The Glenn Beck Program - June 30, 2023


Best of the Program | Guest: State Sen. Tammy Nichols | 6⧸30⧸23


Episode Stats

Length

39 minutes

Words per Minute

153.31819

Word Count

6,076

Sentence Count

530

Misogynist Sentences

16

Hate Speech Sentences

22


Summary

Today on the Glenn Beck Program, Glenn talks about the Supreme Court's ruling in the Black Lives Matter case, and why the left is so upset about it. He also talks about Margaret Sanger and why she thinks blacks should be wiped off the face of the earth.


Transcript

00:00:00.000 Hey, make sure to check out the pilot episode of my brand new podcast, Honest History.
00:00:06.060 The episode's titled, Control Freaks, The Scientific Roots of Progressive Tyranny.
00:00:12.240 It's available right now wherever you get your podcasts.
00:00:14.900 Great podcast today.
00:00:16.640 We have a huge announcement from John Irwin, who is part of Angel Studios,
00:00:22.960 on something that I think you're really going to like.
00:00:26.120 A new series is being launched, is launched on today's show, about the founders.
00:00:33.400 You're going to love that.
00:00:35.060 Also, we go through the court cases from the Supreme Court this week and so much more all on the podcast,
00:00:41.480 which begins after this quick message for Jace Medical.
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00:01:10.560 My son needed antibiotics.
00:01:12.080 I needed the antibiotic.
00:01:13.020 And then when we got home, we checked with the doctor, and we were already past whatever it was that we had.
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00:01:57.400 Jace Medical.com.
00:02:01.500 You're listening to The Best of the Glenn Beck Program.
00:02:13.020 So, Pat, affirmative action yesterday.
00:02:19.460 If I know my history, and I'm pretty good at it, and I know what Martin Luther King was all about,
00:02:29.900 yesterday would have been a very, very good day.
00:02:34.060 Yes.
00:02:34.560 But apparently the left is upset.
00:02:37.260 Very.
00:02:38.180 Let me read you this tweet from Erica Marsh.
00:02:42.020 She tweeted out...
00:02:42.800 Oh, boy.
00:02:43.160 It's not from a racist, is it?
00:02:44.740 Oh, no.
00:02:45.900 This is a...
00:02:46.800 Okay.
00:02:47.240 This is a person who supports people of color, Glenn.
00:02:50.860 Okay.
00:02:51.380 Okay.
00:02:51.720 Good.
00:02:51.940 Good.
00:02:52.240 She tweeted, today's Supreme Court decision is a direct attack on black people.
00:02:58.720 No black person will be able to succeed in a merit-based system, which is exactly why
00:03:05.020 affirmative action-based programs were needed.
00:03:08.760 Today's decision is a travesty.
00:03:11.940 No black person will be able to succeed in a merit-based system?
00:03:16.980 Well, how?
00:03:20.200 Wow.
00:03:20.740 What a racist.
00:03:21.600 I think blood is coming out of my eyes.
00:03:24.000 Did you see the James Bond movie with the guy in Casino Royale?
00:03:28.920 He kept had...
00:03:29.980 He would...
00:03:30.420 Oh, yeah.
00:03:30.880 When he'd get really upset, the blood would come out of his tear ducts.
00:03:33.480 It's actually shooting out of my eyes.
00:03:35.900 That seems a little racist.
00:03:41.700 Yeah.
00:03:42.200 To say that...
00:03:43.200 A little.
00:03:43.820 No black person could get into college on merit.
00:03:51.000 Is that amazing?
00:03:52.100 Seems...
00:03:52.520 You know what it seems like?
00:03:54.120 It seems almost like the early American, very 20th century early American progressive
00:04:01.340 that thought that blacks were kind of subhuman and really were really somebody that we should
00:04:10.100 dispose of because they're useless, which is why...
00:04:13.660 Kind of sounds like that.
00:04:14.540 Which is why Margaret Sanger, who was one of those progressives, came up with a great idea
00:04:20.420 of Planned Parenthood so that they could eliminate the undesirables before they were even born.
00:04:26.800 And we don't have to worry about it.
00:04:28.180 I'll tell you, you're only saying that because of the writings of Margaret Sanger where she
00:04:35.400 said, don't tell the black pastors that we're trying to get rid of all blacks.
00:04:41.560 Right.
00:04:42.380 That's the only reason I'm saying it.
00:04:43.680 I'm only saying it because it's true.
00:04:47.260 So...
00:04:47.340 Right.
00:04:47.820 You know, I know that's my fault.
00:04:50.860 I apologize for that.
00:04:53.580 I'm sorry.
00:04:54.640 America's not used to hearing truth anymore.
00:04:57.380 And we're sorry to break it to you.
00:04:59.000 But that's some of the things that we have for you.
00:05:01.380 By the way, I just did a podcast on what's called the Red Pill Room that is part of the
00:05:09.420 tour here for history.
00:05:12.260 We have millions and millions, tens of millions of dollars worth of American artifacts.
00:05:16.580 And I love it when people say, you know, you're just, you're just, you're just trying to make the Republicans look good.
00:05:25.820 No.
00:05:28.900 We start the Red Pill Room with Theodore Roosevelt.
00:05:31.820 And he was a Republican and a progressive.
00:05:35.900 And he thought, you know, we don't take our cattle and just let them breed with any other cow.
00:05:45.440 We decide who they can breed with.
00:05:48.600 And that's what we should do with humans.
00:05:51.360 In fact, we didn't have a blood test.
00:05:53.160 We didn't have a marriage license until that kind of thinking happened.
00:05:58.120 And origin of the species, which said there are subhumans, people that aren't fully baked.
00:06:04.660 And it was codified.
00:06:06.380 But follow the science.
00:06:08.500 Follow the science.
00:06:09.360 This is exactly the kind of thinking.
00:06:14.260 And we're returning to it.
00:06:15.640 And the people who say, therefore, civil rights, you know, I swear to you, I've got to do this.
00:06:22.400 I just don't have any time.
00:06:24.600 But I'm telling you, my gut screams this to me, that the Great Society, you can't take Johnson,
00:06:34.180 who was the guy who stopped the Civil Rights Act in 1959, and then by 1964, have him the champion of civil rights.
00:06:46.420 It makes no sense.
00:06:47.620 The guy was an extraordinary racist till the day he dropped dead.
00:06:52.620 And all of the, everything that was done in Great Society crippled the black family and the black man.
00:07:01.060 Crippled it.
00:07:01.820 Broke the family up.
00:07:02.940 But black families had a better record of staying together in 1963 than white families did.
00:07:11.140 By a lot.
00:07:11.680 Now look at it.
00:07:12.760 By a lot.
00:07:15.040 I'm telling you.
00:07:16.240 It turned around almost exactly because it was, I think, 80 or 85 percent of black families had the father in the home.
00:07:25.040 Now it's 73 percent don't.
00:07:28.900 So it's an amazing turnaround.
00:07:31.940 And why?
00:07:32.460 And why?
00:07:33.260 And why?
00:07:33.660 It was because the Great Society rewarded families that didn't have a father.
00:07:40.960 So it encouraged fathers to leave the home.
00:07:44.560 Black fathers.
00:07:46.260 These people, I really, truly believe.
00:07:49.160 They didn't change their spot.
00:07:50.500 How do you go from, we want to kill all black people to, hey, let's help them out in four years.
00:07:59.080 And then every single one of your policies cripples people that are black, cripples them, enslaves them.
00:08:08.320 And then you come out and say some of the most racist stuff I've heard to date.
00:08:14.500 You know, blacks will never amount to anything unless we let them in without merit.
00:08:23.120 Oh, my gosh.
00:08:24.320 Oh, my gosh.
00:08:25.420 Yeah.
00:08:25.920 And did you see the ratios at Harvard?
00:08:29.380 Harvard, for instance, is just one of the schools that have these ratios.
00:08:33.300 But the admittance rate for blacks up until now was 58 percent at Harvard.
00:08:40.040 So 58 percent of blacks who apply to Harvard get into Harvard.
00:08:43.660 It was 35 percent for Hispanics.
00:08:47.200 I'm not looking at it right in front of me, but I think the white number was 18 percent.
00:08:53.520 And for Asians, 13 or 14 percent.
00:08:56.860 So can I tell you something out of whack?
00:08:59.080 I don't I don't know if you know this.
00:09:01.440 And a lot of people will be shocked by this, but I'm not Asian.
00:09:04.820 And even though I'm not Asian, I have no problem with Asians beating my children in a race to Harvard.
00:09:18.320 Asians have a work ethic.
00:09:21.780 Generally speaking, I don't want to be racist.
00:09:26.240 Generally speaking, they have a work ethic and an education ethic that whites don't have.
00:09:32.900 Nobody has.
00:09:33.900 They happen to in Indians are very much the same.
00:09:38.320 They come over here.
00:09:39.700 They work really hard.
00:09:41.420 I don't know about you, but when I look up from the operating table as they're putting the mask over my face,
00:09:49.580 I don't want to see the guy who's like, yeah, I'm I didn't pass any of the tests, but I got into medical school.
00:09:58.500 And then count back to 10.
00:10:00.480 No, no, no.
00:10:02.100 I want the most qualified person.
00:10:05.020 When I drive over a bridge, I don't care the color of the person's skin that designed it.
00:10:12.320 I want to make sure they were the best in their class.
00:10:16.560 I want to make sure they didn't just slip in because of their color.
00:10:21.060 Well, what is so racist about that?
00:10:24.980 It makes no sense.
00:10:26.980 We will never go to space again if we just take people who are not qualified and move them move them to the top and give them the education and the most qualified not give the education.
00:10:42.500 And I don't care what color you are.
00:10:45.340 And by the way, I apologize for saying we went to space.
00:10:49.000 We'll never go to space again.
00:10:50.780 We clearly never went to space.
00:10:53.420 That was Hollywood.
00:10:54.800 That was definitely Hollywood.
00:10:56.420 You're listening to the best of the Glenn Beck program.
00:10:59.340 So while the rest of the world yesterday was talking about affirmative action, Joe Biden was right on point talking about abortion, talking about abortion.
00:11:12.500 And his point of view is interesting, but he's speaking from the standpoint of a very devout Catholic.
00:11:28.020 That's the thing.
00:11:29.040 When I say very devout Catholic, I think maybe the kind of Catholic that runs the Vatican bank.
00:11:36.820 Other than that, probably not so Catholic.
00:11:40.260 Here's what he here's what he said yesterday.
00:11:43.900 So I'm, you know, I happen to be a practicing Catholic.
00:11:49.300 I'm not big on abortion, but guess what?
00:11:53.560 Roe v.
00:11:54.100 Wade got it right.
00:11:56.280 Really?
00:11:57.060 Oh, yeah.
00:11:57.580 I bet the Pope feels that.
00:11:59.020 Well, this Pope might.
00:12:00.180 I don't know.
00:12:01.440 I don't know.
00:12:02.900 Roe v.
00:12:03.760 Wade cut in a place where the vast majority of religions have reached an agreement.
00:12:08.220 Historically, the first three months or thereabouts in all major religions was that's between a woman and her doctor.
00:12:19.100 Can I tell you how many times have you read Jesus saying that's between you and your doctor?
00:12:26.740 Want to kill a baby?
00:12:28.620 Three months?
00:12:29.500 First three months?
00:12:30.320 I'm going to give it to you.
00:12:31.640 Whatever.
00:12:32.100 I mean, if your doctor say, yeah, what did you counsel with your doctor?
00:12:35.980 Because in that eventuality, whatever you want to do is perfectly fine.
00:12:40.180 You could counsel with God.
00:12:42.280 He might have another opinion.
00:12:44.220 But don't.
00:12:45.120 First three months?
00:12:46.040 Yeah.
00:12:46.660 We've all made an agreement.
00:12:48.060 He goes on.
00:12:49.000 The next three months is between, I mean, just a woman and her family.
00:12:55.480 So I guess at that point.
00:12:56.240 Just a woman and her family.
00:12:57.320 Yeah.
00:12:57.620 The doctor's been cut out of that arrangement, I guess, now.
00:13:01.000 But then he goes on.
00:13:01.840 Let's not use the word cut out.
00:13:02.860 No, that's a good point.
00:13:04.480 Yeah.
00:13:05.320 Yeah.
00:13:05.740 The next three months.
00:13:07.780 So we're up to the third.
00:13:08.600 So this is nine months.
00:13:09.520 Third trimester now.
00:13:10.980 The next three months is between a woman and her doctor.
00:13:14.260 So it goes back to forget the family.
00:13:16.620 Now you're back to listening to your doctor.
00:13:19.300 And then.
00:13:20.100 Okay.
00:13:21.040 The last three months.
00:13:23.280 Now we're up to a year.
00:13:24.160 We're up to a year.
00:13:25.660 The last three months have to be negotiated because you can't, unless you're in a position
00:13:31.520 where your physical health is at stake, you can't do it.
00:13:35.900 So that's, if you're a year pregnant, you may not terminate, I guess.
00:13:41.040 So if you are carrying a child at 12 months.
00:13:46.080 Yeah.
00:13:46.980 Then.
00:13:47.740 You can't do it.
00:13:48.480 You can't do it.
00:13:49.120 You can't do it.
00:13:49.520 You can't do an abortion after 12 months.
00:13:50.640 Unless your health is at stake.
00:13:52.680 Now.
00:13:53.460 So if you have like tuberculosis and a three month old, you can kill the child.
00:14:00.540 Okay.
00:14:01.300 Yes.
00:14:01.980 Yes.
00:14:02.420 Good.
00:14:02.840 Now I'm, I'm, I'm thinking during the fifth trimester, you know, that's between, that's
00:14:10.920 between the mother and her second cousin.
00:14:13.540 I, and you leave the doctor out, leave the rest of the family out.
00:14:17.600 What about the 73rd trimester?
00:14:20.340 That's between the mother, her favorite sous chef and her hairstylist.
00:14:27.500 So where is it?
00:14:30.920 Is it the, is it the 90th trimester where it's between the husband and the mechanic?
00:14:37.880 No, the husband's never involved, but the mechanic could be if it's a woman.
00:14:42.560 If, if it's a woman.
00:14:45.340 Okay.
00:14:45.580 So it's between a woman and her female mechanic, but we can't identify the female because we
00:14:52.000 don't know what a female is.
00:14:53.440 Yeah.
00:14:53.620 Well, that's, that's right.
00:14:54.780 Okay.
00:14:55.280 We don't know.
00:14:56.820 Unless.
00:14:57.360 That's good.
00:14:57.860 If you're a biologist and you can't identify the gender of the mechanic, you, you bring
00:15:04.120 the, uh, you bring the biologist in on it as well.
00:15:07.000 What if you're a biologist so you can identify a woman, but you don't know what a mechanic
00:15:12.020 is because you'd have to be a biologist mechanic, man, uh, to be able to identify one.
00:15:23.000 Right.
00:15:23.460 So it gets very dicey as time goes on.
00:15:26.820 It does.
00:15:27.360 And by the time the kid's 26, it's almost impossible to abort it.
00:15:31.860 Yeah.
00:15:32.140 But I mean, you still could, but you'd have to figure out the whole, right.
00:15:37.620 It's a, yeah, it's a mechanic's right to choose at that point.
00:15:41.980 Right.
00:15:42.400 Right.
00:15:43.040 Okay.
00:15:43.700 Good.
00:15:44.440 Good.
00:15:45.200 So could I just ask when did, could you read the first part of the first three months again?
00:15:52.600 Yeah.
00:15:52.880 Uh, Roe v.
00:15:54.120 Wade cut in a place where the vast majority of religions have reached an agreement.
00:15:59.760 Historically, the first three months or thereabouts in all major religions was that's between
00:16:06.240 a woman and her doctor.
00:16:08.840 Hmm.
00:16:10.100 Now, can I ask when they held this meeting?
00:16:14.120 Yeah.
00:16:14.700 The major religions.
00:16:16.560 When did all major religions get together to agree?
00:16:19.760 That was Vatican nine, I think, uh, where they not, they didn't just decide Catholic doctrine,
00:16:27.760 but they invited all other religions in and they all sat down and they couldn't come to
00:16:32.680 an agreement.
00:16:33.100 So they said, you know what, let's leave this to a woman and, uh, her doctor in this case.
00:16:39.040 Okay.
00:16:39.540 Yeah.
00:16:39.860 All right.
00:16:40.580 Okay.
00:16:40.860 That's weird.
00:16:41.500 Cause usually they would say, and a priest, but they don't have female priests, so you can't
00:16:47.740 include them.
00:16:48.620 Uh, and, uh, I don't know.
00:16:49.760 So, okay.
00:16:50.500 So I don't remember Vatican nine, um, but historically I think where churches fell was the first three
00:17:01.660 months, uh, is the time before the quickening and when you couldn't be charged.
00:17:10.400 Well, no, it wasn't.
00:17:11.780 The quickening was when the woman first said the baby moved.
00:17:15.800 That was the, that was the, that that's what the quickening was.
00:17:19.600 That was the time that someone back historically could, I mean, I know, you know, in caveman
00:17:27.220 days, all the churches agreed on an ultrasound.
00:17:30.320 Um, but when the quickening happened, um, but when the quickening happened, the baby moved,
00:17:34.760 then the woman or somebody who let's say, you know, uh, beat her up or pushed her down the
00:17:41.020 stairs or whatever would be held for murder after the quickening.
00:17:46.620 Before that, you didn't have verification.
00:17:50.680 Uh, so that, that, that, that I hate to bring that up to Joe Biden because he is such a good
00:17:57.140 Catholic, you know, um, yeah, he is, he's that in the, he goes to, he goes to mass every day.
00:18:05.320 That's how Catholic he is every day.
00:18:08.120 Wow.
00:18:08.740 Yeah.
00:18:09.300 And it's weird because his son goes to hookers like three times a day, every day.
00:18:15.300 And, uh, that's wow.
00:18:18.700 He's pretty devoted.
00:18:19.360 Is that a worshiping?
00:18:20.560 Yeah.
00:18:21.040 He's pretty devoted.
00:18:21.740 Two hookers?
00:18:22.260 Uh-huh.
00:18:23.160 Yeah.
00:18:23.460 Yeah.
00:18:23.860 Yeah.
00:18:24.280 He's very devoted to the hookers.
00:18:26.280 Or anybody really that he's sniffing cocaine off the belly of.
00:18:31.020 He's devoted to any of those people.
00:18:33.620 So.
00:18:33.700 Right.
00:18:33.920 Could be anybody.
00:18:34.840 Yeah.
00:18:35.060 Could be a Buddhist because all religions could be involved in that.
00:18:40.000 Right.
00:18:40.380 Well, that's good.
00:18:41.220 Um, I'm glad we, I'm glad we got that, uh, bit of information from, uh, Joe Biden.
00:18:46.540 Did you see him, uh, yesterday kind of waddle to the, uh, door in, uh, in the White House?
00:18:56.260 He was making a statement about, uh, yeah, he was making a statement about affirmative action.
00:19:01.280 He's in the White House and he slowly walks away from the podium and then stands there at the door.
00:19:07.260 Uh, I mean, I've seen, uh, more intelligence in my dog when he's standing at the door going, I gotta go outside.
00:19:17.700 Um, at least there's something behind those eyes.
00:19:21.080 Watch this.
00:19:22.380 Is this a rogue court?
00:19:27.720 This is not normal.
00:19:30.880 Not normal.
00:19:32.480 And then I need my pudding.
00:19:34.100 Wow.
00:19:34.460 I don't know.
00:19:36.920 It's nummy time.
00:19:38.860 And then at nighttime and, uh, and the president brings my pills in every day.
00:19:45.860 Nice.
00:19:46.240 Mr.
00:19:46.520 You are the president.
00:19:48.360 You, you are the president.
00:19:50.460 No, it's a nice black woman that comes in.
00:19:53.400 Uh, and, uh, she gives me my nummies.
00:19:56.680 Uh, so that's, uh, that's great.
00:19:59.240 Then he was on MSNBC.
00:20:01.820 And after the interview, he just decided to get up.
00:20:05.220 Yeah.
00:20:05.640 Even before the interview ended, this is fun.
00:20:08.140 Mr.
00:20:08.400 President.
00:20:08.740 Thank you.
00:20:09.180 Thank you.
00:20:09.680 Thank you very much.
00:20:10.340 It's great to have you.
00:20:11.360 Thank you.
00:20:11.720 Thank you.
00:20:13.560 Don't go anywhere.
00:20:14.740 It's a very exciting day around here.
00:20:19.160 He's just, it's embarrassing.
00:20:22.360 It's embarrassing.
00:20:23.360 Well, you know, at this point, at least we can laugh about it.
00:20:26.960 I mean, cause we would be crying, uh, if we weren't laughing about it, but, uh, I mean,
00:20:33.420 are these warnings for entertainment purposes, these warning signs, any Democrats are they,
00:20:38.160 is anybody concerned on the left about the shape this guy is in they, you know, we see
00:20:43.740 this stuff every day and we comment on it, but it seems like everybody else on the left
00:20:48.260 is ignoring it.
00:20:49.220 I have to tell you the left.
00:20:52.300 Yeah.
00:20:52.740 The left is different than the average Democrat.
00:20:55.240 I think the, the average Democrat, the one that just, you know, is our neighbor.
00:20:59.600 Yeah.
00:21:00.020 I think they're just as concerned about it as we are.
00:21:02.820 And they think the same thing that we do.
00:21:06.160 Kamala Harris.
00:21:07.620 Yeah.
00:21:07.920 No, that is the problem.
00:21:09.560 Stay in, just stay alive, Joe, just stay alive.
00:21:14.360 That's the best insurance policy I've ever seen.
00:21:17.500 I think that's why he picked her.
00:21:19.540 Yeah.
00:21:19.780 It's like, yeah.
00:21:20.940 So you'd be rooting for her.
00:21:22.280 I mean, America, I don't know.
00:21:25.040 You want her?
00:21:26.700 No.
00:21:27.040 No.
00:21:27.640 Nope.
00:21:27.960 I'm with you, Joe.
00:21:28.960 I'm with you.
00:21:29.940 Some breaking news, Glenn.
00:21:31.800 Uh, the Supreme court has made a decision, um, about the web designer that, uh, who designs
00:21:38.880 things for weddings and whatnot.
00:21:42.140 And so the gay couple went to him and he didn't want to do it.
00:21:45.380 And they just ruled in his favor.
00:21:48.660 Is that amazing?
00:21:49.580 In the web designers?
00:21:50.420 Yes.
00:21:51.840 Oh, thank God.
00:21:53.440 Uh, let me read you the first paragraph, uh, from the AP in a defeat for gay rights.
00:22:00.180 Is it though, is it really a defeat for gay rights?
00:22:03.400 This is a victory for the rights of all citizens.
00:22:07.080 Everybody.
00:22:07.880 Yes.
00:22:08.540 First of all, first of all, can I just ask if, if I were going to have a wedding and somebody
00:22:14.600 said, I hate Glenn Beck.
00:22:17.500 And there's lots of those people.
00:22:19.900 I hate Glenn Beck.
00:22:21.720 I'm not making a cake for Glenn Beck's wedding.
00:22:24.880 I wouldn't want the guy to make my cake.
00:22:27.500 Yeah.
00:22:27.640 I'm sorry to be sexist or the woman, but then if I would have said woman, why would you say
00:22:33.160 woman?
00:22:33.740 Because she's in the kitchen all the time.
00:22:35.720 So there's no way to win, but I don't there.
00:22:39.300 I mean, I wouldn't want them.
00:22:40.600 Why other than making a point, you know, the poor cake master guy in Colorado.
00:22:47.020 Yeah.
00:22:47.560 He's going back to the Supreme court.
00:22:49.540 That guy has spent 15 years of his life battling this.
00:22:55.540 It's insane.
00:22:56.880 And who knows how many hundreds of thousands or millions of dollars, um, have been involved
00:23:02.260 there too.
00:23:03.000 He, uh, he, in one of these cases, they lost their, they lost their shop.
00:23:08.600 They, you know, they had to do something else.
00:23:10.920 They lost their home.
00:23:12.960 Uh, but this particular ruling, the Supreme court's conservative majority ruled today
00:23:19.580 that a Christian graphic artist who wants to design wedding websites can refuse to work
00:23:25.360 with same sex couples.
00:23:26.640 Court ruled six to three for designer Lori Smith, despite a Colorado law that bars discrimination
00:23:32.860 based on sexual orientation, race, gender, and other characteristics.
00:23:39.760 Smith had argued that the law violates her free speech rights.
00:23:43.640 Absolutely.
00:23:44.400 It did.
00:23:45.260 Smith's opponents warned that a win for her would allow a range of businesses to discriminate,
00:23:50.920 refusing to serve black Jewish or Muslim customers.
00:23:54.680 Nonsense.
00:23:55.960 Interracial.
00:23:56.860 Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait.
00:23:58.340 First of all, first of all, if there is a restaurant, I mean, and there were restaurants in, uh, there
00:24:07.360 was the coffee cup cafe in someplace in Texas and each word was spelled with a K very subtle.
00:24:17.940 Um, and, uh, it was very uncomfortable and everything was made to be uncomfortable for blacks.
00:24:24.560 You know what, if that's what they want to do, I want to make sure I know what business that is
00:24:32.040 and people just won't go.
00:24:34.740 Right.
00:24:35.240 Uh, and you know, you want to be racist, be racist, but you know, I ain't going to your place
00:24:40.680 and I don't know anybody who does and anybody who is sitting and I'm driving by and I see
00:24:45.060 you were having coffee at the KKK place.
00:24:47.660 I know who you are now as well.
00:24:50.800 Yeah.
00:24:51.320 Let the, let the free market sort it all out.
00:24:54.480 Uh, hopefully that business would go out of business.
00:24:57.840 Um, but they, they write, Neil Gorsuch wrote, uh, the first amendment envisions the United
00:25:03.000 States as a rich and complex place where all persons are free to think and speak as they
00:25:07.320 wish, not as the government demands.
00:25:09.880 The, um, dissent was written by Sonia Sotomayor today, the court for the first time in its
00:25:17.640 history, grants a business open to the public, a constitutional right to refuse to serve members
00:25:23.900 of a protected class.
00:25:26.480 No, that's not true.
00:25:28.080 No, wait a minute.
00:25:28.520 It's not true that they are not saying at least in the cake, uh, thing you can't, uh, I won't
00:25:37.260 make a cake for you and won't make a wedding cake for you.
00:25:40.800 She's not saying I won't take pictures for you.
00:25:43.660 I won't, I won't take pictures of your wedding for you.
00:25:47.540 You cannot compel speech.
00:25:50.340 That is the thing that makes us America.
00:25:54.040 I mean, everybody misunderstands the bill of rights.
00:25:58.140 The bill of rights is only written down because sometimes it's tough.
00:26:04.300 Sometimes people are saying things that you don't like.
00:26:09.220 People say things I don't like all the time.
00:26:13.640 I get over it or I debate them.
00:26:17.060 Uh, you know, it's not less speech.
00:26:19.600 It's more speech.
00:26:21.420 That's why we have the bill of rights.
00:26:23.020 You don't ever have to go to court to protect.
00:26:26.840 I love pudding.
00:26:28.700 I mean, maybe, maybe in the case of Bill Cosby, but I think that was a little different.
00:26:33.140 Um, you don't have to, you don't have to protect things that aren't controversial, that aren't
00:26:39.980 tough.
00:26:41.220 You don't need the bill of rights for those things.
00:26:43.880 You need the bill of rights for that lone individual that says things that you hate.
00:26:50.800 Today in St. George, there is, they've shipped in a bunch of people, bust them in from all over
00:26:57.140 the West to do a, a trans show in one of the parks here.
00:27:03.160 And there's a big, um, uh, there's a big counter protest that is planned.
00:27:09.760 Why?
00:27:11.260 Why?
00:27:12.480 These people are not part of the community.
00:27:15.320 They're being bussed in for a reason.
00:27:17.460 They want to stir up trouble.
00:27:20.280 They want to get all kinds of press for it.
00:27:25.300 Why waste your time going down there?
00:27:28.260 They're not from your community.
00:27:31.180 Let them come in, do their thing and go, gee, I thought that would end differently and move
00:27:38.480 on to another community where hopefully they'll be ignored there as well.
00:27:43.640 Or if they're in their own community where it's accepted, okay.
00:27:49.300 Right.
00:27:50.520 We are, uh, we are, we're missing, um, the point here of the bill of rights and the right
00:27:59.760 of people to do and say outrageous things.
00:28:04.080 We don't have to like it.
00:28:06.420 Um, in fact, that's the point.
00:28:09.500 There's going to be a lot of things that people say that we don't like.
00:28:13.640 We must stand up for those people when they're saying things we hate.
00:28:18.780 Otherwise we shouldn't expect it to happen when we're the ones saying things that other
00:28:24.520 people don't agree with.
00:28:26.240 This is the best of the Glenn Beck program.
00:28:29.840 Tammy Nichols.
00:28:30.800 She is an Idaho state Senator.
00:28:34.180 Tammy, how are you?
00:28:35.840 I am well.
00:28:36.880 Thank you for having me on Glenn.
00:28:38.260 You're welcome.
00:28:40.440 How did this bill come about and what does it mean?
00:28:46.240 Well, you know, in Idaho, we've had, um, our fair share of things that have happened in
00:28:52.180 our state, going back to the Ruby Ridge siege, um, with the weavers, uh, back in the, um, early
00:29:00.100 90s.
00:29:01.340 And, uh, in my district, district 10, uh, we have very engaged, uh, people here that are
00:29:08.240 involved in the Republican party involved in the conservative movement.
00:29:11.560 And we've just seen the things that have been transpiring across the nation and our state,
00:29:16.100 uh, in regards to the weaponization of government and more specifically the FBI.
00:29:21.280 So several of, um, my constituents here got together and put together this resolution
00:29:27.080 to present at our summer meeting, uh, for the state GOP.
00:29:30.820 Uh, we weren't sure how far it would get.
00:29:32.660 We weren't sure if it would get any pushback, but it actually sailed right through.
00:29:36.420 We had some really good resolutions that actually passed this last, uh, summer meeting, but this
00:29:40.600 was one of them.
00:29:41.320 And this is one that has really picked up, uh, steam, uh, in the media because it is so
00:29:47.000 straightforward and it really, uh, hits on the issues that are, are transpiring in our
00:29:52.200 government.
00:29:53.880 Okay.
00:29:54.400 So before we get into the resolution and, and what has to happen and what it means, um,
00:29:59.920 tell people, um, in a, in abbreviated form, as much as you can, what happened with Ruby
00:30:06.700 Ridge?
00:30:07.400 Most Americans think of Ruby Ridge and they think there, whatever, because that's how it
00:30:14.720 was sold to the American people.
00:30:16.240 Oh, it's some gun nut up in the woods.
00:30:19.140 Tell us what happened to Ruby Ridge.
00:30:22.320 Well, basically, and I was, I was really young when it actually transpired, uh, but I remember
00:30:27.480 watching the news on, on what was going on and even thinking back then, you know, why,
00:30:32.440 why is this happening?
00:30:33.320 Uh, you know, you had a, you had an issue with a, with a, a sawed off shotgun and, uh, uh,
00:30:40.820 the weavers went up to their cabin, uh, just wanted to be left alone, basically.
00:30:46.240 And, uh, and started being surveilled by the FBI.
00:30:50.140 There was, uh, issues going on.
00:30:52.520 They wanted him to, uh, Randy Weaver to turn himself in, uh, and there ended up being a
00:30:57.780 standoff.
00:30:58.260 And Tammy, if I'm not mistaken, the sawed off shotgun was entrapment.
00:31:05.480 Um, it was the FBI agent trying to get him to saw off the shotgun for him.
00:31:11.560 He sawed it off in a legal way.
00:31:14.000 And then the FBI agent said, no, can you add another quarter inch or something like that?
00:31:19.100 He did.
00:31:20.360 And then tried to arrest him.
00:31:22.460 Right.
00:31:23.380 Right.
00:31:23.860 It was used as a, as a, as a tool to, yes, as an entrapment.
00:31:28.120 And, uh, so the standoff ensued and, uh, uh, the, the wife of Randy Weaver, uh, ended up
00:31:36.000 getting shot.
00:31:36.980 Uh, there, there was a bunch of things that transpired, but there was a standoff that took
00:31:42.280 place and people died and, uh, and it was, it never needed to happen.
00:31:47.880 That did not need to transpire the way that it did.
00:31:50.420 And, and we see that happening in different areas.
00:31:54.700 Right.
00:31:55.440 And if I remember right, it did go to court and the FBI was excoriated, I believe, um,
00:32:01.600 in the verdict.
00:32:02.700 And we never seem to learn the lesson.
00:32:06.580 The FBI never seems to learn the lesson and it happens over and over and over again.
00:32:12.760 And it's getting much worse.
00:32:15.880 Correct.
00:32:16.620 Well, and in this resolution, we put in, there's several examples that are
00:32:20.400 put in.
00:32:20.860 I mean, you have the, the Ruby Ridge, you have the Waco, Texas, you have, uh, different
00:32:25.400 programs that the FBI have put together, like Cointel Pro, uh, that transpired and we're going
00:32:31.340 back, you know, to the early fifties.
00:32:33.520 So this has been going on for a long time.
00:32:35.320 And then we have more recent things that have transpired, such as parents speaking out at
00:32:39.740 the school board meetings that have been put under surveillance.
00:32:43.160 So there's all these issues that are continuing and you're right.
00:32:46.520 Our government doesn't seem to learn the lesson.
00:32:48.620 I was just back in DC just a couple of months ago, uh, with, uh, another organization to
00:32:54.680 talk to Jim Jordan's committee and those that are on it about what's transpiring with the
00:32:58.940 weaponization of government, how NGOs are being utilized, um, to put people on lists and that
00:33:04.680 the government is utilizing those lists and people don't even know they're on that.
00:33:08.740 And then we have the FBI with what they've been doing with the surveillance, with what's
00:33:13.180 happened with parents that are speaking out at the school board meetings, what's happened
00:33:16.420 with president Trump.
00:33:17.480 And so we have all these things that are transpiring where we just have a entity that is out of
00:33:23.200 control, government overreach and not staying within their jurisdiction of the, of the constitution.
00:33:28.480 We're talking to, uh, Idaho state Senator Tammy Nichols about a, uh, GOP resolution that has just
00:33:38.540 passed condemning the FBI and calling for its abolition.
00:33:41.480 So it, it moves from the GOP.
00:33:44.820 Will it actually become a resolution, uh, that you think can pass?
00:33:50.380 Yeah, well, you know, as, as a Senator, you know, our, my desire and how it should work
00:33:57.780 is that the things that are passed at the state party GOP meetings should translate over to
00:34:03.640 the legislative session.
00:34:05.380 And, uh, you know, like in this last one, we had 26 different resolutions that passed.
00:34:10.740 So now those 26 should come over through, through the legislative process into actual pieces
00:34:17.660 of legislation or legislative resolutions.
00:34:20.760 So what we're hoping transpires with this, and, and I'm, I'm a, uh, co-chair of the Idaho
00:34:25.620 Freedom Caucus and my, my members are very excited about this sort of pieces of, of, of
00:34:31.380 legislation that could come into play.
00:34:33.380 So what we're hoping to, to get out of this is that we would like to see other states also
00:34:38.280 run similar resolutions at their state party level.
00:34:41.960 And then also, you know, because we say in this resolution that if the FBI cannot be
00:34:47.580 reformed, then we do support, uh, an abolition of this government agency.
00:34:53.760 So, so we're kind of trying to give that incentive first that, you know, to reform, but we don't
00:34:59.780 have a very good track record that, that transpires with this.
00:35:03.640 So the next step is to call for the abolition.
00:35:08.280 So how is the state going to pressure?
00:35:11.020 Or, I mean, what, what, what do you have, uh, to use as leverage to get them to reform?
00:35:19.720 Well, first, this resolution is going to be sent to our, uh, senators and our congressmen,
00:35:26.800 uh, in DC.
00:35:27.980 So we want them to know that this is something that the state GOP as a whole is wanting to
00:35:34.240 see transpire.
00:35:35.140 And, you know, we're going to be looking to them, of course, to help try to, to lead
00:35:39.800 that or to start putting the pressure on the federal government to rein in the FBI.
00:35:45.420 If that is not the case, then the states have sovereignty.
00:35:48.960 The states can exercise their sovereignty.
00:35:51.960 And, and we see that happening in all sorts of other forms where states, you know, do things
00:35:56.900 that, uh, you know, the federal government may not like, or, you know, like with drugs or
00:36:02.940 with illegal immigration or, or any of that sort of stuff that the states exercise their
00:36:07.760 sovereignty.
00:36:08.500 And that's really what we're getting to now.
00:36:10.660 We, the federal government is not doing their job.
00:36:13.760 Uh, the states are the ones that give the power, the control to the federal government.
00:36:18.900 And so the states need to start exercising their sovereignty and saying, we are not participating
00:36:23.380 in this anymore.
00:36:24.140 They're not welcome in the state.
00:36:25.720 If the FBI comes to the state, then our sheriffs, our constitutional sheriffs need to exercise
00:36:30.520 their authority.
00:36:32.080 Uh, but we need to, we need to put our, our federal government, our congressmen and our
00:36:36.440 senators on notice that this is what we want to see transpire.
00:36:39.440 And if it does not happen, the states need to start exercising their sovereignty to say,
00:36:43.840 we're not participating in this anymore, or we are, we are going to, uh, regain our, our
00:36:50.580 control and our authority to say enough is enough and do that through legislation.
00:36:54.500 I have to, I have, I have to tell you, I think this is the bravest legislation in any state
00:37:02.100 that I have seen yet.
00:37:03.520 I mean, this is, uh, this is powerful.
00:37:07.320 Are you, how much pushback are you getting from the people in the state?
00:37:13.840 And, uh, are you worried about federal pushback at all?
00:37:18.640 Uh, you know, so far we haven't received a lot of pushback in our state.
00:37:23.800 Uh, again, this is a resolution that we weren't even sure how far it was going to get.
00:37:27.820 And it wasn't one that we, that we thought was going to actually get a lot of attention.
00:37:32.200 Uh, but the more it's, it's getting out there, I've had actually people from different parts
00:37:37.980 of the country contacting me because of things that have happened to them, uh, and their,
00:37:43.240 their, uh, uh, situations that they've had dealing with the FBI.
00:37:47.620 So that's been very interesting to me to see the people actually become aware of what's
00:37:53.320 transpiring and that we actually ran this.
00:37:55.100 Uh, and so, yeah, I, I'm hoping, I mean, we might get pushed back on the federal, but
00:38:00.440 so be it because we have an out of control agency that is acting with, uh, outside of the constitution,
00:38:07.180 outside of their authority.
00:38:08.820 And we have to re we have to retain that.
00:38:11.360 We have to get that back under control.
00:38:13.340 So, so be it.
00:38:14.060 Well, I hope that you have enough people, um, in, uh, the legislature that have clean
00:38:23.100 lives because that's the way the FBI has gotten away with it for so long.
00:38:27.840 They'll gather information on people.
00:38:30.260 This is what Hoover did and then use it against them and, um, and blackmail them into siding
00:38:37.300 with them.
00:38:37.960 Um, so I, I hope you have enough in the legislature that are, that fear their God more than they
00:38:46.520 fear the United States, uh, the, uh, the FBI.
00:38:51.700 Yeah.
00:38:52.340 You know, I, and, and we know that that, that there are tools that are, that are utilized
00:38:56.860 to, to get people to, to do things.
00:39:00.180 Uh, and again, that's why we put the examples that are in, uh, this resolution so that people
00:39:04.940 are aware that these are the things that have transpired in the past, these are the things
00:39:08.760 that have transpired recently, and that we have a problem that we need to get back under
00:39:14.200 control.
00:39:16.440 Tammy Nichols, the, uh, Idaho state Senator, um, a part of the, uh, Freedom Caucus in Idaho.
00:39:24.240 Thanks for being on.
00:39:25.900 And, uh, I am a, a proud resident of the state part-time, but I'm a proud resident and land
00:39:31.440 owner in, uh, Idaho, and I'm counting on you guys keeping it free.
00:39:35.840 Thank you so much.
00:39:37.240 Thank you.
00:39:37.780 Thank you.