The Glenn Beck Program - July 08, 2019


Best of the Program | Guest: Pat Gray | 7⧸8⧸19


Episode Stats

Length

56 minutes

Words per Minute

152.87358

Word Count

8,629

Sentence Count

4

Misogynist Sentences

13

Hate Speech Sentences

20


Summary

In this week's episode of the Glenbeck Program, we look at what's happening in China, the cops that were kicked out of Starbucks, and the latest polls that show Donald Trump at his highest approval rating since he was elected.


Transcript

00:00:00.000 hey podcasters uh we're in new york city today we've got a great week of shows for you some
00:00:05.560 really really good guests uh tomorrow i think we have gavin mcginnis on we not michael rechtenwald
00:00:12.820 is also going to be on with us uh this week a lot of people are going to be on with us you don't
00:00:17.040 want to miss it today we started with what's happening in china there's there's the probably
00:00:22.300 like more like our boston tea party happened during our independence weekend in china we go
00:00:29.500 over that also the cops that were kicked out of starbucks the latest polls that show trump at his
00:00:35.740 highest approval rating we compare that to donald trump uh while he was uh not uh donald trump but
00:00:42.320 barack obama while he was in office also a look at some of the good things uh some of the things that
00:00:48.840 you know we say oh geez the price of a phone is so much it's so high well let me give you a perspective
00:00:55.600 on on that at the same time telling you why i think we don't have inflation now while everything
00:01:02.980 tells us we should we don't perhaps for this reason and how good america really has it today on the podcast
00:01:11.660 you're listening to the best of the glenbeck program
00:01:21.840 freedom freedom usually begins as a whisper freedom it's a secret pass between patrons at
00:01:41.880 a secluded bar or a private meeting maybe in a basement freedom no matter how hard the tyrants
00:01:50.360 may try to stop it no matter how many dams they throw up to try to contain it the whispers
00:01:57.280 usually become a flood and sometimes it takes longer to break through sometimes it'll take
00:02:05.340 millions of lives lost but it is the same every time liberty and freedom win it's like life
00:02:14.280 life has a way of staying alive it's an unstoppable force that knows no immovable object
00:02:24.940 now for us it was 243 years ago 12 score and three years ago to this month that those whispers
00:02:35.140 became a flood became a flood a group of colonialists on the world's only superpower they took on
00:02:42.060 that superpower and won our forefathers proved it freedom refuses to recognize tyranny as an
00:02:50.080 immovable object and the world was forever changed i can't help but see the poetic justice as more
00:02:58.620 whispers become a flood defying their own immovable object just three days before all of us were buying
00:03:06.100 fireworks to celebrate our independence day something was happening just off the coast of mainland china
00:03:12.900 last week in case you weren't paying attention a million protesters filled the streets in hong kong
00:03:19.060 literally a flood of humans looking for their freedom they stormed the government building that
00:03:26.820 is the equivalent of their congress they smashed windows broke down doors and then there was a photo
00:03:33.640 that was taken i don't know if you saw it but it should be the picture of the year it was a british
00:03:41.080 colonial flag a symbol thrown out when hong kong was given back to china but it was draped
00:03:48.540 by the protesters over the chair of the head of their government think of that think of a
00:03:57.520 think of an antifa flag over the chair of the white house how shocking that would be
00:04:05.840 this is a colonial flag the people of hong kong with a population that is over 90 percent ethnic
00:04:15.340 han chinese which is the right kind of chinese i hear they're saying to the mainland that they prefer
00:04:23.040 the colonial rule over the tyranny of the chinese government leftists will tell you now that communism
00:04:29.940 is a remedy for colonialism but for those living in the dark shadows of communism they actually
00:04:37.680 prefer colonial rule over what they now face think of that
00:04:43.660 when hong kong was given back to the mainland china agreed to allow them a few a few freedoms
00:04:53.240 that the rest of the chinese don't ever enjoy they're free to engage in protest against the government
00:04:59.240 they maintain a legislative body both of which are outlawed on the mainland but as every oppressor
00:05:08.760 always does china has been looking to reel that back in most recently china attempt to make it
00:05:18.500 possible to extradite the dissenters back to beijing that spooked everybody in hong kong
00:05:26.580 and the quiet whispers of freedom the secrets told in private at clandestine meetings became a flood
00:05:33.980 a flood of millions in the streets
00:05:37.360 so the night before we were lighting fireworks here the police began a count a crackdown
00:05:46.040 more than 13 people have been arrested so far 13 colonies 13 arrests
00:05:55.300 china if they eventually get their way those 13 people will no doubt be the first of many to be
00:06:03.900 extradited over to the mainland their crime is that they believe they should be free
00:06:10.460 as of right now their extradition has been temporarily delayed the local hong kong government is caught
00:06:19.040 between the immovable object of the chinese government communist government and the unstoppable force of
00:06:25.720 liberty but all we have to do is really look at history we'll see who wins in the end yesterday over
00:06:35.280 200 000 protesters gathered at a high-speed train station that links mainland china to hong kong
00:06:42.340 the message was just as clear as the british colonial flag hung inside of their legislative building
00:06:49.060 we had the gadston flag the phrase death to tyranny
00:06:54.920 china the message is simple we will not be ruled freedom knows no immovable object
00:07:02.060 news of the protest movement has been censored in mainland china but how long will they be able to
00:07:09.420 contain their own whispers with over 200 000 freedom lovers camped out on a bridge between
00:07:17.140 hong kong and mainland china how long before those whispers spread to secret meeting locations in
00:07:24.520 beijing or shanghai how long before that cascades to the christian and the muslim minorities that are
00:07:32.360 tired of being rounded up and thrown up into camps or is there digital security a new immovable object
00:07:45.880 we might have just witnessed the chinese version of the boston tea party
00:07:49.560 july 4th is still a long way away for them but as it does time and time again freedom and liberty
00:07:57.960 always win in the end the best of the glenn beck program
00:08:05.480 hey it's glenn and if you like what you hear on the program you should check out pat gray unleashed
00:08:17.040 his podcast is available wherever you download your favorite podcast gray hello pat glenn how are you
00:08:24.400 oh i'm almost perfect really yeah very close that's great because uh we were we have a lot of listeners
00:08:31.780 that were very concerned about your health last week i know it was really nice and yeah you know
00:08:36.420 thanks to everybody for their thoughts and prayers um the surgery went really well it it it uh helped a
00:08:42.180 lot helped a lot yeah fact is i need another two or three probably yeah so
00:08:46.820 you had uh four vertebrae fused together yeah i had uh and i'm not sure all the things he did but
00:08:53.860 he it was a disc discectomy and uh fusion yeah so okay they take out discs that are pinching nerves
00:09:00.660 and then they put in a plate and screws and jam it all down there somehow i don't know how that works
00:09:07.060 is it just me or you the luckiest luckiest man on the earth earth earth today i just thought i heard a
00:09:13.600 little echo there as you were talking about your oh your health health health health um so uh uh so
00:09:21.020 it's good to have you back pat and uh thank you and uh what how was your weekend your independence day
00:09:27.760 it was pretty quiet well until uh our entire uh church showed up we we hosted the ward uh fourth of
00:09:35.600 july party um and that was what five days after my surgery so it was really quiet until uh like
00:09:42.860 120 people showed up at my house oh yeah okay that's that's really nice you know there's nothing
00:09:48.000 better there's really nothing better than having 120 people show up to your house right after surgery
00:09:53.700 right exactly that's what i thought that's what i thought and that's what i told my wife this is
00:09:58.140 the best thing you could have done right now this is great i wouldn't have it any other way right my
00:10:05.820 wife was so pissed at me because we were leaving to go to new york on july 5th in the morning and uh
00:10:11.900 and i had suggested that you know maybe you know we have the family over and a couple of friends and
00:10:19.400 uh it didn't uh it didn't go well with my wife didn't go well i'll bet it didn't uh no she was
00:10:27.100 like uh okay and then and then what i could stay up all night and pack and i'm like well i guess i
00:10:33.060 mean if that's what you want to do it's up to you yeah it's up to you plan ahead a little bit yeah
00:10:37.660 so i was i went to uh so we're we're traveling to new york which is always delightful uh and uh and
00:10:45.420 we get we get to new york and i'm i'm here in new york for not kidding could not have been longer
00:10:52.580 than five minutes okay and this guy comes up and to me in the airport and he's like how come you're
00:10:59.700 supporting donald trump how could you possibly do that i'm like i think you i i i i i don't know if
00:11:08.820 you listen to the show but uh that's not usually the complaint i get right uh and uh yeah and uh
00:11:17.280 he said uh you're you're supporting a dictator and i said well thank you very much i appreciate
00:11:25.900 meeting you it's been very nice and uh he says he says you know eat crap he didn't use the word crap
00:11:34.420 and then he walked away and i and i thought okay he may be he may work for the board of tourism for
00:11:41.380 new york you know that may be the greeting that everybody gets uh when you when you land in new
00:11:47.300 york so it was wow you know it was very nice uh and um and then uh i'm i'm i'm taking my daughters
00:11:54.920 out because i i started a tradition as you know pat when they were very little uh i would take them to
00:12:02.200 a broadway show each of them uh and i would take them out uh on a father-daughter date and
00:12:08.900 uh guys don't be careful when you are starting traditions because they never end apparently uh
00:12:18.080 and uh so they they said to me when they were like six or seven that they wanted me to get all
00:12:24.480 dressed up and uh and wear a black tie and so i which is what people don't do anymore
00:12:30.960 what don't do anymore yeah uh i mean back in the 80s you when you went to a broadway show
00:12:36.820 you know you you could wear a black tie because there was on a friday or saturday night a lot of
00:12:41.800 people wore a black tie right uh going to a broadway show nobody does now okay if i i think as long as
00:12:48.460 you're wearing just underpants i think that's about enough yeah it seriously is when you see them
00:12:53.500 lined up outside the theater uh and we used to all the time it's it's like you're going to a cinema
00:12:58.980 it's not it's not a dress-up thing anymore yeah so it so it's not and so it's it's i feel very out
00:13:04.980 of place usually i'm asked you know where can you help me to my seat and i'm like no but i noticed
00:13:10.660 this year not even the ushers are wearing ties okay nobody is wearing a tie let alone a black tie
00:13:18.340 so saturday i went out with my my granddaughter because it somehow or another has now slipped
00:13:24.960 into the next generation wow that grandpa gets to do to do that and it was about oh i don't know
00:13:32.940 a thousand degrees a thousand percent humidity and uh and it smells delightful here and i just i kept
00:13:42.140 thinking to myself you know i love new york just doesn't say what's in my heart you know it's just
00:13:50.740 i don't know if you could print a t-shirt uh what's in my heart but it just doesn't really say it all
00:13:57.980 so uh gentlemen just uh just remember anything you start with your daughters you have to finish
00:14:06.380 and that ends at your death it's a happy thought yeah yeah thank you obviously you're enjoying it uh
00:14:15.800 loving it going into the second and third generation now yeah now so i have i have five nights that i
00:14:23.560 have to yeah i have i have uh cheyenne and and uh and hannah and lorelei and mary and then my wife
00:14:33.720 and then my daughter is performing at carnegie hall on friday oh wow and yeah who would have
00:14:40.700 who would have guessed that a beck is at carnegie hall but uh so i'm going to i'm going to uh to that
00:14:49.300 so every night i get to wear a tuxedo it just doesn't get does that have to remain part of the
00:14:58.220 tradition or couldn't you go in a pair of jeans i asked oh really i asked yeah i wouldn't then i got
00:15:05.200 the i got the oh oh um well i guess you could you wanted to completely ruin the night that's what you
00:15:14.600 want to do i mean oh okay well no dad it's not a problem okay well i mean i i just brought you know
00:15:23.820 i just brought with me like you know a really nice it doesn't really go with a suit okay well
00:15:29.100 it could have you seen have you seen everybody else dressed i mean you know they're not even wearing
00:15:37.300 shoes they're not wearing shoes anymore so and then we went to frozen which i can't take
00:15:46.420 the amount of diversity okay i just i can't take it i can't take it uh i mean it's it's one thing
00:15:56.660 to be colorblind and okay whatever but there's another thing about a story that happens in i don't
00:16:03.240 know scandinavia all right the king's not black in scandinavia especially if he has two very white
00:16:11.040 daughters it's just not happening why what is it with the with all the olaf was a girl
00:16:19.260 uh and yeah olaf was a girl the king was black uh there was something else that was
00:16:28.960 well doesn't think it was i think i think it was just that i kept thinking that they were going to
00:16:34.640 have what's her name that sings let it go come out you know because they're talking now about the
00:16:39.320 next movie that she's going to come out as gay as lesbian and i'm like i i just can't take it
00:16:47.160 i just can't take it so have they already established that if olaf is a girl because
00:16:52.980 isn't olaf the romantic interest of one of the two like girls right in the kingdom the two princesses
00:17:00.840 manic no olaf is a snowman oh okay i was thinking olaf who's who's the guy then the you know the
00:17:08.460 reindeer yeah the reindeer guy reindeer guy okay yeah the reindeer guy i don't remember it's been
00:17:13.480 a while since i've seen frozen yeah so yeah yeah he was black which made me think ah she's marrying her
00:17:20.040 dad you know all girls want to marry their dad so she's marrying her dad maybe that was it maybe that
00:17:26.640 was it i just it is amazing how far they they've bent over backward for in the in the in the name of
00:17:35.420 diversity it it has to be whether it works or not you know they have to change they have to change
00:17:41.360 everything no doesn't matter right and it really doesn't it really doesn't matter if you were
00:17:45.620 watching something else where you know it it wasn't set in scandinavia right why is it set in
00:17:53.740 scandinavia then with mary i went to see another show where they were doing the four tops and i don't
00:17:58.860 know the ojs or somebody on it it was the carol king show and they were all black and i was like
00:18:03.440 why isn't the lead singer white right or asian why no asians in this plane the four tops you can't
00:18:11.340 have an asian okay i get it racists this is the best of the glenn beck program
00:18:20.560 like listening to this podcast if you're not a subscriber become one now on itunes
00:18:35.940 and while you're there do us a favor and rate the show hey i have uh i've never done this before i
00:18:41.580 i don't think in i don't think ever uh where i have so badly botched a commercial i will feel
00:18:49.780 guilty the rest of the day if i don't correct this um uh tekovis is a is a new sponsor today i just did
00:19:00.460 their commercial and it was awful and uh it was because i was time pressed and it was it was new and
00:19:07.460 i like to spend more time with a new uh sponsor this is a uh a boot company but it's better than
00:19:14.900 a boot company it makes jeans it makes belts leather wear wallets everything they are based
00:19:22.020 in texas and it's a it's a couple of guys that started this that were like just like me and i think
00:19:27.700 pat when you got down here i mean boots are so expensive yeah and if i mean i don't know who wears
00:19:35.620 the two thousand dollar boots i guess you know they can go up to ten oh i know they can yeah i
00:19:40.620 know they can or more uh and and they you know who wears those i don't know where you wear them or i
00:19:46.600 mean getting outside of the limousine i don't know where you you would wear those but people do wear
00:19:53.760 them in texas but the average person you're either buying really bad stuff or you're uh you know or
00:20:01.280 you're you're having to be you know forced into something that you just can't afford
00:20:06.340 these people make really good handmade boots and i just wanted to apologize to them for such a
00:20:13.440 horrible commercial and welcome them to the family i wear their jeans i wear their boots i think
00:20:19.660 i'm wearing their belt today um and this is a client that i wanted on the air because i think
00:20:27.780 they're really really good again started by two guys who just think americans can do really great
00:20:33.780 quality and find ways to make it affordable uh for everybody so it's t-e-c-o-v-a-s
00:20:45.840 to covas.com slash back all right pat the question that i have to ask that i think the new york times
00:20:54.920 is really is is is really reflecting most americans when they ask this question do americans need air
00:21:05.100 conditioning
00:21:05.640 uh if they want to survive yeah uh if if you live in texas you know the answer to that question
00:21:14.920 you live anywhere in the south there's a reason why the south was sparsely populated for a long time
00:21:22.380 right uh because there was no air conditioning eight people lived in houston texas until about
00:21:27.440 1956 yeah nobody did nobody did you wouldn't i was i was um uh out this uh summer in texas where
00:21:36.580 was i and i was only outside for maybe an hour and a half and i was who lived here yeah nobody lived
00:21:44.320 here it's not and it was the same way pretty much all over the south i grew up in the pacific northwest
00:21:50.320 and i got news for you pacific northwest we could have done without air conditioning i did my whole
00:21:56.320 life growing up and yes there were a few sleepless nights where you needed a fan uh in the summertime
00:22:02.540 uh that were really toss and turn that you could have used air conditioning for for the most part
00:22:08.080 you open a window they're not even flies in the pacific northwest for the love of pete
00:22:12.580 like that in montana too nobody has air conditioning in montana nobody has it nobody
00:22:17.240 now in new york it's a different story and that's you know that's pretty far north too but you get
00:22:22.540 those hot humid days you can't do without air conditioning even in new york so it's not just
00:22:26.980 a southern thing but if you i mean if you live in iceland yeah you're gonna say okay yeah i don't i
00:22:32.900 don't need air conditioning and try africa right try africa okay so but the new york times would like to
00:22:41.840 say on an overheated planet oh jeez air conditioning becomes more and more desirable
00:22:48.240 solving the short-term problem it's helped create so air conditioning is the reason why the planet is
00:22:56.540 getting hotter and the more we use air conditioning the hotter it's going to get um fire they say made
00:23:05.340 as human but does air conditioning make us less so uh no no no makes us much more so yeah i can
00:23:14.640 control both environments are you kidding me didn't that say something about a species yeah i don't
00:23:19.960 think monkeys control the environment i don't think so i know i'm trying to check out the lion who was
00:23:25.460 like hey i gotta call the air conditioning guy i'm wearing this fur coat around my neck the whole time
00:23:30.900 and i'm boiling up i need to call the air conditioning lion now they go on think about
00:23:37.700 the term air conditioning okay says the culture critic at the boston globe who suffers at work
00:23:44.720 and does without at home do you really want to condition your air yes yes i do your skin maybe or your
00:23:53.860 hair i'm a vegetarian but i didn't become one for any specific reason it just happened but there are all
00:23:59.840 sorts of ex post facto good reasons for not eating meat same with ac if you just modify your actions
00:24:08.380 it's good for the planet it's good for everyone oh shut up
00:24:14.100 there's you know what there is no good reason to get rid of air conditioning i i was just last night we
00:24:22.780 were in chinatown whoo have you smelled chinatown in the summer in new york you get the nice lovely
00:24:31.920 urine vomit you know uh smell coming up from the subway nice right into the dead stinky fish
00:24:40.280 dinner bell is ringing now oh yeah yeah no it was i mean i could have i could have been confused uh for a
00:24:52.060 bulimic yesterday i was so close to barfing the whole time i was in uh but i managed to get through
00:24:57.720 it by going into a nice air-conditioned restaurant and eating stuff that didn't smell like it was rotting
00:25:05.900 next to a bunch of people who didn't smell like bad bo no i don't want to live that way
00:25:12.920 we you know we we got we we've made progress the new york times would like to uh let us know that
00:25:22.920 over cooling is using conventional ac uh to its extreme and it's like extreme dieting removing calories
00:25:33.800 without improving nutrition one ends up installing heaters in the summer in office spaces
00:25:40.980 that do not enable local temperature control the quintessential sugar rush air conditioning listen
00:25:47.940 to this air conditioning demystifies nature's miracles what what what is one of nature's miracles
00:25:56.020 that it's boiling hot outside that's not a nature miracle i'm not mystified by it it's summer
00:26:02.420 it's summer i live in a part that's closest to the equator which is then getting directly
00:26:10.020 the direct sunlight from the sun that big flaming nuclear explosion in the sky i don't know how
00:26:18.980 mystical it really is it contributes to a culture characterized by disconnection and over consumption
00:26:26.760 what are we just disconnected from what the heat disconnected from from smelly people yes
00:26:37.360 there's an off-sided study published in nature.com that notes how building temperatures once set to
00:26:44.880 comfort preferences of the 1960s era men in suits disregard the thermal comfort of the female staffers
00:26:54.160 oh quote air conditioning is sexist an engine of the patriarchy this is the freaking new york times
00:27:06.720 building temperatures are largely controlled by building managers to industry standards that aim for the
00:27:13.840 thermal comfort of 80 percent of a building's occupant which means of course that 20 percent will
00:27:19.200 be uncomfortable if not miserable those standards are updated regularly by the american society of
00:27:25.760 heating refrigerating and air conditioning engineers which suggests that a building building
00:27:30.320 range range range from 67 to 82 degrees fahrenheit what building except your mother's or your
00:27:38.640 grandparents house is at 82 degrees
00:27:44.640 i mean that's a nursing home yeah that's the only place is a nursing my my father-in-law comes down and
00:27:51.280 he's had a stroke and he's got i don't know thin blood or what i don't know what it is but he comes down he's
00:27:58.480 literally wearing a sweater and a jacket outside in dallas in the summer he can't come and visit us
00:28:08.000 anymore i told tanya he's got to stay at a hotel so he's got to stay or he can just live in a tent
00:28:12.640 outside and we can put some hot coals on the floor for him too but he keeps it like at 85 degrees it's
00:28:19.600 miserable many offices including those in the new york times set their thermostats to 74 to 76 degrees
00:28:28.080 which you would think would feel balmy yet other the yet the other day my colleagues
00:28:34.480 were shivering in sweatshirts and sweaters okay what between 74 and 76 degrees they're shivering in
00:28:43.200 sweatshirts and sweaters my colleagues probably about 20 of them were shivering oh kind of like
00:28:53.440 what the industry standard is that it's set for 80 meaning that 20 are going to be uncomfortable
00:29:01.280 in some cases even miserable what are you talking about you're within the norm new york times
00:29:10.560 but i guess suffering suffering self-imposed suffering in my life because i'm a lapsed catholic
00:29:18.320 and an irishman so i need a certain degree of self-imposed suffering in my life and i guess
00:29:25.120 this air conditioning this air conditioning is just one qualifies as suffering oh my god pathetic
00:29:36.640 they are they are they are right in step oh yeah american people do you remember how they made fun of
00:29:44.000 jimmy carter when he said you know about sweaters you just have to wear a sweater just set your air
00:29:48.320 conditioner a little lower and wear a sweater in the yeah in the winter yeah they're the we're back to
00:29:53.440 this yeah that's when we were being blamed for the energy crisis yes now we're being blamed for global
00:29:59.120 warming and it's the same message have less do less don't have i am currently sitting in a studio in
00:30:07.520 manhattan that is 62 degrees and i'm loving every second of it and if there's somewhere on earth a panda
00:30:15.840 going oh it's too hot well sucks to be a panda i like it 62 degrees in the summer
00:30:29.120 you're listening to the best of the glenn beck program
00:30:32.400 let's start with uh starbucks starbucks uh if you remember right they took the side of
00:30:51.760 two people uh that were staying at the starbucks sitting at the table and not ordering anything
00:31:01.920 and it was crowded and if you're if i remember right uh they said you have to order they said no
00:31:10.640 so the the manager called police police came removed them because then they started getting hostile
00:31:16.800 and then starbucks turned against the police who they called right right yep now they've done it
00:31:24.720 again in arizona yeah according some tempe police officers were forced to uh pick up their coffee cups
00:31:33.120 and get out of the restaurant because uh one person in the starbucks went to an employee and said i i don't
00:31:40.960 feel safe i don't feel safe because there's police officers in here i mean wouldn't the natural
00:31:47.520 reaction would yeah wouldn't that be your natural reaction are you wanted by the law what's your
00:31:51.360 problem quite honestly unless you're mentally ill well that could be yes okay yes you're mentally
00:31:59.680 barring that though you've got no business doing this if if you are if you are living in uh i don't know
00:32:07.760 uh you know some southern town that just has not gotten past 1956 and you're black but or you're
00:32:17.920 white and you like black people yeah you know what i mean that's not tempe that's not tempe no so you
00:32:24.800 you have to be so delusional and suffering from some sort of mental illness to think that you're
00:32:30.960 unsafe with the cops in a public place that doesn't make any sense and you know it's just the hysteria
00:32:36.880 of guns they probably see the the guns that the officers have uh in their holsters and they freak
00:32:43.280 out do you think so i think it could just as easily be just just just the badge or it might be just the
00:32:49.680 badge there i mean we've made police officers into such bad guys especially on tempe isn't that where
00:32:57.120 the uh university is located one of them it is yeah so it's got i bet it's a university student
00:33:02.560 that's just like could well be this isn't a safe space yes and so you're throwing police officers
00:33:12.000 out because the customers don't feel safe uh all right well then when the place gets held up
00:33:18.640 and or somebody comes in and starts shooting then what do you do well we don't have police officers
00:33:24.160 in here because we won't feel safe well police officers will be what police officers are and they
00:33:30.320 will every time yes they will time yes for me i would have a very hard time i would really i mean i
00:33:36.080 would not be a good police officer i wouldn't either good luck because there would come a time to where
00:33:41.600 i'd be like shut up right just shut up uh and uh one out of 12 one out of 12 a 211 in progress in
00:33:52.720 tempe and no i'm not doing it call one adam 13 because 12 ain't answering this call i would really
00:34:03.120 that's how you would feel that's how i would feel and i do you know it's amazing police don't do that
00:34:08.560 especially because they're risking their lives when you need them you love them you remember how we all
00:34:15.920 felt about every single police officer in the country after 9 11 we couldn't get enough of these
00:34:23.920 guys we loved them now these same guys who showed us that when the going gets tough they run in the
00:34:32.720 building while we're running out of the building now those guys oh they're just oppressors they're
00:34:39.120 horrible this is ridiculous it's just ridiculous it is we've taken we've taken and blown everything
00:34:48.480 out of proportion we have taken every good quality and assigned it to one group of people and every
00:34:55.680 bad quality and assigned it to another group of people this is this is what gets people killed this
00:35:01.920 is what happens with racism or uh or classism that you start to put everybody into the same category
00:35:10.880 well they're not there's some really good rich people there's some really good white people
00:35:15.200 there are some really good black people there are some really good poor people there are some really
00:35:19.600 good chinese people some really bad chinese people what are you talking about there's there's
00:35:25.680 everything because we're all human and when it all comes down to it all of us are going to the same
00:35:35.200 place well not all of us are going to the same place if you believe in hell i don't happen to believe in
00:35:39.600 hell but if you believe in hell it does make you feel good that not everybody's going to the same place
00:35:45.200 anyway uh uh uh uh the the idea that we somehow or another are different from each
00:35:55.440 other when i mean as a group is ridiculous because they make us all exactly the same as a group and
00:36:05.840 yet they're at the same time telling us to celebrate our differences well wait a minute i thought we were
00:36:10.880 all the same as a group how does this even work none of this even makes sense anymore you used to be
00:36:18.560 able to have it make some sort of sense it doesn't it doesn't make sense
00:36:25.440 maybe it's just me i don't i don't think so my uh it's it's 2019 that's kind of where we wind up
00:36:36.720 every day on my show is it's 2019 the things that that are everyday occurrences now i couldn't have
00:36:45.840 envisioned five years ago and i remember five years ago thinking well we've come a long way down the wrong road
00:36:53.440 road and look how much further we've traveled down that road than we were five years ago and it it
00:36:58.960 gets worse every day it just keeps compiling uh it's nuts have you read and i know i've talked about
00:37:06.720 this for a long time but you were glad when you read garden of the beasts if i remember right yes
00:37:11.760 you read it you were you were happy you did yes you have to read uh
00:37:17.200 uh shoot it's not avoiding hitler defying hitler defying hitler it is pat i'm telling you you will
00:37:28.240 read it and you will see the exact pattern you know our museum was all about patterns yeah and the only
00:37:36.080 reason to look at history is to recognize it for the patterns and say okay here's how it happened last
00:37:42.960 time are we making any of those mistakes okay when you look at uh this book called defying hitler and
00:37:50.640 it just stops at the end it doesn't have a it doesn't have a satisfying ending because it was
00:37:56.320 just a it was a manuscript or almost a diary is this written in 1939 yes and not published not published
00:38:03.760 until 2000 yes okay uh-huh yeah and it was written in germany by a guy who uh became one of the leading
00:38:11.920 authors uh and authorities on on hitler he wrote the uh the quintessential uh biography on hitler and so
00:38:22.320 he came to the united states in 1939 he didn't think he was going to be able to get out of there
00:38:29.040 but he starts at just before world war one and he shows how society had changed and he started
00:38:37.840 writing it in the 30s because he saw hitler come to power and he's he's writing a letter of warning
00:38:45.920 to the west and saying look you guys don't understand what's happening in germany and how the german
00:38:52.640 people are seeing this they're not who you think they are anymore because of what's happened over the
00:39:00.400 last 20 years now we're 20 years after 9 11 and when you read that book just make world war one our
00:39:08.400 9 11 and you will see the exact same pattern it's pretty chilling it's chilling it's chilling you wow
00:39:18.320 when i read this i i think i highlighted almost every page because i would read a page and i'd be like
00:39:23.120 oh my gosh the way he talks about people because he again he's writing it like a diary he's writing
00:39:31.200 it almost real time and he said you know my friends who we were close to just a year ago now we can't
00:39:41.360 talk to each other now uh they'll call me a racist they'll call me uh you know a communist they'll call
00:39:49.600 me all of these names and you read it it's exactly the same exactly the same and the again the only
00:39:59.120 reason to learn history is to make sure you don't create the same conditions in the same pattern and
00:40:06.160 repeat the pattern otherwise you're going to cut out the same exact figure this is this is an important
00:40:12.480 book for every american to read uh because it will show you we are going down the wrong path
00:40:19.360 like crazy and we'll get to an actual nazi lover and aoc her love for this nazi lover hey uh pat
00:40:30.080 you know can can you tell me what do you know about evita uh that she was a uh fascist
00:40:39.520 right she was a fascist lover and uh she was a fan of the nazis uh but also a fan of the people
00:40:46.640 i mean she was all all about the people the the suffering she was people and knew that you know
00:40:53.120 wealth was only in the in the hands of a small fraction a tiny little fraction of the people of
00:40:58.960 argentina right and she wanted to fix that she wanted to well and she did it was in even a smaller
00:41:06.960 fraction it was all in her hands in the end yes um but uh aoc tweeted this weekend quote
00:41:15.040 i had watched for many years and seen how a few rich families held much of argentina's wealth and
00:41:21.360 power in their hands so the government brought in an eight-hour work day sickness pay and fair
00:41:28.080 wages to give poor workers a fair go end quote i mean how do you not know who this is i mean i don't know
00:41:39.520 hitler said stuff like this be like yeah yeah saying i'm going to build a road that has no speed
00:41:47.200 limit it's going to be called the autobahn and i'm going to start building some great cars called a
00:41:52.560 volkswagen adolf hitler hello
00:42:00.960 if you tweeted that out it would be fascinating to see the deluge afterwards but for her fans they
00:42:09.120 don't care because you know i think they're as ignorant as she is they don't they don't know who
00:42:12.720 eva perone is they don't know what she stood for uh and and i you know i i don't know that aoc
00:42:20.560 knows much of anything really she's she's pretty butt stupid and so it doesn't surprise me to see her
00:42:28.480 tweet out quotes that seemingly she agrees with eva perone okay so wait a minute it is eva i'm
00:42:36.160 looking at the deal or they called her eva too they did yeah it was yeah it's it's pretty much
00:42:42.720 both terms okay both names all right i like to call her just fascist yeah that works so you know
00:42:49.280 she was she went over to germany you know uh right around the war if not in the war and uh you know
00:42:56.640 now she's hobnobbing with uh the um uh the the nazis and and you know there's a reason you know
00:43:04.480 argentina ended up being a place where there was a lot of nazis towards the end uh you know she made
00:43:13.920 a very very safe place for it but she went over uh to you know tour and uh see all of the greatest
00:43:21.520 dictators of her time um uh during the during the war and she also made a quick stop at a bank in
00:43:30.560 in switzerland uh and they were the the the rumor is is that she went over there and she just loaded
00:43:38.400 that swiss bank account with all kinds of uh well the people's money let's just say that all kinds of
00:43:45.440 cash from the people but she was only saving it i'm sure yeah for the little people for yeah for
00:43:50.880 the little people that she was so concerned about you know that's what she was doing right well they'll
00:43:55.920 say that she was great for women's suffrage and she was great for the poor can we can we just can we
00:44:02.320 just point out that when we point out that the founders did a lot of good stuff including fighting
00:44:10.560 against slavery no you can't they were horrible human beings but they can take they could take
00:44:18.480 even prone they can take uh uh uh margaret sanger yep and they can say yep those people are horrible
00:44:27.520 individuals all they do is horrible individuals yeah it's it's a nice double standard if you can get
00:44:34.960 away with it it's uh it's great because these are terrible people and it's amazing that that they
00:44:45.040 get away with praising them and that suffer no consequences i mean you can't even say biden
00:44:50.320 couldn't even say something that he ate dinner with two segregationists and and get away with it uh
00:44:57.280 and he's been persecuted ever since he will again if he's made the nominee yeah he will then oh yeah
00:45:02.880 then it'll be fine then it'll be totally fine yep totally fine i'm convinced we you know we haven't
00:45:08.560 talked about uh uh uh the um uh the sex what's his name epstein oh yeah we haven't talked about him
00:45:17.600 yet we have to because i'm convinced this is about donald trump they haven't made it about him yet i mean
00:45:25.680 some have because trump made a statement a few years ago about uh you know how he likes the ladies how
00:45:32.880 this guy likes the ladies and he was a friend and i i really think this is about donald trump
00:45:40.240 i i wonder if this guy this guy should go to jail he's re it's really a horrible story
00:45:46.880 um but i i wonder if it's not a story today just for the setup of you know an october surprise for the
00:45:56.960 election this is the best of the glenn beck program
00:46:09.600 so on saturday um there was a plane that landed here in new york and it had jeffrey epstein in it
00:46:22.800 uh and the police arrested him and he has been in jail he was um taken to new york's public
00:46:32.080 corruption unit um and they were assisted by investigators of the sex trafficking division
00:46:38.960 the case uh is still undisclosed there are indications that others are involved in his
00:46:46.400 crimes and they are going to be charged or named as cooperating witnesses uh this guy is
00:46:54.960 this guy seems to be a real dirt bag um this is this is kind of like um uh what's his name from hollywood uh
00:47:06.480 weinstein yeah we're weinstein where everybody kind of knew this but nobody ever said it out loud
00:47:12.800 um everybody in these circles have have thought that he was a dirt bag for a long time good friends
00:47:21.360 with bill and hillary clinton uh bill clinton would go down to a democrat donor yeah huge democratic donor
00:47:28.640 uh and bill clinton would go down to his uh private island in the virgin islands and this is where a lot
00:47:35.760 of this stuff apparently happened where he actually kept sex slaves um and they would go
00:47:42.560 down and have their way with these women and rape them and then go home on his private jet yeah and
00:47:48.480 in some cases they weren't women they were underage girls uh which makes this story even more sickening
00:47:55.680 uh he apparently and this according to uh an article done by what was it like maybe it might have even
00:48:04.560 been vanity fair they quoted donald trump saying yeah he likes he likes uh he likes his women and he likes
00:48:11.920 them young uh and they printed that um and now they're using that against donald trump donald trump
00:48:18.160 was neighbors with him down by mar-a-lago the picture they have of of donald trump and epstein is
00:48:26.160 one with marla and not marla um oh the first lady melania melania yeah yeah i was seeing a marla maples uh but
00:48:37.200 melania um and it was taken back in the 1980s um so they've known each other for a long time but again
00:48:47.280 even the new york times is saying that the they were really close with the clintons and he was
00:48:54.960 a very large democratic uh donor so they're going to try to make this i think all about donald trump
00:49:01.440 i think you're exactly right on that uh i'm i was just reading uh an article on this and it it's
00:49:07.520 talking about epstein a multi-millionaire hedge fund manager who has powerful political connections
00:49:12.240 that include and you would assume the first person they mentioned would be bill clinton because that's
00:49:17.440 who's been associated with him for years now and clinton flew on his jet with him to the private island
00:49:23.440 and there's speculation that he was involved in some of these parties with young women but no the
00:49:28.320 first person they include is president donald trump uh amazing that's amazing now the miami herald
00:49:35.440 is the one that is really has done all of the work on this and they would not let it go and i think that
00:49:42.720 is uh i think that's commendable but i want you to listen to uh what they say about uh donald trump
00:49:53.040 they talk about how uh he has been with many many famous people blah blah blah um
00:50:03.120 they say the epstein case drew scrutiny following an investigation published in november by the miami
00:50:09.520 herald called perversion of justice that examined the ways in which the u.s attorney for the southern
00:50:15.360 district of florida alexander acosta worked in conjunction with epstein's lawyers to engineer the
00:50:20.800 non-prosecution agreement and to keep it secret from epstein's victims so they could not object
00:50:26.480 acosta is now president trump's secretary of labor so that's how they're going to get
00:50:32.320 into donald trump because they don't have anything really on donald trump on this that we know of
00:50:39.040 they do bring up uh the friendship with bill and hillary clinton because that's something that we've
00:50:44.560 known for a very long time that uh bill and and uh and robert epstein would would you know go on trips
00:50:54.240 to the private island uh from uh from time to time there's no information of donald trump being involved
00:51:00.480 in any of that it looks like they're just going to go after see look he hired this guy who was doing
00:51:05.520 shady things down in uh down in florida and i think that's uh that's really what where this thing is
00:51:14.240 going to end up in about a year from now now some of the people that are either going to be prosecuted
00:51:19.680 or used as cooperating witnesses one of them is this uh this woman named maxwell she's almost 60 years old
00:51:29.040 she's a british socialite uh she was a uh a woman working for epstein apparently as the madam
00:51:38.720 and according to uh court records she was partners in this international modeling company
00:51:47.040 and what the what the the scam was is she would approach these young girls and say hey do you want to
00:51:54.320 be um in a in a modeling company we can help find jobs you're beautiful blah blah blah i want you to
00:52:01.040 come to this modeling class and assignment uh and we're going to help launch your your modeling and
00:52:07.280 fashion career and give you all kinds of educational opportunities and then they would be flown down and
00:52:14.000 then someone would say if you don't have sex with him and all of his buddies he's going to destroy
00:52:20.480 your modeling career you won't have a chance at anything because do you know who he is i mean he's
00:52:26.080 in there with the former president of the united states bill clinton you can't say no to these people
00:52:31.040 they'll destroy you and then they had them that's that's in a nutshell what they think uh is going on
00:52:39.360 if she turns because she's going to face prison uh for a very long time if they have evidence against
00:52:45.280 her they think that she's going to be named as a cooperating witness uh and uh and if she is
00:52:52.960 cooperating and admits to all this all i mean he'll go to jail for the rest of his life and others
00:52:59.200 may also go to jail for the rest of their life which would be a very very good thing
00:53:06.160 as long as it's honest i don't think they've even scratched the surface of who's been involved with
00:53:10.720 this either i you know i think there's going to be a lot of people that are probably pretty nervous
00:53:16.240 right now because he got rearrested they they were probably thinking this was over they settled this
00:53:21.440 case he paid off a bunch of people now i'm i'm i'm in the clear and now he's been arrested again
00:53:27.360 so yeah they're going to get caught i think this was the biggest travesty of justice i've seen in
00:53:32.640 long time in a long long time i mean i can't think of a another well oj simpson comes to mind
00:53:38.720 but this one was corrupt from the get-go i mean uh the guy who's working for trump now should be
00:53:45.040 investigated uh not because of any connections with trump but because this was just dirty it was
00:53:50.960 clearly dirty the police you know that were involved so they've never seen anything like this before
00:53:57.280 it was this shady deal that was supposed to keep him out of court for all of all of the sex stuff
00:54:05.520 so i don't know he's supposed to go to a judge today and they're saying that uh he may not leave
00:54:11.360 jail he may not be able to post bail because he's considered a flight risk and i would imagine a guy
00:54:17.280 with that kind of money yeah a billionaire i mean he is a risk that is a total flight i mean there's
00:54:23.360 that is the definition of a flight risk uh that guy could board a plane in the middle of the night
00:54:29.040 especially with all of his political connections and i mean if he really does have connections to
00:54:33.680 the royal uh the royal family and bill clinton and and and people in the trump administration the guy
00:54:41.360 could um get out of the united states probably fairly easy so we'll see we'll bring an update on this uh
00:54:49.280 tomorrow after we find out exactly what is happening also are we headed for the end of the world
00:54:57.280 oh my gosh i read this review of this book that talks about the end of the world and what's bringing
00:55:05.200 it apart and pat do you remember what they said about the overton window oh yeah you remember the
00:55:11.440 review and and agenda 21 it was just all this conspiracy theory okay and it was just nothing it wasn't a
00:55:20.080 novel it was glenn beck's conspiracy theories even though all of our stuff in those were
00:55:26.800 footnoted so you knew exactly what was real and what wasn't i mean you read the eye of moloch
00:55:32.640 well that's pretty much that's pretty much the nsa and google that's what that book was about before
00:55:39.760 that book uh knew what they were going to be called this one the wanderers they're headed toward the end of
00:55:47.840 the world i want to share some of this because it seems so plausible and it's definitely really
00:55:55.760 definitely yes definitely not a conspiracy theorist uh book or really anything that was politically
00:56:03.680 motivated at all just people calling it like it is that's all that's what it is calling it like it is
00:56:11.600 okay good pat it's fiction sure it's fiction you can't you can't persecute them for fiction
00:56:18.640 why would you of course not the blaze radio network
00:56:25.680 on demand