The Glenn Beck Program - May 28, 2019


Best of the Program | Guest: Suzane Grishman | 5⧸28⧸19


Episode Stats

Length

56 minutes

Words per Minute

159.78482

Word Count

9,059

Sentence Count

5

Misogynist Sentences

2

Hate Speech Sentences

19


Summary

A felon from washington state made a series of mistakes when he shot himself in the testicles and tried to hide the weapon, all while storing drugs in his butt. Another balloon of drugs slipped out of his anus while he was being operated on by the doctor.


Transcript

00:00:00.000 here's today's podcast it's a good one it's tuesday feels like monday but if it really
00:00:05.400 feels like monday i've got a great story starts the podcast you think you think you're having a
00:00:11.220 bad day no no no wait until you uh meet our uh our first story also the results of the european
00:00:19.400 elections we talk a little bit about the snotty art world the storms that hit uh date in ohio
00:00:25.380 mending fences and hard work something i learned on vacation we're looking at mending fences
00:00:32.920 completely wrong and again gillette stands in uh and tries to fill the uh uh the gap on on good men
00:00:43.360 and bad men they've got another lecture on how bad you are if you don't want to give your kids
00:00:48.600 steroids to change them from little girls to boys all that and so much more on today's podcast
00:00:55.720 you're listening to the best of the blend back program
00:01:06.280 imagine being evicted from your home for not paying your home equity loan uh back but you never
00:01:16.860 took out a home equity loan that would suck wouldn't it uh i mean literally evicted from
00:01:25.120 your home we've been telling you about this couple in portland uh bill and betty um they had no idea
00:01:31.280 that somebody had taken their their uh house and forged the title gone over to a bank taken all of the
00:01:39.180 you know equity loans out that they possibly could bill and betty start getting these things they
00:01:44.340 discard them we didn't take out that loan um the bank insists that yes you did take out that loan
00:01:50.180 they're like no it's not us next thing they know the house is foreclosed on and they've had to spend
00:01:54.820 thousands of dollars to get their house back i mean it's it's an absolute nightmare we can get a free
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00:02:16.320 has not already been tampered with hundred dollar value for free home title lock dot com go there now
00:02:23.440 home title lock dot com a felon from washington state made a series of mistakes when he shot himself
00:02:32.460 in the testicles and tried to hide the weapon all while storing drugs in his butt cameron wilfrey wilson
00:02:43.360 27 was carrying a pistol in his front pocket while in cashmere washington he was in an apartment on
00:02:51.020 april 5th when the firearm accidentally discharged and blew off one of his testicles wilson who is a 13
00:03:02.140 it hurt to say that stew it did that i could feel the pain yeah wilson who is a 13 time convicted felon
00:03:09.980 told his girlfriend to dispose of the weapon before heading to the hospital when the ex-con finally went
00:03:17.000 to the hospital now wait hang on just a second let me stop there stew why do you suppose he wanted that
00:03:23.520 weapon disposed of being a 13 time felon there may be some criminal concerns there right like he doesn't
00:03:34.160 have a right to own a gun right and he also had already kind of dispose of his own weapon yeah so
00:03:40.080 right this is a not a good day so when he went to the hospital a balloon of drugs
00:03:46.240 and i'm just slipped out of his anus while he was being operated on by the doctor now i don't know
00:03:55.760 how it just slipped out of his anus but apparently it did cops arrived at the hospital when alerted of
00:04:02.500 the gunshot wound they searched his car where they discovered a bag of meth in the bloodstained jeans that
00:04:09.340 he was wearing when he shot himself to death there are so many things that this guy's going to jail
00:04:14.560 on they say men can't multitask no here we go this is this is a really good uh as he was being
00:04:21.080 processed uh at the uh county regional justice center wilson was strip searched and another balloon
00:04:28.320 of marijuana was found how much in it no i let me i can't say it was found let me quote the story
00:04:34.780 another balloon of marijuana slipped from his anus while in jail he made a number of calls to his
00:04:41.840 girlfriend and asked her not to cooperate with investigators another crime
00:04:46.680 the convicted felon was charged with possession of a firearm unlawful possession of meth possession of
00:04:57.200 a controlled substance in a correctional facility and four counts of tampering with a witness oh wait
00:05:02.620 a minute that's that i i gotta take issue with the possession in a in a what was it in a correctional
00:05:07.780 facility i mean yeah that was a mistake come on he had it in there long before yeah i mean i
00:05:13.260 your honor i was free when i put that in my butt yes i think that's a legitimate defense i think so
00:05:19.340 there's gotta be an attorney will take that one yeah i think so i mean we can cut him some slack
00:05:23.540 on that one that's pro bono material too i mean that's just wow you just you really have to
00:05:31.240 at some point it's like you know it's like those people uh that you know go on uh you know american
00:05:36.960 idol that somebody in their life didn't just say to them you really suck at singing somebody in his
00:05:43.640 life needed to say you're really not a good criminal you i know you want to be a criminal but
00:05:49.020 you're really a bad criminal and it is one of those things like criminal life is you only really get into
00:05:55.140 it if you're good at it right theory right i mean like well you're only 13 times you thought you
00:06:00.220 start to think to yourself i should apply my time to something else like i should apply to like a job
00:06:07.380 and use like because there's plenty of incompetent people in regular life that hold jobs down you
00:06:13.540 could work for the federal government yeah you could run for office you'll never go to jail
00:06:18.340 you could have anything coming from your anus and you're fine yeah and you have like a legitimate
00:06:24.780 like you're above the law in some of these circumstances remember when harry reed went on the senate
00:06:28.760 floor and he was like look uh you know mitten romney didn't pay his taxes he didn't pay his
00:06:34.800 taxes just blatantly lying with no evidence and later admitted and later admitted it but he was
00:06:40.140 on the senate floor so you can't really do anything about him i mean if something were to slip out
00:06:43.640 when you were giving a speech on the senate floor i think you're exempt from any crime i think a 10
00:06:48.660 pound bag just slipped out of his butt while i was giving a speech i was giving a speech i was on the
00:06:54.480 floor of the senate i'm fine this would encourage some really interesting individuals to get into
00:06:59.680 politics it would i think that's where we that's i think that's where we need to go so if you were
00:07:04.300 having a bad day just realize most likely i was going to say nothing but most likely nothing is
00:07:12.640 going to slip from your anus today and uh yeah you don't have to tell your girlfriend to hide a gun
00:07:17.660 you're fine you're fine today's a good day for you the best of the glenn beck program
00:07:25.340 hi it's glenn if you're a subscriber to the podcast can you do us a favor and rate us on itunes
00:07:37.020 if you're not a subscriber become one today and listen on your own time you can subscribe on itunes
00:07:42.740 thanks i saw a story in the in the huffington post um about pro-trump drawings are tro pro-trump
00:07:54.440 drawings art this it drove me out of my mind they take president donald trump has inspired a range of
00:08:04.980 famous artists across different mediums to create works criticizing his administration and make a
00:08:10.000 statement about his place in culture but there's also a lesser known group of amateur and professional
00:08:16.460 artists who laud the president and depict him as a strong sometimes superhuman leader
00:08:21.660 largely rejected from the established art venues these pro-trump images proliferate on social media
00:08:30.620 and have staked out a place as the trump administration's unofficial icon icon iconography
00:08:37.300 okay so the premise of this article is if you don't like trump you're a respected artist but if
00:08:47.460 you do like trump you're not really an artist you're not doing art you're doing drawings you're an
00:08:53.620 amateur drawer okay that's what you are a few months ago we assembled a group of editors and reporters
00:08:59.160 from our culture and politics team some who are no longer with the company i love that why why are they
00:09:05.900 not with the company we executed them they they actually they said trump stuff was good so so
00:09:11.180 they're no longer no longer with us or the earth they're no longer here right uh to discuss the
00:09:16.060 pro-trump art um so they go through these these artists and some of them are good some of them are
00:09:25.080 some of them are bad uh but you know like john mcnaughton you know john mcnaughton is right yeah
00:09:31.840 john mcnaughton is a real artist um and has done some really amazing religious paintings and everything
00:09:39.080 else he's the guy who most conservatives will know um because he did the painting of i think it was
00:09:47.460 obama wasn't he standing on the constitution and the the founders were behind him weeping
00:09:55.080 uh and he did he did a lot of different political art but it's it's real art i mean it's beautiful art
00:10:02.340 he did something for uh the underground railroad as a fundraiser um he's done he's done a lot of
00:10:09.740 a lot of famous famous art if you're on the right but he never gets any credit because he's on the right
00:10:18.280 this whole thing is where they talk about the pro-trump art it's just propaganda it's not art
00:10:28.360 really because do you remember the hope poster that's now hanging in which museum in los angeles
00:10:40.580 one of the big museums is now hanging his work now that truly was propaganda
00:10:48.320 that was released as street art if i'm not mistaken at first and it was used as propaganda it was based
00:11:01.480 on propaganda and uh and that one's art but anything that anything that makes trump
00:11:10.360 look good is just a drawing yeah i mean it's not surprising of course now you as the 100th most
00:11:20.740 important man in the world of art as named by some really highfalutin art i don't even remember it's
00:11:26.160 so highfalutin i don't even remember which magazine it was that's actually legitimately happened it really
00:11:30.220 did because you had uh correctly talked about the art at rockefeller center and and they wanted to
00:11:38.080 demean you and mock you by putting you as 100th you actually were 100th though yes i was the most
00:11:42.860 important man of art as someone who knows that though i mean we all know you obviously know what
00:11:47.200 this world is right like it's just a world to promote the hard left you know the the idea of
00:11:53.680 political art at this point the reason why you know you can name a few of the conservative artists
00:11:59.680 is because they're so rare right like you're right you can just be it's like you know the story
00:12:05.580 because it's a story you know say the rarity makes yes say exactly like when he comes out and he does
00:12:10.880 one of his his great posters and they they show up you know whenever there's a big democratic event
00:12:15.380 somewhere uh you know about it and it's a big story because of the fact that it's so rare that
00:12:21.320 someone actually takes that stand i mean there's a lot of people who are conservative artists that just
00:12:25.740 you know they don't get into that world like we've met a bunch of people who who are real artists
00:12:30.440 and known for their art however they don't come out and state their political views no i know
00:12:35.740 one of my favorite artists who shall not be named um and and and kind of at a request of him please
00:12:43.580 don't please don't ever please don't he's a big fan he listens every day he paints most of his stuff
00:12:50.200 and it's it goes for hundreds of thousands i can't afford one of his paintings i want one of his
00:12:56.280 paintings really badly one of my favorite artists he sells for thousands and thousands of dollars
00:13:04.320 he's a huge fan he sells a lot of stuff to most of his stuff to the left to the hardcore left uh and
00:13:14.620 they have absolutely no idea and his paintings are very american i love them because it's do you know
00:13:21.720 who i'm talking about yeah they're very american but not red white and blue america they're very
00:13:27.700 they're subtle in their america you know when you think of american painters you think of the eagle
00:13:34.240 you know and the flag and a soldier and a jet flying someplace not that um he does this beautiful
00:13:41.780 beautiful art but he can't be known he's like i'm i'm doomed if it ever comes out i'm doomed he's in
00:13:49.680 museums and everything else and he's had to live in hiding that is horrible absolutely horrible but
00:13:59.420 if you go to museums what you're seeing is i mean come on when i when i went they took down the
00:14:06.240 painting of washington crossing the delaware uh one year in uh the metropolitan museum of art and i
00:14:13.380 went there specifically to take my kids through the art museum and one of the things i wanted to show
00:14:17.880 them was that but i also went through all of their you know modern art and everything else i'm a fan
00:14:23.540 of art and we got to we got to where the painting was supposed to be and they're like oh yeah it's in
00:14:30.100 a warehouse but you know what wasn't in a warehouse a bigger painting and if you've ever seen washington
00:14:36.040 crossing the delaware it's like 20 feet by i don't know 15 it's a gigantic painting what what wasn't
00:14:43.940 in the warehouse was a uh was a piece of art i like to call blue and i like to call it blue because
00:14:51.020 i believe that was the name on the card blue okay now i went up to read the little card on this entire
00:14:59.500 wall at the metropolitan museum of art because i couldn't figure out what it was supposed to be
00:15:06.340 and then i read blue and i'm like well yes it is blue i think it's sherman williams number five
00:15:16.460 i'm not sure but it was entirely flat blue it was on a wall i like to call eggshell white
00:15:27.280 now at some point somebody and you know this is happening somebody went i'm gonna paint i'm just
00:15:37.800 gonna paint this thing blue i'm gonna i'm just gonna take a roller and i'm going to paint it blue
00:15:43.800 i'm not talking about jackson pollock where the splatters can be i'm talking flat blue
00:15:50.500 i'm looking at the painting now glenn and you see it wow it's amazing it's blue uh it's well
00:15:57.480 that is you're using a shorthand and you you because you're so familiar with the world of art
00:16:02.760 you feel comfortable doing that yeah i will call it by it's a full name blue panel two blue panel two
00:16:09.060 painted in 1977 yeah now i'm guessing that who's the artist there i'm pretending i don't know ellsworth
00:16:15.460 kelly ellsworth kelly i'm guessing that ellsworth kelly was very very popular on the left at the
00:16:22.120 time i don't know and uh interesting and uh and had at some point said to somebody maybe his husband
00:16:29.980 maybe his wife i'm not judging uh whatever it is somebody that he really trusted and went
00:16:36.540 i just sold this to a freaking museum okay that's how stupid this whole system is i just sold this
00:16:48.860 it's blue panel two now can you understand blue panel two if you didn't see the original
00:16:54.840 uh yes you can understand if you didn't see blue panel one right if you didn't see that yeah okay
00:17:00.380 blue panel one is a little lighter or darker than blue panel two now would you like to hear what he
00:17:06.860 was doing not that you don't know but for the audience yeah what he was trying to do as blue
00:17:10.380 panel two suggests he treated color and shape in his painting as synonymous and an integral with each
00:17:16.280 other in keeping with a prevalent mid-century philosophy that illusionism was a denial of
00:17:21.540 paint's flat essence this guy spent more time coming up with what the meaning was
00:17:29.060 kelly's conflation of shape and color is especially evident in his inventive exploration
00:17:35.140 of the shaped canvas in this case a trapezoid that is nearly a parallelogram this design is based on
00:17:42.380 collages he made on a postcard uh postcard views of the island of saint martin which may account for
00:17:48.340 the painting seductive blue evocative of sky and water that's just blue which is blue just a blue
00:17:55.080 painting that's all it is that's all it is that's amazing i don't think i made a billion dollars
00:17:59.500 you know what get over yourself huffington post get over yourself it's a scam everybody knows it's a
00:18:08.520 scam gee how come the ones that reflect the values of the laughter in museums and it's just a caveman
00:18:17.140 drawn over here this is the best of the glenn beck program
00:18:23.780 hey it's glenn and if you like what you hear on the program you should check out pat gray unleashed
00:18:39.620 his podcast is available wherever you download your favorite podcast i grew up in the pacific northwest
00:18:45.020 where uh extreme weather was 20 days of sunshine uh the only thing that we had is in regards to
00:18:54.500 natural disasters that i recall i remember i was about 17 years old i think when mount saint helens
00:19:01.580 blew up and i was on the other side of the state and i heard it it shook the windows but on that
00:19:08.780 really nothing i mean we don't have a fly problem or mosquito problem it's pretty sweet in the pacific
00:19:14.860 northwest you you move around the country and you get a real sense of how different people are and how
00:19:24.680 different the areas are and you start to appreciate weather i remember because we didn't we rained all
00:19:32.660 the time in seattle but if you have ever been in seattle or lived in seattle you know it doesn't ever
00:19:36.840 rain really hard it's just always misty and drizzly and i remember 18 years old moving out to washington
00:19:43.340 dc and people must have thought i was crazy i'm 18 i'm i'm in this rental apartment that i had a an apple
00:19:51.100 box a little like 12 inch screen tv i had a mattress and a refrigerator full of beer and macaroni boxes that
00:20:02.780 was it and it rained in august and it rained like a washington humidity
00:20:12.060 thunderstorm i had never seen lightning before we have what's called uh i can't even remember now
00:20:20.900 sheet lightning it would be up above the clouds in washington state so you never saw a bolt
00:20:25.260 and i stood out and like an idiot stood out in the rain just watching these bolts come down thinking
00:20:31.440 this is unbelievable
00:20:33.020 the one place that i have lived that scares the hell out of me is texas because they have one weather event
00:20:43.940 that is completely unpredictable and so destructive it's terrifying they're tornadoes
00:20:53.260 when a tornado goes off here and we're in kind of a suburb of tornado alley
00:21:03.040 when we have tornado warnings that happen and when they happen at least for me it still freaks me out
00:21:12.080 in the family means get into the center of the house like oh okay all right the center of the house
00:21:18.180 where there's no glass oh okay sure that's gonna i don't know if you know this it's up above the house
00:21:23.900 it could set down in the middle of the house and suck us up into it
00:21:28.780 and they are so random if you've ever seen the effects of a tornado something on one side of the street
00:21:38.120 can be absolutely fine and a corner of the house across the street is completely gone
00:21:45.640 they jump they jump fast and the destructive power is unlike anything i've ever seen
00:21:53.960 a massive tornado tore through dayton one of ohio's largest cities last night levels home
00:22:03.560 leveled homes entire apartment complexes knocked out power knocked out water tens of thousands of people
00:22:11.600 about 140 000 uh people in this area trying now to figure out their lives as this tornado massive tornado
00:22:23.900 just hopscotched across ohio last week it was bad indiana missouri illinois ohio now destruction
00:22:36.440 all across the country oklahoma and it's been a busy week for mercury one and uh to tell us what
00:22:46.540 we can do is uh suzanne grishman she is uh here she is the um the um executive director of mercury one
00:22:56.000 welcome to the program suzanne how are you i'm good good morning glad so i know you guys were out last
00:23:01.440 week for the storms in oklahoma what what do we have going on and what do people need so it's been a
00:23:08.960 busy week for our partners on the ground um people need food they need water there are mucking out homes
00:23:16.320 right now a lot of the areas have been flooded very badly in the midwest um but the trail the
00:23:22.920 devastation of destruction is really what's the worst right now on the ground we have team rubicon
00:23:28.240 working real hard a lot of our veterans that volunteer their time through team rubicon they're
00:23:33.400 deployed all over the midwest right now and they're responding for people who don't know what team
00:23:37.620 rubicon is this is the greatest charity it is they're all veterans and these veterans you know
00:23:44.900 they come home and they feel like they're not making a difference and they want to make a difference
00:23:48.740 and team rubicon is usually the first on the ground and they're the last to leave there's a lot of
00:23:54.820 people still on the ground with team rubicon with hurricane harvey still rebuilding homes it's amazing
00:24:00.140 and so they come in and the first thing they do is muck out homes and if you've never had to do that
00:24:06.460 it's an awful experience to do it for somebody else's house i can't even imagine doing it for
00:24:12.640 your own house but team rubicon uh is great operation blessing is there they're really food and
00:24:19.660 disaster relief kind of they are food disaster relief they actually are a volunteer organization
00:24:25.320 as well so they go in with people and they work through some of the local churches there and they
00:24:30.180 try to lift people up in a time of crisis and you can imagine a lot of trauma minuteman disaster relief
00:24:36.440 and city impact um what mercury one does is we give 100 of whatever we collect to these charities
00:24:45.580 we've vetted these charities we've worked with these charities we know that this is actually your
00:24:51.480 money is going to the right place nothing against the red cross but you know you you're funding
00:24:57.640 sometimes their phone system uh when you give to the red cross this we know 100 goes to these impact
00:25:04.660 and you can you can go to natural disasters if you want to just fund natural disasters we know
00:25:11.600 that that money will go right directly to the people uh and not to some big institution uh and so we
00:25:18.860 really need your help you can go to mercuryone.org uh donate to our humanitarian relief fund did you see
00:25:24.680 also uh suzanne there was a story that came out today that says here it is genocide of christians
00:25:32.780 reaches an alarming stage christian persecution is now quote at near genocide levels this according to
00:25:41.580 a report in the bbc a lengthy interim study ordered by the british former secretary uh blah blah blah
00:25:49.140 says uh one in three people around the world suffer from religious persecution with christians being
00:25:55.320 the most persecuted religious group that's crazy it is unfortunately the truth it is happening all around
00:26:02.520 the world they're saying that uh nobody is talking about it and they're not talking about it for
00:26:07.580 politically correct reasons and so which is the wrong reasons this is when you do stand up and take a
00:26:14.260 stand that's exactly right uh and i know we're doing uh a lot around the world on uh christian
00:26:20.460 persecution you can get involved on that at mercuryone.org and one last thing we do these pop-up
00:26:26.980 museums uh and the the collection at mercury one has grown is quite an amazing uh collection
00:26:35.180 already and it's about to get even bigger uh as we move forward but we're also partnering uh with
00:26:42.340 other museums the african-american museum in dallas the abraham lincoln presidential library and museum
00:26:48.260 the frontiers of flight museum the dallas historical society the old red museum uh blah blah blah and we
00:26:56.280 are we've we've partnered with them to put together something called 12 score and three years ago based on
00:27:03.000 abraham lincoln's gettysburg address four score and seven years ago it's now been 12 score in three
00:27:08.960 years ago that our founders got together and said hey we have an idea for a country and lincoln had a
00:27:16.920 goal and lincoln's goal was can we actually do all men are created equal can we free slaves it's been
00:27:25.420 a fascinating journey and many people will focus on the really bad things about slavery or they will
00:27:32.700 take it out of context it's important that context is um is put in around slavery so you really truly
00:27:41.560 understand what was going on and how it affects us today but also those who did something with their
00:27:48.260 freedom those who said i'm not going to sit around i'm free now what am i going to do with it um we
00:27:57.740 look at the gettysburg address will be here the emancipation proclamation coming that's amazing
00:28:04.580 stuff that you will be able to see 12 score in three years ago the unfinished promise promise of unity
00:28:11.140 um and when does that happen so it's going to happen on the 29th and 30th of june and then we'll
00:28:17.560 be also here the 4th through the 7th so come spend your 4th of july weekend with us they can go on a
00:28:23.220 tour with you too glenn i know david barton is going to be uh giving tours i'm going to be giving tours
00:28:28.220 stew will give his usual crappy tour where he really doesn't know anything i'm just saying if you
00:28:33.220 if you don't want your kids to learn anything you just want to have fun we all want to stew tour that's
00:28:37.900 what i do uh but anyway grab your tickets now you can get them at mercuryone.org uh and uh and just
00:28:46.320 look for 12 score in three years ago and come see us as we open up uh the studios again uh this year
00:28:52.540 for a a really fantastic um look at american history and the promise of unity that has not been fulfilled
00:29:01.840 yet and what we have done in the past and what we need to do in the future going forward thank you so
00:29:08.640 much suzanne i appreciate it you're welcome uh all of this can be found at mercuryone.org
00:29:14.300 you're listening to the best of the glenn beck program
00:29:21.840 you know uh what happened in the elections uh last week in europe took a lot of people by surprise
00:29:38.320 and it took people by surprise exactly the same way the donald trump uh win took people by surprise
00:29:44.640 and it shouldn't because what the eu is is an artificial entity it was an entity that was
00:29:53.540 maybe started with good intentions it was started because after world war ii they were like okay
00:29:59.300 these countries it's you know belgium you're not really even a country or a waffle house at best
00:30:05.100 uh and you know we're just going to put you into one group well the belgians are like yeah we do make
00:30:11.860 waffles but we also do a couple of other things that are really cool and uh the eu was starting to
00:30:18.560 erase those things and starting to call people names you're a racist if you were a proud belgium
00:30:25.840 you were a racist if you were proud of your swedish flag well that has nothing to do with racism
00:30:32.360 and this is by erasing and folding everybody into this artificial eu
00:30:39.560 people started to push back on it now that doesn't mean that they hate france or hate italy
00:30:46.280 it means that they're proud of who they are and they don't like this artificial argument
00:30:54.640 that they're racist that's only making things worse no we just don't want to be controlled by a
00:31:03.640 foreign body we don't want the germans telling us in france what to think or do we're different
00:31:09.260 doesn't mean we hate germany but because it's been set up this way and because the media and everybody
00:31:16.720 else has been been saying well you're a racist if you believe this the bubba effect is coming into
00:31:23.500 play in europe the bubba effect is is really happening and you can see it in things like nazis
00:31:32.540 punching nazis we all know punching nazis punching anybody is wrong yeah but you don't get that
00:31:38.320 reaction from the left because they say well you know punching someone i mean like look the nazis
00:31:43.120 deserved it sure punching people is wrong but you know they deserved it and someone needed to stand
00:31:48.320 up and you're not going to step in and tell us we can't do that and that is the effect that's uh you
00:31:53.000 know it's been long rumored that it would happen to somewhere you know in some southern you know city
00:31:57.840 and after some you know effect a bunch a bunch of racists would would be involved in it and it's
00:32:04.060 and it's been the opposite uh it's been in you know san francisco where you're seeing it happen but
00:32:10.460 the point is like you people get to that level where they don't care anymore and they know they know
00:32:16.540 that for instance are nazis a problem yeah are nazis are really one of the biggest problems in the
00:32:23.180 united states no there's a rally scheduled this this uh week weekend in uh for the kkk it was
00:32:29.240 headlines everywhere uh it's like in i thought it was in dayton i thought it was in ohio someplace
00:32:35.740 like nine people nine people nine how endless coverage previewing an event where nine people show
00:32:44.000 up now there should be zero people we all realize that but you can't account for stupidity that much
00:32:50.080 i mean like you can't you're gonna be able to fight you know there are racists yeah there will
00:32:53.500 always be racist there will always be racist and we do we like them no we don't but we don't blow it
00:32:59.740 out of proportion and that's what everything that's everything right now everything is blown out of
00:33:05.400 proportion and what happened in europe is happening here and is going to continue to happen on a bigger
00:33:11.040 and bigger scale until we either get it or destroy ourselves let's take abortion
00:33:18.520 where are most people on abortion most people are look i mean i don't want to if there's rape or
00:33:28.160 incest i i don't i i yes it's a baby and i don't want to even think of it that way most people and i'm
00:33:37.820 giving the benefit of the doubt on this because i don't think this is most people but it's close but
00:33:42.800 i'm going to throw the scale in their favor most people are safe rare and legal that's where most
00:33:50.900 people are and legal for a short period of time short period of time short period of time when you
00:33:56.900 know when you're into 25 weeks there dude you've already carried the baby what kind of scars are you
00:34:03.720 i mean hello what are you talking about so if you were raped or there was incest and and you know
00:34:12.460 you that's where most people are that's not where that's where i want to be
00:34:18.780 but it's not really where i think i am i life is life and i'm changing on that and people are changing
00:34:29.540 and if you have when you stop changing you're dead you're either dead physically or you're dead mentally
00:34:38.380 if you're not changing if your views aren't evolving someplace and you're dead why get up in the morning
00:34:47.120 you're not learning anything new so the problem is is that just like the eu you are either in the eu
00:34:58.820 and for the eu or you're a racist that's not true that is not true and people have had enough of it
00:35:07.940 and it's not going to end in a good way when it comes to abortion you either hate women
00:35:16.160 or you're for whatever the latest is right before birth right after birth two years after birth
00:35:24.420 you're either for that or you hate women it's not true and and here's why it's effective for the left
00:35:35.640 because they always make it about that one person they make it about a story
00:35:41.320 for instance does anybody think giving your kids access to gender and hormone treatment
00:35:53.040 is a good thing as a parent does anybody think that now what they want to do after they went
00:36:01.040 your brain stops developing you're fully developed i think at 24
00:36:07.080 you know legally 18 okay you're on your own you can do your own thing whatever
00:36:14.240 but i would caution that you don't do anything when you're a kid that lasts forever we don't
00:36:20.760 we don't let our kids go into a tattoo parlor you know at at five or six or eight why
00:36:27.580 why because it's permanent don't make any permanent decision don't let your kids get married at nine
00:36:38.540 why it's not about sex it's about they're not fully developed they can't make that decision
00:36:45.660 now here's gillette framing gender therapy in a completely different way
00:36:54.800 and they when they do this how do you argue here's yes the sexist razor company
00:37:06.360 trying to show you just how evil you are listen growing up i was always trying to figure out what
00:37:14.060 kind of man i wanted to become and i'm still trying to figure out what kind of man that i want to
00:37:18.100 become i always knew i was different i didn't know that there was a term for the type of person
00:37:24.000 that i was i went into my transition just wanting to be happy i'm glad i i'm at the point where i'm able
00:37:31.300 to shave south south north north east west never in a hurry right now don't be scared i'm scared that's his
00:37:47.080 problem is about being confident oh you you're doing fine you are doing fine i'm at the point in my manhood
00:37:54.880 where i'm actually happy it's not just myself transitioning it's everybody around me transitioning
00:38:00.420 whenever wherever however it happens your first shave is special gillette the best a man can get
00:38:12.880 now how do you argue about that you see that and if you say wait a minute wait a minute can we not
00:38:20.620 jam transgenderism down everybody's throat you're immediately a hater why well the feeling of that
00:38:28.040 is nice right it's a it's a dad and his kid and they're having a nice moment and you know how can
00:38:34.080 you fight against that so i read this story i didn't see that's the first time i've seen the
00:38:38.340 commercial but i read the story and when i read the story it was an anti-gillette stance okay but as i
00:38:46.760 read the story and i read the transcript they're selling love that's what they're selling they're
00:38:52.820 selling love just like they sold love who are you to judge you're gonna stop this is about love love
00:39:01.760 always wins no no gay marriage was not about love if it was about love we should have said the federal
00:39:12.420 government shouldn't have anything to say about anybody's marriage because love if you love a tree
00:39:19.700 and you want to marry a tree marry a tree it's not the government's business but it wasn't about love
00:39:26.720 it was in some particular cases it was about love it was at the individual level in most cases about
00:39:37.040 love but in the political arena at the at the at the level of of the activist it wasn't it was about
00:39:48.860 change not a change in me about change in everyone else it's a change of everyone else
00:39:57.560 you man now must agree with me so we've just taken you must agree with me
00:40:05.460 gay marriage is wrong to you must agree with me gay marriage is right neither of those is good
00:40:13.640 because it rules out people being different
00:40:19.220 i may not hate people who are gay i may not hate people who are uh who are married
00:40:31.900 but that doesn't mean that i i want that in my life that i want to teach that in my life it means
00:40:41.240 i'm tolerant of people who are different but are the people who are different than me tolerant of me
00:40:47.580 in my in my particular case yes unless they are politically motivated yes every gay person i
00:40:57.800 personally know we don't have a problem at all none married they have children i don't care they're my
00:41:07.180 friends that's the way it is with most americans but you are made to feel like you hate if you're not
00:41:19.420 for abortion in the extreme you hate women
00:41:24.800 if you're not for hormone therapy for your six-year-old eight-year-old fifteen-year-old
00:41:34.560 you hate people who are different than you that's not true that's not true
00:41:40.760 if you don't agree with them on abortion up until the last minute of birth
00:41:49.060 you're pro-life which means you're a hater
00:41:53.320 and i want to talk to you a little bit about how that has been flipped around on us so much
00:41:59.920 that now people want to be
00:42:04.400 pro-choice even though they're really not they're more pro-life than a lot of republicans
00:42:13.100 but because this media has made this has done such an effective job
00:42:19.500 that you if you are truly pro-life and are willing to say it
00:42:25.240 you are made to feel completely alone even though many of those people who are pro-choice
00:42:32.560 may in some cases be more pro-life than even you are
00:42:38.780 but they fail to recognize it and they certainly won't admit it
00:42:44.240 this is the best of the glenn beck program
00:42:49.060 breaking news from the supreme court in the last hour or so we're going to do our best to
00:43:04.100 wade through this we think it's both good and bad for pro-life people
00:43:10.800 uh the the bad part is the supreme court decided not to even consider
00:43:18.160 a an overturning of a law that was passed by mike pence when he was the governor of indiana
00:43:27.560 that said you cannot abort based on sex
00:43:33.320 well gender um i think disability is in there as well
00:43:38.960 disability which is really remarkably bad and race i think is in there too
00:43:43.280 so you can't say it's a white baby i don't want a white baby
00:43:47.240 um you can't say oh well they're handicapped so i don't want a handicapped kid
00:43:51.660 um they've overturned that so you can do those things which i don't understand yet
00:43:59.460 we haven't read clarence thomas concurred with that um but it's a long uh statement it's like 25
00:44:07.620 pages long so we haven't read it yet but we will by tomorrow and i'll have that uh for you because i
00:44:13.320 don't understand that yeah they're basically race sex and disability are the three main ones and
00:44:17.700 they're not saying they're basically saying they have no opinion on that they didn't take it up
00:44:21.180 so that you would have an opinion on that yes average person you'd have an opinion on that yeah
00:44:26.460 you know there's a complicated reasons why they do these things um and so it's not necessarily a bad
00:44:32.340 ruling but it we would have wanted a ruling in you know you want them to hold up the law so that
00:44:38.360 will now have its legal challenges on its own now uh the supreme court did overturn an overturning
00:44:47.380 yes of the law that mike pence uh did on fetal remains yeah so just to under to make it
00:44:53.760 understandable it went the good way for pro-life people on the fetal remains part of the law which
00:44:59.500 basically says hey it's a person so you kind of have to bury it with all the laws of burying a
00:45:05.000 person you know cremate or bury right um you can't just i don't know you know sell it for parts or you
00:45:11.680 know put it on you know whatever they're doing whatever whatever weird twisted thing planned
00:45:16.700 parenthood is doing these days uh with the remains they have to bury it like it's a person
00:45:20.580 and it's a respectful thing obviously they don't want that to happen because they're trying to argue
00:45:25.180 it's not a person so it went to uh that's a big that's a big deal yeah and it's interesting because
00:45:31.780 i think one of the things it does is it puts another another burden on planned parenthood right
00:45:38.080 so if they're having 10,000 abortions at a clinic they now have to have 10,000 cremations or 10,000
00:45:44.660 burials but that's not what they really argued they didn't argue it was an undue burden which is
00:45:50.100 one of the reasons why it seemingly went through that basically the law was does the does the
00:45:56.340 government have any any reason to look at how people are buried and they said yes they do and
00:46:04.260 so they up they upheld the law so that one i think is good and i think it is good anytime
00:46:08.420 planned parent has has another burden to deal with you know this i you know the way they approach that
00:46:14.180 i kind of wonder does the federal government have any place well remember this is state state it's a
00:46:20.200 state law um you know so that's a whole a whole nother situation so there's been some good and some
00:46:25.220 bad on that there's it was a there's still a few big cases we can go over this maybe we should spend
00:46:29.720 some time on this because we're getting to the end of the session here we're gonna have some of the
00:46:32.740 bigger uh yeah ones coming out um you know there was there's before we move off of abortion let's
00:46:38.960 just wrap up what we were talking about on on abortion and how we are we're focused on the wrong
00:46:45.800 things and and even people who are uh really truly pro-life say they're pro-choice because they're they
00:46:55.580 don't want to say that they're pro-life yeah and they are viewing it differently yeah for a friend of
00:47:02.080 mine was talking about you know the pro-choice pro-life thing and he says he's pro-choice and
00:47:06.180 you know you investigate these things and you realize that like the people even that say that
00:47:10.700 they're pro-choice are so far away from where the debate is actually happening and certainly so far
00:47:15.840 away from anything the democratic party is advocating for these days uh you know he said it was basically
00:47:20.880 the first trimester you know which is you know kind of where roe versus wade was that's where the
00:47:25.020 ruling initially was unlimited ability to get an abortion in the first trimester um and uh he was
00:47:32.720 saying he's talking about cognitive abilities and how far along it was and as you talk to him you're
00:47:37.640 like well what the the position he's describing and what a lot of pro-choice people are describing
00:47:42.340 is something considerably to the right of what most republicans are trying to do in their states
00:47:48.480 most the typical republican position and this isn't this is different than the the last week or so of
00:47:54.580 debates where people are talking about alabama going for six weeks um most republican states are
00:48:00.220 trying to get a ban on abortion at 20 weeks 20 and what we're talking about here with people who
00:48:07.400 consider themselves pro-choice they're saying well i think they should be allowed up to 12 weeks or 10
00:48:12.740 weeks i mean the polling on it is really incredible as we talk about the first trimester about 60 percent of
00:48:20.920 americans think abortion should be legal in some form and the reason why i truly believe is because
00:48:27.640 it's been drilled into our head rape incest i don't want to make that decision i don't i'm not that person
00:48:37.180 it is the emotional argument there right and so i think that is the argument of compassion people think
00:48:43.440 um and it is it's normal i think to be there because you're you want to say and it's and it's
00:48:51.180 actually in some ways very american to be there i'm not in your situation right i i don't want to
00:48:58.420 make that call and that's what people because it has not been made about life so the left gets all
00:49:04.320 libertarian aren't you yeah oh yeah we don't want anything to do with our body i mean sure we want to
00:49:08.800 micromanage this type of straw and how much soda you drink every single day yeah but we don't want
00:49:15.500 to be involved in your health decisions sure we want to take over the entire health care system
00:49:19.780 but gosh you and your doctor that relationship is so important it's so insultingly fake i mean they
00:49:26.800 don't argue this point on any other issue but it works for a while yeah it works because if they
00:49:34.280 are there and you keep the argument there most people are there if you can do that yeah so 60
00:49:42.400 percent of people in the first trimester think abortion should be legal um in the second trimester
00:49:48.220 generally legal or not only 28 so you're down to an incredibly unpopular position so you're an
00:49:55.720 incredibly you are very much alone if you believe in the second trimester but the word trimester
00:50:03.380 means there's another trimester that's coming and you're at 13 percent 13 percent of people believe
00:50:12.000 in the stated democratic position right that uh you should be able to uh to have an abortion in the
00:50:20.960 third trimester generally that's incredibly terrible and this is a position can you believe that they have
00:50:27.840 24 candidates and they can't find one who's going to side with the 80 i think it's 84 to 13 technically
00:50:34.720 84 percent of people who believe third trimester abortion should be illegal they can't find a person
00:50:41.400 there's not one of the 22 dozen candidates you can't find somebody who's going to stand up and say
00:50:46.240 yeah by the way that third trimester thing that's a little nuts nobody and all they can do is find
00:50:51.640 people who come out and say well look five minutes before um before birth yes it's the it's the woman's
00:50:57.140 choice for any reason the woman's choice that's that is i mean and i i think a huge problem because
00:51:05.220 number one people are people want to describe themselves oddly to me as pro-choice even when
00:51:13.780 they're taking positions to the right of where george w bush was or where uh you know where most
00:51:21.140 republican states are right like people want to be able to say that they're pro-choice instead of pro-life
00:51:27.380 and in a way it's it's i mean i would not certainly uh consider someone who's for abortion in the first
00:51:34.120 trimester to be pro-life but when you look about the the scale of debate right now most of the debates
00:51:39.420 happening in the ninth month of pregnancy where there's supposedly a controversy and isn't
00:51:43.760 and then the rest of it people are like well okay 20 20 weeks that's a republican position
00:51:48.900 every time that gets trotted out the media beats on them like they're psychotic they just want to
00:51:54.240 steal women's ovaries and use them for sport and it's like well that's not what's happening at all
00:51:59.080 they're a pool with ovaries yes it's fun ovary pool i figured you'd play before because you're an evil
00:52:04.760 conservative right yeah so i mean they want to play ovary ovary billiards that's one way to go
00:52:10.420 but in reality the the conversation is to the you know the reality of the situation is
00:52:16.140 if you could if you went with all these republican states and they said 20 weeks you would get rid of
00:52:21.860 a massive amount of some of the most horrific things we allow as a society and it would not you
00:52:29.420 know what the job wouldn't be done and people will say well it's just a trojan horse you're trying to
00:52:32.340 get no more abortion it's not a trojan horse i'm telling you it's right there i'm telling you that's
00:52:36.980 what i'm going for absolutely i consider this all of these things a step towards never having
00:52:42.520 another one of these happen that's why people will say they're pro-life because they get bogged down
00:52:48.960 pro-choice pro-choice yes because they get bogged down in that first six weeks and they'll be like i
00:52:56.160 you know i don't want to make that decision and the left will say well they're just trying to get rid
00:53:02.700 of it all entirely and they they're stuck there at that point of compassion and because they are
00:53:09.880 compassionate americans are compassionate people they will look at people who say yeah the night
00:53:15.240 before yeah go ahead kill the baby the night before kill him let him die after birth we tried to kill
00:53:22.280 him and we didn't kill him we can let him die what they'll say to themselves is that's not that's not
00:53:27.880 real that's not going to happen yeah that's not it's just that the people aren't going to do that
00:53:31.780 no no people are doing that people are shouting their abortions people are happy about abortions
00:53:38.120 and so they live in this safe but rare kind of world where they're like it's it's rare and it should
00:53:45.340 be safe and it should be legal and so i don't want to be i don't want to be pro-life because that means
00:53:50.720 you know that that it's all going to be back alley abortions and so they get stuck there i i that that
00:53:59.240 point is really it bothers me because i mean you're i've heard people say this before like oh well look
00:54:04.320 you're talking about these last minute abortions there's almost none of these things that happens
00:54:08.520 like one to two percent of abortions that's one way of thinking about it and i bet that way makes
00:54:12.740 you feel good how about this other way uh how many 9-11s you willing to excuse six seven eight ten
00:54:18.520 because that's what we're talking about we're talking about tens of thousands of babies that
00:54:22.360 would be born in weeks that are fully formed in the womb that you're killing so yeah you could say
00:54:28.020 one to two percent because that feels a lot better than saying seven or eight 9-11s i mean it feels a
00:54:33.960 lot better but let's just say all we did was save the 20 000 kids that were killing within the last
00:54:41.060 few weeks of pregnancy by the way this there's a big story while you were out glenn the npr um has their
00:54:46.620 language of how you're supposed to talk about abortion you might have caught a little bit of
00:54:49.220 that the one thing they did say in there was don't call them rare because we don't know how many of
00:54:54.200 them occur that's npr all of that was all left-wing propaganda except that one point they said don't
00:55:00.180 call late term and third term trimester abortions rare because we don't know if they're rare so we're
00:55:06.080 we know we're talking about tens of thousands we don't know how many uh how many there actually are
00:55:11.020 and even if it was just that if you could just get off this like little debate thing
00:55:15.200 where you're saying well i don't know donald trump seems to not want them so i want them
00:55:20.340 if you can get past that sort of thing you could save tens of thousands of actual children
00:55:25.480 and wouldn't that be great and you know what you can go on in front of in front of congress and say
00:55:29.460 well what about these kids that are in cages in the shiny blankets they aren't being treated as well
00:55:35.780 as we should on the border that's a great point seems secondary to the tens of thousands of kids
00:55:41.620 that are dying seems secondary you know get rid of that first then come talk to me about the color
00:55:47.360 of their blankets it's the only way you could uh argue about the color of the blankets because they
00:55:56.280 are children and uh and we hear from the left all the time if we can just save one it's worth it
00:56:06.220 the blaze radio network
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