Did Pakistan Just Say the Quiet Part Out Loud About the Ceasefire? | Guests: Rep. Riley Moore & Bridget Phetasy | 4⧸10⧸26
Episode Stats
Length
2 hours and 6 minutes
Words per minute
163.19104
Harmful content
Misogyny
13
sentences flagged
Hate speech
51
sentences flagged
Summary
On today's show, Glenn Beck is joined by his good friend and long-time supporter, Michael Bloomberg. The two discuss the lack of sleep and how dangerous it is to have guns in your home. Glenn also talks about the recent shooting of a woman at her own home and how we should have more guns in our homes.
Transcript
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You're at home in the middle of the day, going about normal, quiet afternoon when something stops you cold.
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Not a doorbell, not a knock, but the sound of somebody testing your doorknob.
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And at first you might wait, you know, thinking it's a mistake.
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And then you hear footsteps moving along the side of the house.
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Whoever has decided to try to get in has tried to get in another way.
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And in that moment, everything becomes very, very clear.
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This isn't somebody, you know, at the wrong address.
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This is someone seeing if your home is an easy target.
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And that's when you realize how important it is to have an option that, you know, doesn't require you to escalate to legal force.
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It still gives you ways to protect yourself and create distance if you need it.
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It's a compact device that fires kinetic and pepper projectiles designed to stop a threat without using a firearm.
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And it is legal in all 50 states, and you don't need a permit.
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Try before you buy a sportsman's warehouse located near you.
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We push back against the lies, the censorship, the nonsense of the mainstream media that they're trying to feed you.
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We work tirelessly to bring you the unfiltered truth because you deserve it.
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Right now, would you take a moment and rate and review the Glenn Beck podcast?
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The fusion of entertainment, enlightenment, and empowerment.
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It's Friday, and I had about two hours of sleep last night.
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We have a lot, a lot on our plate, and I have quite a few opinions.
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And every Friday, I always feel like, you know, I did four really good shows.
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So I'm just going to come in on Friday and just like, whatever I am thinking, I'm going to say it.
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and it's maybe because of the lack of sleep possibly a little unfiltered and I begin with
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what we talked about yesterday who do you trust do you trust the prime minister of Pakistan
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or do you trust the president of the United States for all those who said yeah but Pakistan
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said this I'm gonna give you some information that you know might be interesting might be
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interesting um also those british hikers that crossed into america yesterday from canada i
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thought that was such an interesting way to uh speak about four four guys named mohammed mohammed
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abdul saeed mohammed um but uh for just four british guys probably going out having a picnic
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and some tea with guns. How do you get to Canada from Britain? Both of them
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do not want even pictures of guns in their country. How do you get from Great Britain
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on an airplane to Canada and then cross into America and you've got guns? Help me solve that
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problem, Mohammed, Mohammed, Saeed Mohammed. I'd really like some help on that one.
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Also, some things that we might have missed, and Artemis comes back today at 8.07. I suggest we
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pray. This is a very, very dangerous six minutes tonight. The most dangerous part of the entire
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mission happens tonight at 8.07. And we'll bring you up to speed on all of that and so much more.
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Stand by. We begin in 60 seconds. First, your dog is not, you know, a great judge of what he should
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be eating. I mean, have you seen what your dog has eaten out in the yard? You see what I'm saying
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here? They're not really the sharpest tool in the drawer, you know, but they eat what you put in
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front of them sometimes. But their body reacts. Their body is telling you, I'm not getting the
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nutrition i need and most of us think that those are just our dog getting older but i'm telling you
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as somebody who i started feeding uno maybe when he was nine i think uh started feeding him rough
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greens and i'm telling you the last four years of his life three years of his life were amazing
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he changed he seemed to almost get younger um because he had more energy he was a different
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you're going to get a free trial bag of rough greens at roughgreens.com promo code back
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okay i want to bring jason and ricky in uh because i just want to have a couple of
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conversation just to make sure that i'm i'm i'm getting these stories right because again two
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hours of sleep um and i just want to make sure um so the prime minister of pakistan is the guy
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who's doing the negotiations between us and iran and yesterday as i said when people said no
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israel israel and lebanon that wasn't that that was included in a ceasefire our president said
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no it wasn't I told you yesterday I don't believe Benjamin Netanyahu because they're operating on
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their own thing okay but I do believe the president and if I have to choose between
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what did the president say and what did the prime minister of Pakistan say who I challenge you right
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now give me the name of the prime minister of Pakistan you can't you trust somebody you can't
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even you don't even know his name and you trust him more and i said you know i think it's i think
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it's as an american we should trust our side first with full understanding they could be lying to us
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but it'll come out well it came out it came out um the defense minister of pakistan so this is
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you know our pete hay their pete hegseth imagine if you know donald trump was doing negotiations
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While peace talks are underway in Islamabad, genocide is being committed in Lebanon.
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I hope and pray people who created this cancerous state on Palestinian land can get rid of the
1.00
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European Jews that will burn in hell. Wow. Now he's fair. He seems like an honest broker, doesn't
1.00
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he? Congratulations for anybody who said, I side with Pakistan. I believe they have the best
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intentions do you do you this for anybody who is believing Pakistan I just want you to know
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what most of those people say well I don't necessarily agree with that
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you don't really because I'll bet you believe in some of that and more importantly
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show me your friends and i will show you your future you are standing in a room with a lot
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of people that believe that kind of stuff and by the way that's not just clearly i mean you look
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up anti-semitism in any dictionary and i think that's the passage that's the definition of
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anti-Semitism. But more importantly, in this case, if you're standing with these guys and you choose
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to believe these guys over the president of the United States, it's just absolutely
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anti-American. It's anti-American. You don't have to agree with Benjamin Netanyahu. I told you
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yesterday, just said it a minute ago, they're on a different path. They're doing what they think.
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They think that they are going to be wiped out by the 12ers, the Shia 12ers in Iran.
1.00
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That's the way I would read it if I lived over in the Middle East.
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But you don't have to agree because, you know, you're next, but you're not first.
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So you can, you have the time and the privilege to say, well, they're not coming after us.
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you don't have to side with them but israel is evil and a curse for humanity uh bloodletting
1.00
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continues unbated i hope and pray the people who created this cancerous state on palestinian land
1.00
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get rid of all european jews they burn in hell wow wow jason uh any perspective on this well
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yes i mean i've i just looked up in one of our copies we have an encyclopedia britannica here
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in the control room and it actually says under the heading of neutral arbiter of peace that you
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must use words like burn in hell when talking to some right part of the negotiation yeah so it is
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in there one of the people at your negotiating table that is sitting there it's required for
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you to be neutral to say that person is evil and a curse on humanity it's part of the process
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glenn yeah don't question okay also don't question the fact that you know these are the
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neutral arbiters of peace and they also basically housed one of the worst terrorists who ever live
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osama bin laden just a football throw away from an army base you know what yeah i think that's
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also in the encyclopedia britannica that's part of the setup for who you have ricky can you please
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talk this madman down from the tree i wish i could but i'm actually getting a little black
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about the negotiation process now like i really trust donald trump and and jd vance but my word
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how are you supposed to negotiate with people who have this ideology like these are the most
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sane people in the room please i can't believe i'm saying this can we bring qatar in hell no
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no no not qatar not qatar uae maybe the the lunatic that puts his enemies his enemy reporters
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into blenders maybe but not guitar not guitar okay i think that we can go back to your valkyrie
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statement glenn i i really do not i i think all of this is part of the process i i really do uh
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while the prime minister of pakistan is copying and pasting what looks like from chat gpt
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random parts of the agreement and putting it out on x i don't know i don't even know if he knows
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Iranian regime. If he's getting it from an IRGC
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This is specifically about inner turmoil within Iran, creating it, stoking it, and sitting back and watching it as they get closer towards these negotiations led by J.D. Vance.
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I have to tell you, I find this actually kind of refreshing because everyone is revealing who they really are.
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let him talk. I like, I like knowing exactly who they are. We now know who our main negotiator,
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our neutral party is. We know exactly who they are now. Okay. So when they say something,
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I mean, unless you just hate America so much, I mean, honestly, you don't have to trust the
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government. What has the government done to gain your trust? Not a lot, but what has Donald Trump
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done to gain your trust right now people are are jumping off the speech because he promised us no
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wars he did not promise you that what moron promises any country no wars i'm sorry beside
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woodrow wilson and then get us into a war what moron does that that's not even reasonable as
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president united states it's not reasonable to say we're not going to have war okay what he was
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saying is no more of these never ending wars. So we're in this now for 30 days. Is that never
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ending? I mean, this, don't get me wrong. This could go horribly. I am not, I am not on the
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bandwagon of going, yay, we got to go in and kill everybody in Iran. I'm not for that. I'm not for
1.00
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that. We're in this now. What do you say we give the benefit of the doubt to the guy who I think
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has earned our trust. He's earned our trust. Tell me somebody who is as a president who has
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done a better job at military operations, done better than this guy. I don't even know if I put
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FDR in that category. It's been stunning what this guy has done. So relax. Monday, I'm going
00:16:04.280
to share something. I put something up on the chalkboard. What if we back up a little bit more
00:16:08.340
and thought even of a bigger picture? I'm going to share this with you on Monday because I'm
00:16:16.380
thinking, you know, there could be, this could be a disaster. This could be an absolute disaster,
00:16:22.960
but is that a reason to freak out as i was thinking about this yesterday i was on a plane
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going up to washington yesterday which by the way russ vote i love you russ vote is uh he's the guy
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he was he was the architect of project 2025 um and everything that happened in the first hundred
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days he's he's the guy and he's hated for it and i love him for it and because of the war and
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everything else uh he was supposed to have somebody speak at you know one of his big
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conferences yesterday a big big big cabinet member yeah who shall remain nameless shall remain
00:17:01.340
nameless and then i don't think they announced in advance that he wasn't coming and that i was
00:17:06.780
coming in instead and so they introduced me and they were just like oh great guys that is not true
00:17:13.880
that's glenn okay that's feigning humility the room loved it uh but i had a chance to go up there
00:17:21.020
and uh and and talk and i gotta tell you these guys get it so i'm on the plane from from that
00:17:28.740
experience last night and i'm thinking all right if things go really really horribly
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is there a way to take that and make it into lemonade and i think i think there is i think
00:17:40.960
it's actually i mean it's not what's happening but i think when you hear it on monday somebody
00:17:50.240
might want to call the president and say hey have you thought about this because it doesn't have to
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go horribly to do this as well i mean it's it's one of those you know uh one rock and two birds
00:18:05.600
or whatever it is one stone and two whatever that saying is it's right i'm tired okay back off you've
00:18:12.800
had four good shows from me how many good shows have you done today america right okay um so i'm
00:18:19.700
going to give you that on uh monday but we we just we have to know who our friends are with that said
00:18:25.900
i want to tell you something that happened in the eu here in the last what two weeks
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and i can't believe nobody's talking about it i found out about this last night i'm like wait a
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minute wait wait wait what something really good is is happening and very unexpected we'll get it
00:18:45.820
to that here in just 60 seconds. First, let me tell you about our, uh, our sponsors Patriot
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uh i don't i i have a feeling that that headline might be a little misleading
00:20:37.520
maybe a little bit a little bit so when you hear the story you hear oh four british people came
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over and they were hiking on the border and somehow or another they they slipped into america
00:20:51.200
but they were on this road and they didn't know they didn't know they crossed over in america
00:20:55.640
although you know they were recording stuff on their gopro and when looked at their gopro
0.77
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one of them was like hey mohammed yeah mohammed uh guess where we are now where are we we're in
00:21:08.360
america we crossed over in america yes uh praise be to allah we're finally here i don't know that
0.87
00:21:15.240
doesn't sound like you were going hiking and you accidentally slipped across our border
0.90
00:21:19.840
then you add the fact that they were met by muslim mohammed mohammed and mohammed were met
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by two other Mohammeds in another car and on the American side and they had weapons in the car
0.97
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but they were just hiking they just look who who doesn't like to go to from England travel over to
00:21:45.900
Canada go to a state most people can't even find on the map where was it Vermont or it was Maine
00:21:51.980
and Maine hiking is very lovely beautiful and you can go visit Stephen King while you're there
00:21:56.880
And so they go, they go over to, they fly over to hike through Canada, not Maine, Canada.
00:22:04.960
And they accidentally find themselves in Maine.
00:22:26.340
Do you remember when President Trump got slammed by the press and by Canada for saying, I need you to shut down the border, and he enacted tariffs until they made the northern border secure, and everyone's like, there's nothing wrong with the northern border, it's all in the southern border.
00:22:46.520
Turns out that it's actually not secure, and they didn't secure it.
00:22:54.560
but but i think canada is in real trouble i think people are waking up in canada i'm going to show
00:22:59.960
some things that are happening in canada next week that'll blow your mind oh while i'm there
00:23:04.680
let me go to the eu parliament uh the parliament the eu parliament just approved a bill to begin
00:23:16.300
deporting irregular migrants this is this they are saying this is a trump move and the vote was
00:23:30.160
389 to 206 the leadership of the eu is not happy at all but that's what's happening in parliament
00:23:50.920
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00:25:31.480
We have been doing all kinds of different things
00:25:34.180
at the torch one of these uh is a 20 part series and so you know every 45 minutes takes us about
00:25:43.800
18 hours to produce um it is the best audio drama i have ever been a part of and one of the best
00:25:53.320
audio dramas i've ever heard and i can say that because i'm only narrating them uh this team is
00:26:00.980
unbelievable and it is the american story and it's based on the book by david and tim barton
00:26:07.240
the american story uh and we take you from columbus all the way i'm in the i think i just
00:26:15.000
finished recording episode 16 and that is uh towards the end of the civil war we're getting
00:26:22.440
to gettysburg now but we take you from columbus all the way through you know this you are an
00:26:29.160
outlier. Most people, you ask them anything. Who did we fight the war of independence with? And
00:26:35.740
they cannot tell you. And you're going to lose your country if you don't know that. If you don't
00:26:41.280
know what we are, where we came from, what these documents, how we fought for this, you can't have
00:26:47.620
a country. And I know you know this, and I know you want to pass it on to your kids. But quite
00:26:53.980
honestly, I hated history when I was a kid, absolutely hated it. David Barton was one of
00:27:00.420
the first people that brought it to life for me. And I became addicted to American history
00:27:06.940
because they're the greatest stories ever told. They are just, they have absolutely everything,
00:27:13.420
heroes and villains. And sometimes, you know, it's, it's sometimes they turn out to be the
00:27:20.300
same people it's incredible our story and you are our you're your children's history teacher
00:27:28.340
because history is boring they tell you to memorize the names and the dates i want you to
00:27:34.380
look at the ark i want you to learn the story i don't care about the names and everything else
00:27:40.420
the dates what out of all the stuff that we have to worry about memorizing a date is the most
00:27:47.260
important thing no tell me what the emancipation proclamation did i don't care what year it
00:27:55.300
happened in tell me what it did why why was that struggle for that how did we come to all men are
00:28:02.920
created equal so no matter how much you think you know about american history uh this whole series
00:28:09.380
is written by nathan nipper who is one of our best writers um he is our best history writer
00:28:15.240
um by far and i have learned just reading them i can't tell you how many times i have said nathan
00:28:21.140
is there when i'm when i'm narrating and i said is that true is that i mean we have that he's like
00:28:28.460
yes glenn i mean i have learned so much from this series our nation's 250th birthday is this year
00:28:37.820
um we want you to dive in with your family on american history let me give you a little taste
00:29:12.520
Then, with swift determination, he swings back onto his horse, no time to register the pain coursing through him.
00:29:27.980
He draws his sword, charging ahead into the maelstrom.
00:29:38.900
A war that is also a forge, shaping him for the destiny he cannot imagine.
00:29:52.680
From Columbus to Jamestown, America's Messy Origins, that is episode one of The American Story.
00:30:01.000
It goes wide distribution tomorrow, wherever you get your podcasts.
00:30:09.240
So you'll be able to, if you get, if you're on our email, you'll get that, um, uh, link
00:30:13.880
tomorrow, but wherever you get your podcast, you will be able to hear it tomorrow.
00:30:19.640
If you are a insider, you already have episode one through five.
00:30:24.600
We released them, uh, I don't know, two months at launch at launch of the torch.
00:30:29.600
We have been waiting for this moment to give you episode six through 10.
00:30:35.080
those are available right now and i'm telling you
00:30:43.600
by the work of my team on this blown away it i can't recommend this highly enough
00:30:52.360
and we really want to hear your opinion on it because
00:30:56.080
we want to make this so you can share this history they're all
00:31:04.960
um and uh you know it's average commute and maybe that's average commute to and from um but you can
00:31:12.840
listen to one at a time one a day a really really good one a week just make sure you listen the first
00:31:19.140
one is out from columbus to jamestown this is the perfect time to share american history with your
00:31:25.180
friends and family this is honest history believe me there's stuff in here that's uncomfortable
00:31:33.020
really uncomfortable you know let me tell you this uh you know that jamestown ended in cannibalism
00:31:42.740
right did you know that i learned that from you recently yeah so it ended in cannibalism
00:31:50.640
when they actually got to uh jamestown to rescue the people that were there because they had heard
00:31:58.920
they had run out of food and everything else um it had it had fallen apart so far when they got
00:32:05.280
there i think they found one person eating a dead child and they found teeth marks on bones human
00:32:14.580
bones why did that happen you know for all of these people who say uh you know socialism is
00:32:23.040
the way to go christians need to be away from capitalism and socialism jamestown jamestown
00:32:29.460
ended in in uh in cannibalism because they were trying the socialist model it wasn't called
00:32:37.600
socialism at the time it wasn't marxism at the time but it was the community everybody put
00:32:44.800
everything in one pile and take what you need okay and you don't have to work even if you know
00:32:51.180
if you're not working, we just assume you're going to work because it's for the good of the
00:32:54.620
community. Socialism. It ended in cannibalism. Okay. Well, that's the English. They weren't
00:33:00.860
religious. All right. Let's look at the pilgrims. Did you know that they tried socialism?
0.61
00:33:07.040
They thought it was the Christian way to live. So when they were on the Mayflower, they were like,
0.70
00:33:12.900
you know what? Let's share everything. Let's come up with a system. Let's live the way the Lord
00:33:18.080
wants us to live and we'll take care of each other and you know we should all just put all
00:33:23.180
of our stuff in a in a pile and just take what we need you know how that ended people were dying
00:33:30.180
from starvation it didn't work and so they became capitalists this was a new idea capitalism the way
00:33:38.660
we understand it came from adam smith that's right around the idea right around the time i think it's
00:33:46.380
maybe even the same year as our Declaration of Independence.
00:33:50.220
Before that, he was kind of noodling it all out with a book called Moral Sentiments,
00:33:55.660
which was, look, if we're a God-fearing people, we will then produce things
00:34:03.740
because the market will respond to what people need and want.
00:34:07.960
And if they're God-fearing people, they will need and want good things.
00:34:11.700
And so that will prompt the market to produce good things that are needed by the people to be stronger people.
00:34:20.680
So that's the system that the pilgrims went to, and it kicked all of it off.
00:34:27.340
So please do not listen to anyone telling you that socialism is what Christ wants.
00:34:38.080
his perfect order where we all live like that will happen when he is our earthly king
00:34:45.820
not beforehand not beforehand do you know that reunion if you go to uh dallas and you'll see
00:34:55.760
this big ball uh it's on the skyline and it's this this big lit ball in the skyline of dallas
00:35:02.500
and it's a rotating restaurant it's reunion tower nobody knows what reunion is reunion was the town
00:35:10.240
outside of dallas back in the day in the 1800s what was reunion reunion was a town where i think
00:35:18.620
the guy came from france and he was going to he was the one of the leading minds on marxism
00:35:25.580
and socialism. They called it that at the time, as Marx had written it all down. And so they
00:35:33.060
believed that socialism was the way to go. And so they wanted to come to America, to a frontier town
00:35:38.820
where they could just start it and do it right. And so they got the best minds of Marxism together
00:35:45.000
and they all moved to Texas, just outside of Dallas, to reunion. Guess how that ended?
00:35:52.520
it didn't end well do you know why because it was going it was going great until people got
00:36:01.080
really sick and they couldn't take care of each other so they just like you have to leave when
1.00
00:36:06.940
people got old and stopped working the society couldn't afford to hold all those old people and
1.00
00:36:13.340
care for them so they said when you get to a certain age you have to leave kind of like what
1.00
00:36:19.160
canada is doing except they're killing their old people and selling their organs
00:36:24.540
it ends the same way every time it will only work when christ is our king literally on earth
00:36:34.560
so please don't listen to those people get the real facts of american history it is bloody
00:36:42.900
it is ugly at times it is glorious at times it is filled with miracles miracles and we tell the
00:36:52.740
story in a way that doesn't feel like you're eating your vegetables make sure you join us
00:36:56.960
i know you don't have time to sit and read a 600 or a thousand page book this is honestly
00:37:02.380
the scripts put together it's it's like les miserables it just but when you break it up
00:37:09.480
And then you hear what Nick Daly has done to Nathan's writing.
00:37:18.680
You will, the bullets, it's done in, I don't know what it's called,
00:37:24.600
You'll feel like the bullets are whizzing by your head.
00:38:03.900
for the next 10 weeks next 10 weeks um but all 20 episodes will be released by the end of the year
00:38:09.480
you don't want to miss this episode one from columbus to jamestown the columbus story and
00:38:16.520
you know it's so crazy i'm doing this and i'm learning stuff from nathan and i'm like wow i
00:38:22.920
didn't know that i had no idea and at the same time when i'm narrating this stuff i'm like oh
00:38:30.960
I could tell this whole story a second time and fill it with stuff.
00:38:43.900
you go down this rabbit hole and you find story after story after story.
00:38:49.480
You want to be America needs you and your children,
00:38:53.580
you and your family to be somebody that is so excited about American history because it's
00:39:00.780
contagious. It's contagious. When somebody says something to you and you're like, no, no, no.
00:39:06.720
Did you know that Columbus, whatever, did you know about George Washington? Forget about the
00:39:13.340
wooden teeth thing. No, no, that's true. Did you know about this? Did you know about this with
00:39:18.980
abraham lincoln do you know how that actually happened when they shot him do you know how he
00:39:24.440
came into town to be sworn into office do you know what what happened when when you're telling
00:39:31.520
that story because you are so excited about it it's infectious that's what this series will do
00:39:39.700
join us glennbeck.com slash torch it's our mission to inform you so you and your children
00:39:58.660
that happens when you open a letter from the IRS.
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who knows how the system works somebody who deals with the irs every day and understands how to
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You're going to be thinking about that for a couple minutes, huh?
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00:42:58.200
jason i just heard you say and i wasn't i was busy doing something else i heard you talking
00:43:07.040
to the insiders here a second in the break and you were saying i'm going to tell a story
00:43:11.020
about something that happened while we were at the white house when you were shadowing me
00:43:16.160
with the president uh you know i signed a non-disclosure did you have to sign a non-disclosure
00:43:25.800
Only for that one part, which didn't include this part.
00:43:29.020
Can you give me a hint on what story you're about to tell here when we go into the break?
0.98
00:43:33.420
We were walking through a hall that had multiple pictures of first ladies.
00:43:37.980
And there was one painting of a first lady that I was deer in the headlights.
00:43:42.560
I made a joke about, didn't think it would land.
00:43:44.640
At first it didn't, but someone saved me and everyone cracked up.
00:43:49.700
I know, Ricky, she's looking like she's deer in the headlights.
0.97
00:43:53.060
Yeah, I also made an inappropriate joke in the White House to the president.
00:43:57.580
I don't think this is something you need to share with everybody.
00:44:19.200
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It has the most critical six minutes of the mission,
00:45:55.100
because they actually have an escape possible at launch.
00:45:59.780
But the six minutes beginning right around 8 o'clock tonight
00:46:09.200
We have seen people burn up before and be destroyed.
00:46:13.220
because you have no idea what it is like you you have to hit the earth's atmosphere exactly right
00:46:21.200
otherwise you will bounce off you can come in too steep blow up hit too uh hit too uh narrow and
00:46:30.220
bounce off you have to hit it exactly right and then you have to hope that the tiles that are not
00:46:37.800
made the way they used to be are are all secure nothing has fallen off while you were going around
00:46:44.440
the moon nothing is going to heat up the last time artemis went up some gas started they
00:46:51.480
in a way the gas kind of almost uh came alive again in these in these tiles and started to
00:46:58.520
rise up and it started to pop some of the tiles off if that happens our astronauts can die from
00:47:04.680
the heat or the entire thing can just break up and disintegrate and blow up and it's it's going
00:47:10.760
to be a tense few minutes um and the guys who are there i mean are just remarkable people yeah even
00:47:19.720
the canadian i have to say even the canadian remarkable people and victor glover is the uh
00:47:26.360
pilot and he has been so open about his faith it's been really refreshing however it caused
00:47:34.600
some upset because he was saying you know there is no atheist on top of rockets well some reddit
00:47:40.520
user got that and said no respect for victor keep it to yourself just enjoy the 100 scientifically
00:47:48.600
managed ride around the moon you're not praying to the rocket you're not praying the rocket into
00:47:53.480
space victor the foxhole stuff is factually incorrect as if it's a discount of bravery if
00:48:03.080
Then he goes into, from a neurological standpoint,
00:48:29.400
you you change the degree of space by one degree and the whole thing collapses
00:48:35.240
i mean he's the greatest mathematician and scientist ever and science can lead us
00:48:45.200
and show us these amazing things um so a response to that came from a guy named george
00:48:51.840
Roush. And he said, I helped build the spacecraft. And when we were building the spacecraft,
00:48:59.300
one of our engineers would stand behind us while we were laying wire harnesses and read from the
00:49:04.300
Bible. We would sometimes pray before a large operation. He brought his Bible into the clean
00:49:10.820
room and privately prayed over a vehicle before we sent it into test. I'm pretty sure he prayed
00:49:16.840
over orion that's being flown on artemis 2 as well the orion team is just as religious if not
00:49:22.780
more religious than we were we are the science and we're glad astronaut uh glover is as faithful
00:49:30.020
as us i mean it's an amazing thing well i wanted to talk to george because i thought that was a
00:49:35.440
great i i don't i've never talked to anybody who's building this stuff i don't know what happens
00:49:39.620
and i want to hear how he built it and about the faith that is involved i think that's fantastic
00:49:45.280
we talked to him in 60 seconds first let me tell you about z factor you can have the best bed you
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for relief or visit relieffactor.com george welcome to the program sir how are you
00:51:03.000
We just encountered the Orion team every once in a while.
00:51:06.980
Those guys put in a lot of work, and they're still putting in a lot of work.
00:51:10.700
they're still building more, which I think is incredible.
00:51:13.460
Where, where, where do you work out of, if you can say?
00:51:16.460
So yeah, Orion is built in Southern Denver, Colorado,
00:51:20.860
as well as at the Lockheed Martin Sunnyvale complex in California.
00:51:26.880
it's integrated down at Kennedy space center in Cape Canaveral, Florida.
00:51:31.420
I'm sure you've seen some of the integration photos of them stacking it on
00:51:36.680
It's crazy. It is crazy. When you look at the, I mean,
00:51:40.400
i know how science works but it is also a miracle it is a man-made miracle to watch that thing go up
00:51:48.780
there's it's a wonder of the world it's incredible well everything is a miracle around us i mean look
00:51:56.500
at the society that you live in look in the nation that you live in this is a the the technology that
00:52:03.500
we have available to us today the innovation that we have available to us today no society in history
00:52:08.880
has ever created anything close to what exists in modernity today.
00:52:14.060
Your television, your smartphone, your airplane, your car,
00:52:16.840
all of those are miraculous technologies to people just a few hundred years ago,
1.00
00:52:21.140
and that was all possible because of a Protestant and Christian,
00:52:26.640
primarily Christian development in this world, and that is the United States.
00:52:34.360
One of my favorite books is The 5,000-Year Leap,
00:52:36.620
and it shows how we went from candlelight to walking on the moon in less than 200 years
00:52:43.540
and nobody really puts that together they don't ask how did that happen i mean people have been
00:52:49.180
around for thousands of years and we never really moved past candlelight and then all of a sudden
00:52:56.120
candlelight to walking on the moon in 200 years what changed and it is the judeo-christian values
00:53:05.160
being understood that all men are created equal
00:53:09.640
and that everyone has the right to worship the way they want,
00:53:16.660
live the way they want under certain principles.
00:53:20.500
And when you do that right, the whole world changes.
00:53:33.680
so there's this idea in the world of engineering and the world of deep research that uh big bang
00:53:41.960
theory is representative of how scientists and researchers behave how engineers behave but if
00:53:47.800
you look at the characters on big bang theory that's your that's your um deep researchers
00:53:53.500
those are those are your people who are out there exploring the universe doing all those people who
00:53:57.200
really really really love marvel comics and really can't stand those really awful backward
0.98
00:54:02.920
hillbilly religious people. You see it in Big Bang Theory, you see it on other television shows
1.00
00:54:07.700
where they always show Christians as being these very backward farm people. But to be completely
0.97
00:54:12.700
honest with you, not only was the original Apollo program, as well as quite a lot of our leading
00:54:17.740
aircraft programs, led and built by Christian men, or men at least raised in a Christian society,
00:54:26.960
the people today who are still working on this are overwhelmingly religious. And I do want to
00:54:31.660
make a note about our development from candlelight up to modernity that is worth talking about you
00:54:37.160
talk about how it's judeo-christian values and it is worth noting that there there is a bit of a
00:54:41.540
difference here because it's not just the the judeo-christian values and it's not just christian
00:54:47.040
values it's actually the united states doesn't exist unless they're the protestant reformation
00:54:52.880
unless there is an enlightenment unless there are people who have a reason to go over to the
00:54:57.400
new world who become self-starters and say, I have to build a nation from the ground up because
00:55:02.660
the old world doesn't work for me anymore. So in a lot of ways, the United States is a product of
00:55:07.940
Christianity. So talk to me a little bit about the process of, of building the rocket and, and
0.68
00:55:17.600
praying over the parts. Sure. So I did not build rockets. I built stuff that went onto rockets and
00:55:25.960
i didn't work specifically on uh the artemis program right i would be happy if you guys so
00:55:32.180
a little bit of background you guys gave me i think less than 24 hours uh to say yes or no
00:55:38.840
if if i if we had a little bit more time which i understand we're time constrained because um
00:55:43.560
artemis 2 is coming back today on a steeper trajectory than previously known or previously
00:55:48.560
attempted um if we had a little bit more time we would uh i would have gotten you somebody from the
00:55:55.300
actual Artemis program so that they could explain to you exactly how they built Orion itself. But
00:56:02.580
building spacecraft is very interesting. There are manufacturing engineers and mechanical
00:56:08.540
engineers who work on the floor, and then you have your technicians. I was a technician.
00:56:12.180
Technicians are guys with some sort of hands-on experience. So that is people who are A&P
00:56:17.600
aircraft mechanics. A&P is airframe and power plant. That's a license from the FAA.
00:56:21.220
Okay. There's also other folks, our most talented technicians, the most talented people building
00:56:26.560
the spacecraft. Number one was a guy who was a Toyota mechanic. He worked for Toyota as a
00:56:30.860
technician for 20 years. And then he said, you know, I actually want to go build, uh, I want
00:56:35.720
to go build spaceships. And then we had another guy who was a Fox body enthusiast. He built Fox
00:56:39.780
body Mustangs and that's what he was known for. His hobby, his, his calling was he can restore
00:56:47.100
a Fox body Mustang better than anybody. It just so happened that on the, uh, on, you know, in his
00:56:52.080
day job, he's putting hardware in orbit. So your technicians are all very hands-on blue collar,
00:56:59.520
good people. Mike Rowe would be very impressed with the people who are building the spacecraft
00:57:04.640
for this country, because whether you're on the Orion team, the GPS team, or any of these teams
00:57:09.480
that build spacecraft, whatever it is, they are all people who build with their hands because you
00:57:15.060
have to because it is a hand-built industry. So to give you a little bit more on the process of
00:57:27.280
building it and praying over it, a lot of days are very slow. A lot of days you're just putting
00:57:33.600
together wiring harnesses, taking care of thermal systems, etc. There's a lot of gluing, a lot of
00:57:41.060
string tying, a lot of putting on the podcast and just getting to work. But on some days,
00:57:48.240
big stuff has to happen, and you move. And obviously, when that happens, you've got
00:57:53.220
teammates who are religious, myself included, and they would like to pray over it. So we prayed over
00:57:58.200
it. And because of the nature of the kind of people that you can find who are available, who
00:58:03.160
have the skills, interests, and abilities to do this kind of work, you tend to get a lot of
00:58:10.780
religious people. So, you know, we had people who were Orthodox Christian, people who were
00:58:14.240
Protestant Christian, people who were Catholic Christian on our team. We had an engineer who
00:58:18.880
was Jewish. We had all sorts of very interesting backgrounds and beliefs. And when you're all
00:58:26.180
locked in a room together, working with your hands for hours at a time, you begin to talk about it.
00:58:29.880
You begin to have those conversations. And one person's brought a Bible, and he reads from it,
00:58:34.480
and you talk about your interpretations. And it's just something that you do to build rapport
00:58:38.800
with your with your friends it's it's also a very spiritual engagement george why do you
00:58:48.280
why do you think people work so hard to separate science and religion i mean i think they go hand
00:58:55.560
in hand in fact most people think oh the big bang that was science no that was actually religious
00:59:00.840
people that that was that was actually to prove god's existence and somehow or another that thing
00:59:08.100
got so turned around by atheists that now they try to use it to prove uh you know that there is
00:59:15.300
no god it was actually a christian concept the big bang came from christians yeah it it's uh
00:59:23.120
it's a demoralization campaign it's a demoralization campaign uh there are there are groups out there
00:59:30.280
who would prefer if people were not proud of their country proud of their history proud of
00:59:34.020
themselves who didn't trust in their countrymen. The more division you can sow, the easier it is
00:59:40.300
to bring the United States apart. It's the same kind of campaigns that you see running all over
00:59:43.580
the world, but going after the divide between the cosmopolitan atheist and the rural Christian
00:59:54.280
has been a very, very, very good wedge that has been used by both groups inside and outside of
01:00:00.520
united states to to help to break down our social fabric and i think separating religion from
01:00:06.960
science is one of the ways that you break down america's social fabric because we are the
01:00:11.160
aerospace republic we are a nation of innovation and we are a nation of christians uh george can
01:00:17.500
you do me a favor i want to take a one minute break i'm going to make one of those very fancy
01:00:21.000
transitions um and then when i come back uh i'd like if you can i don't know if you can can you
01:00:27.500
explain what the capsule is going to go through tonight at you know about eight o'clock tonight
01:00:34.140
coming back into our atmosphere what it takes what beating that thing is going to take and
01:00:39.880
what they're afraid of what happened last time can you walk us through that a little bit
01:00:44.340
are you asking if i can go read the the nasa uh root cause findings on the last re-entry
01:00:50.880
No, no, no. I'm just asking if you can give a layman's understanding of that. Hang on just a second. Hang on. If you can't, that's cool. But hang on. Let me just tell you about relief factor first. I want you to imagine the perfect day for a second. You feel up, you know, you're rested. You move through your morning without, you know, a little check-in with your body. Sometimes you have to do. Maybe you're outside. You're working on something you enjoy. Maybe you're spending time with people you care about and you are present for it.
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Ricky said we were on a plane yesterday and Ricky said,
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You really believe in it or something like that?
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I asked if you believed in what you were eating.
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following and my i think my wife made it very clear didn't she she takes it every night and
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it does actually help her sleep yeah i know and but the relief factor when we were talking about
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so um george i i hate to put you on the spot and if you can't explain it i
01:02:45.760
completely understand but can you just give a layman's understanding uh to us about what
01:02:51.040
the what the space capsule is going to go through here tonight at eight coming back into our
01:02:56.320
atmosphere yeah sure um so my understanding is is that the well is this live by the way
01:03:07.120
yes it is there's no editing you're on a tightrope man without a net if you don't know
01:03:12.640
it's totally fine it's totally fine no no no no it's fine so orion uses a multi-layer heat shield
01:03:17.620
and they're using um material called av coat as well as a handful of other materials uh the the
01:03:23.820
orion heat shield is effectively an ablative shield and it's not worth getting let's not get
01:03:28.680
too far yeah yeah yeah because it's right i'm not an expert on it if you ask my co-workers they'll
01:03:34.500
go george that guy you had him on no no you should see me explain it uh and they're probably right
01:03:41.320
But understanding a little bit about the flight dynamics of Orion, what you have to understand is that the Orion heat shield is a certain sections of it are effectively baked epoxy.
01:03:55.840
And so when we talk about today's reentry and you talked about some of the issues with the last reentry, what the issues that you're talking about are spalling issues.
01:04:03.620
So the previous Orion reentry used what's called a skip reentry maneuver.
01:04:09.260
And just kind of a side note, we're using a skip reentry this time, but it's a little bit different.
01:04:13.520
And the reason why they use a skip reentry or a lofted reentry is because they're trying to keep temperature down on the heat shield itself.
01:04:20.280
And what they found is that there's actually bubbles in the AV code itself.
01:04:26.260
And what happens is, is as the pressure builds and then releases, builds and releases as they kind of, how do I say, not fishtail their way through the atmosphere, but kind of make their way up in elevation, down in elevation, up in altitude, down in altitude, the pressure builds and it can actually cause chunks of the heat shield to break off.
01:04:46.900
And so NASA did a root cause analysis and they dug into it.
01:04:49.800
They actually found the cause of the spalling and they determined that they can actually fix it by increasing the temperature that the panel's being exposed to, steepening the reentry a little bit and bringing Orion in a little bit faster.
01:05:02.020
So they're taking some of that pressure risk off.
01:05:05.820
Any of the idea, what temperature are they coming in at?
01:05:11.640
Yeah, we're talking about roughly 4,000 degrees Fahrenheit, about 2,200 degrees Celsius.
01:05:16.900
gosh oh my yeah i mean it's you know it's you're you're talking about coming in at you know
01:05:23.700
multiple times the speed of sound into an atmosphere which has molecules and those
01:05:30.000
create resistance so it gets pretty hot pretty quickly it must be hot even with the shield
01:05:35.900
working everything it must just be scorching inside uh not inside the vehicle itself the
01:05:42.940
The vehicle is temperature-controlled, and it's fantastically temperature-controlled.
01:05:48.040
Material sciences and thermosciences, they do a fantastic job.
01:05:51.840
It'll get a little bit warm in there, but it shouldn't be anything significant.
01:05:56.000
We have temperature controls that keep the astronauts comfortable.
01:05:58.520
Someday, you'll be able to go to space, and you'll enjoy the air conditioning as well.
01:06:02.540
I love talking to you, and I hope we get to meet someday.
01:06:05.720
And thank you for everything that all of you guys do on any part of the space program.
01:06:12.940
you bet exactly how far into emergency do you have to get before you know you think wow you
01:06:22.080
know glenn was glenn was right i should have prepared for this okay uh is it when the news
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wraps around the block just to get into the grocery store you know hoping there's still
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We've just been talking about going to space and everything else.
01:08:01.960
And there is something weird that is happening.
01:08:04.020
and i don't know i i mean i think it's all misdirection myself but i believe in aliens
01:08:10.400
i mean i believe i mean what again as carl sagan said if we're alone in this universe what an
01:08:15.160
enormous waste of space um but it's almost like it's almost like they're going to announce
01:08:22.960
something you know that's what it feels like so billy's the host of uh investigating the supernatural
01:08:28.340
uh miracle uh miracles um and uh i wanted to bring him on because he's been talking in in
01:08:36.180
this documentary he has uh hugh ross lee strobel john burke they're all people who've been on this
01:08:42.520
show talking about these things but he's he's honed them in and uh and and really put together
01:08:49.840
a really remarkable series here a documentary and i want to play a clip from it when he sat up at
01:08:56.960
The foot of the bed was this eight-foot luminous angel.
01:09:01.460
That's when I began to realize there's a connection between demons.
01:09:07.100
And on the last beat of my heart, my spirit left my body.
01:09:19.660
In all ancient cultures, people believe in a spiritual wrong.
01:09:24.240
And I was struck that all throughout history, the vast majority of cultures not only believed in evil spirits, but believed in possessions.
01:09:35.740
For most of the world, the question isn't, is there a spiritual world?
01:09:40.180
The question is, which spirit is the most powerful?
01:09:42.980
But to say you believe in angels, demons, is oftentimes to expose you to ridicule, like you sound like somebody from the Middle Ages.
01:09:50.600
Many scientists just write it all off saying this is just people's imaginations, they're hallucinating, they're having dreams, none of this is real.
01:10:04.040
And within a matter of minutes, a bomb went off.
0.65
01:10:07.080
All of a sudden we hear this guttural sounding voice come out of her in the back.
01:10:12.360
Your mumbo-jumbo quarters will fail, just like they always do.
01:10:17.580
and the one from the driver's side reached over and put his hands right in the middle of a flat
01:10:20.920
spot and the one from the passenger side did the same thing my heart started supernaturally
01:10:24.800
no cpr no medicine what i uncovered changes everything
01:10:30.420
um billy alowell is joining us now billy how are you i'm doing well how are you
01:10:38.460
that's good to have you on good to have you on my friend um so it's it's it seems wonky
01:10:47.560
uh or not wonky it seems i don't know religious hickey i guess to talk about angels and demons
01:10:55.100
but i absolutely believe them and i i i think most people believe in angels and demons in some
01:11:03.320
form or another what did you find that surprised you yeah you know i found a lot that surprised me
01:11:11.380
and let me tell you we actually have new data that we're going to be putting out and i'll share
01:11:14.560
here first. We actually asked Americans what they believe on all these things. And the majority of
01:11:20.340
the country, more than 50 percent, believe in angels, believe in demons, believe in all of
01:11:25.360
these things. And it's interesting. What has surprised me the most is how mainstream this
01:11:30.920
topic is, because it does feel wonky. It does feel difficult to talk about. And I think a lot
01:11:35.620
of people have had experiences, which we also gauge in this research, asking people, have they
01:11:41.180
been spiritually attacked before what does that look like how do they respond to it yes and you
01:11:46.140
know so for me the big surprise is hey you know what we feel like we can't talk about this stuff
01:11:50.320
but most of us are intrigued and actually believe in it and you know it's really crazy i learned this
01:11:56.420
as an alcoholic when you try to hide because you think it's just you you um you miss so much uh
01:12:06.300
connection and you miss solutions everywhere. I mean, I hid my alcoholism as most alcoholics do
01:12:13.220
forever. And when I, when I came out and said publicly, I'm an alcoholic, I really thought
01:12:19.680
it would be a shameful thing. And the opposite happened. People started to connect with me and
01:12:25.320
saying, Hey, I've got this problem. You know, I did these things and I'm really struggling with
01:12:29.360
this. And you, you start to find strength in that. And I think that's why we are discouraged
01:12:36.820
from talking about these things, because we would find strength in the things that we believe we
01:12:43.040
would find, um, new understandings if we were just open and talking about them.
01:12:49.620
Absolutely. And, you know, I've, I've always loved how you've shared your journey, you know,
01:12:53.400
publicly in that way, because it helps so many people. And I think that's the same thing here,
01:12:57.220
because I mean, think about this. There are people, and I can talk about some of the other
01:13:01.040
things that really shocked me. I mean, the biggest thing is that there's a lot of evidence for angels
01:13:06.060
and demons and obviously miracles. And if people want to check this out, they can go to cbn.com
01:13:10.700
slash supernatural. But I'll tell you, you know, I went into all these stories thinking I'm going
01:13:15.320
to uncover something that will tell me it's not true. There's got to be some other explanation,
01:13:19.220
not because I don't believe in angels and demons. I'm a Christian. I believe in the Bible.
01:13:22.900
but, you know, look, we can make claims all day long that we've had interactions with angels or
01:13:27.540
demons or that we've been afflicted. I want evidence. And so I was shocked by the staggering
01:13:32.180
amount of evidence that is there, but to your point, and we can dig into some of that, you know,
01:13:36.780
I think that there's a real force that pushes us not to talk about it because here's the other
01:13:41.380
thing. There's, because of that evidence, it almost becomes apologetics. It almost becomes
01:13:46.740
this tool. If you can prove that God is still moving, that miracles happen, that angels and
01:13:52.620
demons are active, then that means there's a God. And that was shocking to me because I had never
01:13:57.760
thought of these topics as being something that could close that loop and actually help bring
01:14:02.680
people to faith. And one quick thing, and you know this story, I'm not going to name the people
01:14:07.800
because people got very upset about it, but there was a prominent politician's son who was having a
01:14:12.980
conversation with an apologist, and they're on the phone, and this guy's 19 years old, and the
01:14:18.760
apologist is trying to get him to believe in Christianity. And he was throwing everything
01:14:22.620
at this kid, right? Like, hey, this is the evidence for God. And none of it was really
01:14:26.520
working until he said to this kid, hey, did you know that there are Muslims in the Middle East
01:14:31.540
who wake up after having dreams of Jesus? He appears to them and they become Christians.
01:14:35.860
And like a light bulb went off for this kid. And I realized when I heard that story,
01:14:40.680
for young people right now, this evidence, actually the supernatural evidence is the
01:14:45.640
thing that could bring them over the line into faith because they've been so lied to for so long
01:14:50.300
so forced into this weird secular worldview that when you see something crazy that has evidence
01:14:55.380
it brings you into the faith i have to tell you i think i think people feel it at least i i feel it
01:15:02.760
more universally than i've ever felt it before and i was just in washington i was speaking to a
01:15:09.260
a big group of people in washington you don't usually you know lead with god um and you know
01:15:16.040
somebody asked me uh about glenn how are so many of our friends so many people now on this path
01:15:24.000
of such darkness of you know uh of anti-semitism and that's different than disagreeing with israel
01:15:33.000
um yeah but it's it's gotten some really dark and i said i i'm gonna say something maybe it's
01:15:37.940
unpopular but i'm gonna tell you um i think god showed up after charlie was was killed and he used
01:15:44.520
that and we saw miracles all over the world people finding god and going to church for the first time
01:15:51.420
and everything else and for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction and i said i think
01:15:57.920
what the darkness and the fog that people are in right now is evil it's from satan and it's we're
01:16:04.940
watching good and evil angels and demons duke it out all around us right now and we're just feeling
01:16:13.500
the after effects that battle is happening all around us right now and if we're not aware of it
01:16:21.700
we could end up being on the wrong side really quickly what do you think about i love what you
01:16:28.040
just what you just said so these projects investigating the supernatural angels and
01:16:32.360
demons in particular, has totally transformed my faith in the way I see things. Because what you
01:16:37.080
just said, it's Ephesians 6. And for those who don't know that, if you don't know the Bible,
01:16:40.920
you don't know that. Ephesians 6, the Apostle Paul is talking about how we all think that we're in a
01:16:46.260
battle between each other. It's Democrats versus Republicans. It's me versus you. It's everybody's
01:16:50.420
fighting, and it's a flesh battle, right? We assume that's what's going on, but what's actually
01:16:54.740
happening, and that doesn't mean we shouldn't get engaged in those arguments and have meaningful
01:16:58.940
discussion. That's not the point. What's really happening is that there's a spiritual battle,
01:17:03.040
good versus evil. We can't see it with our human eyes, but it's pouring over into the world in
01:17:07.640
which we are living. And so when you see Charlie get assassinated, when you see these horrific
01:17:12.540
things happen, even atheists will turn on their TV and say, that was evil. And so the question is,
01:17:18.260
well, where does that evil come from? We know that what Ephesians 6 says is that that battle
01:17:22.520
is going to impact us. And so I actually don't think, and I was pretty convicted of this after
01:17:27.480
working on this film, that we can really understand fully what is happening in the
01:17:31.540
world around us and in our individual lives if we don't understand that battle.
01:17:36.420
And I will tell you, because back, you know, in 2012, when I started working for you at
01:17:40.660
The Blaze and you would talk about all these things, I mean, you were ahead of everybody
01:17:43.700
on a lot of these issues that we're experiencing right now.
01:17:46.540
You know, I wasn't fully understanding what this battle meant, and I get it now.
01:17:51.280
And I think we've got to hone in on that, because if we want to, if we have any hope
01:17:56.140
of navigating and not ending up because right now you and I both know there are people who are
01:18:00.500
falling on the wrong side of a lot of these things and I'm not going to name them but they're out
01:18:04.140
there and they're impacting a lot of people right now and so we need to make sure people understand
01:18:09.360
this and this film really is a quest to do that not just in our again in our individual lives
01:18:14.580
because evil can affect us but also in our politics and in our culture. So tell me by the way you can
01:18:22.560
find the film at cbn.com slash supernatural um billy tell me how um aliens are are fitting into
01:18:34.540
this i mean here's the thing you know how this is you're working on a film and this is well over a
01:18:39.940
year ago we're having these conversations you know we're talking about angels and demons what are we
01:18:44.060
going to do about aliens because this is a big at the time obviously disclosure was becoming a big
01:18:49.020
conversation. I had no idea we'd release this film in the middle of this massive conversation
01:18:53.860
about aliens. What is happening right now? And look, there's a debate, and I'm not going to tell
01:18:57.960
people what to think. There are people, even in Christian circles, and this film is for everybody,
01:19:02.380
not just Christians, but who believe that aliens are very real and that they exist and that God
01:19:06.660
created them. But there are also people like Hugh Ross, as you know, who would take a different view
01:19:12.560
on this. They would take the view that it's not that people aren't seeing or experiencing aliens
01:19:18.100
and UFOs. It's that the nature of what they are might not be what we think. And Hugh's position,
01:19:24.820
and he was in the film, obviously, as you saw in the clip you shared, is that these are actually
01:19:29.440
interdimensional demonic entities that are appearing to people. And he has a whole slew
01:19:34.420
of thoughts about why that is the case. And I will tell you, they're compelling.
01:19:38.880
Not everybody agrees with them. They are compelling. But here's the deal on the alien thing.
01:19:43.920
About 10 years ago, a lot of us would have laughed at this, right? The fact that we would
01:19:47.140
even be talking about it or having presidents and former presidents talk about it. We would think
01:19:51.540
that was semi-ridiculous. And yet here we are. And I would encourage people not to laugh this off
01:19:56.480
because a lot of Christians on the issue of evil have done a very bad job of addressing it because
01:20:02.920
it feels weird. So we don't want to talk about it. And we've allowed secular culture to talk
01:20:08.000
about evil more than churches are. That's why every Halloween you've got The Conjuring and all
0.75
01:20:12.820
these movies coming out, Hollywood's owning this issue. We don't want the same thing to happen with
01:20:17.420
aliens because this is not going away. People are going to want answers. And just like you said,
01:20:21.900
it feels like something big is about to drop. And so what are you, what is your response going to be
01:20:27.240
to that? And so the film, you know, dives into that, you know, from a perspective, it's obviously
01:20:32.380
Hugh giving his perspective, but I would encourage people figure out what you think
01:20:36.080
on this issue because it's, it's not going anywhere. Hey, Billy, can I have you on again
01:20:41.520
next week i want to i want to have you on just about the alien thing because i have some thoughts
01:20:47.040
on this and i would like to explore it with you a bit billy hollowell again the um uh the the film
01:20:55.440
the documentary is investigating the supernatural miracles um and uh you can find it at cbn.com
01:21:03.760
slash supernatural billy has been a long time uh friend and co-worker and i have an awful lot of
01:21:10.160
respect for him and i'm glad to have you on we'll talk to you again hopefully i can squeeze you back
01:21:14.680
in uh next week because i i think you're right about exploring um the supernatural and aliens
01:21:22.920
i don't know what is coming but i've never seen anything like this in my life before um and you
01:21:29.640
know just a few years ago you would all we would all say well that's crazy well i've seen i think
01:21:34.200
we've seen a lot of crazy stuff happen uh and we're gonna see more i think we're gonna see a
01:21:39.160
lot more so we are we're gonna see crazy crazy things in our lifetime billy thank you so much
01:21:44.940
we'll talk next week thank you appreciate it okay let me tell you about the burner launcher
01:21:50.040
um you know you think it's never going to happen to you but one day it does all of those times in
01:21:55.980
the movies seeing somebody get mugged nothing to prepare you for experiencing it in real life
01:22:01.580
because in real life it's faster it's closer it's a lot more confusing than you expect it to be
01:22:06.280
and is also terrifying it's scarier than you imagine yeah there's no scary music building
01:22:13.260
up to it so you don't have a soundtrack in your life you don't get a warning you don't get a
01:22:17.040
second to think through all of your options that moment whatever you have with you is what you have
01:22:22.300
with you the burner launcher matters it gives you a non-lethal way to respond using kinetic and
01:22:28.360
pepper projectiles that can stop a threat from up to 60 feet away. It allows you to create distance
01:22:34.060
and get yourself out of a bad situation. Um, and it's legal in all 50 States. This is the thing
01:22:40.280
that is so important. My kids have them. Uh, I just bought some for my nieces. Uh, so they all
01:22:46.620
carry it because we've had some scary things happen in the family recently. And I want to
01:22:51.240
make sure all of them are prepared wherever they are. It's legal. You're over 18. You can carry a
01:23:27.120
you know a lot of people don't think that aliens have ever landed or have been here and i would
01:23:42.540
like to testify that aliens have landed and they've landed in canada here's proof positive
01:23:50.480
when the budget was released i was shocked to find out that prime minister carney is cutting
01:23:56.540
$7 billion between Indigenous Services Canada and Crown Indigenous Relations.
01:24:03.020
They provided $0 to deal with the ongoing genocide of MMIWG2SLGBTQQIA+.
01:24:14.800
This is callous because the very liberal government that has stripped organizations of life-sustaining funding
01:24:21.880
has now promised, committed $13 billion, $13 billion on military spending.
01:24:46.260
I mean, I just want to just again reiterate, the aliens are already here.
01:24:55.320
They're in Canada, and they apparently have been there for quite some time.
01:25:10.800
This spring, stay three nights and get a $50 Best Western gift card.
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Hello, America. It's Friday, and no Friday is complete, really, unless you have Bridget Phetasy on.
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I mean, Bridget is, honestly, she started out as my favorite hussy slut, and now she's a mom,
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she's got aprons, she's, I mean, no longer a hussy slut. I don't know what happened,
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01:28:17.860
well hello bridget hello my friend so good to see you how are you it's good to see you great
01:28:28.880
yeah it's been a minute i'm great i know it's been too long you you have gone through
01:28:36.740
one of the greatest uh i don't know i don't want to say transformations because you you were great
0.95
01:28:45.680
even when you were a hussy slut you were great and but to watch you it's like metamorphosis i
1.00
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I mean, you've just become just such a well-rounded, really cool person.
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01:29:02.720
He's like, don't you talk about my wife that way.
01:29:17.440
And you, I mean, you're sitting on a set with aprons behind you.
01:29:22.940
uh that's not you five years ago i did always love to cook but yes i have become quite domesticate
01:29:32.280
i was always weirdly more domestic than people would expect me to be to be for being a hussy
01:29:37.580
slut so people would be like you can cook but i always loved cooking but now i'm baking which i
0.82
01:29:44.260
feel like is domestic a different level now you're now you're june cleaver um what was
01:29:52.460
first of all before we get into your your latest article for people who don't know what was the
01:29:57.580
big change because you were i mean you were on the left did you ever hate me i don't feel like
01:30:04.620
i think i just thought you were silly i don't think i ever hated you i remember i'm sure that
01:30:10.840
john stewart covered you and made fun of you so i think that i probably just laughed at you i don't
01:30:18.180
Even in this crazy media, I don't have very much hatred in my heart in general.
01:30:26.100
So I think that I generally tend to lean on mockery as my way of coping.
01:30:35.260
And I also think that it's very hard to hate somebody that you don't know.
01:30:42.340
Although we all probably do this now with algorithms and being online.
01:30:47.100
but I don't I generally try not to and and honestly I think being in recovery as I'm
01:30:55.000
very open about I I always have to go back it you know there's this expression um put down
01:31:02.200
the microscope and pick up the mirror and so whenever I'm hyper focusing on someone or hating
01:31:11.440
somebody it's like what is this saying about me yeah you know it's a it's amazing i was giving a
01:31:19.620
speech last night in dc and somebody brought up you know all the stuff that's happening with
01:31:25.240
podcasters and i said i am not gonna i'll comment on i'll comment on facts but i'm not going to talk
01:31:31.840
about personalities all i say on this is i am so tired and i think the american people are too
01:31:37.200
i am so tired of getting a list from somebody it's seemingly every day of who i have to hate now
01:31:45.980
who i have to declare is my mortal enemy because if i'm not i'm a traitor to somebody and it's like
0.64
01:31:53.620
i i can't take any more of it it's just so stupid is something going on in podcasting glenn
01:32:00.260
i don't know i i don't know i don't either i haven't noticed anything strange going on
0.57
01:32:11.540
yeah or the president mentioning anything like that yesterday wow oh do you know how angry it
01:32:18.120
makes me being a comedian just to reference since you reference this the everybody who's listening
01:32:24.040
it's the the the true social post where you went on a tirade against podcasters and i'm telling you
01:32:31.940
it's unfair that he's the funniest president we'll ever have do you know how hard it is to be
01:32:39.360
a comedian and know you're never gonna write anything that funny it is i mean he might be
01:32:45.220
the funniest person on earth he is if you miss his sense of humor you you've missed a great time
01:32:55.800
if you think he's serious about everything you've missed a great time i i think he has the best
01:33:00.700
comedic timing of any non-comedian i've ever seen i mean he is he's brilliantly funny it and it's
01:33:10.580
something that i missed so i i this is again something where i have to ask myself what has
01:33:17.880
changed in me because when i i've been thinking a lot about this in fact i probably should write
01:33:22.900
about it but when i first when he first came on the scene as a politician i could not handle the
01:33:29.740
sound of his voice i just couldn't listen to it and slowly over the years i realized i was missing
01:33:37.440
a lot of hilarity that that people saw that i didn't see and now he just kind of makes me
01:33:45.960
laugh you know he'll make you roll your eyes and go oh geez you're gonna say that all right but
01:33:51.780
i don't know we've been dealing with this guy for 10 years i know i you know um ronald reagan
01:33:58.880
when i was a kid ronald reagan was president and he would make you he'd make you laugh like
01:34:03.120
ha ha that's funny donald trump can make you belly laugh i mean absolutely belly laugh it is so funny
01:34:10.580
so funny i was reading that post in the green room dying laughing it was like oh yeah and we
01:34:16.580
were just how how can this how can this be i must be in a simulation
01:34:21.840
um you wrote an article and this is what i wanted to talk to you about you wrote an article
01:34:29.140
i don't care if young people like me and you shouldn't either can you can you take us through
01:34:34.640
this yes i mean to to your point it was a little bit of me looking around at podcasting and
01:34:43.580
podcasters and seeing this kind of trend of chasing what i see as younger opinions now i
01:34:52.760
understand this your livelihood depends on views and it is an attention economy and the the older
01:35:01.060
people are going to age out and there's a giant number of young people who are radicalized by
01:35:08.300
these algorithms and it's easy to understand why this would happen but it also came across as that
01:35:16.000
meme where it was like how do you do fellow kids you know these these older hosts where they're
01:35:23.300
like look how based and cool i am like see i'm saying those crazy things that kids are all about
01:35:30.400
and i don't know it just came across as as embarrassing to me and i realized it was very
01:35:37.980
gen x of me to say i don't care but it did feel and saying you know like get off it's a very
01:35:44.480
almost older like get off my lawn yeah it yeah it does i get why people reacted strongly to it and
01:35:52.760
and they're gonna tell me that i'm gonna be irrelevant and you know they they make comparisons
01:35:57.300
whatever six seven six seven listen but i i also hate this idea that popularity equals right
01:36:05.360
there's been a lot of people historically who have been extremely popular who have also been
01:36:33.720
I understand it from if you're young I can understand that
01:36:38.560
but from somebody who's older it seems like you should know
01:36:42.520
better. But you know what, Bridget? I think you're an alcoholic. I'm an alcoholic. We're
01:36:49.180
covering both of us. And that puts you in a different place. I'm not sure if I hadn't have
01:36:55.560
gone through the hell that I went through in my 30s that I would have the same perspective that
01:37:00.580
I have now. I know what's important and what's not. And this business really screws with your
01:37:07.900
head oh yeah and you know especially if you've ever been at the top where some of these podcasters
01:37:15.280
you know when they were in tv they were at the very top leaving that alone screws with your head
01:37:21.960
and then going into the world of podcasting that screws with your head again and then if you do
01:37:27.460
well and then you start to see things slip or you notice that things are changing if you really
01:37:32.640
don't if if you have if you don't know exactly who you are and you're not willing to go I don't
01:37:40.560
really care if anybody listens I could leave tomorrow and I'd be fine I don't know if you
01:37:46.520
can make it yeah you see any validity to that oh totally I mean it goes back to a couple things
01:37:53.400
that you said I really do try and ground myself in those recovery principles all the time one of
01:37:59.520
which is principles before personalities so like you i try not to get bogged down in too much of
01:38:06.400
the you know personal mudslinging i have friends and family members on all sides of the aisles i
01:38:11.880
see that i see the same thing in media and it i actually think it should be that way it's healthy
01:38:18.020
to to be able to have conversations with people who disagree with you and i do think uh turning
01:38:24.000
everything as james lindsey is always talking about uh this friend enemy distinction makes it
01:38:29.980
very easy to kind of divide and conquer people and we have outside forces who are influencing this
01:38:36.160
from other countries now there's also a lot of truth and the idea that and this was really
01:38:44.360
embedded in this piece i never i've never peaked so i have literally built what i made it like
01:39:02.140
I can't imagine what it would be like to be Jon Stewart or to be you even, somebody who is on Fox.
01:39:14.860
me no but you like your intro to this show which is new I believe reminded me yeah there was a time
01:39:25.660
when you were on all these magazine covers and that's got to be crazy I've never experienced
01:39:32.400
that and then to have that it's like being it reminds me a little bit of being a woman and
01:39:39.140
then you kind of enter into a later time in your life and you're like oh that was my peak
01:39:45.080
i'm on the other side of it now how do i how do i grapple with this and this is something
01:39:52.700
that oh all women kind of have to grapple with is all right i'm not everybody has to you know
01:39:59.480
ronald reagan said ronald reagan said there is everybody has a time and if you don't change if
01:40:08.460
you know who if you know who you are and you stay rooted in your principles it's like there's this
01:40:16.400
you're just sliding along a timeline and all of a sudden you your time comes and you just slot in
01:40:22.020
and then that time passes and you just pop back out and somebody else is popping back in yeah you
01:40:28.520
just you just have to know who you are and stay the same the whole time and just know that was
01:40:34.560
my time it's not my time now and you know whatever whatever yeah it hasn't changed me or diminished
01:40:40.740
me that's just my time was then yeah or now and I'm coming whatever and I think too that's that
01:40:49.800
is something I guess one of the things that happened to me when you asked me what happened
01:40:55.920
to you Bridget over the past 10 years and a lot of people will say that in a negative way so some
01:41:00.900
of it has nothing to do with me like a lot of people will say what happened to you and it's
01:41:05.680
like a good thing the thing I hear the most from people probably more than anything is what happened
01:41:11.060
to you in a negative way but one of the things that did happen to me is that I didn't really
01:41:17.380
know what my values were I remember Ben Shapiro saying very early when I came into the space and
01:41:24.000
he was talking about values and Jordan Peterson and I was like values what are those you know
01:41:30.780
what a strange concept and it put me back into this kind of first principle thinking I didn't
01:41:40.940
even really know or remember what that was I had strayed so far from even contemplating or thinking
01:41:48.200
about any of those things in addiction and just hustling to try and survive as a waitress and
01:41:56.380
make ends meet i didn't i didn't have the more i was in this space the more i said what are the
01:42:03.020
hills i will die on what do i believe what is great about this country america that we should
01:42:11.180
all be celebrating right now it's our 250th birthday it is a miracle a miracle that this
01:42:18.880
experiment exists i having and having a kid really really activated that in me in ways that
01:42:26.940
not i didn't have before because i want things to be better for her i want to pass this down
01:42:32.900
i don't want it to all go away because we were idiots you know and and didn't and took things
01:42:39.160
for granted and we're basically like trust fund babies of litter of liberty and that's really what
01:42:45.440
we are we're just trust fund kids of liberty and freedom that people have died for whining on
01:42:52.980
podcasts and i want to build stuff america if you know you haven't heard british bridget before
01:43:02.320
and now you know why i just love her um you're the best we've got to get together get our families
01:43:07.500
together. I would love that anytime. Yeah. Okay. Thanks so much. God bless. Thank you for having
01:43:13.900
me. You bet. Bridget Phetasy, comedian. She's walk-ins. Welcome host of Dumpster Fire. You can
01:43:20.020
find her online. Phetasy.com is her website, or you can follow her on X Bridget Phetasy. All right.
01:43:27.160
Let me talk to you about a leaf filter. Um, you know, it's, uh, you know, it's funny. Nobody ever
01:43:32.600
says i can't wait to spend part of my weekend cleaning out my gutters oh i've got so many
01:43:37.340
things i just i've i've stopped doing because i gotta get to this because i just i can't wait
01:43:42.080
to get home to do it it's boring and it's dangerous it's sloppy and it's it's it's not
01:43:48.160
something i ever want to do you put it off until you can't put it off anymore well you don't have
01:43:53.720
to actually get up on the letter ever again go to leaf filter.com slash glennbeck all the leaves
01:43:58.480
and the debris and the bird's nest and the crap that's in there it's it doesn't go into the gutters
01:44:04.840
ever it keeps the debris out leaf filter keeps the debris out and keeps the water flowing through so
01:44:10.420
you don't ever have to do it cross that job off the list just call leaf filter go to leaf filter
01:44:15.700
dot com slash glenn beck leaf filter dot com slash glenn beck 15 off right now minimum purchase
01:44:22.400
required restrictions do apply uh talk to the representative for warranty and promotion details
01:44:55.620
is resist the temptation to think that victory is immediate
01:45:01.940
or that we're going to win back our civilization through instant gratification.
01:45:09.460
It's far more influential than it was back then.
01:45:12.540
But I think a lot of people, this is particularly true in the United States of America.
01:45:16.140
If they see something that the administration does they don't like,
01:45:25.620
If we do something you don't like, the response should be to get more involved, to make your voice heard, and to try to push things in the direction that you want them to be pushed.
01:45:40.100
And so what I'd encourage you to do is stay involved, be patient, and don't let disappointment turn to checking out of the system entirely.
01:45:48.760
There's way too much of that, I would say, in the Anglo system and the American system.
01:45:52.200
There's way too much, you know, I didn't like this thing that the vice president said, or I didn't like this thing that the president did, and I'm going to completely check out.
0.83
01:46:00.700
We call that blackpilling in the United States of America, and blackpilling is how you give power to the forces that are trying to destroy what our ancestors built.
01:46:10.600
We need to take power back from those people and build the kind of institutions that can actually save our societies.
01:46:17.040
It will not happen overnight. It will not happen in the term of one prime minister or one president, but it will happen so long as we keep our faith in God and we work hard to achieve it. That's what we have to do.
01:46:30.360
100% agree with him on that. 100% agree. On Monday, I'm going to take you through a scenario because I think there's some black pilling going on. There's a lot on Iran. And let's just say Iran works out horribly.
01:46:45.060
Could I give you a white pill on it working out horribly?
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01:46:53.340
Just a way to open your mind in different ways.
01:47:03.780
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no obligation supersure.com. Want your kids to know America's real story? Torch Insiders can
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get 10 episodes of the American Story podcast now. Join us at glennbeck.com slash torch to
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help us tell more honest history. Hey, before I leave, I want to share a letter from a friend of
01:48:39.600
mine. He happened to get to know Neil Armstrong, first man to walk on the moon, before he died.
01:48:47.640
and his children were young and he said neil would you write a letter to my children and
01:48:53.740
and tell your story but tell them what is important in life what's really important if
01:49:01.740
you want to be successful however you would define that neil what what should they know
01:49:07.560
what should they do it's an amazing letter it's not a public letter i want to share that
01:49:12.200
um here in just a few minutes but i also want to bring on riley moore right now he is a
01:49:17.000
representative from west virginia um he is introducing the deport act i have several
01:49:22.740
things i want to talk to him about from congress um but let me start with the deport act this um
01:49:30.840
riley if i have this right this would let the u.s denaturalize and deport naturalized citizens who
01:49:38.100
commit plot join or aid terrorism i can't believe this isn't already part of law but i don't know
01:49:46.700
who this would affect we have do you have people that we've been trying to get out that are
01:49:52.920
naturalized citizens what what what's the motive what was the motivation to do this now yeah hey
01:50:00.600
glenn great to be back on with you and you kind of nailed it in the i can't believe that this isn't
01:50:06.460
already a law um so probably the best example that we have recently and i have um i'll start
01:50:12.820
from the one that's probably most notable is that Muhammad Jalo, who was the shooter down at Old
01:50:21.060
Dominion University, he had previously been arrested for providing material support to ISIS.
01:50:28.320
He went to jail. He was let out of jail. We could not deport him because he was a naturalized
01:50:35.680
citizen and so after providing material support to isis getting out of jail goes and does this
01:50:43.460
mass shooting down at old dominion university then we had the senegalese gentleman you might
01:50:49.320
remember he's wearing this shirt property of allah another naturalized citizen killing three
01:50:55.060
wounding 14 lebanese uh gentleman who rammed a truck into a synagogue in michigan another
01:51:03.480
naturalized citizen that we have we can't denaturalize and deport these individuals
01:51:09.320
and sometimes when it's just like provide material support they might do 10 years they could do 12
01:51:14.520
years whatever it is get back out on the street and commit more terrorist acts like why would we
01:51:22.400
allow these people to stay here they they clearly are a danger to the public and the end of the day
01:51:31.240
Part of this bill is just changing something very simple, and that is when they take that oath, when they swear allegiance to this country, is that they have to swear that they will not join a terrorist organization, provide material support, plot or commit a terrorist act, or aid to bed a terrorist organization against the American people.
01:51:51.840
currently when you take that oath you do have and this is a holdover from uh the cold war era that
01:51:57.580
just happens to be very relevant today is that you have to swear you're not part of a communist
01:52:02.060
party uh not sure how uh mandami got through that one but that's another conversation uh but adding
01:52:10.860
that in this and then if you violate that within your oath then you can be denaturalized and
01:52:18.160
deported and we've had the fbi director cash patel point this out and actually exchange some
01:52:24.600
messages on it and because i was asking the question why can't we just get these people
01:52:28.180
out here he's like i can't i we can't there's nothing to charge them on we can't denaturalize
01:52:33.140
them we can't deport them and so to me this is just correcting something that's very obvious
01:52:38.360
that should have been there a long time ago is it gonna pass i i think we can pass it in the house
01:52:46.360
uh if you're asking me what the senate's going to do i've been really bad at predicting that lately
01:52:50.200
so um that is another thing i'd love to get your opinion on this because you've knew i mean you
01:52:59.580
came from west virginia um you were the treasurer there you killed it in west virginia and then
01:53:06.020
you you decided i think i want to go to congress not that you wanted to but you felt compelled to
01:53:10.720
go to congress now that you've been there for a while maybe you can help me i was speaking to a
01:53:14.580
group in washington dc last night i'd give a speech and took some questions afterwards and
01:53:19.820
somebody said how is it that you can't get something to go through the senate that is
01:53:24.900
80 percent popular with all people in america left right democrat republican what is wrong
01:53:32.560
with these politicians and i i i didn't give a popular answer i said i don't know i can't think
01:53:39.400
of anything other than they are just so entrenched in their own power and they just
01:53:44.360
have some they're getting something for not doing it but i don't know what it is
01:53:49.840
do you have any insight on how our republican party can be so out of step on some of these things
01:53:56.780
well a couple things because i've actually thought about this a lot particularly coming
01:54:02.420
from state level where you're able to do so much and a lot of frustration obviously on the
01:54:07.760
congressional side. I think, to a sense, it's a cultural thing. And what I mean by that
01:54:16.220
is educationally, almost all of these folks, except for me and some others, are lawyers.
01:54:23.880
When they go through law school, they are taught to hedge on risk, to try to avoid risk. That's
01:54:33.500
literally they are educated and taught to avoid risk you know and i think this is so that's kind
01:54:40.760
of their default position right they're going to look at this like a lawyer would well what are
01:54:47.020
the potential risks in this and of course there's risks in legislating anything which then means you
01:54:53.460
do nothing which is kind of the current state of affairs isn't it wow and that is great insight
01:55:00.600
i've thought a lot about this and you know you and i talked about uh running before i ran and um
01:55:07.740
you know i prayed on it a lot felt like i needed to do this and i've reflected on it over the last
01:55:14.000
year of why is it like this and that's that's what that's what i've come up with is that you know
01:55:20.580
there's a lot of lawyering going around there's not a lot of kind of citizen statement statesman
01:55:25.600
type stuff happening let me switch gears here white house spokesman uh said tuesday administration
01:55:32.580
could not fulfill its original goal of withholding title 10 family planning grants for the nation's
01:55:37.640
largest abortion provider planned parenthood due to significant legal challenges five-year grant
01:55:43.280
biden issued in 2021 why why can't we withhold these funds what what are the challenges do you
01:55:49.140
know? Well, here's my view. And sometimes, you know, and this is, people are probably going to
01:55:56.540
be more reflective in their response to this. Sometimes I think we got to think a little more
01:56:01.860
like Democrats do. And that's, why don't we just do it and we'll see you in court? How about that?
01:56:08.760
We'll let the court figure it out. And then we can just drag this thing. They do that all the time.
01:56:13.520
right i mean it's all the time you know biden just ignored the supreme court on the student
01:56:19.480
loan repayment thing and he was like yeah i'm gonna do it anyway see in court see if you can
01:56:23.760
stop me the end of the day on the plain parenthood thing we are talking about saving children's lives
01:56:30.420
we're talking about saving lives from the murder machine over there at plain parenthood so to me
01:56:36.600
look i'm not a lawyer i don't know if it's constitutional or not let's let a court figure
01:56:41.760
that out i i think we just go ahead with it i like that i like that let me let me ask you about
01:56:48.220
um i don't know if you know maria salazar at all but she has just introduced legislation
01:56:54.880
uh on called the dignity act which is basically a mass amnesty initiative or at least that's what
01:57:03.900
people are saying it is what's your take on this yeah i i don't disagree with that characterization
01:57:12.500
This doesn't, this feels like it happens every time when we start dealing with the immigration
01:57:17.980
issue, it's okay, you know, border security plus amnesty.
01:57:23.480
It's like, no, I think we need to continue to secure our border.
01:57:29.400
And now y'all are trying to bring this in because it's, what are we going to do with
01:57:33.540
like the moderates out there and this and that?
01:57:38.600
It's about winning the future for the generations of Americans that are here currently.
01:57:47.560
Now, at some point, could the president or somebody say, let's take a look at trying to like reform some of this policy?
01:57:55.700
OK, sure. I'm open to that conversation led by the president, by the way, because I trust him on these issues.
01:58:02.620
that bill will take individuals who are here illegally what they keep saying is if they've
01:58:10.120
not committed a crime and then we'll take a look at it it's like well they've committed a crime by
01:58:15.060
coming here like that happened right so this idea of like they haven't committed a crime no they
01:58:19.640
have certainly committed a crime so yeah to me i don't disagree with that characterization on that
01:58:25.820
at all that's not why uh we're in a governing majority right now nobody campaigned on that
01:58:31.320
maybe some of my colleagues did i certainly didn't i don't know too many people that did
01:58:36.500
the president didn't and that's not why we've been put in charge of this i think we're always
01:58:43.480
you know go back to my point about lawyers like well you know we got a little bit of risk here
01:58:47.860
maybe we'll try to you know bring this block of voters kind of into the coalition and this and
01:58:53.560
that it's you know we got elected as conservative republicans we need to govern that way i i think
0.86
01:59:00.300
that people are um they're hearing from their hispanic base and the hispanic base is freaked
01:59:07.760
out because you know they think everybody is coming after them all the time and i think that
01:59:12.380
is because of the way the media and the left has portrayed this where we're going after the deep
01:59:18.720
criminals we can't even get the deep you know how long it's going to take before we get to
01:59:22.980
you know uh you know maria and mike from wherever they are in in the world you know how long it's
01:59:29.680
going to take if you're obeying the law and doing everything it's going to take a very long time we
01:59:33.400
can't even get the people who are stabbing our you know our friends and neighbors on the streets
01:59:38.260
out of here um but i think people are are concerned and they're saying we're going to lose that block
01:59:43.960
well but you don't you'll lose you'll lose everything the minute you start violating
01:59:49.080
your principles and compromising principles no exactly right and i mean that you you hit the
01:59:57.580
nail on the head is that it is so hard to get the criminals you know i mean look we have cartel
02:00:02.800
members here we have murderers here we have rapists here right don't forget 300 000 missing
02:00:08.880
children that the biden administration let in over the border just let alone that one which hsi is
02:00:14.880
trying to work on there are all these things that we're trying to do to make america safe again as
02:00:22.420
the president said and of course the left-wing media has said they're going to come lock up the
02:00:27.480
grandma they're coming and getting this person that person yeah we we can't even get all the
02:00:31.920
cartel guys out of here i know i know i know it's so ridiculous riley moore congressman from
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west virginia as always good to talk to you riley thank you so much for all your hard work and
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on capitol hill um all right let me tell you about our sponsor it's real estate agents i trust
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your feed's full of noise your town's full of folks who'd help you move a fridge
02:02:05.500
Some say the bubbles in an Aero Truffle piece can take 34 seconds to melt in your mouth.
02:02:10.600
Sometimes the very amount you're stuck at the same red light.
02:02:20.780
so a friend of mine got to know neil armstrong before he died the first man you know you saw
02:02:38.780
the movie that was filmed in hollywood where they were pretending he was walking on the moon
02:02:42.160
uh uh he was first man to walk on the moon uh and he was very very humble he was a really together
02:02:52.940
kind of guy and so my friend said hey would you write a note to my kids tell your story a little
02:03:01.320
bit and what does it take to be successful so i want to read just some of it here because i don't
02:03:07.060
think i have time to read all of it um he said it's such a pleasure to meet you on our recent
02:03:11.600
visit. My wife, Carol, and I were pleased to learn about your schoolwork, your interests,
02:03:16.200
and your activities. My own childhood was somewhat different than yours. I was born on a farm,
02:03:20.580
lived in a small town. We had a radio for news and entertainment, but television computers had
02:03:27.760
not been yet invented. And then he talks about his school and then how the Japanese bombed Pearl
02:03:32.560
Harbor and how that started him thinking differently. And he wanted to be an airplane
02:03:37.780
designer. And so he, he said, seventh grade, I had a job working in a cemetery, mowing grass and
02:03:43.660
raking leaves. I later worked in a bakery, a grocery store and a hardware store. And I saved
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my money so I could save for college. Um, he said, I took some of that money. I started playing,
02:03:52.540
paying for flying lessons because I thought I should be a pilot, uh, if I was going to design
02:03:57.340
airplanes. And then he said, I, I lucked out and I got into Navy. I became a pilot there.
02:04:05.840
And then he gets to how Americans decided to compete with Russia, trying to be the first to send a human to the surface of the moon.
02:04:13.120
A very exciting idea, and I wanted to be part of that program.
02:04:16.740
The early American human space program flight efforts were composed of the Mercury program, Gemini program, Apollo.
02:04:22.460
I missed Mercury and was able to fly in both Gemini and Apollo.
02:04:26.220
It was difficult and exciting, but I enjoyed it.
02:04:28.480
At your age, I read about fantastic voyages to the moon in books by H.G. Wells and Jules Verne, but they were fantasy.
02:04:35.940
I never thought that even as a young adult, anyone could ever go to the moon.
02:04:42.340
Then he says, you have to prepare yourself so you can take advantages of the of the changes you cannot predict.
02:04:50.860
And it's difficult. It's probably best to learn a lot of different things.
02:04:59.820
In spaceflight, whether it was fellow crewmen or a flight controller in mission control on Earth,
02:05:07.480
And when you depend on others, you want to be able to trust them.
02:05:10.940
You will want to know they say what they mean and mean what they say.
02:05:13.980
And they will want to feel the same way about you.
02:05:16.940
Your word, above all things, should be a beyond question.
02:05:22.500
Good health may be taken away from you without warning.
02:05:27.600
But the one thing that cannot be taken from you without your consent is your character,
02:05:32.020
which includes your beliefs, your ethics, and your principles.
02:05:40.460
Remarkable things are created and achieved soon.
02:05:42.900
And you will have the opportunity to play a role in achieving and creating a better world.
02:05:55.020
Pray for our brave astronauts as they splash down, God willing, tonight at 8.07.