32:37.820 really solid is if you you decide to accept different people's pronouns that's all part
00:32:43.060 of the insanity go back and look at things that have been said for generations that are true
00:32:48.580 there's your solid ground because what we're all searching for is peace and peace that's not
00:32:54.800 dependent on election results peace treaty stock markets what's trending online we just want to
00:33:01.640 become whole again and that begins maybe by saying the words we hate saying i'm not in control of
00:33:09.860 this i can't do this alone and strangely that's not the that's not the end of strength that's
00:33:16.660 where strength begins this is the best of the glenn beck program okay now this is this show's
00:33:26.800 known for its heavy science of course you know all the many science awards that we have won
00:33:30.700 Um, so let me do my best to come at this, not as a scientist and somebody who barely understands anything, uh, regarding quantum mechanics, but they have now through experiments, they believe that time travel is possible, but it's not the way you think it is.
00:33:53.280 So I want you to, I want you to think of it this way.
00:33:57.880 Imagine that you're a father and you're sitting alone in, you know, in your house, uh, and
00:34:03.040 the clock on the wall is ticking forward as it always does.
00:34:05.840 But tomorrow, you know, uh, something terrible is going to happen to your daughter.
00:34:12.520 She's about to walk into real danger, bad choice, risky path, something like that.
00:34:17.500 And your heart aches because you wish you could reach back to yesterday and just say,
00:34:22.180 don't go that way turn around stay home you want to tell her hey today her tomorrow today is not
00:34:31.200 good because you made this choice now in the movies you'd go through like a glowing door or
00:34:36.340 you'd get into a delorean or whatever but that's not what this is there's fresh scientific thinking
00:34:41.820 now that has just been published that says that one day you might be able to send a warning back
00:34:48.780 through back through time you're not going to go with your body it's just you're going to slip like
00:34:53.580 a a hidden message hidden in a fold of the universe okay and here's my best telling and
00:35:02.060 my best understanding of what science is telling us now they're saying time is not a straight
00:35:07.460 railroad track marching only forward it's like a long ribbon flexible and under the right conditions
00:35:14.760 at the tiniest invisible scales,
00:35:17.880 the ribbon can twist and loop back
00:35:20.600 so the end connects with the beginning.
00:35:23.400 The scientists are calling this a closed loop in time,
00:35:26.840 and it's kind of like this cosmic roller coaster
00:35:29.040 where cause and effect gently circle on themselves.
00:35:33.580 You can't go change, you can't go kill Hitler
00:35:36.440 or anything like that,
00:35:37.560 and you can't send your whole self back.
00:35:39.440 You can only send, they believe, information.
00:35:43.520 So think of it this way.
00:35:44.760 You and your daughter are connected in a special, invisible way.
00:35:50.400 Scientists would say, like two dancers who have practiced the same steps so perfectly
00:35:55.000 that when one moves, the other feels it instantly, even across great distances.
00:36:00.340 Okay.
00:36:02.020 You carefully prepare your warning today in the future to send it back to her yesterday.
00:36:11.300 and you know exactly how she's going to receive it and understand it yesterday because you've
00:36:17.360 already lived through the moment when she gets it. And so you can adjust the message to cut
00:36:21.380 through any of the noise or confusion and you are connected to her. So you have a special bond. You
00:36:28.380 know how she's going to react. And so you write this message, if you will, in a way that makes
00:36:36.700 her pause or smile or take action in a different way when the loop closes the warning arrives in
00:36:43.920 the past okay do you remember if you saw the movie interstellar remember dad is on the other
00:36:49.720 side of the bookcase and he's doing something to her watch and she doesn't understand it for a long
00:36:54.760 time and then suddenly she's like oh my gosh that's kind of what this kind of what this is talking
00:37:00.480 about so yesterday your daughter hesitates at that crossroads and she chooses differently and
00:37:07.020 she stays safe and because she's safe the future where you sit in your study and send the warning
00:37:13.100 still happens exactly as the way it did and so the story is consistent no broken timelines no
00:37:19.900 disappearing parents no you know nobody's just like hey what what happened to the other half
00:37:26.340 of my body i'm disappearing in this picture okay the universe only allows loops that make sense
00:37:33.740 they think in one single neat tale it's not a fantasy researchers were inspired uh by earlier
00:37:41.600 experiments with light and quantum rules and all these things that i don't understand and they
00:37:47.020 they believe now that time travel or time time travel for information can flow backward without
00:37:55.120 tearing reality apart this is a fascinating story uh from a modernity news and it shows
00:38:05.040 at the deepest level of physics the blending of einstein's idea about gravity bending time
00:38:11.480 with the strange rules that govern the tiniest bits of our world that's my best interpretation
00:38:18.560 of what the science and i know anybody who really actually knows science is like good god this guy
00:38:23.320 should be stopped. But let me leave science of what was reported and now give it to you in a
00:38:31.900 different way, a slightly different way, one we already know. Picture the dad again. It's you.
00:38:41.120 You're sitting in your study. You've lived through tomorrow's near disaster with your daughter.
00:38:45.860 You use that hidden ribbon of time, the closed loop scientists describe. You encode the warning,
00:38:51.020 and it's not a loud shout, it's not a post-it note, okay?
00:38:56.200 It's a whisper of information that slips backward through the twist of space-time.
00:39:02.640 Your daughter, back in yesterday, doesn't hear a voice.
00:39:07.140 She doesn't see a vision.
00:39:08.760 She just feels something.
00:39:11.840 It's a sudden hesitation, a quiet, don't go there, in her chest,
00:39:16.920 a hunch the spirit a prompting a god wink okay that's what they're saying can be sent back
00:39:27.380 through time a god wink something that she will connect with an intuition a gut feeling
00:39:35.420 and she acts on it she stays safe and the loop closes perfectly and the future still holds the
00:39:41.920 loving dad who sent the message and everything is fine in in that framing of the same science
00:39:50.540 those everyday moments are we're already experiencing experiencing them the flash of
00:39:57.620 something feels off before a bad decision is made or an unexplained urge to call a loved one right
00:40:05.260 when they need it you ever had that sudden clarity that steers us away from trouble and we
00:40:11.880 get to the other side we're like wow do you know what a disaster what made me think that
00:40:15.800 tiny echoes of information traveling backward is that possible science now says yes
00:40:25.040 no deloreans no dinosaurs just nudges woven into the fabric of the universe
00:40:34.940 I mean, the universe is amazing.
00:40:41.480 It is amazing.
00:40:43.120 I mean, the scientists that participated in all of this,
00:40:46.620 they would hate me for all of this stuff.
00:40:50.400 They're not claiming that this explains human intuition.
00:40:54.600 Their work is about photons and quantum particles
00:40:57.180 and mathematical loops and the tiniest scales
00:40:59.680 and all of that stuff.
00:41:00.600 But as a poet, look at that.
00:41:04.940 If information can slip backward in principle, cleaner and clearer because the sender already remembers how it lands, then why couldn't our minds, in their deepest hidden layers, sometimes catch those whispers of father's care, prayer, reaching his daughter as a feeling?
00:41:27.420 your own wiser future self offering a quiet course correction not rewriting history but just
00:41:36.160 nudging it to unfold safely gut instinct six cents inner voice promptings the spirit god winks
00:41:47.380 we have traditions religious traditions that have described this forever guidance that arrives just
00:41:55.040 in time, and always the logical mind has no clear reason.
00:42:01.560 Science dismisses all of this stuff, or they'll say, well, that is your mind processing,
00:42:07.620 your subconscious mind rapidly processing clues, and it feels like it's in the past,
00:42:12.920 but it's not really, whatever.
00:42:15.200 I've always described these things coming from God.
00:42:18.920 but now this new thinking about time loops opens a pretty wondrous door what if the promptings
00:42:28.780 what if these god winks are all get this part of the god-designed cosmos itself
00:42:37.600 and our entangled connection to it sending little love notes from ahead
00:42:44.740 science doesn't describe it this way but you know science also doesn't understand
00:42:51.260 you know if god exists then he's the greatest scientist of all time
00:42:56.900 to me it's only logical the entire universe has a grand design look at look at the universe
00:43:04.640 explain this how did this just kind of happen okay grand design or a unifying they're always
00:43:11.740 looking we got to find the unifying theory okay it's god and if there is a grand design then there
00:43:18.020 has to be a designer what's first cause none of this is proven may never be we're still far from
00:43:26.080 turning quantum theory into something that you can measure in a daily human experience but
00:43:30.640 holy cow that is quite the statement from science
00:43:37.000 that things arrive to us
00:43:42.720 not as words but as feelings
00:43:45.160 that you trust
00:43:46.160 you act and safety follows
00:43:49.040 tomorrow
00:43:51.100 you smile
00:43:53.300 because the nudge worked
00:43:54.460 the next time you feel that
00:43:59.220 sudden pull to slow
00:44:01.320 down call her
00:44:02.540 take the other road pause and
00:44:05.220 listen
00:44:05.640 I mean, I think it's God, but science may now be on the verge of explaining how God works.
00:44:15.580 Universe's quiet time travel, your future self, or the caring connections around you,
00:44:21.820 your family whispering across the fold so today turns out a little better than it otherwise would
00:44:27.000 have. That is the gentle magic this research invites us to imagine, I think. No flashy
00:44:34.440 machines just a kinder cosmos where warnings travel as feelings loops protect us and the whole
00:44:41.960 grand tale stays beautifully intact i'm only telling you this today because i know god exists
00:44:49.960 already i just think we are on the verge of science doing one of two things and it's going
00:44:55.040 to do the same it's going to do the same thing actually it's going to do one thing and then it's
00:44:59.540 well then we're going to choose it either is good we're going to look at science we're going to go
00:45:02.780 see that proves there is no god or we're gonna go look at how god has designed this okay look at
00:45:10.700 this i have no idea how the universe works nobody really has any idea this little this little
00:45:18.380 experiment that i'm asking you to go on here won't cost me anything you know uh and that my
00:45:26.280 little experiment is i'm gonna pray harder than ever but i i i know this is not what science is
00:45:33.700 saying because there's no photons involved but you know thinking good thoughts and thinking about
00:45:41.280 decisions that maybe loved ones have made yesterday i'm gonna pray a little harder for
00:45:48.000 them not only in the future but also literally yesterday as well we're at the beginning of this
00:45:55.720 understanding, but take a few minutes today.
00:45:58.640 We're going to get into how we're all going to die soon, but take just a second today
00:46:03.420 as we start our day to admire how great God is and how, what an amazing creation that
00:46:10.520 we are allowed to watch unfold in front of us and ponder this, how many promptings have
00:46:20.080 you felt lately that just with this understanding, you might go, hmm, did I get that from somebody
00:46:32.640 I love?
00:46:34.680 Were they helping me course correct?
00:46:40.120 What an amazing time to be alive.
00:46:43.020 This is the best of the Glenn Beck program.
00:46:50.080 Luke, welcome to the program. Thank you for your service. Thank you for being an actual
00:46:55.500 investigative journalist. That's not a hack and you're trying to do the right thing. Thank you
00:47:01.460 for everything you've exposed. Thank you, Glenn. Start at the beginning. Anybody who hasn't been
00:47:08.940 following, give me a quick thumbnail of what is happening in Ohio. So I call it free butlers for
00:47:18.580 Somalis. The Medicaid program is sending people to the houses of elderly people who tend to be
00:47:27.240 Somali and saying, you know, you can have somebody come and clean your house, cook for you,
00:47:32.740 even just do companionship and conversation, which sounds crazy. But the reason that part is key
00:47:38.300 is because what they've done is the people providing these services are their own family
00:47:42.920 members. So they figured out a way to get the government to pay you by the hour to hang out
00:47:47.780 in your own house with your own family and this is in ohio alone this costs one billion dollars a
00:47:54.380 year a billion a billion dollars now how much of this is illegal because parts of it um you know
00:48:04.320 i mean that is the law we you can have companion you can have somebody come over and clean the
00:48:08.880 house and the government will pay for it as crazy as that sounds um so where do they go wrong on
00:48:15.120 this yeah so in my opinion it's essentially all waste and a large portion of it is fraud but that
00:48:22.900 exact portion is somewhat unknowable because the program is inherently susceptible to fraud
00:48:27.340 it's happening in people's private residences in ways where it's really hard to prove like
00:48:33.300 were you really hanging out with your family member that day is your family member really
00:48:39.320 disabled is kind of a subjective maybe opinion of a doctor is it can you prove that the doctor
00:48:45.040 was lying. It's very difficult when you open this door that the government's going to start
00:48:50.100 paying people for families hanging out with each other. It gets a little murky. But I found a lot
00:48:56.260 of evidence that the people running these middlemen companies, so if I'm getting paid to hang
00:49:00.660 out with my own mom, I don't get paid directly by Medicaid. I become an employee of a different
00:49:05.860 company that then bills Medicaid. And those companies are owned by the sketchiest people
00:49:10.740 imaginable and yet the government just just trusts whatever form they send in and just
00:49:14.800 reimburses them so that's what i was that's that's one of the things that i i looked at
00:49:20.480 um you know you look in the investigation 288 medicaid registered businesses concentrated in
00:49:28.240 seven buildings um these build over 250 million alone one building had 94 companies in it billing
00:49:37.800 66 million and um and there are a lot of sketchy people making a lot of of money one of them is a
00:49:44.860 democratic uh politician surprise surprise mohammed jama um and he was running it you know part-time
00:49:54.160 while he was out campaigning he built 11 million dollars um received a whole bunch of donations
00:50:00.520 from other home health owners sold it later um and it's it's it's this this nasty little web of
00:50:09.900 of somalis and i bring up the somali thing because i've been trying to figure out why is this
00:50:16.460 happening to the somali community and and once you understand their culture this begins to make
00:50:23.700 sense. And you have to pay attention to the Somali culture, because if you don't understand
00:50:30.840 it, you'll never stop it. You agree with that? Yeah. I started, I saw the great work that Nick
00:50:38.280 Shirley and people like that did. And some people claim maybe it's cherry picked. And I do a lot
00:50:42.820 with data. And I really wanted to do this in a fair and a precise way. And so Doge released this
00:50:47.520 data about Medicaid, which was a huge deal, because you can look at it comprehensively and
00:50:52.600 you can try to be really analytical and objective. And I got to tell you, it's all Somalis. It's
00:50:58.800 insane. I mean, we can't beat around the bush here. It's not even just somewhat of a murky
00:51:04.400 correlation. It's almost universal. I mean, I went to, after the data pointed me where to go
00:51:10.160 to find the most sketchy things, it took me directly to what turned out to be the Somali
00:51:14.620 neighborhood of Columbus, Ohio. And Columbus has the second most Somalis in the United States after
00:51:21.100 minneapolis and you know i think maybe um what you're getting at is i mean they they come from
00:51:26.920 these clans and they operate as almost like um hive like they're bees in a hive like they work
00:51:32.960 together on things and that's kind of what you need here you need go ahead i'm sorry to interrupt
00:51:39.200 go ahead well you need doctors in on this you need a bunch of old people that are going to go
00:51:44.420 to those doctors and those old people need to be poor so they're on medicaid and then they need to
00:51:49.640 go to the doctors and get the sign off. And then you need people running these businesses that
00:51:56.680 claim to go to those old people, but they really know the old people. Maybe the old people get a
00:52:01.720 little kickback, but they're not actually showing up. And then you do this at scale, and it's not
00:52:06.620 a huge hourly rate that each person's getting paid, but there's an infinite number of these
00:52:11.740 Somalis. And yeah, I mean, I don't think I saw more than one or two Americans the whole time
00:52:16.980 when i visited hundreds of medicaid businesses so here's the thing then this is why assimilation
00:52:23.780 is so important somalis come over here and they are clan based they're clan based meaning it's
00:52:30.600 it's their group of family and uh and tight-knit friends that means everything this is not just
00:52:39.000 this isn't just um this is the way it operates over in somali and the government is uh something
00:52:46.960 to be exploited and uh to be used it's a resource and it whatever they can do to strengthen their
00:52:55.720 clan in somalia that's the way they do it um ian hersey ali uh wrote um growing up in somalia
00:53:04.360 meant loyalty to kin was absolute loyalty to the nation was theoretical at best so if you don't
00:53:12.960 understand you're never going to be able to find all of the connections you won't understand why
00:53:18.060 it's connected this way and when you say it's the smallies you'll just say well that's racist no
00:53:23.440 because you're thinking of this in a western point of view or an american point of view
00:53:27.700 you can't understand what they're doing if you don't understand the country they came from and
00:53:33.460 they're not assimilating they are staying in their clans correct yeah i mean they're certainly not
00:53:41.120 assimilating like i i walk through these buildings and again i mean one landlord alone owns you know
00:53:46.940 buildings with 300 different medicaid businesses in it that build a quarter billion dollars that's
00:53:51.520 just one landlord in on one street and there's nobody there it's not like being in america when
00:53:57.660 you go there. And everybody there is clearly doing like cookie cutter schemes. Like they're
00:54:02.960 all doing the same thing and they're just doing it at massive scale. And they have like weird
00:54:07.680 signs on the door. Like the motto of one of these things was like steaming to assist,
00:54:12.560 steaming to assist. I don't know what that means. It's some sort of poor Somali translation,
00:54:16.780 but it didn't even have a doorknob on the door. So I know nobody was going into it.
00:54:20.860 But yeah, oftentimes there's evidence that they may put companies and put assets in other
00:54:28.920 people's names so that the individual is almost fungible within the Klan.
00:54:33.180 And so if you've got a bunch of assets that you don't want the government to see, you
00:54:36.300 may put it in one of your wife's names and maybe you're not actually officially married
00:54:40.580 in the US, partly because polygamy is illegal in the US.
00:54:43.980 Maybe you put it in your brother's name and your brother probably has a different last
00:54:47.060 name than you.
00:54:47.920 So that's going to be hard to track.
00:54:49.920 So they move assets around.
00:54:51.720 In my opinion, there's like essentially two sets of books.
00:54:54.440 And then it's also very hard for American authorities to track them because their names are so common.
00:55:01.680 And, you know, there's only a few variations of them.
00:55:04.580 And we don't even know birthdays for a lot of these people just shows up as January 1st.
00:55:09.460 So help me out on this.
00:55:12.640 You know, when I saw the fraud that was happening in Minneapolis, especially all that money that cash that was going through the airports,
00:55:18.500 there's no way the airports didn't know that there's no way the TSA didn't know that this
00:55:23.460 this and it was we now know it was pretty much a well-known secret this stuff was happening
00:55:28.400 and there were people that you know started to ring the bell and they were told by higher ups
00:55:32.780 just stay quiet and either those higher ups were part of it or they had tried to do something and
00:55:38.660 they saw people get destroyed and so they'll just just shut your mouth turn the other way
00:55:42.880 because it's almost like mob like it seems in minneapolis um was this just the fault that it
00:55:51.940 is so poorly managed or do you have any indication now that um people were turning a blind eye
00:55:59.780 um maybe they were initially gullible like um in minneapolis just minnesota nice trusting that
00:56:08.940 most Americans wouldn't demand to get paid for doing things that only a psychopath would bill
00:56:13.400 for. And that logic doesn't hold when you bring in hundreds of thousands of Somalis, because it
00:56:19.640 seems like in their culture, if something is available and you don't take it, it's almost
00:56:23.840 like you're losing money. Like you'd have to be a chump not to raid a treasury program if it's
00:56:29.000 available. And when I did finally find people who were in the offices and they weren't totally just
00:56:33.680 sketchy and vacant, that's what they would say. The answer to why would you demand to get paid
00:56:38.480 to hang out with your own family is because i can well i gotta tell you that is the problem in
00:56:44.880 america people are starting to feel that way i'm the only sucker here because i'm not i'm the only
00:56:49.120 one not doing it it seems to be legal nobody's getting punished why not i mean that's a real
00:56:55.360 problem um again i can't thank you enough uh for what you've done luke um where are you going next
00:57:02.120 um we've got stories coming out every day and probably into next week on this topic and we've
00:57:08.700 got one going up um right around now about a couple uh you know convicted fraudster that's
00:57:15.000 running a medicaid business million dollars and i have him you know on audio saying i was just too
00:57:21.100 dumb i don't know what the law is um his wife is like stabbing people and um so yeah check it out
00:57:27.040 on the daily wire and and and mike dewine republican governor of ohio says oh this is
00:57:31.960 all fine nothing to see here well i will tell you uh vivek uh will change things if he becomes the
00:57:39.960 next uh governor because he's not uh he's not a fan of all this kind of stuff and he will put the
00:57:46.760 systems in to stop it luke thank you so much appreciate it from the daily wire senior
00:57:50.860 investigative reporter read the story now the latest uh from luke rosiak
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