Best of the Program | Guests: Pat & Stu and Jeffy | 11⧸20⧸18
Episode Stats
Words per Minute
192.99426
Summary
On today's show, Glenn Beck is joined by Pat Gray, host of the show Pat Gray Unleashed, to talk about all the latest in the 2020 election. They discuss the latest on the candidates, the NFL, the Women's March, and much more.
Transcript
00:00:08.500
Welcome to the podcast. I want to tell you we are coming on tour, Glenn and I, to Orlando and Tampa.
00:00:14.660
Get your tickets at glennbeck.com slash tour. We would love to see you. It's in a couple weeks.
00:00:19.420
If you happen to be in Florida, we would love for you to hang out and come see the show.
00:00:23.300
It's a lot of fun and a lot of election stuff, and it's a good time.
00:00:30.620
We are joined by the host of Pat Gray Unleashed today to talk about all the news going on.
00:00:38.280
You can get that podcast, by the way, when you're done listening to this one.
00:00:44.980
It was an interesting show. We kind of started talking about what's the state of affairs.
00:00:50.140
Is it okay to now watch the NFL, or are we supposed to still be boycotting it?
00:00:54.520
And if you're not watching the NFL, what a game you missed on Monday Night Football.
00:00:58.780
That's unbelievable. Highest scoring game ever on Monday Night.
00:01:02.460
That's out of like 700 games, 700-something games on Monday Night.
00:01:09.120
We have a new presidential candidate on the Democratic side that has not really been talked about.
00:01:15.920
He's got billions and billions of dollars to spend, and he's going to to try to convince you to elect him president of the United States.
00:01:21.480
And there's an older candidate who's coming back into the picture and has just received a new nickname from the president, which we talked about.
00:01:31.500
Also, we have a pretty amazing—there's some stuff from Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, which is interesting, but also an amazing statement from the founder of the Women's March, who's now distancing themselves from all the anti-Semitism that has kind of crept into that movement.
00:01:48.380
Some climate stuff as well, and really, that's about it of value.
00:01:57.480
There were a couple of segments we didn't mention, but those didn't have value.
00:02:02.020
But I guess if you want to listen to Jeffy more often, you can sign up and subscribe to his podcast, Chewing the Fat is the name of it.
00:02:18.680
You're listening to The Best of the Glenn Beck Program.
00:02:27.380
Brickhouse Nutrition, you don't have to eat your piece, you know.
00:02:29.820
To get the goodness of vegetables, you don't have to eat your piece.
00:02:35.060
What you need to do is get Brickhouse Nutrition's field of greens because, you know, everyone likes to call themselves a superfood, which is just like, to me, it's just basically a scam term.
00:02:48.380
A lot of these things are just extracts and weird supplements and things that, you know, there's some odd collection of ingredients.
00:02:58.600
You get to eat your vegetables without having to eat your vegetables.
00:03:01.820
For a limited time offer, visit BrickhouseGlenn.com.
00:03:14.660
Pretty good Monday night football game last night.
00:03:19.580
I know that might not be the most popular choice, but that's exactly what I want to talk about today.
00:03:26.440
That game last night was one of the, it was honestly one of the best sporting events I've ever watched in my entire life.
00:03:32.780
Now, of course, it comes into a distant second, at least, to last year's Super Bowl, which was the greatest sporting event of all time.
00:03:39.100
But that game last night, Pat, and I don't think you stayed up for it, right?
00:03:42.940
You have to get up so early for Pat Gray Unleashed.
00:03:52.900
I mean, because, you know, it was 54-51 as a final.
00:03:56.160
I was listening to a little of Pat Gray Unleashed earlier.
00:03:58.480
And you made the point, which is a sensible one, of was there any defense on the field at all?
00:04:04.680
And that's what I think was incredible about that game, is that there was, there was a lot of defense.
00:04:10.880
I mean, there were three defensive touchdowns, three in the game.
00:04:16.420
You know, two of them by one guy, Samson Ibecom.
00:04:22.780
Well, Aaron Donald played one of the best games, most dominant games by an interior defensive lineman I've ever seen.
00:04:47.300
And as I'm watching this game, it is just one of those things fully, if you like sports, right?
00:04:57.960
And Glenn always falls on the other side of this line.
00:05:06.380
And he is on the other side of that line, and he doesn't care about it.
00:05:09.040
So, if you don't care about sports, you don't care about sports.
00:05:12.600
But as this game is ending, I'm thinking to myself, there are some people who don't care about sports.
00:05:18.300
There are some people like a Mr. Pat Gray who's responsible and decided not to go, just actually to go to bed, but still recorded it, right?
00:05:26.740
And all that, there's some people who watch the game.
00:05:34.040
Allow me to revisit with new information the group of people who love the NFL, who love watching football, but who didn't watch because they were boycotting the league.
00:05:48.300
Polls show this is not a huge number, but in this audience, it's probably a significant representation in this audience.
00:05:55.480
And you're not doing it because, as we know, Colin Kaepernick was kneeling and all the controversy that's gone over that over the last couple of years.
00:06:05.640
I understand why you would think, you know, the national anthem and our country is more important than sports.
00:06:22.660
The man is not employed by the National Football League.
00:06:26.240
He is not in the league and has not been in the league for multiple years.
00:06:32.840
And yes, he has no idea what he's talking about when it comes to the statistics of policing.
00:06:38.640
Does he understand what any of the words that come out of his mouth?
00:06:48.440
But you can't let Colin Kaepernick's sock choices determine what you do with your life.
00:06:55.100
I felt, I thought to myself like, this is, this is one of the most enjoyable sporting events I've ever watched in my life.
00:07:03.820
And people are avoiding it because of what Colin Kaepernick put on his feet.
00:07:12.440
He deserves no power over anyone in this audience.
00:07:16.460
He should not be making one decision for any individual person in this audience.
00:07:25.940
And to let Colin Kaepernick make a choice for you makes no sense to me at all.
00:07:30.360
Remember, this is a league that not only does not employ Colin Kaepernick, but employs what?
00:07:57.940
I understand that these culture sort of wars go on and you feel like, you know, with social, I mean, you know, Glenn's book really keeps popping into my head as I watch this stuff go on.
00:08:09.560
But, I mean, you're going to see this at Thanksgiving.
00:08:12.560
And people are going to be so angry about all these, you know, little issues related to politics.
00:08:19.360
And sometimes it's important to make your stand.
00:08:22.120
And, you know, these issues, these cultural issues can be important.
00:08:27.100
But the idea that two out of a thousand players are kneeling that would keep you away of such an enjoyable three-plus hours last night is just, it's criminal.
00:08:40.940
Colin Kaepernick should not be controlling our lives and our decisions.
00:08:44.380
And I, I, there's something about this where, I don't know, we just get on these lines and it's partially because of politics and partially because, you know, Colin Kaepernick's points are really terrible.
00:09:02.860
He is doing things that, that push back against the cultural fabric of this country.
00:09:21.500
I've got no interest in kneeling in front of the flag.
00:09:23.660
And I got no, I, you know, when we've gone over the stats a million times, Colin Kaepernick and the people who agree with Colin Kaepernick that are in the NFL are wrong on most of these issues.
00:09:33.180
That's not to say there's never an incident of, uh, of unwarranted violence towards African-Americans by police officers.
00:09:40.020
But we know, we've looked, we've looked at these stats a million times.
00:09:43.080
There is almost nothing to support the opinion of Colin Kaepernick.
00:09:48.220
But that's even more of a reason to not let it determine your choices.
00:09:54.560
It's, it's even more of a reason to not let Colin Kaepernick make these choices for you.
00:10:01.780
He's made choices that have cost him millions of dollars, arguably.
00:10:06.260
Most of those choices were throwing it to defensive players instead of offensive players.
00:10:11.360
And I just can't, I, I just was watching this last night and I'm like, by our audience, most of them will do what they want to do.
00:10:20.500
Most of them will say, hey, you know, look, I, I'm not going to let this guy, you know, decide my life for it.
00:10:31.220
You know, every place you go into has people who feel like Colin Kaepernick.
00:10:36.520
Every grocery store trip you go into, you're buying food that was stocked by people who agree with Colin Kaepernick.
00:10:44.980
Every, every, uh, every restaurant you go into has a server or a cook or someone else who works there who agrees with Colin Kaepernick.
00:10:54.840
And they're probably posting publicly about it on their social media accounts.
00:10:58.620
Every single time, I guarantee the radio station you're listening to with all the conservative hosts has an engineer or an IT guy or somebody else that agrees with Colin Kaepernick.
00:11:15.060
You deal with people who are wrong all the time.
00:11:18.320
And yet, the one thing that everybody seems to want to boycott is the National Football League.
00:11:25.240
The one thing I know, at least in my life, is the highest level of entertainment.
00:11:34.840
It's easy to avoid entertainment you don't like.
00:11:37.820
But if you love it, there's just no reason to let Colin Kaepernick or any of the other morons making points associated with him control your decisions.
00:11:49.840
And I, I, I think in the moment, the heat of the moment when there's, you know, Trump's tweeting about it and Pence is going to the games and leaving games and it's a big issue and MSNBC is talking about it all the time.
00:11:59.940
I can understand being, getting in the middle of that and taking a side on it.
00:12:03.400
Because I, of the two arguments, I completely side with Donald Trump on the idea that it's a terrible protest.
00:12:11.360
But I think it's a bad, it's a bad series of points.
00:12:21.460
The, the, the, the, the intense back and forth has passed.
00:12:26.460
Isn't it another moment to, isn't it time in this really complicated world where everybody hates every, everybody for everything to just step back and say, look, if a football game is something I want to watch, I'm going to freaking watch it.
00:12:41.080
You know, I'm very excited, as you know, Pat, to go see Creed 2 tonight.
00:12:45.360
And Sylvester Stallone is Republican-ish, right?
00:12:51.660
I mean, he's, he has a good relationship seemingly with Donald Trump.
00:12:54.660
He worked with him on a pardon a few months ago for a former boxer.
00:13:00.460
But, you know, Sylvester Stallone, obviously the Rocky guy, but guaranteed half or more of that cast, probably, if they had a choice, would side with Colin Kaepernick, right?
00:13:11.640
Like every Hollywood movie you go to, every television show you watch.
00:13:15.920
I mean, every time you watch a Fox News program, you're watching a show that is, that probably has camera guys and, you know, people working behind the scenes in every capacity that agree with Colin Kaepernick.
00:13:34.600
Shepard Smith's on the air, and we don't boycott Fox News, right?
00:13:39.560
Like these, we have to understand, I think, that so often people in Washington and in the media find little issues like this.
00:13:54.040
Colin Kaepernick, a man who has, I wouldn't trust to order the catering at Thanksgiving dinner.
00:14:00.600
I wouldn't trust him with any decision in my life.
00:14:05.400
I've seen the analysis he has made on two major situations.
00:14:12.440
And two, who he's supposed to throw to, and it's constantly the other team.
00:14:20.340
Much more the decision-making on the field than the other way around.
00:14:23.640
But it's like, you know, to see that and to, I just feel like Washington and the media and all these sites,
00:14:30.540
all the social media accounts are constantly trying to use us to get us to click on things,
00:14:39.200
to push us into these passionate decisions that we're going to make,
00:14:43.920
and lock ourselves into choices that we ourselves don't even enjoy.
00:14:48.100
We're taking things that we like out of our lives because of other people's choices.
00:14:52.180
And I just, you know, it's Thanksgiving week, one of the most important parts of Thanksgiving.
00:15:03.420
And, or no, it's who's food and three's family.
00:15:08.420
And I think five is that great nap that you have after you have dinner,
00:15:11.680
and you fall asleep on the couch, and your gut's half hanging out over your belt,
00:15:22.660
Those are the important moments of Thanksgiving.
00:15:25.740
And I just, this week, I think it's time to reconsider that if you went that way.
00:15:31.100
I mean, if you wanted to make your point, you made your point.
00:15:33.580
I mean, the National Football League seems to be thriving.
00:15:35.700
I don't know that it had a huge impact on them.
00:15:41.080
You know, if you really believe that this is an important thing to do,
00:15:45.800
I just feel like so many people get locked, you know, get caught up in this
00:15:48.780
without even thinking through the idea that what they're doing
00:15:51.260
is giving power over their lives to some dope who's kneeling on a field.
00:15:59.440
And the protest is essentially, for all intents and purposes, over.
00:16:11.060
I don't even know who the two players are that you mentioned.
00:16:17.100
I mean, I know Eric Reid is still in the league.
00:16:33.060
I mean, I don't care what the cheerleader does.
00:16:37.460
You know, I don't care what the cheerleader does either, right?
00:16:40.180
But, like, shouldn't we think of the players the same way?
00:16:43.480
Why do we favor what the players think about a political issue over the cheerleaders?
00:16:47.060
The cheerleaders have more time to be thinking about it.
00:16:49.920
They probably are more informed than most of the players.
00:16:52.240
There's no reason, you know, a guarantee, like, you go to that game,
00:16:56.700
if every single player stops kneeling and every cheerleader stops kneeling,
00:17:00.180
there's going to be thousands of concession workers
00:17:02.700
and thousands of people working at the networks that carry the games
00:17:06.420
and thousands of people who work for the websites that you visit
00:17:11.700
Every franchise has got people in their offices who do this.
00:17:16.100
We live in a society where people get to make their own minds up,
00:17:20.980
and sometimes they make really terrible decisions, and they're wrong.
00:17:26.400
You know, Glenn's got into this world before, and we always talk about this.
00:17:29.040
We used to have this argument with Glenn all the time whenever he would decide,
00:17:31.900
I don't know, maybe I'm going to boycott X, Y, or Z.
00:17:33.820
It was usually sports, and we always made fun of him,
00:17:42.060
Because you weren't watching it in the first place.
00:17:55.240
I do regular cocaine, so that wouldn't even be a – anyway.
00:17:58.820
But, like, with Glenn, we always always come back to him and say,
00:18:03.380
You go to 16 movies a week and give him those up?
00:18:06.960
He usually would get very mad at us when we made that point.
00:18:10.660
I mean, it's like – you can find this everywhere.
00:18:13.400
There's no way to be consistent in your life on these stances
00:18:19.140
because every single thing you do has – people – there are conservatives,
00:18:24.920
and we know this, in every aspect of society, right?
00:18:28.400
I mean, even in – with the exception of maybe academics,
00:18:31.420
you can basically find them everywhere, even in Hollywood, right?
00:18:34.700
And so many of them are in hiding, but still, they're out there.
00:18:38.200
The same thing happens with people who are completely wrong about police officers.
00:18:43.940
And you're just never going to be able to be consistent on this issue.
00:18:47.080
So, why pick one that's going to cost you enjoyment out of your life
00:18:57.920
Maybe I'm alone on this one, but it doesn't – I like your point here, Pat, too.
00:19:06.160
So, even if you thought – when Kaepernick was in the league,
00:19:11.340
He hasn't been in the league for two or three years.
00:19:21.100
But I think, you know, it was too big a point he wanted to make.
00:19:28.680
And you lost out on probably, who knows, over three years now,
00:19:55.740
You getting pumped up for the Tom Steyer presidential bid?
00:20:07.640
He's basically – I think what he's trying to do is get out ahead of Bloomberg.
00:20:11.360
Because this is a guy – you've seen his face before, if you've watched cable news probably.
00:20:18.640
He spent $20 or $100 million of his own money to try to push people into getting familiar
00:20:26.300
with the Donald Trump impeachment that he's trying to push for.
00:20:29.480
And so this is going to be where he runs if he does.
00:20:34.080
There is not one chance, not a chance, that he wins the Democrat nomination.
00:20:41.580
And if he did, I'll eat my underwear if he wins the Democrat nomination.
00:20:49.120
I just swore this off and said I'd never do this again.
00:20:52.340
But Tom Steyer, I've got to do this for Tom Steyer.
00:20:54.900
So let's go back to the underwear review for Pat.
00:21:00.460
If she wins the Democrat nomination, I'd eat my underwear.
00:21:08.780
In fact, I was a little nervous election day, the fact is, with Beto O'Rourke.
00:21:15.180
Because a year ago, over a year ago, I said, yeah, come on, no.
00:21:18.900
There's no way that Beto O'Rourke beats Ted Cruz.
00:21:33.120
And now I feel confident if Tom Steyer wins the Democrat nomination,
00:21:38.780
You're listening to the best of the Glenn Beck Program.
00:21:51.500
If you're not a subscriber, become one now on iTunes.
00:21:54.620
And while you're there, do us a favor and rate the show.
00:21:58.680
Relief Factor has been helping Glenn for quite a long time alleviate
00:22:02.540
some pretty severe pain he's had and issues he's had with that.
00:22:08.960
Where there's, like, Glenn standing on, like, a farm.
00:22:13.100
And he's like, look, I just do a lot of hard work outdoors.
00:22:21.240
I think Glenn loves the idea of hard work outdoors.
00:22:27.020
But it's helped him when he actually has attempted the work.
00:22:30.300
He's not in a lot of pain anymore, which is a big deal.
00:22:35.640
It's got four key ingredients that help your body's fight against inflammation, which is where the pain is coming from.
00:22:41.420
They've got a three-week quick start for $19.95.
00:22:51.440
For $20 to find out if you can get rid of this issue that you're having with pain, that's the easiest bargain you're ever going to find.
00:22:57.120
If you go to drug-free and natural way to ease your pain, go to relieffactor.com.
00:23:06.500
You can also check out my show weekday mornings between 6 and 8 Central Time, so 7 and 9 Eastern, and on Pat Gray Unleashed on the Blaze Radio TV Network, and, you know, anytime on podcast if you can't get up that early.
00:23:28.660
Because tomorrow you have a special edition of more on trivia for Thanksgiving, right?
00:23:38.680
It's one of the best years in the history of more on trivia.
00:23:40.320
I mean, in some of these weeks I'm thinking, ah, it's not going to be right this week.
00:23:47.560
It's a really good predictor of who's going to win the game.
00:23:52.740
I certainly wish, I honestly wish I just moved to Vegas and just started betting more on
00:24:07.160
Uh, we're asking questions of, uh, of, uh, store clerks.
00:24:21.360
Here's the clip from, this is from past, uh, past, last Friday.
00:24:38.660
There's a new movie coming out soon about the life of Ruth Bader Ginsburg.
00:24:54.960
The abbreviation GDP is short for what three words?
00:25:13.760
A lot of people don't know that Pakistan's not in the Middle East either.
00:25:16.780
So, uh, uh, but Commissioner Jeffy gave her that answer.
00:25:26.140
We gotta, we gotta fire him as commissioner because he's terrible.
00:25:30.140
And then every time there's a flag on the field and we go to the flag on the field and somebody
00:25:36.200
Well, thanks for your, uh, thanks for your concern.
00:25:39.100
I mean, he, he doesn't even consider any flag on the field, no matter how legitimate.
00:25:51.500
The foundation of this problem is that he's not a good guy.
00:25:54.580
Um, but, uh, if you want to hear more from the good guy, he's got a podcast.
00:26:03.940
It's available on our, on our channel and I don't know.
00:26:06.580
And he'll join us again tomorrow for, uh, for, um, more on trivia as well.
00:26:15.480
You're listening to the best of the Glenn Beck program.
00:26:18.900
There's a, uh, kind of an amazing moment has occurred here, uh, with, uh, the women's
00:26:34.200
Now you, uh, may know the women's march as a, uh, really kind of terrible, uh, organization.
00:26:41.040
Um, not because women are terrible, but because first of all, the first, I think they started
00:26:46.660
off on the wrong foot because their first protest was literally the day of, or the day
00:26:50.920
after the inauguration of the president of the United States.
00:26:53.100
So they didn't even give him a chance to be bad, right?
00:26:55.640
Like they didn't give him a chance to be president and do something bad against women that they
00:26:59.880
They just did it the day after he entered the office.
00:27:02.220
They were like, we protest his choice on the drapes.
00:27:04.540
It was like, it was like, there's nothing to protest yet.
00:27:07.160
Obviously like they didn't like Donald Trump generally, but like that is what the election
00:27:13.760
And then once the president becomes the president, just like we did with Barack Obama, by the
00:27:17.580
way, uh, you give him a chance to do what he does.
00:27:20.760
And when he starts doing things like the bailouts and, uh, when he starts saying in stimulus
00:27:25.400
package and cash for clunkers, he confirms what you previously believed about him.
00:27:30.260
And then you can say, okay, now we're protesting.
00:27:31.920
Uh, you know, the tea party didn't start the day after, at least to me, at least on this show,
00:27:37.940
And the day after he was elected, it was until he started doing things that, that didn't
00:27:43.620
Not, not 2000, you know, it wasn't a hardcore, you know, I think the first protest I remember
00:27:48.580
about him was in April of 2009, which I think at the time Glenn even said, it's too early.
00:27:53.360
He hasn't done enough yet on these issues, like taxes.
00:27:57.800
It wasn't until a little later that we really, okay, this is really happening.
00:28:03.420
So that I thought was mistake number one for the women's March movement.
00:28:07.940
And then mistake number two was associating itself with really awful people like Linda
00:28:12.660
Sarsour, who is, uh, you know, outwardly an anti-Semite and, and, and has all sorts
00:28:21.220
She's associated herself with Louis Farrakhan and will not distance herself.
00:28:30.440
She is one of the founders of the women's March.
00:28:34.500
As founder of the women's March, my original vision and intent was to show the capacity
00:28:38.680
of human beings to stand in solidarity and love against the hateful rhetoric that had
00:28:41.880
become part of the political landscape in the U.S. and around the world.
00:28:44.800
I wanted us to prove that the majority of us are decent people who want a world that
00:28:48.340
is fair, just, just, and inclusive of women and all people.
00:28:54.120
So she, you know, she meant it like if it's, if she just had all a L L with all lowercase,
00:28:58.500
like that's like just a passing statement, but she capitalized the A. That means all
00:29:03.220
people, not just men and women, all the genders, all anyone, any, anyone who's identifying as
00:29:17.400
Cause you know, they really are intense about it.
00:29:20.740
There are, uh, we proved, uh, they, they proved that they say on January 21st, 2017.
00:29:26.860
Um, now she writes Bob Bland, who I don't know, Tamika Mallory, Linda Sarsour, and Carmen
00:29:34.900
I love how they turned it into a company, an incorporation, uh, a corporation, um, have
00:29:39.860
steered the movement away from its true course.
00:29:43.040
I have waited, hoping they would write the ship, but they have not in opposition to our
00:29:48.280
unity principles, both capitalized by the way, which makes it, you know, it's important.
00:29:52.760
Uh, uh, they, uh, have allowed anti-Semitism, anti-L-B-G-T-Q-I-A sentiment.
00:30:08.720
But they're also missing the two for two-spirit.
00:30:16.580
I think we came, came to the conclusion, uh, a previous time doing the show together,
00:30:24.400
Um, and Quilt Bag 2, Electric Boogaloo, would cover all of that, including the two.
00:30:30.400
You do throw in the Electric Boogaloo, though, at the end?
00:30:34.080
I, I, I gotta assume most of it's covered by Electric Boogaloo.
00:30:37.300
So if you do Quilt Bag 2, Electric Boogaloo, then you know you're tolerant.
00:30:42.340
Uh, but in opposition to our unity principles, they have allowed anti-Semitism, anti-Quilt Bag
00:30:48.040
2, Electric Boogaloo sentiment, and hateful racist rhetoric to become part of the platform
00:30:52.480
by their refusal to separate themselves from groups that espouse these racist, hateful
00:30:57.220
I call for the current co-chairs to step down and to let others lead who can restore faith
00:31:03.980
I stand in solidarity, and this is capitalized, so you know it's important, solidarity, with
00:31:09.680
all the sister march organizations to bring back the movement to its authentic purpose.
00:31:13.720
As Women's March founder, I am stepping up to bring focus back to the unity principles,
00:31:17.840
and that's capitalized, so you know it's important.
00:31:19.920
And I am stepping up to bring back focus to, uh, uh, uh, to, uh, and with all the support
00:31:24.760
of those who march and have continued to march, I pledge to support grassroots decentralized
00:31:29.260
leadership, promoting- Decentralized leadership is an interesting thing coming from this group.
00:31:37.180
Promoting a safe, worldwide community devoid of hate, speech, bigotry, and racism.
00:31:40.760
This is something that we have, on the right, criticized the Women's March about, saying,
00:31:46.440
hey, uh, if you want to be taken seriously in this movement, you've got to distance yourself
00:31:50.820
from people like Louis Farrakhan and the people who are working with them, like Linda Sarsour,
00:31:54.840
like Tamika Mallory, and we're getting our wish here.
00:31:59.380
She is, I mean, the founder of the Women's March is saying, this isn't right, we're going
00:32:09.480
She did resist it for a long time, and then she also denounced them, uh, and what they were
00:32:15.380
I think they've finally been guilted into saying, you know, maybe your advocacy of the
00:32:19.140
position that Jews are bad isn't all that wonderful.
00:32:22.300
And it's nice that they've, they've discovered that, um, when it comes to the connection between,
00:32:28.320
uh, gender and race and all these things that are so important, you hear this all the time
00:32:33.620
from Democratic politicians, largely, and also in the media.
00:32:42.520
This is, you have to make sure you have this, a number of people on, on your, uh, on each group
00:32:49.120
That is so common, I even get the sense, I think, that that's reality.
00:32:56.640
Most, like, there's a split between conservatives and liberals, in which liberals, you know,
00:33:01.400
the left sees this as, you know, vitally important diversity for diversity's sake, skin color
00:33:08.940
And conservatives see it as like, what about the merit of the person?
00:33:16.180
This is a poll, and this is in the Huffington Post, they wrote about this.
00:33:20.260
Would you say that you share a lot of common interests and concerns with other, uh, people
00:33:25.780
of your gender, um, or would you say it's not really irrelevant?
00:33:29.900
Now, in my mind, Democrats are going to say it's 80% really relevant, and Republicans are
00:33:39.440
And in the middle, like, you know, maybe it splits out a little bit differently than that.
00:33:43.220
Maybe in the, you know, somewhere in the middle among independents.
00:33:49.520
In fact, it's really only true with female Democrats.
00:33:55.120
And it's still to the, not to the scale that we're talking about.
00:33:58.280
Female Democrats, do you believe you have a lot of common interests and concerns based
00:34:07.980
Now, even that, to me, is not nearly as high as I imagined it in my head.
00:34:12.980
Based on the debates we see in politics and in media, I would not, I would have said it
00:34:20.300
Female independents, 29% say, yeah, I have a lot of, I'm a woman, I have a lot of, uh,
00:34:31.240
Among Republicans, only 27% of females say yes.
00:34:34.960
They have interests with, same, uh, common interests with other women.
00:34:41.260
So you kind of get this, the, the, the general split there, but not nearly as dramatic as
00:34:46.580
What's even more interesting, I think, is, is, uh, males.
00:34:50.940
And of course, obviously, as a sexist, you'd expect that out of me.
00:34:54.660
Uh, male Republicans, only 24% say they have something in common with other men.
00:35:00.080
In other words, you're thinking of yourself as part of a group and we're all in this together
00:35:03.460
and we all have the same concerns because, you know, that's what, instead you think of
00:35:14.960
21% say they have, uh, something in common with their gender.
00:35:27.240
But maybe the most shocking thing of all, the lowest support out of all these groups,
00:35:34.500
Male Democrats say, now maybe that's because they're saying, well, well, it's because women
00:35:40.940
Only 21% say they have a lot in common, um, when it comes to basing things on gender.
00:35:49.640
Uh, when you look at some of the other findings, 52% of all Americans who identify with a political
00:35:55.480
party, including half of Democrats and 55% of Republicans say they share a lot in common
00:36:01.440
Now that's when you should share a lot in common with, right?
00:36:05.400
Because this is an ideologically based organization in theory, right?
00:36:09.020
Like you should have the same concerns as other Democrats.
00:36:13.480
As would you say you have a lot in common with the Republican part right now?
00:36:18.060
No, I'm not, I'm not a Republican or an independent.
00:36:20.620
So I wouldn't necessarily, and neither are you, right?
00:36:22.680
I mean, you're not a Republican registered Republican.
00:36:24.360
Although I, you know, I would certainly typically vote for more Republicans and Democrats.
00:36:28.760
Um, I vote with a lot of libertarians as well, but again, if you're in a party and I don't
00:36:33.480
take that stance largely because I don't believe in the way the party system works, I don't
00:36:37.840
So I don't, uh, I don't join a party, but if I'm going to join a party, what reason would
00:36:43.120
you join a party other than the ideas and concerns being similar?
00:36:48.660
Now you, maybe there's people in there you could say, well, I disagree with what we're doing
00:36:54.480
However, if that's true, like there's also an argument to just find a new party, right?
00:36:59.020
Like go, go to a party that's like the party is just supposed to identify your values and
00:37:09.120
We saw this a lot with, you know, people who were Democrats in the fifties, you know,
00:37:12.740
and they really love, they were the, they were the, you know, fifties Democrats and they
00:37:16.620
remained Democrats through the eighties when the Republicans were much closer to their views than
00:37:22.400
the Democrats of the eighties were, but they remained Democrats because they were loyal
00:37:26.200
to that party and it was part of their identity, right?
00:37:28.640
They, they, they saw it as part of their core, which is not what a party is supposed to do
00:37:39.580
As long as you're leading that, not them, they shouldn't be leading you to a new position.
00:37:44.180
Uh, black Americans were split 38, 34 as to whether or not they had much in common with
00:37:50.460
Would you believe that looking at the way we are told that African-Americans vote in
00:37:58.960
The way the media paints the African-American in this, in this country is a crime.
00:38:03.660
They, they paint them as mindless people who just will always vote with Democrats and they
00:38:09.020
don't think for themselves and they can't get ID.
00:38:15.260
The African-Americans I know think for themselves, just like every other race and every other
00:38:19.200
group, you know, like it's insulting and somehow the media gets away with this.
00:38:27.720
They're not a, the groups are, it's a terrible way to identify people.
00:38:32.140
You know, you are an individual and I know as conservatives, we understand that the media
00:38:36.240
just likes to lump everybody in groups so they can talk generally about them.
00:38:40.380
It's actually the core of what racism was, right?
00:38:44.280
When you think of people as groups instead of individuals, this is when you get in, when
00:38:54.580
There may be a person who is Jewish who does things that you don't like and that's okay.
00:38:59.120
The media should learn that about George Soros, who's, I mean, you know, really more of
00:39:03.140
an atheist at this point, but still the point is that like you can criticize someone as
00:39:07.320
they do with Jared Kushner, with Ivanka Trump, they, with Sheldon Adelson.
00:39:17.620
But when a conservative says something bad about, you know, Chuck Schumer, well, then it's
00:39:25.260
It's Jewish money you're considering, you're criticizing.
00:39:28.540
He is making decisions that we don't like politically.
00:39:33.280
30% of Americans younger than 30 say they have a lot in common with others their age.
00:39:40.820
A third of those age 45 to 64 say that they agree with that.
00:39:51.360
And then when it comes to income, people making less than 50 grand a year say they have, about
00:39:58.840
a third of them say they have a lot in common with people in their income group.
00:40:05.460
59% of Americans who describe themselves as born again or evangelical Christians say that
00:40:11.760
they share many interests and concerns with others of faith.
00:40:18.620
But again, if you're in a faith, you should really consider yourself aligned with others
00:40:26.680
Because, I mean, that's kind of the whole base.
00:40:28.020
Ideological groups, you should find a lot of the similar interests and concerns.
00:40:55.800
Home title lock is, they actually showed us how they go and how the criminals can do home
00:41:02.360
Literally takes them like 15 or 20 minutes to take your title.
00:41:06.480
And they can take it and borrow hundreds of thousands of dollars.
00:41:09.900
I've decided to stop doing radio and just go into business.
00:41:16.560
I got to believe that I can probably get away with it.
00:41:18.760
I know all the, you know, just go and you just start taking people's homes, barming against
00:41:22.480
their equity and then spending the money on yourself.
00:41:26.120
And they can find your home as well, especially if you don't protect yourself.
00:41:34.080
They put a virtual barrier around your title and mortgage.
00:41:37.620
And as soon as they find tampering, they're going to shut it down for you.
00:41:42.700
Get the $100 search free with sign up at home title lock dot com.
00:41:48.440
And right now, one of the things they're doing is trying to pin Ivanka Trump with the
00:41:53.740
same problem that Hillary had when President Trump had everybody chanting, lock her up.
00:42:04.460
To drum her out of the picture in the White House.
00:42:09.000
Because, I mean, we have to go back and revisit the lock her up thing.
00:42:11.520
This was seen as a sign of sexism by Republicans who wanted to lock up Hillary Clinton with no
00:42:17.980
evidence, no trial, showed that they don't care about due process, showed that they they
00:42:23.720
Now, of course, what we all know is it was a, you know, a little bit over the top chant
00:42:30.380
about saying we don't want her to be president of the United States.
00:42:33.820
It was like it was a dumb part of a political election, like locking her up.
00:42:37.320
Like, obviously, let's all be clear about this.
00:42:40.560
Obviously, Donald Trump does not think that she should be locked up because if he did,
00:42:56.360
He has the ability to do something about this and hasn't done anything about it.
00:43:01.240
Maybe he will in the future if he thinks it's a it's a positive thing.
00:43:04.800
But he said right after the election, look, I think we've done enough to her.
00:43:11.360
When you commit a crime that we don't we're not supposed to say, well, look,
00:43:21.100
First of all, she didn't make the cross country team.
00:43:24.780
And now and just because her dad robbed a bank, we can't do that to her as well.
00:43:30.700
If you commit a crime, you should be investigated for it.
00:43:33.380
And the idea that, you know, we're somehow embracing this idea that because she's a powerful
00:43:39.200
political figure who's going is probably close to, if not a billionaire, who has lost a political
00:43:46.860
Like, so she gets out of whatever crime she committed.
00:43:49.540
Like, that's not a sensible way of dealing with this.
00:43:51.780
And I think the reality of it is, is when they look at it like, you know, could you go
00:43:58.900
I mean, she did seemingly do things that were in violation of rules and probably illegal
00:44:05.140
in some way, but it would be difficult to prove.
00:44:10.680
It would be a massive thing that tore apart the country even more than it already is.
00:44:15.760
And for that reason, it's just not worth the hassle, I think.
00:44:19.380
She's not going to jail for 50 years over it, you know, over the email thing.
00:44:23.800
Maybe she would have if we saw all of her emails.
00:44:27.340
So that's a whole, that's the whole reason why that crime exists in the first place.
00:44:34.640
And what the media is doing, and it's fascinating coming from the media, in that every single
00:44:40.640
time you say, well, Barack, what you're saying, you're complaining about Donald Trump separating
00:44:46.840
Well, look at these pictures from the Barack Obama administration.
00:45:02.240
You complained about Hillary Clinton in her emails during the campaign.
00:45:04.840
And now Ivanka Trump has sent emails from a private email address about work issues.
00:45:17.480
Well, stunningly, some actual sense, I guess, is coming from MSNBC on this issue, who's
00:45:25.940
Here's the segment from their coverage this morning.
00:45:28.940
In both cases, these women used private email accounts to communicate with government officials.
00:45:34.720
Both women used private attorneys to determine what emails should be reviewed and which should
00:45:41.080
And like Trump, Clinton pleaded ignorance of the rules surrounding email usage.
00:45:48.040
Trump's use of private email appears to cover about seven months, from February 2017 until last
00:45:54.520
Hillary Clinton used it for all four years that she served as Secretary of State.
00:45:58.940
According to people familiar with an internal review that began last year, Trump's attorney
00:46:03.960
found less than 1,000 emails that discussed her official schedule and fewer than 100 that
00:46:09.560
discussed government business with other administration officials.
00:46:12.860
By comparison, Clinton's attorneys determined that about 30,000 of Clinton's emails addressed
00:46:18.400
official business and had to be turned over to the State Department.
00:46:21.760
According to the FBI, another 31,000 emails were deleted after Clinton determined that they
00:46:28.060
Trump's attorney says none of her emails were deleted.
00:46:31.860
Trump's attorney also insists none of her emails contain classified information.
00:46:40.680
On the other hand, the State Department determined more than 2,000 of Clinton's emails included
00:46:50.240
Sure, in Hillary's case, it's like maybe 61,000 emails that had to do with sensitive government
00:47:00.100
information to maybe less than 100 of Ivanka's.
00:47:04.800
And you know that they, I mean, the Secretary of State is probably privy to some pretty serious
00:47:09.960
information that she could be sharing on these emails.
00:47:12.500
I'd also note the first daughter is not held to the standard of the Secretary of State.
00:47:17.180
Now, she is an advisor to the president, so she has some role formally in the government,
00:47:21.620
But, you know, and she has to follow these rules just like everybody else.
00:47:33.480
I mean, all of these, like, the one thing I will say about it from the negative perspective
00:47:40.640
on Ivanka and others who have been in the administration who have done this is because
00:47:51.540
You shouldn't, you gotta, I mean, you just know this is going to be a problem because
00:47:55.220
of what a big problem it was for Hillary during the election.
00:47:57.700
And you should probably make sure you're just on government email all the time unless
00:48:04.260
That is, a lot of these wind up being, though, you know, tied together.
00:48:10.600
And Hillary tried to make this point with some of the things that she did.
00:48:16.140
But, like, if you're sending a, if we're saying, you know, tonight I'm going to Creed
00:48:21.420
And if I'm in the government and I'm like, well, I gotta find a time.
00:48:28.560
Technically, that's government business, right?
00:48:36.260
The other point I would bring up, though, is that one.
00:48:39.100
There's a difference between a private email account and a private email server.
00:48:44.560
If you are doing a private email account, you open up a Gmail, you open a Yahoo account,
00:48:55.960
If you're on Hotmail.com, you are, your stuff is all stored by, you know, Google or whatever
00:49:05.220
And if it needs to be seen, there's an availability to get it.
00:49:10.040
You can't delete all your emails out of your Gmail account.
00:49:12.880
At least, there's ways that Google can get them if, like, let's say they're subpoenaed,
00:49:17.880
I mean, Google will work within those legal restrictions.
00:49:20.560
If you have a private email server, there's a reason you do that.
00:49:24.560
The reason you do that is to pull all of that outside of it.
00:49:29.840
Like, if you want to go and send emails about cooking recipes, you can do that over Google
00:49:37.160
Um, when you do a private email server, there's a, you are launching intent.
00:49:43.740
Hillary Clinton knew she was going to run for president again, did not want all of her
00:49:48.160
So she didn't send them on the government accounts.
00:49:50.360
And then when she set up her private server, she deleted 30,000 of them, uh, knowing that
00:49:56.220
You couldn't, you most likely would not get away with that if you were on Gmail.
00:50:04.840
We don't, we don't get the chance to read them.
00:50:06.520
Let's just say, Pat, you were going to send an email that was sensitive in nature that
00:50:11.380
you knew if it came out would affect your future presidential campaign.
00:50:15.460
Uh, and you had a choice whether to send it to, through a, a government account, be a
00:50:21.360
public popular Gmail type account, or see your own private server that exists in your
00:50:27.980
That nobody could see that nobody can see and no one has access to which one would you
00:50:36.520
But let me give you one more piece of information.
00:50:39.180
If you had a situation in which you knew, uh, you, there might be one of these, um, uh,
00:50:44.960
political controversies coming up and you were going to choose which ones to delete.
00:50:50.300
Would you say delete 29,500 emails that were just about cooking and 500 of the most sensitive,
00:51:04.240
If you had that opportunity to get rid of all those private emails about your grandkids
00:51:08.160
and you could just throw in a couple of more slipped in there that happen to be the things
00:51:16.680
Let me give you the name Hillary Clinton phone her.
00:51:23.000
She should know better, but everybody should though.
00:51:25.840
And so, yeah, just the appearance of it is unfortunate.
00:51:30.240
We say that like this, Scott Pruitt was, was guilty of this occasionally.
00:51:33.020
The guy who was in EPA, uh, initially in the Trump administration did a lot of really
00:51:36.680
good things at the EPA, but he, he was, once he got into this realm of like, he was being
00:51:41.680
talked about as this corrupt guy who was doing all these things that he shouldn't be doing.
00:51:46.980
After that, you can't order the thousand dollar pens.
00:51:55.880
They, they, you know, they order that in catering five times a day.
00:52:00.380
However, when you know that you're already under that microscope scope, be careful with
00:52:06.040
And I think the Trump administration should learn that lesson.
00:52:08.400
They should know that they shouldn't give any of this material to the, to the, to the
00:52:15.120
They actually characterized that pretty accurately.
00:52:24.960
Well, there is a lot of production that goes into these things.
00:52:32.600
And that's one of the things, you know, look, it has been, you know, when you watch a lot
00:52:38.940
The porn industry will rent a house for a day and film, you know, 20 or 30 movies.
00:52:43.380
Oh, don't say that because I, I did stay in a porn house once.
00:52:48.620
In fact, our, our, our, our wonderful host, Glenn Beck, I was actually the one I would say
00:52:53.720
was responsible for this happening because this is, we were in LA, gosh, it was just
00:53:05.120
I mean, it was, it was this year though, for sure.
00:53:07.180
So we're in LA and you, we go to this house and it's, it's exactly what you would picture
00:53:15.020
Like what, what would a porn director think rich people have?
00:53:26.260
Kind of everything in like different floors and, and, and like a big open pool, but protected
00:53:35.680
And so the way it was, I don't know if it's like an Airbnb or something, but it was like
00:53:39.100
all of us, the whole show went out to this, instead of getting, you know, 12 hotel rooms,
00:53:47.320
When we went to the Superbowl in San Francisco too, we played at the house.
00:54:00.340
So when we pull into the house, one of the people, I will not out this person, but one
00:54:05.180
of the people who, who is with us traveling says, and it wasn't Jeffy shockingly.
00:54:12.220
One of the people says, wait a minute, I've stayed in this house before.
00:54:16.180
And so, wait, how do you, will you stay in that?
00:54:23.780
Now I didn't know there was such a thing as a porn house, but apparently like very commonly
00:54:29.560
the same, as Jeffy just pointed out, the same sets get used because you can just rent
00:54:35.220
the house for a day and film a bunch of stuff at the same time.
00:54:37.240
So apparently he had stayed in this house earlier with a previous radio show that I won't name
00:54:45.560
And while they were there, they were like, this looks like a porn house.
00:54:50.980
And they assigned one of the producers find the movie that this house was in.
00:54:56.680
So they, so of course I go, what, how many porn movies are, I mean, every day there's
00:55:08.840
So they, they, they stay at the house for like a week.
00:55:30.420
Now God only knows what else happened in this house.
00:55:32.540
I mean, I, I went immediately into emergency surgery to just, please just dump like bleach
00:55:45.300
Though, you know, I think potentially lighting it on fire is a better solution.
00:55:50.180
Uh, but, uh, apparently it was actually a, uh, a porn house and, and God only knows how
00:55:54.680
many movies have been made in this thing because it just, it's exactly what you would think
00:55:58.320
like Ron Jeremy would think is the place to own it.
00:56:07.240
You gotta love the dedication of a young producer.
00:56:09.920
Just watching hours and hours and hours of porn to try to find, to quote unquote, try to