The Glenn Beck Program - August 17, 2021


Best of The Program | Guests: Raymond Ibrahim & PolitiZoid | 8⧸17⧸21


Episode Stats

Length

40 minutes

Words per Minute

172.36417

Word Count

7,027

Sentence Count

4

Misogynist Sentences

2

Hate Speech Sentences

27


Summary

On today's episode of the podcast, we have a blast from the past and a new leader in Afghanistan. We talk to someone who has been in our wheelhouse for quite some time, an expert on the persecution of Christians in the Middle East, and he tells us what's coming for those people that are remaining in the middle east. Then we take on the new leader of Afghanistan, and the identity of who that new leader is.


Transcript

00:00:00.000 welcome to the podcast uh today today today we have uh it's a date that will live in infamy we
00:00:05.880 do uh jerry boykin's on general lieutenant general uh from uh uh from i would say some uh he has a
00:00:13.560 pretty pretty big history yeah he was original member of uh the delta force a founding member
00:00:19.460 of that you know he ran all of our special operations for a while he has a different
00:00:25.120 take than joe biden on afghanistan uh we also talked to somebody who has been in our wheelhouse
00:00:32.360 for quite some time an expert on the persecution of christians in the middle east he tells us what's
00:00:38.920 coming uh for those people that are remaining in the middle east you don't want to miss that then
00:00:43.520 we take on woke incorporated all this oh oh oh and the identity of who the new leader is in afghanistan
00:00:54.960 you're gonna love this one blast from the past all on today's podcast
00:01:01.160 pat gray from pat gray unleashed into our studios with us now thank you uh boy i was
00:01:24.760 proud of our president yesterday oh bursting he was bursting with pride yeah he the buck stops here
00:01:30.160 well except for the you know the part that except for the part where he blamed trump
00:01:34.560 yeah and the part that he and the afghani people well as he said the buck stops here except for
00:01:40.940 wherever else the buck stops his fault it really is i mean it's really their fault it's really their
00:01:48.520 fault it's not my fault but the buck stops directly right and it was important to know that that uh he
00:01:55.720 made the decision but he was forced into the decision uh but uh by trump because this is the
00:02:02.580 one thing that's well he followed the trump plan like he's done so many other times every time man if
00:02:06.820 he's followed one trump plan he's followed them all he refuses to change it up at all from the
00:02:15.580 direction that trump was going and it was too good that's why this is a that's why that was a good
00:02:20.040 excuse yeah because of his consistency on all the other trump related matters like the border yeah for
00:02:26.020 instance just you know straight ahead straight ahead well i think he is keep it going i mean the nice
00:02:31.100 thing is uh the way he he is so consistent the way the border is going is exactly the way afghanistan
00:02:41.240 is going you mean worse than ever before yes okay yes what about inflation though it's not that's not
00:02:46.940 going the same way it's actually is spending spending uh yeah they're we're thinking that maybe uh 13
00:02:53.400 trillion dollars to 21 trillion dollars by the end of his term i love how he's blaming trump for that too
00:03:00.040 oh that 8 trillion he spent was ridiculous you spent that in about an hour and all democrats agreed
00:03:06.940 with that spending yeah i should point out as well uh trump i believe was making them smaller wasn't he
00:03:12.500 at one point wasn't he like um some of some of it yeah yeah um by the way george w bush uh spoke out
00:03:20.380 yesterday he said laura and i have been watching the tragic events unfolding in afghanistan with deep
00:03:24.600 sadness our hearts are heavy for both the afghan people who have suffered so much and for the
00:03:30.020 americans and native nato allies who have also sacrificed so much the afghans now are at the
00:03:36.980 greatest risk as are as are the same ones who have been on the forefront of progress inside their
00:03:44.280 nation president biden has promised to evacuate these afghans along with american citizens and our
00:03:50.160 allies the united states government has legal authority to cut the red tape for refugees during urgent
00:03:56.200 humanitarian crisis and this is what i like um you know we could have done that slowly and methodically
00:04:03.780 but now let's just let's just cut the red tape and no need to really go slowly on who comes here in america
00:04:14.560 and who doesn't you know i'm sure all those who are applying only have the best of intentions
00:04:20.440 and really belong here which is yeah you won't get anybody from the taliban or al-qaeda no not a
00:04:27.240 single person no i mean there's not going to be anybody i mean i just hope we can get more ilan omars
00:04:32.300 you know right uh which we brought into this country and she has just she loves it she loves it hey by
00:04:40.220 the way did you hear about the dna test i did see this story yeah yeah so there was a dna test about the
00:04:46.060 dna test oh you didn't no yeah endeavor dna laboratories uh did a test they took a they took
00:04:55.120 i think a straw from one of them and a cigarette and a cigarette butt from the other okay and ilan
00:05:02.720 omar and her brother slash husband i mean her husband her husband brother yeah brother husband
00:05:09.440 a brother a brother brother husband uh now here's the thing they find out it is her brother
00:05:15.400 well only 99.999998 chance oh so you're saying there's a chance i'm saying that there's a chance that
00:05:24.680 they're not but uh hopefully we can get that kind of screening done it's a bit of a weird story
00:05:30.980 they they claim to have legitimately like she's smoking and they just took the cigarette butt and
00:05:37.100 tested the dna over a multiple year investigation it's a very it's a very strange story but that is
00:05:43.820 what who reported that was the daily mail i can't remember yeah daily mail yeah so i don't know i
00:05:48.920 don't wow i haven't heard anyone else reporting it yet i mean it's a very odd story well odd but
00:05:53.800 interesting but the whole saga is very odd the whole saga is odd even without dna evidence yeah let's not
00:06:00.420 talk about it because there's nothing to see there let's just get as many people from afghanistan
00:06:05.460 on to flights here in america look i it's a tough line because no it wouldn't have been no we can
00:06:12.880 help us do deserve to get out of there yeah they wouldn't have been a tough line it wouldn't have
00:06:18.000 been a tough line had you done it differently yeah you you say we're gonna pull out everybody who is
00:06:23.960 concerned about dying come to the embassy right now and we'll get all this paperwork done
00:06:31.580 you should have done that first and they've been doing that they've just blown the process
00:06:36.300 the entire time which is not a surprise yeah they've had plenty of time i mean as we as everyone
00:06:40.660 has noted here donald trump uh negotiated this deal and mike pompeo negotiated this deal and the
00:06:47.940 the exit was supposed to be may 1st so we actually had more time than was actually outlined in the deal
00:06:54.220 and still it went this way which is incredible you had you had multiple extra months to prepare for
00:06:59.800 this and still screwed it up like this massively uh mass massively pathetic well you know the thing
00:07:06.280 that i really like uh is the fact that now the entire world uh every single one of our allies
00:07:15.000 now saying they know they can trust us good god yeah they know they're coming out now they know
00:07:22.200 they're loud i know they are and saying we don't know if we can trust that america will ever have our
00:07:28.180 back well yeah that's england and and denmark and germany and france our allies are saying well
00:07:35.820 some of those countries punch above their weight anyway well they don't need they do they don't
00:07:41.020 need us yeah they do what would you say if i'm taiwan i am uh well don't worry terrified yeah don't
00:07:49.120 worry uh china just said when uh we march into taiwan don't expect the americans to come the americans
00:07:56.740 won't help and they're right exactly right they're right what do you say about that well yeah okay
00:08:05.040 you're right clearly i mean any move china obviously is aware of this i'm not breaking news to them but
00:08:10.140 any move they'd want to make right now they could just get well they already did with hong kong yeah
00:08:14.360 they did it with hong kong we didn't do anything yeah they could do it with they could do it with
00:08:17.120 taiwan they could do it wherever they wanted did you guys know that they know it and they won the
00:08:20.260 olympics did you guys see that i saw that i see they tried to win the olympics yeah by adding taiwan
00:08:25.360 yeah it was added all the countries they want to control hong kong and they still didn't beat us
00:08:29.860 with taiwan and hong kong they tried and not in total but it was very it was very close it was very
00:08:35.200 very close and we added canada because they're just like us anyway you can't tell canadians apart
00:08:40.960 and china and china we had also added china and we'd still be at what not even half their population
00:08:46.120 isn't that amazing yeah think of that you say five times our population america isn't exceptional
00:08:53.140 america isn't exceptional they have five times the population and don't forget the sport camps
00:08:59.640 where they take children from their families when they're two correct and they take the children
00:09:05.360 that are are destined for greatness and they never see their families again and they're taken to these
00:09:13.480 camps and they're trained their whole life to be this is what you're gonna do and they can't find a
00:09:19.940 way to beat us it's pretty amazing hmm gee i know this system doesn't work does it that old freedom
00:09:27.300 thing just there's i don't know it's kind of messy yeah it's we're exceptional you know a lot like
00:09:35.300 great britain is exceptional and japan is exceptional and russia is exceptional everyone bob where is
00:09:42.280 exceptional there's nothing exceptional about us because everyone thinks they're exceptional right
00:09:45.940 exceptional hey can i ask you a question should anyone be talking about the 25th amendment
00:09:51.380 should anyone be talking about that you mean should everyone be talking about trump yes
00:09:57.980 yeah when he gets back in in august we need to remove him immediately with the 25th amendment
00:10:03.800 we only have 13 14 days left uh so we better get that done i mean pretty soon i mean i i find this
00:10:11.460 incredible that no one is talking about that well i don't you know honestly watching him yesterday
00:10:18.600 yesterday he looked solid he looked solid and honestly because he hasn't worked in two weeks
00:10:23.380 maybe but i would say he seemed completely um completely confident in his huge mistake like i
00:10:30.500 he he absolutely seemed to i did this intentionally yeah uh sort of laid it out and i stand behind it
00:10:37.520 yeah i i think he okay i don't i you know because on sunday i felt the same way where is this guy
00:10:42.420 this is do we have a president or not but he was there he was just making this decision intentionally
00:10:47.140 and it went the way that he was talking about no not on the weekend not on the weekend he wasn't
00:10:51.800 he wasn't he was actually calling the fort worth school district to uh congratulate them on their
00:10:58.980 very that's a true thing true story actually did very brave stand on masks to stand against the
00:11:05.360 governor of texas he was making calls to support the teachers union while people were falling out of the
00:11:16.680 sky and being slaughtered in the streets of afghanistan i mean just in case you needed it to be worse
00:11:24.800 right uh there it is there's there's your president i'll say this coming into this none of us believed
00:11:30.460 joe biden was going to be a good president but this has been really worse than i thought this is you
00:11:36.700 know what this is the exact opposite of of donald trump i expected donald trump to be somewhat of a
00:11:44.720 disaster uh back in 2016 in 2016 he gets into office and he was a disaster on you know relationships
00:11:53.460 and everything else but it all kind of turned out the right way you know i think that they're all
00:11:58.940 treasonous in the press and you're like oh dear god why would you say that and then like two years
00:12:03.640 later and you're like you know what i think he's right in the press i think he's right look at apples
00:12:08.200 to apples here basically he came in with one of the biggest people forget this one of the biggest
00:12:13.120 things in the entire campaign was isis in 2016 wiped him out and he wiped him out a very similar
00:12:18.580 situation here where you have an insurgent group starting here and we're just like giving them the
00:12:22.280 country we're just like ah you guys take it you'll probably do better than we could anyway
00:12:26.340 that's basically is it i mean think about how bad this has been this has been we all assumed this is
00:12:33.440 almost it's very similar to the taliban like we all kind of assumed that maybe the taliban would be
00:12:37.620 back in control eventually but it happened so fast it was like breathtaking that's the biden
00:12:42.480 administration like i didn't assume he was going to be a good president but this is breathtaking how bad
00:12:47.260 he has been how quickly he has got he's gotten to this level of complete failure i mean this has
00:12:52.460 been it's remarkable no he did this why would you expect less in afghanistan when this is exactly how
00:12:58.560 breathtaking the border was yeah yeah exactly it didn't it wasn't a big build-up it was just like
00:13:04.780 you know what come on in yeah and everybody came in they had a chart they've been running for years
00:13:11.960 on the border that the government releases and you've seen it amazing have you seen this i don't
00:13:16.340 know you've probably seen this chart a million times where they show like how many migrants are
00:13:19.760 coming in and and like the lines kind of follow each other pretty much every year there's a spike
00:13:23.380 every once in a while and then you've seen the chart where they goes up and it goes way above the
00:13:27.120 all the previous years uh well the peak of that chart was 200 000 they've now had to adjust the chart
00:13:36.680 because it literally went off the chart it went off the chart they had to change the chart they've
00:13:42.880 been releasing yeah it was 210 or 220 so now they're now north of the top of the actual chart
00:13:48.260 that's how bad he's been he's been legitimately literally off the charts bad
00:13:53.220 congratulations congratulations but it's a very diverse group of people
00:14:00.820 you know and some of the men in the administration are having babies and i just think it's
00:14:07.420 it's something to be proud of it really is
00:14:10.740 the best of the glenbeck program
00:14:16.520 there is a guy who's been on the program before
00:14:29.800 um he is somebody who's just i mean a giant mentally first of all he won in 93 won the
00:14:39.640 bodybuilding championship uh as a teenager and you're like okay he's a mazel then he went on to
00:14:46.520 receive his ba and his ma in history um then uh dual minors in philosophy and literature
00:14:53.960 literature um he also studied uh closely with victor davis hansen uh graduate courses at georgetown
00:15:02.660 university um he uh also studied medieval islam and semitic languages at catholic university of
00:15:10.940 america serves as the arabic language and regional specialist at the near east section of the library
00:15:17.580 of congress where he uh informs a lot of people um that are in the know and uh government officials
00:15:26.320 he also often functions as a journalist has been a media fellow at the hoover institution
00:15:32.440 um news analyst for cbn news and others uh he produces a monthly report muslim persecution of christians
00:15:41.780 which is why i wanted to bring him on now um he is chronicling day to day the abuses and slaughters of christians
00:15:50.440 throughout the islamic world and no one is really paying attention to what is going on
00:15:57.680 i wanted to uh bring him on uh it's raymond ibrahim he is the author of sword and scimitar
00:16:04.680 and uh distinguished senior fellow at gatestone institute raymond welcome hi glenn very good to
00:16:12.780 be with you again yeah good to talk to you again um i i am concerned with what's going on in uh
00:16:20.360 afghanistan you know i i don't know if you're aware but i started the nazarene fund a few years ago
00:16:26.860 uh with isis and we have been going in and trying to free the women and children that have been made
00:16:33.400 slaves and anyone that is persecuted because they're a minority a religious minority um we've
00:16:40.500 been trying to get them out and now i think we've got a whole new country to look at can you tell me
00:16:47.020 what's going on yeah absolutely um afghanistan even before what happened recently was uh is widely
00:16:55.240 considered the uh absolute worst muslim nation in the world in so far as its treatment of uh minorities
00:17:03.280 specifically christian minorities so if you look at um open doors international human rights
00:17:09.160 organization they publish their world watch list annually of the top 50 worst nations um habitually
00:17:16.160 of course it's dominated by muslim nations for obvious reasons but the top 10 are top 10 nations
00:17:22.580 are the absolute worst and two or three of them are not islamic and usually the first worst nation
00:17:27.300 in the world is north korea um but then the second worst nation and the first muslim nation is
00:17:33.760 afghanistan and so you can imagine with what's happening right now it's going to get uh significantly
00:17:39.640 worse for any sort of believer in that area um in fact here's a little quote from the world watch list
00:17:46.460 about afghanistan it says quote it is impossible to live openly as a christian in afghanistan leaving
00:17:51.380 islam is considered shameful christian converts face dire consequences if their new faith is
00:17:56.440 discovered either they have to flee the country or they will be killed and that's uh so and now with
00:18:02.900 this new resurgent emboldened uh islamist mentality you can be sure that it's going to get significantly
00:18:09.500 worse for any uh christian living in that nation or even nearby raymond can you help us out on the one
00:18:15.560 question that is kind of a nagging question and i don't understand it at all and that is
00:18:21.060 why did the afghani people not put up any kind of fight what what what happened there
00:18:29.220 well um i would say that you know it there's what we are told and this actually what i'm saying right
00:18:39.060 now actually comports very well with so many other things that we talk about in the west and america and
00:18:44.220 so forth but there's what the media tells us there's what the analysts and the experts tell us and then
00:18:50.560 there's the reality and um the people on the ground in afghanistan and in these countries they don't
00:18:56.660 really care for the western uh uh for for for the things that the west cherishes okay the things uh
00:19:04.800 that we say are you know the cornerstone of western culture let's say uh uh gender equality for one
00:19:12.020 example uh or you know eliminating the patriarchy these are things that have existed uh not just in
00:19:18.360 afghanistan and not just because of islam i would say islam actually reinforces so many of these
00:19:23.740 primordial tendencies of let's say patriarchalism and so forth not creates it it actually just it
00:19:30.340 reinforces it so they go way back these ideas in places like afghanistan and when you just go there
00:19:36.180 and as the u.s government actually did especially increasingly in more recent years uh try to import
00:19:42.920 you know i don't know to what degree but it sounds like to a large degree they were trying to import
00:19:47.820 woke culture as well none of that's going to fly with any afghani at all because they're just not
00:19:53.380 part of that culture and they might have you know to an extent in as much as the america was in there and
00:19:59.120 they were trying to work with it they played along but once it became imminent that the u.s is leaving
00:20:04.660 and so forth all you know the charade just came off the mask came off and it was right back to the way it
00:20:10.200 was and before and that's the idea you know this whole nation building and trying to import democracy
00:20:14.940 to cultures that simply uh you know have it doesn't resonate with at all for a myriad myriad reasons
00:20:21.100 um that's why it fails and after two decades and all the money and blood and treasure that's been spent
00:20:27.000 that's why we are where we are so um because i heard tucker carlson last night talk about
00:20:33.880 how you know we were teaching all these woke principles um and uh you know these are principles
00:20:41.200 that don't sit well with half the population over here has this made them uh turn to an islamist
00:20:50.600 even harder or is it just is it just like i don't care just not these guys anymore i would argue the
00:20:59.520 former um historically wherever the west in any way shape or form retreats or is perceived to be
00:21:05.520 weak it has actually immensely exacerbated the idea of radical islam so if you go back to let's say
00:21:12.540 the colonial era in the you know 19th century mid 19th century and early 20th century um where
00:21:19.400 where today we would describe america or not america's actions mostly europe's european action in the
00:21:24.580 middle east and the islamic world as very negative it was toxic masculinity it was not multicultural it
00:21:31.220 was you know our way or the highway that's how europeans more or less came about that actually
00:21:35.760 believe it or not and you know putting aside all judgments worked and muslims didn't feel resentful
00:21:41.720 they didn't they actually tried to catch up and they saw it as the winning way and we have to be part
00:21:47.140 of that culture and that's why you saw the hijab go away um it's ironic today you know 21st century
00:21:52.640 you see the hijab and the burqas and all and that uh but when you go back to the 1800s and you look at
00:21:58.200 pictures of women in the middle east and egypt afghanistan and syria and these countries they
00:22:03.620 actually look like western women so they were actually trying to emulate but in as much as the
00:22:07.780 west starts to retreat start to say our ways are bad our history is awful your way islam is wonderful
00:22:14.240 and that actually isn't seen as oh you're being polite let me try to reciprocate it's actually seen
00:22:19.740 as admission of weakness and it emboldens and it makes muslims go back to their own way and that's
00:22:26.000 why you see today in the 21st century um a large segment of the muslim population trying to emulate
00:22:31.160 the 7th century muslims the purity hottest of muhammad's time and so yeah there's definitely a
00:22:37.040 symbiotic relationship with western weakness and islamic aggression and i think with what happened
00:22:42.300 in afghanistan you're going to see that again so i read the story this morning about a woman who is a
00:22:48.840 mayor of a small uh town and the taliban has come in and she said i'm just waiting for them to come
00:22:55.440 and take me and kill me and she said there's no place for me to go um and so i'm just waiting um
00:23:03.600 the taliban has said oh no no no we're we're no we're not like that anymore do you does any sane
00:23:11.660 person believe that to be true no but the problem is we were lacking insanity um to a large extent
00:23:20.400 especially when it comes to you know our leaders and our betters for what for whatever reason they
00:23:25.260 just don't want to think according to same principles and it's even worse than that um reports
00:23:30.100 came out around august 11th a week ago of the taliban going door to door and forcibly taking girls
00:23:37.100 as young as 12 to be their sex slaves to be their wives and again so you see it's all back
00:23:43.320 it's just amazing you know 20 years of that and this most powerful nation and all the money that's
00:23:48.860 spent and all the blood and all that and then we are not just back to where we were i would argue to
00:23:53.620 an even worse spot and it all has to do with a very myopic western worldview which is okay look we
00:24:00.480 killed the bad guys we got rid of the bad guys let's say osama bin laden and remember mullah omar
00:24:05.480 and now we've you know we've set up a government and obviously they're all going to want to be like
00:24:10.860 us because this is the natural culmination and see i think this is what they don't understand in order
00:24:16.180 to reach a good sort of western democracy and and the principles that we have you have to have a bedrock
00:24:23.980 for that you can't just import it on you know a surface of islam or tribalism and our bedrock would
00:24:30.760 be i would argue something like judeo-christian principles and that's why you can build um what we
00:24:36.840 essentially built and but because they don't see that and they actually and when you say that oh my
00:24:42.020 god that's the worst thing judeo-christian principles oh that's you're being you know
00:24:45.920 whatever triumphalist and so forth and so without that you see what's happening they bring the package
00:24:52.740 without the found the groundwork being laid and the end result is what we see and what we always
00:24:57.760 keep seeing we're talking to uh raymond uh ibrahim uh who is an expert on the middle east um what is
00:25:05.400 coming our way do you think because of this collapse oh i would argue well it's funny because
00:25:12.800 i remember almost 20 years ago you know amin zawahiri who was the second at the time of al-qaeda he's
00:25:19.280 currently the head of al-qaeda since osama bin laden died but i remember when osama bin laden ever about
00:25:24.700 three years after the invasion of afghanistan some reporters cnn asked him uh amin zawahiri
00:25:30.200 what's you know what happened where's osama bin laden where's mullah omar we don't hear about him
00:25:34.540 and what he said is it was very telling i'll give you the quote he said to them jihad in the path of
00:25:39.500 allah is greater than any individual organization it's a struggle between truth and falsehood until
00:25:44.300 all almighty inherits the earth then he said mullah omar and sheikh osama bin laden are merely two
00:25:49.940 soldiers two soldiers of islam in the journey of jihad but the struggle continues for all time
00:25:55.460 and so you see there's that patience where it looked like they lost they stepped back now well
00:26:01.340 look they're winning even though those two guys are not there mullah omar and sheikh osama bin laden
00:26:06.420 and amin zawahiri will come and go muhammad himself the prophet came and died but the jihad
00:26:11.700 goes on so and they're already saying this uh just recently uh leader said it's our belief that one day
00:26:18.380 the mujahideen will have victory and islamic law will come not just to afghanistan he just said this
00:26:23.720 a couple days ago but all over the world we are not in a hurry we believe it will come day jihad will
00:26:28.900 not end until the last day so you see it's just it's this impatient mentality that we're dealing with
00:26:34.600 while we usually just you know sit and look at these little myopic sort of um uh you know
00:26:40.660 milestones uh that in the end just don't amount to much
00:26:45.700 raymond um any suggestion on where we should go from here and and and i mean as a people not as a
00:26:55.720 government um you know we're this audience is very involved in um rescuing people in the middle east and
00:27:04.120 all over the world that um especially women and children that are found in these situations and we want
00:27:10.080 to help all uh persecuted minorities um get to safety any suggestion on on what we should be
00:27:18.960 looking towards or how we can help well the first thing of course is to have to be armed with adequate
00:27:25.420 knowledge and i know you are and i'm assuming most of your audiences but to be able to understand that
00:27:30.680 you know we're talking about something like christian persecution or religious persecution of minorities in
00:27:35.240 general when you come to understand that it is overwhelmingly the lion's share of that phenomenon
00:27:40.120 is being uh dealt out at the hands of muslims and it and the fact that it's happened it happens in
00:27:46.600 sub-saharan muslim africans nigeria we have a genocide of christians it happens of course in east asia
00:27:52.140 pakistan you can go in malaysia indonesia and of course the heart of the muslim world all throughout
00:27:57.840 north africa middle east turkey iran when you understand that i think you start to realize there's an
00:28:03.960 ideology behind this and it's important to get you know our heads wrapped around that ideology and
00:28:09.160 understand it's not going anywhere anytime soon it's been around 14 centuries you don't have to
00:28:13.820 say every muslim believes this or every muslim is out to do this to understand that you do have this
00:28:18.320 core in there doing that and it needs to be eventually excised in order to put an end to what's
00:28:25.580 happening people need to understand the difference between a muslim and an islamicist
00:28:31.840 uh right that is the real problem and we refuse to name it raymond uh ibrahim thank you so much
00:28:39.000 we'll talk again my friend thank you absolutely thanks mike this is the best of the glenbeck program
00:28:46.260 i became aware of a video uh early i think last week uh from politozoid uh politozoid has uh done
00:28:59.020 several videos that are well worth your time to watch uh let me just uh play the highlights of this
00:29:07.020 one it starts in disneyland uh and it's a woke world ladies and gentlemen boys and girls welcome to
00:29:17.220 this video takes you into it's a small world except everything has changed inside but it looks
00:29:32.580 exactly like it it's uh it's a world of privilege in boats that are cramped welcome to disney's
00:29:44.220 re-education camp if your skin if your skin is white it's time you're contrite it's a woke world after all
00:29:53.060 it's a world of power a world of fears and we work long days to make souvenirs
00:30:01.220 although millions have died and the uyghurs aside it's a woke world after all
00:30:07.540 there is a land where once you lived free as a capitalist pig of the bourgeoisie we could eat
00:30:28.500 until we are fat and we would vote democrat if we just get past that wall
00:30:35.380 the guy who put this together would like to remain anonymous so we're just going to refer to him
00:30:45.340 uh as a the creative director of politozoid he is a former disney artist welcome to the program
00:30:54.840 thank you you bet how are you i'm doing well it i liked your narration there thank you uh so
00:31:04.100 you must have a great job especially since you you don't uh you don't have to you don't have to
00:31:13.220 take credit in the bows you also don't have to take the hits well my family's not quite ready for
00:31:20.180 that yet i think they will come um but considering i live in los angeles and uh i run my own shop so
00:31:29.040 you know i have clients that couldn't really handle uh the fact that i animated that piece that you
00:31:34.500 shared uh but you know i'm tired of watching my country go down the drain and it's it's time to do
00:31:40.940 something um i've been doing these cartoons for about 10 years um and you know at times we've had
00:31:47.980 funding and and a team of 12 guys running around other times it's just me it just it depends on
00:31:53.460 what the opportunity uh you know the opportunity is there but um uh i took about a seven-year hiatus
00:32:01.500 off of doing these cartoons and jump back in the game with um a piece called shift hits the fan
00:32:06.940 uh because i was getting so uh bent out of shape over the impeachment scam and uh kept seeing adam
00:32:14.820 coming on you know saying all these things that were undoubtedly you know false and every one of
00:32:20.700 them proved uh that he was lying and so i i dressed him up like wiley coyote and and i put some uh you
00:32:28.460 know trump hair on the road runner and had him chasing after him and about three weeks later the white
00:32:34.260 house was sharing it and uh uh so you know it was like well i guess i'm back so since then i've been
00:32:41.140 putting out as many as i can in between client jobs and because these um these take quite a while
00:32:47.020 to do i mean the piece you just played took about uh four to five weeks to complete so wow um full time
00:32:53.120 you know yeah it's a heavy investment in time to do something like this and are you doing it by
00:32:59.160 yourself or are there others involved in it um right now the animation was done by myself uh i have
00:33:07.240 some friends that helped contribute some elements some of the posters at the end and um you know
00:33:12.940 like the pictures of mal and that sort of thing uh i i had some help uh and then uh i had some
00:33:19.620 friends that uh brought together the the chorus because all that music was recreated yeah that none of
00:33:26.040 that was pulled from any original disney material right so the orchestra everything had to be recreated
00:33:32.660 uh using synthesizers and uh but i can't sing like a child so fortunately uh i had a friend that
00:33:42.180 was able to bring together um you know a lot of acting students and and uh and of course the end
00:33:48.100 was an adult choir so i'm not even sure how many people went up singing it because i wasn't there they
00:33:52.240 sent me the files um but without their help i couldn't have pulled this off i mean if that song's
00:33:57.780 not right i mean you want to feel like you're in a real attraction yeah and i have to tell you the
00:34:03.280 animation is unbelievable i mean you worked for disney uh at one point as an animator and it is i mean
00:34:10.900 this is really really well done um what uh why did you take on disney well i wouldn't do what i do
00:34:21.400 without walt disney um i i grew up not wanting to be an animator i grew up wanting to be walt disney
00:34:29.240 um and uh you know i've i know his history uh i've actually traveled to marceline missouri twice and
00:34:38.660 stood in front of his old offices in kansas city and of course done the tour here in la multiple times of
00:34:45.900 just uh tracing his steps because um i can't imagine what our country would be like without
00:34:51.820 amen i am so glad to hear you say i've been allowed to go into the archives i've gone through his
00:34:58.660 daily calendars and his diaries um he's an amazing man and i i don't know if you could say this
00:35:07.860 about very many people especially in the 20th century imagine america without
00:35:15.400 walt disney it would be a radically different place and i'm not sure we'd still be free
00:35:22.260 because he put so much americana into us buried it deep into us as kids
00:35:29.400 well yes um i mean just imagine what hollywood would be like without him you know there would
00:35:36.280 have been no counterbalance it's what we got now um you know i i don't know how deliberate or
00:35:43.020 structured the takeover was or if it was just kind of like an opportunity that presented itself to the
00:35:48.200 left but they took care of it by overtaking walt's company i i i understand why walt took the company
00:35:56.840 public uh because he wanted to execute his ideas but it was the worst mistake he ever made uh followed
00:36:02.840 up only by him not really having a good succession plan when he died um he didn't i mean you know he
00:36:09.500 probably felt like he was immortal or something i'm not gonna die yeah uh but um that happened
00:36:15.840 much sooner than he anticipated and um you know i learned what america was through watching those
00:36:23.440 shorts you know pecos bill and and paul bunyan and all those sorts of pieces it just gave you a sense of
00:36:29.160 pride and and a connection to the people that came before us and um that that connection has been
00:36:35.760 severed and i know that walt would be just i mean that's why i put walt at the end i know you didn't
00:36:41.340 get to that part but i actually know his congressional testimony where he was talking about the communists
00:36:47.420 in hollywood i turned that in on itself where he is actually calling the current regime the disney
00:36:52.980 communists as a floating head in the reanimation lab because the old urban legend that he was right
00:36:58.920 right he was actually cremated well that's what they want you to believe he's actually uh in the
00:37:05.440 middle of the uh african uh uh what is that stupid ride called the african jungle the jungle ride that's
00:37:12.880 where he is the freeways the freezers in the middle of the jungle uh the jungle cruise um uh are there are
00:37:19.600 there more people like you than we think because while we don't think there are anybody there is anybody
00:37:25.380 like you are there more disney people that are in that company that are just silent right now
00:37:32.220 um there are a a lot of traditional folks that are below the line in hollywood meaning that you
00:37:40.300 know they're they're the the craftspeople the ones that actually do the work as opposed to the ones
00:37:44.960 that are green lighting projects and and um actors commanding large salaries and uh they keep their
00:37:51.140 head down you know i have a buddy that is having to you know direct woke stuff right now and and i get
00:37:57.280 texts going man this is just it's not my scene i hate this and um you know they'll share my videos
00:38:03.480 around by email you know their personal email and give me the thumbs up but you know what really needs
00:38:09.440 to happen is an opportunity to start pulling those folks into a new operation that competes with
00:38:15.580 hollywood yes one where they know that they're not going to be canceled and that they can feed their
00:38:20.340 families and and save their country at the same time and if an opportunity like that
00:38:24.960 you know presents itself and i i think that there are tons of people in hollywood that would jump at
00:38:29.860 the chance i will tell you though the conservatives just don't part with their money as easily as
00:38:37.400 liberals do especially on things like movies um you know they they don't like the odds of success
00:38:43.840 and and it's interesting because when it comes to politics it seems like the left never runs out of
00:38:51.420 money um but it's very difficult on the right for some reason well there's a very different mindset i
00:38:59.020 mean you know i kind of straddle the world between entertainment and politics and there's very um you
00:39:05.160 know the people that run the money in politics are very set in their ways um and and they're able to
00:39:11.240 kind of get the same sales pitch as to where the money's going to go in the ads and uh you know i
00:39:16.640 um you know i actually created 10 spots for the trump campaign but then not one of them got used
00:39:23.000 um and it wasn't the folks that i was working with directly they were great but it would go up the food
00:39:28.780 chain and it would get mixed wow would you be willing to share them i'd love to see them
00:39:34.500 i actually uh rebranded them as politozoid and they're on uh they're on the youtube channel and
00:39:40.260 the twitter um all right that still made sense to release but i mean i would i i didn't sleep all
00:39:46.420 last october and i put out uh spots that could have come up like the day after a debate or something
00:39:52.640 and they just didn't get used and um it was very frustrating because it i feel like the pieces i did
00:39:58.740 could have moved the needle it could have brought in folks that attrition for traditional campaign ad
00:40:03.620 would not have reached um so but you know it's it's going to take time then unfortunately we don't
00:40:09.920 have a lot of time but um you know i'm going to keep hammering at it and as the opportunities
00:40:14.620 present themselves then i'm just going to you know kind of keep building well i uh politozoid i have to
00:40:19.620 tell you i i was really really impressed with this uh video and uh i will begin to share some of your uh
00:40:27.460 some of your work as well and hope to uh talk to you offline as well i i i think what you're doing is
00:40:33.400 exactly right and i really appreciate your uh your passion uh and your willingness to risk
00:40:40.880 thank you thank you appreciate it you bet bye-bye
00:40:44.100 you