Did We Just Debunk a Piece of the JFK Puzzle? | Guests: Shane Stevens & Scott Robertson | 3⧸27⧸25
Episode Stats
Length
2 hours and 5 minutes
Words per Minute
162.66699
Summary
Struggling to navigate the tangled world of medicare and insurance companies? What s the best way to get out of the mess that ensues when you ve got no idea what to do with your money and no idea where to get it?
Transcript
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hello america welcome to the glenbeck program live from 610 wiod in miami florida uh we've got quite
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a thursday podcast for you um we're gonna we're gonna start where where i left off last night on our
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special on the jfk files stew watched it uh and um i don't want to go over it there's a lot to talk
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about we're gonna hit that a little bit here but saving that for a little later on in the program
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where i have a couple of guests coming in what i also want to talk about is i and maybe it's just
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because it's jfk week on the program but i something's wrong with this signal thing something is is not
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right and i just want to express a couple of ideas that maybe we should consider beginning in 60
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seconds first let me tell you about lear capital simple yet terrifying question what are you going
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your your dollar will be almost of no value overnight what then if this sounds too crazy just
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remember uh that i've got a story today in fact it's in the show prep at glenbeck.com came out today
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where europe is saying prepare to the people of europe prepare for war okay that would do it
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listen anything that you have saved for retirement anything that you have in the bank if our dollar
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a qualifying purchase it's 800-957-gold 800-957-gold well let's say hello to stew hello stew how are you our
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executive producer glenn how are you i'm good i'm tired i was uh helping uh judicial watch
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raise some money yesterday they are such a good organization oh yeah uh so i'm here in miami
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florida i was at the dorale it is so weird to uh be at uh all these donald trump hotels and everything
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it's just weird that he's the president of the united states and he's got all these hotels
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um but uh i think it's different than it was last time i think last time he was in office i think he
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was really really hurt those hotels and the business really hurt try getting a room at a
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donald trump hotel now yeah that definitely seems like something totally different from the first
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yeah it does and i'm glad i'm glad um all right let me uh first of all did you watch the show last
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night i did yeah yeah okay so what did you think well it was really really entertaining and engaging i
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think uh you know uh it was first of all the uh recreation of the shot that you had to do which
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i would argue was maybe a more difficult shot than what lee harvey oswald actually had i think it was
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i think it was yeah i mean it was just you know at one point you see the truck bouncing through this
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field like you know that was i mean i drive on dallas roads uh they're not uh there's a lot of
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potholes but it's not that bad not that not that no not entirely positive no that was that was nicely
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paved yes it was nicely paved uh but yeah it was really interesting um you know really good
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interviews i don't know i mean maybe a lot of people took it in on on youtube or pluto which
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which had a lot of really good stuff but you can get the extended stuff is where i watched it on
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blaze tv and and there was a lot to to take in a long yeah interviews were really interesting and
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and uh you know it's a lot it was a lot to cover i don't want to get into it yet but did it make
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you think or open your mind and go well now wait a minute maybe yeah well i was gonna bring this up
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to you i i thought it was interesting that i mean talking to you here on radio about this as it was
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getting closer and then talking to you a little bit off the air about it it felt like you were
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more like i don't know if you'd been won over by some of the the cia involvement stuff but it seemed
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like you were more more open to that than i thought you were going into the special so you know i was
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because as we're piecing it together um you know it we have all of our researchers everybody was
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working on the jfk files uh and you know i saw bits and pieces come across my desk and they're like
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look at this look at this look at this but it wasn't until it was all assembled and i started reading
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uh the script on how it was all coming together that it clicked in my mind that uh no there's something
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really wrong here at the same time i am convinced that lee harvey oswald made the shot by himself
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it happened that way um because i'm you know they said on the special last night you're a good shot
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i don't consider myself a good shot with a rifle i'm a good shot with a pistol i'm a good shot with a
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shotgun but i i've i don't shoot rifles you know just not because i don't like to or anything else i just
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have never gone hunting so i just don't have the time uh and don't shoot with a rifle and a scope
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haven't done it probably in five years maybe uh so i don't consider myself a good shot with a rifle
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but you know they didn't consider uh uh lee harvey oswald a good shot either and if i could make that shot
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on that field where the where the target was bouncing as much as it was and i took three shots
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and i hit all three he easily could have done it easily could have done it i believe and he only
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he only he missed one and hit the other two so i was convinced that yes he did it
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but i'm also seeing and i think it's because of the timing of this seeing what i'm seeing happening
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in our country today seeing what doge has exposed going on with things like usa id etc
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what's happening right now is exactly the same pattern exactly and uh that i think is what hit me
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while i was doing the show as i was putting it up on the chalkboard and stuff it's just all baking
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in my head and i'm like i i think this is right i really think this is right um so we'll get into
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that later let me let me let me take you to another thing that involves the intelligence uh community
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so there were these hearings up on capitol hill and it all turned in about signal okay and what
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happened uh with uh signal and the uh you know the war plans that were released to a uh an atlantic
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reporter and it's bothered me because i thought who has this reporter and then stew you and i talked
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about it on monday well you know waltz was a congressman uh so he might have had that in his
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rolodex but not necessarily in your signal rolodex um and then waltz has come out and said no i don't
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have his number um that's not what happened then they came out and said maybe it was somebody in his
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office and then they came out and said it wasn't somebody in his office so how did it get there
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and i've been and again i would like you to talk me down from the conspiracy tree tree here but i
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think it's worth considering what's going on i've been to washington i don't know how many times in
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the last five years i've had congressmen ask me can you leave your cell phone outside sure let's go
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for a walk okay you're carrying any electronics do you have a do you have an apple watch no i i don't
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okay and then they'll say outside as we're walking quietly the cia is monitoring everything that we're
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doing in congress they're monitoring all of us and two of them have told me we've been threatened
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behind closed doors we've been threatened by the cia um and that was a little scary to hear that
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and i've heard it over and over and over again and then when i see the jfk special which you can see
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at blaze tv you'll see that's what they were doing in the 1960s they were wiretapping people you don't
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have to do all that wiretapping you don't have to do that i mean it's so easy for them to spy on
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congressmen and senators and people in the administration and uh and they also at the time
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they were also orchestrating things and when they felt threatened they upped the orchestration of
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things to hurt uh the president at the time and that's kind of the theory that we were laying out
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um from the jfk files i'm not putting i i don't know how deep their involvement went with the intel
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community but i i believe they had to be involved and either they just saw oswald coming and just let
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him do it you know what i mean and just all of a sudden they're they're following him everywhere
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except on that day gee we where did we put our lee harvey oswald uh so they may not have orchestrated
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or done anything but they the point is they didn't do anything on that day um so let's go back to
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signal this meeting that we've seen this testimony where it was all about signal and the failure of
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the uh government to actually keep our houthi war plans uh secret which as i told you on monday i have a
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problem with there's a problem the more we dig into it the worse it gets that testimony came at
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something that had been scheduled for all of the uh intel community and uh the dni so everybody knew
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that that hearing was coming up and just before that hearing these war plans are released and so
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that hearing is no longer about all the threats around the world it becomes about donald trump
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and this out of control group that uh are just so irresponsible they'd include a a hostile
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uh uh journalist to have access to the top secret war planning now maybe and i mean that sincerely
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maybe but it seems awfully coincidental and awfully convenient so the use of signal
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everybody's clutching their pearls except for the government so tulsi gabbards in how in in front of
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the house intelligence committee and she testifies that signal comes pre-installed on government devices
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this policy she says backs uh backs up to a cisa uh recommendation during the biden administration
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what is the cisa this is the organization that we know because of other shows we've done other
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reporting uh because of um michael schellenberger we know that is a uh an organization that is helping
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manipulate uh the media uh and helping manipulate the algorithms and and information on people okay
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it's a horrible horrible organization so why is the cisa recommending to put a private
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uh app on all of the government computers why would we do that when we have our own secure app
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so the testimony comes just a day after cia director john radcliffe tells the senate that the very first
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thing that happened when he went into office after he was confirmed is text came in i'm quoting text
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came into my office and uploaded signal on all of my devices now that's odd because why is the united
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states intelligence community so trusting of a private encryption app i mean that's that's odd isn't it
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especially if you know you're supposed to be on government apps there's supposed to be a record
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now they say that well they have strict rules on this you have to report it within 20 days but if
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you're on signal the the conversation disappears so how are you going to know anyway why why would you
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allow the government to the government officials to go off of a government app to use a secure app that
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we supposedly can't get into um where and then just trust everybody that you're going to report
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on what was seen it doesn't make any sense at all now
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how did the name of the journalist from the atlantic how did his name how did how did did waltz just
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click on because this has happened before you're sending out an email you go to your contacts you
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push a name and then you realize you've just sent you know i don't know you know a hot picture of
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yourself to your aunt margaret you're like no okay we've all been there glenn we've all been there
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poor and margaret but yeah we've all been there yeah we've all been there so is it in confidence
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which it could be it could be or is it the biggest stroke of luck in the history of sudden strikes of
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luck ever for the journalist and for the cia so the public went into speculation mode and we did too
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we immediately said it's a stupid mistake and try to make sense of it and we want to make sure this
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gets wrong but did waltz click on the wrong name well that doesn't make sense and it no longer fits
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what the white house and what waltz is saying and we'll get there in 60 seconds stand by
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a giant conspiracy theorist for this and you know that's fine uh everything is a conspiracy theory
00:17:23.960
until it's proven to be correct which i have a pretty good track record of um but all of this is
00:17:29.580
happening because the government is not fostering trust it hasn't for a long time we use you know a
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good society is built and operates on trust and you have to have trust you have to trust your
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neighbor you have to trust the people that you know you work with or the rest of society the people
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at least our local government that's probably better but over time our values and the way of life
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i can tell you that circle is so small on me it's certainly not the circle of trust that i had 30
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years ago when you're making big financial decisions it's going to have a long-term impact
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on you and your family for decades to come you have to be able to trust the people that you're working
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they working for are they incentivized to work for you or to sell you this loan because they're actually
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okay so did waltz click on the wrong name with the uh with the app and and the war gaming that was
00:19:47.020
going on well it didn't make sense because goldberg is no friend and they didn't know one another but
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maybe maybe he had him in his contact list because you know sometimes i have people that are journalists
00:19:58.460
that i don't agree with on in my contact book but check this out from mike waltz on nbc he said quote
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a staffer was not responsible you've got somebody else's number on somebody else's contact so of course i
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didn't see this guy in the group it looked like someone else now whether he did it deliberately or it
00:20:21.040
happened in some other technical mean is something we're trying to figure out now let me give you
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part of that again it was somebody else's number on someone else's contact and some other technical
00:20:35.700
mean now what the hell does that mean well he's describing you know if you try to text your wife
00:20:43.360
you know or your husband and then the number has been changed to somebody else's and you end up texting
00:20:48.120
your shopping list you know for the grocery store to an electrician okay the contact said it was your
00:20:54.660
wife but the number had been changed for some reason now who has the technical capability to do that or
00:21:01.680
as waltz just said technical mean to pull that off who could reach into a government lockdown device
00:21:13.380
well i'm just spitballing but i know the united states intelligence community can do that
00:21:21.300
we know the entire foreign policy apparatus at large is not happy with the trump administration
00:21:28.520
he's mandating that we step back disassociate with operations having to do with regime change
00:21:34.320
disengaged from ukraine etc etc and they do not like him they like him as much as they liked john
00:21:41.000
f kennedy and it is exactly the same thing that we have found in the newly released jfk files jfk as we
00:21:49.060
said on the special last night was at war with the cia there's no other way to describe it he was at war
00:21:56.840
he first fired director alan dulles dulles ever heard of dulles airport in washington dc
00:22:02.580
dulles was the first cia director everybody loved alan dulles except for jfk he fired him when he came in
00:22:12.100
he attacked one of the primary sources of global operations called the ica the international
00:22:19.020
cooperation administration he says uh this was just a cia money laundering system uh so he he abolished
00:22:32.440
that and replaced him with something new that was just going to serve the world called usaid
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huh another cia money laundering system this is glenn beck more in a minute all right springtime is
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i want to give you a theory and this is just a theory i don't know yet but i am
00:24:38.740
i don't trust our intelligence community at all um and when it comes to this uh signal story i just
00:24:47.660
want to throw something out and this has really come clear to me as a theory um that uh this whole
00:24:56.640
signal thing is uh kind of a setup in a way um let me take you back to what we found out through
00:25:04.960
the jfk files first of all jfk fires director dulles the the one of the founding members of
00:25:10.900
the cia and and he does it because there's a schlesinger memo that comes out and says the cia
00:25:16.120
is out of control it's doing all kinds of stuff it's laundering money uh through our you know ngos
00:25:22.660
through government institutions i mean exactly what's happening today uh and then he goes after
00:25:29.680
their primary source of global operations which was a which was a an agency called the ica the
00:25:36.160
international cooperation administration he says i'm shutting that down he shuts it down everybody
00:25:42.220
goes crazy you're going to destroy all of the things the good things we're doing in the world does
00:25:46.720
any of this sound familiar and he opens up usaid instead well the cia is like oh okay well oh boy
00:25:57.800
we're really upset okay well we'll have to live with usaid and then they infiltrate that and they
00:26:02.940
do the same thing that the ica was doing they just start laundering money and doing ops that nobody knows
00:26:10.200
about through usaid just like they did before we also know from the jfk files that the cia infiltrated
00:26:18.420
u.s media outlets we know that's happened now they used media as a weapon we know they've they're doing
00:26:24.660
that now they they shaped the opinions and leveraged journalists and their contacts we know that's
00:26:31.480
happening uh one of those included a contact tied directly to the then attorney general rfk
00:26:38.040
they were spying on many people including barry goldwater and rfk they infiltrated private private
00:26:47.280
businesses like the airline pan ams uh they also um uh were repeating almost just different names
00:26:56.640
almost exactly the same pattern which leads to an assassination on the president of the united states
00:27:03.880
so i want you to put that in your frame of mind it doesn't mean that what i'm about to suggest to
00:27:10.320
you happened i'm suggesting that maybe we should be very very careful because we are dealing with
00:27:16.620
one of the most dangerous agencies ever to grace the planet called the cia and american intelligence
00:27:25.280
so let's go back to signal what does this have to do with the latest mistake with signal i told you
00:27:32.820
i've talked to several members of congress and the senate that have said they're spying on us
00:27:37.480
we know it we've even been been threatened in uh you know behind closed doors by the intelligence
00:27:44.460
agencies um so we know they're spying on our congress and and they have been saying congress
00:27:52.980
the intel community has been saying you got to use these devices because we fear there are things going
00:27:59.520
on with foreign countries well the way you would handle that is not to send out signal and install
00:28:08.640
signal from a private corporation and install it on everybody's computer in the administration you
00:28:16.080
wouldn't do that to everybody's computer in the house and the senate you would say you use this
00:28:21.560
because this is our secured router right okay signal itself has an interesting background
00:28:30.040
it was developed by an organization called open whisper systems they received millions of dollars
00:28:37.420
in government funds wait a minute what they received millions of dollars in government funds to create
00:28:45.120
signal the funds flowed from wait for this one the open technology fund a government organization
00:28:53.660
that was created back in 2012 under the obama administration under radio free asia now radio free asia
00:29:04.140
what is that that's a message into china saying hey things aren't really like they're telling you
00:29:10.220
why did the cia through radio free asia create signal something that has nothing to do with broadcasting
00:29:19.480
information into china right and where did radio free asia what have we heard about that in the last two
00:29:26.140
weeks yes the trump administration just closed radio free asia radio free europe because they said
00:29:33.960
they were direct weapons of the cia during the cold war and then it is morphed into a direct weapon
00:29:40.940
against us okay so the connection between the cia and organizations like radio free europe and asia is well
00:29:50.820
documented and then they take funding through radio free asia and they develop something with government
00:29:58.780
money that the cia is involved in and create the signal messaging app and then that same cia which we now
00:30:07.920
know has been doing things to create revolutions not only around the world but inside the united states
00:30:16.500
and they are desperate to hold on to power they install that signal app
00:30:21.760
okay all right also another coincidence wiki leaks published vault seven that stated the cia had tools
00:30:32.000
that led them let them access signal and what whatsapp tucker carlson went through this remember when he
00:30:39.520
said i've been hacked my signal messages that were hacked by the nsa now maybe it was random luck for
00:30:45.960
goldberg you know a major opposition journalist randomly got into the government cabinet level
00:30:52.100
signal group chat okay and maybe the cia no longer infiltrates the media anymore like they did in the
00:30:59.220
60s and maybe they no longer infiltrate u.s private companies anymore like they did in the 60s and maybe
00:31:05.940
they don't surveil presidential campaigns anymore like they did to barry goldwater or rfk or forget about
00:31:13.100
this one the one they did to donald trump maybe that was the exception and it's also probably just a big
00:31:20.800
coincidence that the intelligence community apparently thought so highly of the signal app that they
00:31:26.680
immediately rushed to install it on every device when we're worried about leaks and they did it for
00:31:33.880
everyone in the government you want to have any secret conversations it'll disappear here put it on this
00:31:38.960
device and by the way we can't get into it nobody can huh and maybe all of this is a coincidence that
00:31:47.760
this story was released the day before the senate select committee on intelligence met for hearings i mean
00:31:54.420
what a perfect storm of good luck for those who stand uh against freedom
00:32:02.340
i'm not sure it has anything at all to do that this story uh dominated the entire hearing or how it
00:32:12.300
caused even conservatives to claim that the trump administration has committed a huge mistake and
00:32:17.540
maybe it did but there are too many smoking guns around this one to take it at face value and i'm not
00:32:25.280
really saying this to you as much as i'm saying this to the president of the united states and the
00:32:29.540
administration you must find out did did waltz actually accidentally fat finger and put the
00:32:40.800
atlantic journalist on that what actually happened and it is important for the administration to not
00:32:47.880
use the whats app because that is a false sense of security you may not be feeding our enemies overseas
00:32:56.840
but you may very well be uh feeding our enemies that are not foreign but domestic
00:33:04.940
i think we should all be careful on what's happening here we brought jason buttrell in he is uh
00:33:13.600
military and global affairs expert and he is also the head writer of the glenbeck tv program welcome
00:33:20.440
how are you jason good glen thanks so your thoughts on this i think that the uh
00:33:26.820
see so to clarify some of the cia connections through uh signal what's interesting is um just
00:33:32.480
like usa they don't like publicly state oh the you know the cia is using usa to pull off soft power
00:33:38.980
you know and regime change things all over the world it's equally you know fuzzy as far as you know how
00:33:45.880
much funding and direction they're giving organizations like you know radio free asia radio free europe back
00:33:51.940
in the day it was not fuzzy at all it was well documented then when they changed it and they did
00:33:56.640
a lot of uh manipulation around we kind of like not we're not exactly sure how involved the cia is and
00:34:03.220
that's one of the doesn't matter as long as they have as long as they have a back door and what mike
00:34:07.640
wall said on nbc the other day i i don't know this for sure but what he said on nbc and let me see if i can
00:34:15.260
find this exact quote here um he said a staffer wasn't responsible you have somebody else's number
00:34:25.780
on somebody else's contact so of course i didn't see this guy in the group it looked like someone
00:34:32.540
else now whether he did it a staffer deliberately or it happened in some other technical mean is
00:34:39.800
something we're trying to figure out what he's saying is the cia might have just gone in because
00:34:45.000
they have full access and they could change things they could make one number look like another person
00:34:51.420
uh and they could have added it and nobody would have known and there's no fingerprints because it's
00:34:56.760
the cia and they have access into that app yeah let me let me put it into this context um imagine
00:35:03.340
it's not the government for just a second imagine if you work at a company and the company who is known
00:35:08.760
to you know use your emails and all that stuff against you let's just say you know there's i
00:35:13.540
don't know some kind of employment issue and they pull up your email they or maybe even pull some text
00:35:18.340
messages if they said you must put this app on all of your phones would you be suspicious about that
00:35:23.760
would you think that and i say that because personally i've worked for a company in the past
00:35:29.260
where they were like you have to use a phone that has this protocol on it and i was like that's weird
00:35:35.040
like why do i have to use this phone i want to use another phone no you have to use this phone that
00:35:39.460
has this protocol on it well i asked one of our it guys later again this is another company i went
00:35:44.660
back and goes oh well let me show you why he took me back to the servers and he pulled up every a
00:35:48.660
folder on every single person in the company that worked there he clicked into it and it gave him
00:35:52.540
access to every every single person's phone he could read their text messages he could see the
00:35:56.520
the photographs he could see everything this is very obvious basic stuff if you know about it and like
00:36:02.700
in mobile stuff in general uh or how exchange services work now in that context does this make
00:36:10.500
any sense does it make any sense that the government the people that are supposed to be the most
00:36:15.060
suspicious the cia nsa all that people all those people just blanket trust this phone application
00:36:22.060
it makes no sense and why you use it but even if they did put it on your phone why would you ever
00:36:27.220
use it right like i would be very suspicious of that arrangement why wouldn't you say hey darpa
00:36:31.400
just create for us a private encrypted messaging system and we have one we have one we do have
00:36:37.480
also also uh the policy to make sure that uh signal is on all devices for government officials
00:36:46.780
that goes back to a sisa recommendation can can you just remind people who the cisa is
00:36:54.760
jason oh what's it stand for hang on let me pull it up i don't remember what it stands for either but
00:36:59.740
it is it is it's cyber security basically yeah it's the cyber security arm that was uh put together
00:37:07.280
under the biden administration that we have found is absolutely nefarious they were the ones that were
00:37:15.520
uh spearheading a lot of the spying a lot of the disinformation they were the ones working directly
00:37:23.360
with uh the um uh the big social apps to force them and say hey hey stop with this they are their
00:37:31.880
fingerprints are all over almost everything that is bad they're not protecting the american people
00:37:38.940
they are monitoring and and hoaxing the american people why would we why would we trust signal if
00:37:48.180
if they're the ones that said oh yeah no you can trust it go ahead yeah clint you bring up a big
00:37:53.380
point uh cyber security and infrastructure security agency they're the ones that were outed
00:37:57.280
a big time expose by michael schellenberger who are right at the center of the censorship regime
00:38:03.020
going through social media posts and getting people banned during the biden administration
00:38:08.060
just absolutely amazing you don't trust it no no government official and i don't think you
00:38:14.220
should either you should ever use signal it's clearly a government uh sponsored or government
00:38:21.140
uh collusion or government hacked app don't trust it in your opinion in my opinion thank you steve in
00:38:30.460
my opinion all right ever come across a product that makes you think geez why am i now just hearing
00:38:35.300
about it this should have been around forever uh that's the way i feel about the burner launcher
00:38:39.200
uh non-lethal weapons for protection have been around forever i mean you've got mace
00:38:43.540
but mace the guy's got to be right on top of you to have mace work um you also have you know a taser
00:38:51.700
really okay you can have all of that but that's if you don't mind your attacker being right on top of
00:38:59.440
you but how about something that fires like a gun has a range of 60 feet and will incapacitate that
00:39:05.780
attacker for 40 minutes while you get to safety and get the police on the scene that's what the burner
00:39:12.140
launcher does it uses co2 to fire kinetic and tear gas rounds that will neutralize pretty much any
00:39:18.340
threat giving you the power to protect yourself and your family without having to use deadly force
00:39:23.780
so why have these not been around for decades why haven't why didn't i think about this it's
00:39:29.640
birna b-y-r-n-a dot com slash glenn birna.com 10 off your purchase it's b-y-r-n-a dot com slash glenn
00:39:45.840
welcome to the glenn beck program we're glad you're here coming up in just a minute we have
00:40:14.900
shane stevens on with us he is the grandson of billy soul estes he owns an audio tape that
00:40:22.980
allegedly links lbj to jfk and the assassination wait until you hear this story we we had it on
00:40:29.760
last night and if you watch it if you watch my wednesday night special on youtube tonight
00:40:34.480
um you'll get most of it you i mean you get about three quarters of it the interviews are all extended
00:40:42.080
on the blaze and uh they are really truly remarkable um especially the shane stevens one this guy
00:40:51.420
came out and has shown this tape for the first time publicly a few months ago we've done all of
00:40:58.220
our homework on it to make sure that it is as legitimate as we can verify um but uh wait until
00:41:07.200
you hear the connections and what he says about the jfk shooting and the involvement of lbj don't know
00:41:16.620
if it's true but it also kind of fits right into cia was part of this that's coming up in just a
00:41:25.760
second stand by when i found out my friend got a great deal on a wool coat from winners i started
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down the road where shadows hide feel the dark on every side stand your ground when times get dark got a
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place the dog and embrace the fire the fusion of entertainment and enlightenment this is the glenn beck
00:44:21.200
program hello america i'm in miami today at 610 wiod and i want to thank uh a good friend in the
00:44:31.680
program director of wiod grace blazer who actually i was about to take a job with her when she was working
00:44:39.140
at cbs in philadelphia and uh instead i chose to do this network thing uh with premiere she was our
00:44:47.340
first programmer to bring and pick up the show i believe uh and now she's at 610 wiod and it was good
00:44:54.380
to see her again today thank you iod for your hospitality now on today's podcast we are really
00:45:01.080
focusing on what we did last night on our jfk special if you missed it it's one of the best specials
00:45:08.100
we've done it is really incredible you can see it on youtube tonight but the entire thing it's about
00:45:15.020
it's about 55 minutes on youtube or if you saw it on uh you know on any other network but if you get it
00:45:21.900
with the blaze it's about an hour and a half and we're gonna we're gonna go over some of it here with
00:45:29.540
one guy that we had on last uh last night he's on with us now shane stevens is his name he's the
00:45:36.920
grandson of billy soul estes who is that well he'll tell you the story but he has a tape from his
00:45:47.040
grandfather along with the guy who was the head of the dnc at the time talking about how lbj
00:45:55.700
had jfk killed we believe this to be an accurate tape recorded at the time what other evidence do
00:46:07.260
we have wait until you hear shane's uh conversation he's in with us in 60 seconds first let me tell you
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we welcome uh our executive producer stubert here and shane stevens the grandson of billy solestas
00:47:56.920
hello shane how are you i'm wonderful how are you i'm good it was interesting and i don't mean that
00:48:03.320
in a bad way it was really interesting meeting you um when we got together to listen to the tape
00:48:08.440
your story uh of your grandfather i still don't know if i fully understand it um but it is fascinating
00:48:16.440
what you and your family have gone through beginning with your grandfather can can you begin to tell me
00:48:22.200
first who your grandfather is or was and what happened to him absolutely yeah so my grandfather was
00:48:31.320
billy solestas and the estes family that goes back to you know 1800s they were um co-founders of the
00:48:39.720
town of clyde texas and um still have a farm out there to this day as part of their original homestead
00:48:47.480
and um you know he grew up poor with a bunch of brothers and sisters in clyde and he was given a
00:48:53.960
i think a pig for his maybe eighth or not birthday and then that turned into a whole flock of lambs
00:49:00.280
by the time he was 12 or 13 then at 16 he had a huge herd of cattle and you know he basically just
00:49:06.120
always had a business mind and wanted to be something and um he started um i think it was
00:49:13.720
roosevelt perhaps that he was sending uh letters to about the grain shortages and the droughts in texas
00:49:19.320
and so he helped auction that off and um just he became one of the the top 10 outstanding young men
00:49:27.880
under the u.s chamber of commerce by the time he was in his mid-20s and then uh by the time 1960 or
00:49:36.600
62 rolled around he was worth 400 million so he built the empire out in west texas and started came
00:49:44.680
from nothing and you know sadly uh ended up passing away with nothing because it was all taken away
00:49:50.840
and let's go into that before we go into the story of the tape and the assassination um let's go into
00:49:55.480
that your grandfather ended up going to prison why did he go to prison so that was a um a trial to
00:50:04.360
where in the early 60s you had two big scandals going one was the billy solesta scandal and the
00:50:10.840
other one was the bobby baker scandal both of them surrounding lbj and there were a lot of other folks
00:50:17.640
involved in pay to play with lbj here in texas but these were the two that the kennedys um and
00:50:24.760
really i think bobby is ag and um jfk were focused in on and so they sent somewhere between 50 and 60
00:50:33.240
fbi agents down to look into my granddad and his dealings with with lbj and it really circled
00:50:43.240
around a couple of things one was cotton allotments and then the second was grain storage contracts
00:50:49.320
and kind of tied in with that were these anahydrous ammonia storage tanks that was a big new deal at
00:50:56.600
the time okay so to not get into all the details was your grandfather guilty of any kind of stuff with lbj
00:51:05.880
yes he was as far as he had given lbj a lot of money and then they had back-end deals to where lbj
00:51:16.520
would get say 10 of a business okay and that would go to him and so um you know it's not nothing that
00:51:24.360
doesn't happen today you know it still happens on a huge level yeah but uh he was certainly guilty of
00:51:30.200
that so the kennedys were after really lbj not your grandfather but the closest they could get to lbj
00:51:40.040
was your grandfather right and along with others uh and uh and why was that why were the kennedys so
00:51:48.360
intent on this because lbj was the vice president yeah they they brought lbj on not because they wanted
00:51:58.520
to but because they knew that he could carry the vote in the southern states and they needed those
00:52:03.800
votes so that was part of their goal of getting into the white house and once they got in and the
00:52:10.360
corruption and kind of the evil of linden was a huge concern to them they wanted him off of the ticket
00:52:17.000
so they went after him they were about to do a big publicity release on lbj talking about the
00:52:26.360
scandals he was involved in to start to destroy his character and force him out if he wouldn't
00:52:32.120
willingly step out and it's it's kind of amazing that you would say destroy his character because
00:52:37.320
as we know now maybe not then this guy was really bad i mean really bad he was a huge racist who
00:52:44.920
he gets credit for you know uh the civil rights uh movement and everything else he he was not a civil
00:52:53.000
rights leader in the least uh and uh a big racist and and and really a dirty guy yeah in fact there's
00:53:03.160
stories that i really don't even we can't talk about here but in person i could share about mlk and
00:53:09.720
some things that potentially happened there and um how that got out of control but he was he was about
00:53:16.760
it for the votes and preserving the democratic party and it was not based on his personal belief
00:53:24.120
on the civil rights activity however my granddad was absolutely um all about civil rights and helping
00:53:31.320
there um okay so shane um your grandfather is now taking the heat he goes to jail for lbj when does he
00:53:42.920
make this tape and who is he talking to perfect yeah so it was around um i think 71 72 when he got out
00:53:54.680
and there's a very short timeline in which it could have been done and he was talking with cliff carter
00:54:00.520
or clifton carter and um and who's cliff carter so cliff carter was lbj's right hand man i'm talking
00:54:08.760
back to the 40s um when lbj ran this um i think it was like young men's youth association or something
00:54:16.520
along those lines uh cliff carter worked for him there cliff carter took over that organization when
00:54:23.160
lbj went on to run for office and then once lbj got in office then cliff carter um ended up coming to
00:54:30.040
him after he served in the military for a while and then he was basically his bag man which means he
00:54:37.400
would go collect the money from people um he was his right hand man on all aspects of getting things
00:54:46.440
done um he was kind of his lieutenant i guess you could say on making things happen and then he went
00:54:53.720
on to run the dnc for a while in the 60s and at the time of this tape in 71 72 my granddad had gotten
00:55:03.000
out of prison let's say in july of that year well cliff died perhaps in october or november of that year
00:55:11.000
what we had always heard is cliff carter died three days after this tape was recorded and i always thought
00:55:20.120
that was suspect but after looking up these timelines of when my granddad got out of prison
00:55:24.200
and when cliff carter passed away i'm like well nothing worst case scenario it was within a couple
00:55:28.840
few months so so tell me tell me about what's on the tape now all right well as you go through i mean
00:55:38.200
these guys are talking as simple and plain as day and i remember the first time i heard it it took my
00:55:44.520
breath away and i probably had some tears because it was just as blatant frank open simple dialogue
00:55:54.840
as if it had been discussed a thousand times before about how lbj was involved and behind and a key
00:56:01.800
central figure in the assassination of the president and then they go on to say well could it have been
00:56:06.760
handled any other way after all the embarrassment he had suffered from lbj and what the kennedys were
00:56:12.360
trying to do and like well no no he couldn't have beat him and there's no way he's going to get back
00:56:17.000
on the ticket so he i guess to accomplish his goals he had to do what he had to do and then you know they
00:56:24.120
go through and talk about some other kind of interesting figures and characters within it that
00:56:29.080
i've dug into and found some fascinating connections with as well but there's a lot there's a mention of
00:56:38.760
an assassin yes tell me what that's about so i talk about malcolm wallace and mac wallace mike wallace
00:56:51.640
it can be you know multiple different names but again easy to look up him and his history of
00:56:58.760
let's say it was in the you know 40s 50s something along those lines and lbj sister josepha was dating
00:57:07.480
at doug kinser and doug kinser was a i think he was a golf pro and at university of texas or
00:57:14.280
something along those lines some golf course here and mac wallace had been a very high performing
00:57:20.120
individual i think at ut but for whatever reason mac wallace went and i'd heard it was because
00:57:29.080
doug kinser was beaten up on josepha or he had too much information about lbj
00:57:34.200
but mac wallace went and killed him i mean just blatant open killed him in front of folks got
00:57:38.840
arrested and went to trial only got sentenced to five years and then lbj immediately ensured that
00:57:46.120
that sentence was adjudicated and he did not serve time for cold-blooded murder
00:57:49.960
and after that lbj had mac wallace as his guy all right i want to take a quick break and then i want
00:57:58.760
to come back and ask you to tie all of this together because you've talked to mac's grandchildren if i'm
00:58:06.600
not mistaken and why what why were they talking your grandfather and cliff why were they talking about
00:58:14.840
lbj what why were they openly discussing this um we'll do that in just 60 seconds first somewhere
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okay so um tell me why your grandfather made this tape do you think and why they were talking about
01:00:34.440
how dangerous lbj is yeah so he had always said that he had tapes um some from before the assassination
01:00:45.080
and then also these after and that cliff carter was a known participant in recording those and they
01:00:52.760
started doing it after um lbj had matt kill henry marshall and so after that killing and i guess
01:01:02.840
perhaps others that they had seen they're like we better start watching our own backs and so they
01:01:07.240
were recording these conversations so they would have and i've got a i think it's called dead man's
01:01:14.040
drop but basically a way of if something happens to me then i can release this and it's going to
01:01:21.800
destroy you and your legacy and so basically you're going down with me right so it was an insurance policy
01:01:28.760
to to protect both of them in their lives um and sadly you know my granddad he lived until 2012
01:01:36.760
but cliff he he still died in 1972 which that's a whole nother story is if you look at the deaths of
01:01:43.080
all the people that were involved in the assassination they all uh died right around the same time frame
01:01:49.080
but we don't need to go down that rabbit trail right now so so let me uh shane go back to the tape
01:01:56.680
itself when you showed me the tape and you had it a little baggy i about had a heart attack uh
01:02:04.360
because i think i think this is really important history um you know i don't know if there's a way
01:02:11.160
we can truly ever verify but we're going to find a way uh and i want to make sure that it's preserved
01:02:17.320
right and i want to talk to members of your family i when was the first time you heard about these tapes
01:02:24.280
give me the chain of possession if you will i mean i started hearing about these tapes in
01:02:31.720
you know the mid 80s early 80s and me my brother cousins we'd kind of talk about it uh you know
01:02:40.440
sol says that you know he we're hearing that he knows who killed jfk and that the only reason that
01:02:45.800
he stayed alive and all these other people died was because of these tapes that he has and so it has
01:02:51.960
been a curiosity thing for us for forever but these tapes did not surface until around maybe 2015 or 16
01:03:02.280
and um my uncle daryl used to be my hairstylist in abilene daryl bright he called his daughter star
01:03:09.880
down in uh horseshoe bay and um or down in marble falls and said hey star i've got these tapes that i've
01:03:17.320
held on to forever and i've got dementia now and i'm i don't know what to do with them so always
01:03:22.120
told me that if anything happened to him or if i'd know the right time that i needed to release them
01:03:27.720
and none of that ever happened so i don't know what to do with them so he um star couldn't go get
01:03:35.400
them so my brother clay went and got them and brought them down to me and so i'm in short order sent
01:03:42.360
them over to a place that could convert old tapes into digital media because i wanted to know what
01:03:48.440
was on them i was like man this might be some of them right and deep down i was hoping they were the
01:03:53.400
ones with lbj talking on it um but those haven't surfaced yet these are just the ones of you know
01:04:00.520
cliff and my granddad yes but still still pretty significant um let me just because i'm i've only got
01:04:06.600
about a minute now just and i don't want to get deep into this but you got a you got a call from
01:04:12.120
uh the uh the hit man if you will his grandchildren and they said what they heard the same kind of
01:04:20.680
stories from their grandfather yeah and i don't think it's a grandchild it's a it's a relative and
01:04:27.560
there's information they they won't let me talk too much on it but i think in time they'll probably be
01:04:32.840
they may want to come up with us when we come to your place on that deal but yeah anyways yeah
01:04:37.640
they felt verified their family secrets and stories aligned with this unbelievable shane thank you so
01:04:45.240
much and we're going to be doing more with you to preserve this history and also to delve a little
01:04:51.240
deeper into it it's a fascinating story you can watch it glennbeck.com this is glenn beck and also on
01:04:59.320
blaze tv.com slash glenn it was last night's wednesday night special all right let me tell
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welcome to the glenn beck program uh we're spending more time on uh the jfk files than the
01:06:50.120
show that i did last night just because i think it tells you everything you need to know about
01:06:54.680
what's happening today and you won't understand that until you really watch the show but it is i
01:06:59.400
think this is a direct replay of what happened during the kennedy times and possibly what happened
01:07:06.200
during uh nixon's uh tenure and what's happening right now to donald trump and it is so important
01:07:13.160
that you understand this because you will understand why people are protesting uh in the streets why this
01:07:19.960
um non-grassroots or as nancy pelosi would say astroturf protests are coming up so uh so quickly and so
01:07:31.320
oddly with something like usa id you'll figure that out as you watch this special last night
01:07:38.280
um but at the end of the special and it's only uh available on blaze tv right now is uh is when i went
01:07:44.840
out uh and fired an exact copy of um um um what's his name oswald's gun same gun i mean we don't know
01:07:54.840
of another one like it because it has the exact same uh modifications that oswald made to his and we shot
01:08:03.240
the exact same um bullets the rounds these were about 40 a piece because they were antique we i mean we
01:08:12.840
literally went and got the same bullets from the same batch to see uh what would happen we made a
01:08:20.120
few shots uh with that and then the gun the firing pin went bad so i had to switch guns but it's the
01:08:26.040
same kind of thing and i think i had a harder shot than even uh oswald did and you'll see what happened
01:08:33.000
but where we did this was up the side-by-side ranch um this is in oklahoma and it is an unbelievable
01:08:40.440
shooting ranch i mean it's just i mean i i was up there and i said to scott the owner i said i i
01:08:46.760
think i think i think i'd like to live here uh quite honestly it is an unbelievable place if you're into
01:08:52.120
shooting or anything else you you should check this out um but scott is the owner of it now let me just
01:08:57.160
tell you who he is first so before before we talk to him he began shooting at seven because his dad was
01:09:05.320
a member of the air force competitive trap team uh and he was a great trap shooter inductee of the
01:09:12.360
california state trap hall of fame blah blah he was also a professional coach and instructor he was
01:09:17.720
the first team captain for team usa in 1985 now his son uh becomes a competitive shooter this scott i'm
01:09:26.920
introducing you to here in a second he was a professional shooter for beretta firearms for 28 years i've
01:09:33.080
seen him do his exhibition events and they are i mean it's almost like uh annie oakley where you
01:09:39.720
throw a quarter up and he shoots it i mean he does that um he's in the sporting clays hall of fame
01:09:46.120
won over 14 national championships uh he is the current national record holder in the small gauge champion
01:09:53.560
eight world champions uh championships named to all 54 american teams in trap he's also the only
01:10:00.840
competitive clay target athlete in the history of american sporting clays 25 years running to average
01:10:06.840
over 90 percent consistently the guy is really good but what has he done with his life i don't know not
01:10:14.280
much here's scott robertson scott welcome to the program thanks glenn thanks for having me first of
01:10:20.440
all you're you're too good of a shot to have sat in that tractor pulling that vehicle that i was shooting at
01:10:27.160
to recreate uh uh the uh the oswald shot i don't know why you did that we were asking can you want
01:10:34.840
to get some more a longer chain because i don't know uh and uh and you didn't but thank you for
01:10:41.160
pulling the the tractor uh and pulling that car tell me about the shot go ahead well glenn we got
01:10:48.680
to give your audience a little context right i mean you don't have me on because i'm a good shooter
01:10:53.560
you mainly have me on because i'm the only one crazy enough to actually get in the tractor
01:10:57.960
um yes you know the reason i'm here really is because i do have a gun club about an hour from
01:11:04.680
blaze or excuse me a mile from blaze studios and i'm the guy that you call when you have one of those
01:11:11.720
harebrained ideas i mean if you remember a couple years ago remember you came with the gun chainsaw
01:11:17.240
multi-purpose whatever that zombie yeah right yeah it's great so you know and then you know last
01:11:25.640
week my my gm who happens to be my best friend says hey glenn's guys called and they want to recreate
01:11:31.400
the jfk deal and i went oh crap you know glenn you're that friend that when people call you're like how
01:11:38.360
much time and money sorry i'm sorry scott i'm sorry glenn up to now so yeah you know jason calls
01:11:48.120
and we have three days to recreate the deal and come up with an elevated platform glenn wants a
01:11:54.200
moving target you know it has to have but you're left-handed and a right-handed gun and i mean i'm like
01:12:00.600
oh my god so you know when jason gets up there earlier he says well how long is your chain i said well
01:12:06.920
i don't know when we could put some together so i put the 20-foot you know a bat wing on the tractor
01:12:13.480
and then a 20-foot chain he goes i don't know if that's long enough so we had another chain
01:12:18.440
and with the angle i couldn't hardly get it long enough but i know i mean that last shot
01:12:25.160
i mean if i were a bad shot the last shot i i mean it was it was not good for you let's put it that way
01:12:31.640
well i i just want you to know when you turn to the staff and you say hey what do you guys think
01:12:37.640
about this when they pause that's pretty much them saying to their boss boss this is a really dumb idea
01:12:47.560
okay i just i don't know what you think about that but as it but as it turns out
01:12:53.240
yeah we don't say glenn that sounds great that's them saying this is really a bad idea
01:12:58.200
yeah so but as it turned out it wasn't was it well look i want you to know i want you to know i
01:13:05.320
am proud of you because you know you always say do your own homework and yeah from the last time i
01:13:11.400
saw you shoot a couple years ago at the range you have been doing your homework and i i am sincerely
01:13:17.320
impressed because wow you know people this was you know those shots that we did first of all you did
01:13:26.680
prove that the shot could be made i mean i i didn't think it could be before you did it
01:13:31.800
and so i think you know we could we proved that the shot could be made i don't know
01:13:37.400
i'm still not convinced that's how it went down but that's my own that's my own right but but i do
01:13:42.600
but i we did rule this out because i i have heard my whole life that oh it's a very difficult shot
01:13:47.800
it probably no i mean very few people could make that shot i made that shot and i think the shot i
01:13:53.000
made was more difficult we had the wind against us and we also it wasn't a paved street the car
01:13:59.240
was on that truck was bumping going up and down all the time that was a difficult shot and i i don't
01:14:04.760
consider myself a decent shooter on with rifles and scopes well i will tell you i i am impressed
01:14:11.480
because i'm first of all i'm in this tractor and i'm thinking i'm not sure this is a good idea now
01:14:18.680
you gotta understand i do lots of sketchy stuff you know i shoot one-handed off a bike and do all
01:14:24.120
kinds of crazy stuff pogo stick you can get and right you know so if i'm a little nervous
01:14:29.640
that's pretty that's pretty sketchy and so you're up on this tower with six or eight people you know
01:14:36.360
i have this truck that has this big lift and it's wobbly so you're the and you know then the radio and
01:14:43.400
and jason's like oh the range is hot and i'm looking at what seems to be down a barrel of a
01:14:48.920
you know high-powered rifle with you up there with the right boy this is uh okay i'm really hoping
01:14:54.760
again glenn's been practicing but anyway i'm pulling this truck at 11 miles an hour and it's
01:15:01.880
in one of my fields so it's bouncing up and down those balloons had to be bouncing probably 10 to 12
01:15:09.000
inches you know high and i'm thinking we're gonna have to do this 10 times today right this is going
01:15:15.480
to take 10 takes this is and then i look back and i see the first balloon explode and i'm like well
01:15:21.320
good for you glenn you got one okay you know we can always go to b-roll and then you hit the next
01:15:26.760
balloon and then the truck is bouncing like crazy because there's a lag between the second shot and the
01:15:32.440
third shot yeah and i'm thinking wow and then i see the third you know balloon explode and i'm like
01:15:38.440
i am not believing this i mean i i i'm impressed it's it's not an easy shot but even more the way
01:15:47.800
that we had to do it with the moving vehicle and up and down and so i think we both can say
01:15:55.960
if i could do that oswald the only thing he had that i didn't have was the pressure of killing the
01:16:02.200
president all the nerves but i'm also left-handed right-handed gun uh you know we had other
01:16:08.200
things going on that i think balance things out so i really believe he could have made the shot
01:16:13.160
now tell what we found at the end that bothered you that you brought up
01:16:19.880
well i what was interesting is is the grouping in the front windshield so the bullet went back it went
01:16:27.240
through the balloon which represented you know the the target and then went through the windshield
01:16:33.000
or excuse me the back glass and then all three bullets lodged in a very small group
01:16:40.040
in the front windshield and so what first thing i thought was interesting is how offset it was it
01:16:48.840
wasn't on the right side of the car it was on the left side of the car right so that was that was just
01:16:53.480
interesting with the angle because we pretty much had the exact angles that that it would have been in
01:16:59.720
downtown dallas that day the other thing that i found interesting was that even though the truck
01:17:06.360
was moving and there was a distance we had we had the balloons lined up in such a way to represent
01:17:14.520
stagnant in the car and what was interesting was that all of the bullets landed in the front
01:17:19.960
windshield in a small enough group that really answered asked more questions than we answered right
01:17:25.960
right like it did why was the guy in the in the why was the driver not hit why was the passenger not
01:17:31.880
hit more than one time right so a lot of these things were weird um and so it really the the way
01:17:39.080
it came out with us the the driver should have been killed the driver absolutely should have been at least
01:17:44.440
hit but could have been killed it would have at least the way we did it it was too high up because we
01:17:49.640
weren't six stories up we were about two um and so uh it would have gone into his back instead of
01:17:57.000
where we had it would have been gone right through his head um but i i went through the warren commission
01:18:03.640
and it said that you know the first bullet landed in the street someplace it was such a bad shot it
01:18:10.280
didn't even enter the car just landed in the street and the kid was uh hit by a piece of the curb uh that
01:18:16.840
broke off and hit him um and the the the head shot uh they say that um the head shot the bullet
01:18:27.320
completely disintegrated and broke up so they've never found any pieces of that bullet is that even
01:18:33.960
possible no i well no one of these days you should research the bill cooper video that's the one that
01:18:44.040
makes more logical sense to me um but you know that's a whole nother conspiracy but if you if you
01:18:51.400
if you watch that video it does make more sense that he was actually shot with a cia air pistol and
01:18:57.560
you know there was also a poison bullet that's why they had to change the brain out in dallas so
01:19:02.600
you know that i kind of come up more in in that deal but the but the real question when you start
01:19:09.000
looking at the ballistics of it is when you shot that shot the first shot being a miss
01:19:16.680
i don't really buy that because how does a guy make two shots in a head at twice the distance of
01:19:24.680
the first shot and the first shot is not done because yep that first shot you have to admit
01:19:30.040
that was probably the easiest shot right it was easy yeah i was more concerned about the other one
01:19:35.320
it was at a steeper angle i mean it was difficult a hundred percent and so if if oswald is good enough
01:19:42.200
to hit the president one in the neck and one in the head you're telling me that he's going to
01:19:48.120
completely miss the car when in your scope all you would see his car it doesn't make any sense
01:19:54.040
no right so it's it's it's kind of hard to believe that the first shot was a mess i don't
01:19:59.800
i you know and then when we start looking at the angles and the ballistics of what we did
01:20:04.440
i i i have to ask more questions because it just doesn't make any sense it it you you don't have
01:20:10.600
a miss and then you have two good shots like that and then the angle of it you know how is the passenger
01:20:16.280
hit not the driver you know it's just it's just a lot of questions there so scott i uh i i've only got
01:20:23.640
less than a minute here i just want to say you know and you might say i uh i'm not sure that's a really
01:20:30.200
good idea but i i'd like to recreate the uh butler shooting um because that just seems like
01:20:37.880
the easiest shot of all time compared to uh compared to uh oswald that seems simple really
01:20:46.040
not only simple is the butler shooting i i would i yes i would like to do that with you because i think
01:20:52.440
we're gonna find in butler that we could take anybody off the street and they would make that
01:20:58.600
shot 99 times out of 100 yep okay scott thank you so much i appreciate it uh he is the uh owner of elm
01:21:07.160
fork shooting sports uh and also side by side ranch founder and co-owner and i i just can't thank you
01:21:12.760
enough scott we'll we'll talk to you again all right back in just a second let me tell you about our
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i don't know if you heard about uh npr and what's going on with npr and pbs and everything else
01:23:12.840
but you know who's on the board of the signal foundation uh it's weird um the former ceo of the
01:23:23.240
wikimedia foundation you might remember katherine marr yeah she also is the now ceo of npr
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remember her name she keeps that's weird she's also on the board of the signal foundation
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uh how many times do we play musical chairs with the same people this is glenn beck
01:23:50.520
claudia was leaving for her pickleball tournament i've been visualizing my match all week she was so
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focused on visualizing that she didn't see the column behind her car on her backhand side
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good thing claudia's with intact the insurer with the largest network of auto service centers in the
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country everything was taken care of under one roof and she was on her way in a rental car in no time
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i made it to my tournament and lost in the first round but you got there on time intact insurance
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01:25:15.000
hello america welcome to the glenn beck program we're glad you're here uh we're going to talk a
01:25:22.200
little bit about uh the real truth behind snow white and the actress and uh the uh the producer
01:25:29.480
his son has has just had it up to here and his dad was being you know just pounded and uh the poor
01:25:38.600
little snow white was being made into the princess that she is not and he just couldn't take it anymore and
01:25:44.280
so he unloaded on social media and i i think it's worth reading because i think you'll agree with his
01:25:50.840
conclusion of course the left doesn't the left loves it um also we're gonna we're gonna go through uh
01:25:58.360
some of the things that just happened yesterday in a hearing uh with uh with npr and pbs and
01:26:07.240
all of these left-wing organizations that are now now looking at losing their funding and like what
01:26:14.280
what we're hell we're an important institution are you are you really seriously you know i think we're
01:26:21.560
an important institution i'm not begging for government money if you're so freaking important
01:26:25.640
then why don't you make the money on your own if you're so important then the american people will
01:26:31.080
support by their views their listens and by their wallet not you're not important if you're taking my
01:26:40.440
money and then telling me you're important i mean no no if you're so important the american people
01:26:48.680
and the capitalist system will support you why don't you get off the teat of all of the taxpayers
01:26:55.160
and do your own damn work what do you say sorry not in a good mood today back in just 60 seconds
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npr thing here in just a second but uh the problem with our society can be found with snow white and
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what's going on with snow white um we have too many people that don't know what it's like to actually
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work they they don't know what merit is because they get paid whether they succeed or not you know
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they were talking about snap and yesterday we we shared the information about snap and sugary cereals
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and everything else that shouldn't be a part of snap well they they they should be able to buy what
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they want well no not on our dime how's that how's that um and this is this really comes from benjamin
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franklin he believes the best way to get people out of the circle of poverty is to make them
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uncomfortable in their poverty meaning you know you don't get what you want you know you get what you
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need and there's a difference between needs and wants and if we give people what they need people
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want more than that well they'll learn that they have to change their behavior maybe their behavior
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is self-destructive maybe their behavior is um just pure laziness maybe it's a lack of education
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but we can find those solutions together if you're not getting what you want you're only getting what you
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need you know it was edward bernays that said uh you know the problem with america is we've got a
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a country of needs we need to turn this around to a country of wants he by the way was the father
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of american propaganda he's the guy whose books all taught goebbels how to make germany into an all-new
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place he is the author of modern advertising we got to just change this from a nation of needs to a
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nation of wants no we need to do the exact opposite now we need to make our nation a nation of needs
01:30:29.560
again and that one that even understands needs so the producer of snow white mark platt the son i'm
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sorry the son of the producer mark platt has uh just gone on uh x and um defended defended his family's
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name and the uh father so one commenter wrote in his instagram and tried to flip the switch here uh
01:30:59.480
and flip the narrative uh apparently his dad had to fly to new york city to reprimand uh what's her
01:31:09.880
face the woman who played snow white what's her face rachel ziegler and had to reprimand because they
01:31:15.720
when they went out on tour for publicity she starts you know starts in with all of her political
01:31:20.920
nonsense and that wasn't helping disney it wasn't helping the the movie you know hey snow white yeah
01:31:29.960
let me tell you about palestine and and israel and how bad israel is and how bad trump is okay that's
01:31:37.560
not going to help sell the movie you've just divided the country in half so you've lost half of the
01:31:43.560
revenue we could have had because you pissed off half the country now this is what exactly what
01:31:51.800
would be said to me you know i go in and i say hey i want to work for nbc well first of all it would
01:31:57.960
never happen because hey i wouldn't want to work for nbc but two because they would never hire me but
01:32:03.320
if it was a serious consideration you know why they wouldn't hire me if it was all if everyone was
01:32:08.600
just being honest they wouldn't hire me the same reason why they wouldn't hire anybody from the
01:32:14.040
view or rosie o'donnell because i'm a polarizing figure because i speak about politics and so i lose
01:32:22.440
half the audience in when you are in mass media when you're making movies it said you don't want to
01:32:28.600
lose half the audience you want to get everybody into a seat you're there to not only make a beautiful
01:32:35.240
artistic film you're also there to put butts in the seats to make money for the company or for yourself
01:32:44.440
so he has to go across the country and say hey can you stop can you please stop talking about your
01:32:51.880
pro-palestinian views and anti-trump con uh comments and you know how how this film was just creepy in the
01:32:59.320
1930s can you stop this is a beloved film so somebody uh goes on twitter and says to uh jonah
01:33:09.640
platt the son of the producer who had to do that your dad flew to new york city to reprimand a young
01:33:15.160
actress any words on this because that's creepy as hell and uncalled for people have the right to free
01:33:21.080
speech shame on your father oh my gosh i'm not the son of the producer and i want to respond to that
01:33:33.080
but the son of the producer did respond here's what he said you really want to do this yeah my dad the
01:33:39.960
producer of an enormous piece of disney ip with hundreds of millions of dollars on the line had to
01:33:46.440
leave his family to fly across the country to reprimand a 20 year old employee for dragging her
01:33:52.840
personal politics into the middle of promotion for a movie which she signed a multi-million dollar
01:33:59.400
contract for to get paid and do publicity for this is what you call adult responsibility and accountability
01:34:07.800
and her actions clearly hurt the film's box office free speech does not mean you're allowed to
01:34:13.560
say whatever you want in your private employment without repercussions tens of thousands of people
01:34:19.640
worked on that film and she hijacked the conversation for her own immature desires at the risk of all of
01:34:26.920
the colleagues and crew and the blue collar workers who depend on that movie to be successful
01:34:33.320
narcissism is not something to be coddled or encouraged
01:34:37.720
i don't think i could have said it better i would have said it meaner perhaps i don't think i could
01:34:51.080
this is how narcissistic now how narcissistic our society has become it's all about me it has nothing
01:35:01.240
to do with the blue collar workers that are depending on that movie to be successful has nothing to do with
01:35:07.080
the thousands of people the tens of thousands of people that worked on that movie no it's all about
01:35:14.360
her and what she believes and what she wants you know when i first went into um fox i turned fox down
01:35:23.080
probably three or four times stew how many times did they offer that job and i kept saying no
01:35:27.320
yeah it was it was several several and roger ailes finally called me into um the the uh murdoch lunch
01:35:35.720
room uh and i went over to meet with him and uh he sat there with a bunch of executives and he said what
01:35:42.280
is it about our number one status and the money that i'm offering you that is much more than i i think
01:35:49.000
you're making now what is it that just doesn't interest you and i said roger i know your business i know it
01:35:57.000
you don't know anything about my business and until you know and care about my business i can't do
01:36:02.280
business with you because i have two masters i would be serving my business my career and yours and i know
01:36:10.440
your business so i know the lines that i cannot cross this is not my company so if you say glenn you're not
01:36:20.040
to do that i need to evaluate before i go into business with you am i willing to play by your rules
01:36:27.320
because i can't get onto your platform and then have you say glenn and then break those that would harm
01:36:36.440
your company because i am being paid as an employee by you now it doesn't mean we're going to agree on everything
01:36:43.000
but i'm not going to do harm to your company and i need you to tell me you're not going to do harm to
01:36:49.960
my company so that was the beginning of the conversation of going into business with fox
01:36:55.320
and and and i i have pride that any company i've ever done business with that i was a good partner
01:37:06.520
they weren't necessarily good partners of mine most of them have been great partners but i've tried to
01:37:13.720
to do the right thing in looking at their company because they've hired me okay why is that any
01:37:23.160
different than these actresses that just believe they have free speech you don't have free speech
01:37:29.960
without consequence you can say whatever you want but she was on the disney dime she's being flown to
01:37:38.440
new york city to have uh interviews that were set up by disney about snow white it was she was there
01:37:47.320
being paid to promote the disney movie not her propaganda not her belief i wouldn't have the
01:37:55.240
right to sit there i would have said if they would have asked me something and they would have they
01:37:58.920
would have tried to goat me into something i would say it's not the time or place i'm here to talk about
01:38:03.240
snow white i'm not here to talk about donald trump i'm not here to talk about israel or hamas
01:38:08.760
that's what i would have done and if you don't believe me well then you haven't listened to me
01:38:13.400
long enough i know what my responsibility is and if i'm going to make that deal and get into business
01:38:19.480
with somebody i know the difference of when i'm on their dime and when i'm not on their dime now i want
01:38:25.880
to leave that and hold my own press conference i think it's unfair to do because you are still promoting
01:38:34.040
that movie so if you do it at the same time you're in promotion you are going to sabotage your partner
01:38:40.280
disney and that's not right but if i felt strongly about it i would get off of the tour after i
01:38:46.440
finished the tour and i would say something then in my own space in my own time and i would make it
01:38:51.800
clear this has nothing to do with disney it has nothing to do with the movie the movie is completely
01:38:57.320
separate now if somebody wants to make that about the movie that's fine that's their thing
01:39:04.600
that's how freedom of speech works you have freedom of speech but if you're being if you're
01:39:15.560
on somebody else's dime you have the responsibility to respect their wishes and respect what they're
01:39:24.440
asking you to do what you do in your own home fine however disney would have the right and they
01:39:32.040
wouldn't have because they agree with her on everything oh men are just disgusting especially
01:39:37.160
white men they got there they're all there with you so they're not gonna let you go they let rosanne go
01:39:44.760
sure but not her even though this is a massive flop they didn't let her go they just had the producer
01:39:53.080
fly out and say can you shut the pie hole for a minute you're killing us you're killing the movie
01:39:57.880
you're killing everybody who worked on this movie you're killing disney what are you doing
01:40:04.120
if this woman gets another acting job in a movie it'll tell you everything you need to know about
01:40:10.440
hollywood there's no way this woman should be hired for anything ever again one of the bigger box office
01:40:17.640
bombs the reason why it was a bomb is because she was just completely irresponsible
01:40:24.760
now how do we teach our children this responsibility we teach our children this
01:40:33.240
responsibility by not allowing them to become narcissistic you know what sweetheart life isn't
01:40:40.840
fair and it's not always about you once we start looking and gazing at our own image on social media all
01:40:50.200
the time and we begin to believe that we're the most important thing ever the whole thing goes to the
01:40:56.440
crapper we have to put narcissism back into the ugly place that it has always been and understand that
01:41:07.880
we are a narcissistic society and that needs to change all right back in just a second first
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01:42:41.480
hey uh glenn the comment by the son of the producer i thought that was a fascinating dynamic
01:42:46.600
in that first of all his uh his articulation of what the actual situation was was 100 accurate right like
01:42:54.840
that is a hundred percent uh the way to look at this right it's about being selfish honestly than
01:43:00.600
more than it is about the content of whatever her protest was which was by the way seemingly
01:43:05.800
being on the side of hamas um but uh the other part of this is i thought it was interesting as a
01:43:10.440
father-son dynamic and that like in in some ways this as a dad you're in the middle of this disney
01:43:18.680
contract you've already had to deal with all sorts of politics stuff you'd probably be like look son i love
01:43:23.240
you but please don't jump in the middle of this don't make this any worse i don't want to i don't
01:43:27.880
want to i don't want this to be to get inflamed i don't want to get into the middle of this and
01:43:32.200
other side you could not be more proud of your son right i know i know for just like laying it out
01:43:38.520
like that and saying the truth and not being afraid it would be an interesting dynamic as a
01:43:43.400
dad how would you handle that i'd be proud of my son i i although i mean i've said this to my my
01:43:50.040
wife in particular but also my kids they're like dad somebody said something in school or somebody
01:43:55.240
said something and i'm and you know i got no no don't don't don't don't right just move on really
01:44:01.000
just move on it's not worth this is about me and what i believe not about you so just leave it out
01:44:07.720
but every member of my family has gotten to a point to where they're like i'm gonna rip your throat
01:44:13.160
out you say another thing about my dad i'm gonna rip your throat out and i'm gonna i'm gonna rip it out
01:44:17.560
with logic and reason and facts um and you're right be so proud so proud but also as a dad i'd be
01:44:26.920
like you're just gonna get that that's not gonna that'll leave a mark they're not gonna leave you
01:44:31.800
alone because what's happening um they're torching him now and they're saying there was one crazy
01:44:38.920
response uh saying oh oh daddy had to leave his family he's 67 years old and he's a billionaire
01:44:47.400
with adult children oh mama platt holding her 38 year old son jonah and 31 year old ben in her arms
01:44:54.200
you're gonna see her again aren't you while i'm here raising our babies okay i mean just because
01:45:02.680
you're 67 years old doesn't mean you still don't hang out with your family you still don't do things
01:45:07.000
with your family uh you don't know this family's dynamics at all no and you know yeah i'd be pissed if
01:45:14.440
well if one of my if one of my kids had to go across the country and even they weren't going to
01:45:19.960
spend the weekend with me had to go across the country to shut some snot nose 20 year old i know
01:45:26.600
everything actress that's destroying the lives of everybody that's worked on this film destroying the
01:45:33.080
success that they might have yeah i'd be pissed i'd be pissed why are you going across the country this
01:45:39.800
is ridiculous she shouldn't have said those things she should know better than that she's a narcissist
01:45:44.760
let her have it dad this is glenn beck there was a time and i know you're probably not going to
01:45:55.160
believe me when i tell you that um you know i didn't have to think twice before bending down you
01:46:00.200
know and tying my shoes okay i mean uh there's tons of fat jokes and everything else in there i i i get it
01:46:06.520
but you know i've i've thrown my back out pencil uh you know picking up a pencil i have i had this
01:46:12.760
massive pain uh in my arms and my hands that i i have no idea what it was but it was just crippling
01:46:19.960
for me and uh spent about six years trying to track it down and find something that would break its back
01:46:25.880
the the only thing the only thing that worked for me was relief factor that's how i found my answer
01:46:33.080
it worked in my life and the lives of countless others who listen to the program i i hear from
01:46:38.680
both sides i hear from people who say i tried it it didn't work did you try it for 30 days you take
01:46:43.320
it as directed no what it just take it as directed for 30 days then evaluate but it doesn't work for
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01:47:37.160
there's a few things uh that we need to cover here president trump says he's going to take a look
01:47:42.040
at the fatal january 6 shooting of ashley babbitt uh maybe some justice would come from uh that he
01:47:48.840
also announced new tariffs on auto imports now up to 25 percent this is uh if these things go into um
01:47:59.720
into effect at the beginning of april uh that is quite frightening for anybody who sells
01:48:05.800
any imported cars uh in america and uh if you're looking for a uh an imported car buy one now if
01:48:14.120
you're looking for a used car buy one now because what's going to happen is the new cars are going to
01:48:20.200
go through the roof and the everybody will start to buy a used car which will go through the roof because
01:48:27.000
no one will want to buy a new car uh so now's the time to buy if you're thinking about buying one i'm just
01:48:33.720
saying uh jim jordan is uh laying out the uh sweeping agenda for judicial reform which i i don't think
01:48:40.600
could happen to uh a better group of people uh we'll talk about that here in a second but i also
01:48:45.720
want to talk about uh the npr uh ceo that was was called up uh to uh the house to to testify on a few
01:48:57.160
things yesterday so you want to take us through this yeah you know i'd like to talk about it as well
01:49:01.080
because it was an interesting hearing first of all good uh fundamental reason the hearing was
01:49:05.880
happening was hey maybe we shouldn't be paying a bunch of money for uh left-wing propaganda at npr and
01:49:13.000
pbs and i think that's a i think there's absolutely no reason for that to be occurring um i don't know
01:49:19.320
what country we are i understand you know the uk has the bbc uh they've got pravda going on i don't
01:49:24.680
know why we need one of those so i'm totally with this and i don't think it should happen however
01:49:30.120
even if it was doing an actual good job i would think it was a bad idea they are not however doing
01:49:35.240
a good job and they were led by uh npr is led by uh someone named katherine marr she is a uh well she's
01:49:43.320
i would say a leftist uh she has some really extreme views we've covered some of them before but never
01:49:48.680
really had her answer for them part of what happened here is is is uh is that process and one of the big
01:49:55.960
complaints about npr in particular was they were probably and you tell me if i'm wrong on this
01:50:01.400
glenn the worst offender when it came to the hunter biden laptop scandal oh yeah they said on day one
01:50:08.040
we will not cover uh conspiracy theories yeah that is not worth the time for us to cover for the american
01:50:15.720
people really bad they didn't give very they just absolutely dismissed it with no evidence because
01:50:21.080
obviously the story was true they absolutely dismissed the story right before the election
01:50:25.320
assuming it was some sort of right-wing conspiracy this almost on day one yeah it did not turn out
01:50:30.120
to be a right-wing conspiracy it did turn out to be a conspiracy between hunter biden and a bunch of
01:50:33.800
hookers um but that's a different situation so this is um this is uh hunter uh this is katherine
01:50:40.280
are um trying to answer about for some of the poor showings of journalism that they've uh they've
01:50:50.920
produced over the past a couple of years listen can we expect that you will bring the same lack
01:50:56.040
of reverence for truth to your management of npr thank you congressman first of all i do want to
01:51:02.040
say that npr acknowledges that we were mistaken and failing to cover the hunter biden laptop story
01:51:07.000
more aggressively and sooner our current editorial leadership wuhan uh we recognize that we were
01:51:13.160
reporting at the time but we acknowledge that the new cia evidence is worthy of coverage and have
01:51:17.320
covered it what have you done to clean up the bias before you you've mentioned you mentioned i wasn't
01:51:23.720
there for that what are you doing to clean up and make sure that we have absolutely thank you
01:51:28.040
congressman uh as i mentioned i came in in may mr berliner published his story two weeks into my
01:51:33.560
tenure regarding stories that had happened prior i wish that i had had the opportunity to speak with
01:51:37.640
mr berliner i would have loved to have had him engage and come back to us with some suggestions as
01:51:42.200
to what we could do editorially in order to address what he perceived as bias hmm so may i just i want to
01:51:51.480
point out who she is here for just a second um chris rufo has pointed out what's well her let's
01:51:59.480
sell shall we say interesting work history uh before npr she was employed by the u.s state department
01:52:06.120
and the national democratic alliance or democratic institute the ndi is one of the main branches of the
01:52:13.400
national endowment for democracy and when was she there during the arab spring what were they doing
01:52:20.440
promoting the arab spring remember it was the ned and the u.s government strategy during the arab spring
01:52:28.520
they were training youth movements on how to influence public opinion through mass media
01:52:34.040
and ultimately organize in the streets and then topple the regime okay chris rufo has said uh that
01:52:43.720
i should rephrase it he all but called her a cia agent okay uh also she was with wikimedia which is
01:52:52.840
wikipedia and when she got there uh you know they changed uh they they changed a a little bit and uh
01:53:00.920
and started controlling information and then she's now the head of of npr and we're supposed to
01:53:07.880
be comfortable with this she's part of this whole deep state revolutionary thing that is exactly what we
01:53:16.200
told you is i think what the jfk files are showing us they're showing us the pattern this is what
01:53:24.040
happened in the 60s this is what's happening right now it's the same story and she's right at the head
01:53:31.080
of it yeah and if you sometimes it's difficult glenn when you look at someone's resume to be able to
01:53:36.760
determine you know who the person is right like you might work at an organization that could disagree with
01:53:42.040
you you might be you know like there's a lot of people who uh worked at x and twitter that we now
01:53:47.800
know were really upset with what twitter was doing at that time we consider them kind of a left-wing
01:53:52.680
social media network and uh at the time there were people inside who were really upset about that we
01:53:57.400
learn about those things later um this particular case though not a good example of that uh at all
01:54:03.560
let me just point out too currently she is currently on the board of signal okay yeah that's okay
01:54:12.040
the newsworthy newsworthy thing to point out there okay and again you could even say that someone
01:54:18.920
could be a someone who's a left-leaning person right who is controlled of npr they've been left-wing
01:54:24.680
forever but you could be a left-leaning news person and and you know okay like that could be something
01:54:30.680
that could work obviously everyone has a revolutionary right not everyone's everyone has some opinion on
01:54:35.320
news stories this particular person however katherine marr has a fascinating history and
01:54:43.000
what she has done is not just work in these places and not just have influence in these stories that
01:54:48.120
keep coming up over and over again but explicitly state her crazy positions over and over and over and
01:54:54.040
over again on twitter uh on x so she she had to know this stuff was coming but she was asked uh by
01:55:04.280
brandon gill he's a a congressman from texas about some of her previous tweets and it is just absolute gold
01:55:14.520
do you believe that america is addicted to white supremacy um i believe that i tweeted that and i as i've
01:55:21.000
said earlier i believe much of my thinking has evolved over the last half decade it has evolved
01:55:26.360
why did you tweet that i don't recall the exact context sir so i wouldn't be able to say okay do
01:55:32.760
you believe that america believes in black plunder and white democracy i don't believe that sir you
01:55:40.040
you tweeted that in reference to a book you were reading at the time apparently the case for reparations
01:55:45.880
i don't think i've ever read that book sir you tweeted about it you said you took a day off to fully
01:55:52.360
read the case for reparations you put that on twitter in january of 2020 i apologize i don't recall that i
01:55:58.920
did okay no doubt that yours your tweet there is correct but i don't recall that okay stop stop stop
01:56:05.800
so good okay so the question there is is she um it was she just uh lying about you know reading that
01:56:16.280
and if she was lying about reading that then was she just doing it because she's part of a circle
01:56:22.040
it's like you gotta read this book and it's all this and blah blah blah and so she just didn't do her
01:56:28.040
own homework she made up that she was taking the full day off to really understand this case in the
01:56:33.480
book she was just being a shill yeah to promote this point of view and that's the best case scenario
01:56:39.240
right like it's like the fact that she's just lying and oppose her right is just is the best case
01:56:44.680
scenario the worst case scenario would be she actually believes the united states is nothing
01:56:48.680
but black plunder uh so and that's i think actually the truth but fascinating number one she should
01:56:55.080
absolutely be prepared for this she should know that tweet is coming how do you go into a congressional
01:56:59.160
hearing and not know that they're going to bring up that tweet uh that's well wait wait wait
01:57:03.320
let's be fair to her almost everything she said has been crazy bat crap nuts so i mean can i narrow it
01:57:14.040
down to which ones he's going to bring up yeah and and there is an element of this right like if i went
01:57:20.440
back glenn and we did a a fake congressional hearing where i was a congressman and you were being uh you
01:57:26.280
were giving testimony and i said hey glenn do you remember tweeting this i'm sure i could find a tweet
01:57:32.920
that you don't remember tweeting i'm sure i could find a even a topic you know maybe even a show like
01:57:38.760
hey glenn you said you were watching this show do you remember that and you go oh gosh i don't i don't
01:57:42.360
think so and i'd be like actually you tweeted it in 2018 like a hundred percent could happen right
01:57:48.520
yes yes however what you wouldn't find in there is you know something that completely disagreed with your
01:57:57.640
entire philosophy of life right like like like if you went back and said stew um i'm looking back
01:58:04.360
at your tweets why did you tweet in 2019 that you love the dallas cowboys that wouldn't happen right
01:58:10.360
i would certainly know that uh i tweeted something like that because it's actually more evil than
01:58:16.200
claiming the entire country is a bunch of white supremacists so and i agree with you and let me add one
01:58:21.960
more thing on the on the statement that my views have evolved the wrong question was asked by the
01:58:28.840
senator really how why what what changed your mind because you were you've been tweeting this forever
01:58:36.520
and um you're still against trump and everything that he's doing i i haven't seen any change of
01:58:42.840
anything what's changed your mind that make you now say that america is not just based on white
01:58:48.280
supremacy it's the most interesting part of the story the transition story is the story yeah right
01:58:53.080
like to walk me through the moment you realize good god why was i saying all those terrible things
01:58:58.280
correct yeah that's the question that these guys have to ask wow you know what we all change
01:59:04.120
tell me about that moment when you realized you were on the wrong track and by the way i think
01:59:07.800
brandon gill did a very good job in this hearing but yeah i know but it is a fundamental
01:59:11.480
problem of these hearings that most of these guys and i'm not saying him but most of these guys are up
01:59:16.120
there to just say their thing and not actually listen to the answer no he's not he he he is
01:59:20.920
listening and he does want to know but time is limited and everything else i would love to hear
01:59:25.080
that answer to that question because yeah whoever the next congressman up should have should have
01:59:29.160
followed up with that um but uh there's more yeah it's worth it yeah go ahead no doubt that out that
01:59:35.080
yours your tweet there is correct but i don't recall that okay do you believe that white people and
01:59:40.280
inherently feel superior to other races i do not you don't you you tweeted something to that effect
01:59:45.960
you said i i grew up feeling superior ha how wide of me why did you tweet that um i think i was
01:59:52.200
probably reflecting on what it was to be to grow up in an environment where i had lots of advantages
01:59:58.600
it sounds like you're saying that white people feel superior i i don't believe that anybody feels
02:00:03.880
that way sir i was just reflecting on my own experiences do you think that white people should
02:00:07.560
pay reparations i i have never said that sir um yes you did you said it in january of 2020 you
02:00:13.960
tweeted yes the north yes all of us yes america yes our original collective sin and unpaid debt
02:00:20.440
yes reparations yes on this day i don't believe that was a reference to fiscal reparations sir what
02:00:25.960
kind of reparations was it a reference to i think it was just a reference to the idea that we all
02:00:30.520
owe much to the people who came before us that that's a bizarre way to frame what you
02:00:35.960
treated um okay i mean that's a obviously it's just not so funny a cool thing so funny justification
02:00:44.280
for what she actually said and that's and that's why she should not be at npr and npr should not be
02:00:49.960
there if you're running if that company is being run by this woman and people in npr aren't saying okay
02:00:56.440
come on uh the whole thing needs to be abolished they're obviously not telling the truth i don't
02:01:03.720
have a problem with you if you're a lefty and you're just telling the truth and you're like no
02:01:08.520
i do believe that i have more respect for you for saying that than i do her and making up all kinds of
02:01:15.160
stuff because the temperature of the room has changed have the balls to say what you believe have
02:01:20.280
the balls to stand up for what you actually believe and want to do that's not that that is a revolutionary
02:01:27.560
uh that is in a that is a wolf in sheep's clothing and we keep seeing the wolf but it's because the
02:01:35.720
sheep skin just keeps slipping a little bit and you're like wow gee grandma you have mighty big teeth
02:01:41.240
yeah npr should be abolished uh and you should start with just firing her uh back in just a second
02:01:50.600
when's the last time you truly knew where your food came from the label on the beef that you're
02:01:54.920
buying in the meat aisle in the grocery store uh does it say product of the usa is it a product
02:02:01.480
of the usa because most likely it's not it probably came out of some giant meat packing plant uh maybe
02:02:08.200
even overseas or the meat came from overseas and then it went to one of our giant meat packing plants
02:02:14.760
you know so it could be could be soaked in chemicals you want to know that your meat is
02:02:22.440
good is fresh you want to know what's in it and that it was raised on a local farm or ranch and you
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you can ignore reality but you can't ignore the consequences there's rough terrain ahead
02:03:08.840
saddle up my friend and stay tuned glenn beck will be right back toronto there's another great city
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and to be clear free speech is not about whatever it is that y'all want somebody to say
02:04:11.640
and the idea that you want to shut down everybody that is not fox news is we need to stop playing
02:04:19.000
because that's what y'all are doing in here you don't want to hear the opinions in any of anybody
02:04:24.040
else and the constitution says congress shall make no law respecting or establishing
02:04:30.840
of religion or prohibiting the free exercise thereof or abridging the the gentlewoman's time
02:04:35.800
has expired i love how she reads a word she reads a statement with a swear in it that's that is
02:04:42.680
fantastic i'll say this we're we're on the the the edge of a situation that's going to be occurring
02:04:48.440
soon that the democrats are going to try to silence jasmine crockett because she's so dumb
02:04:53.720
and we cannot let that happen we must have more jasmine crockett in our lives
02:05:00.360
uh do don't silence her don't shut her up let her keep talking she's priceless and and by priceless
02:05:08.120
i mean worth zero but still she is without price priceless we love jasmine crockett
02:05:18.440
we love jasmine crockett in our lives this this this this is glenn beck