Do We Finally Have Proof Biden SOLD OUT America? | Guest: Tim Barton | 6⧸28⧸23
Episode Stats
Length
2 hours and 5 minutes
Words per Minute
164.19936
Summary
On today's episode of the Glenn Beck Program, host Glenn Beck is joined by his daughter-in-law, Stu Beck, to discuss the latest in the latest NBC scandal involving a man who thought he was the rightful owner of his own house. Plus, a story about a dog named Finnegan who was spooked by cheese.
Transcript
00:00:00.000
Hey, make sure to check out the pilot episode of my brand new podcast, Honest History.
00:00:06.000
The episode's titled, Control Freaks, The Scientific Roots of Progressive Tyranny.
00:00:12.160
It's available right now wherever you get your podcast.
00:00:14.700
When's the last time you checked your legal title to your home?
00:00:17.360
If you're saying, maybe it was like three days ago, because I'm really diligent on this stuff,
00:00:22.820
We know you don't check the home title of your home.
00:00:26.980
If you want to be the type of person, like one homeowner that actually was pulling up
00:00:32.420
to their house and then they, well, everything got shut down because their house was bulldozed
00:00:38.320
in front of them because someone else thought they had bought the house and were redoing
00:00:42.420
Well, that's not what was going on because it was stolen.
00:00:45.700
Your home title can be stolen from, you know, various cyber criminals and then sold again
00:00:53.620
You could still be living in the house and they just sell it out from under you.
00:01:03.700
Everyone around here has it because we've been talking about this for such a long time.
00:01:11.040
Code is back for your 30 risk-free days of protection when you sign up now and then you
00:01:15.580
can protect yourself going forward so your house doesn't get bulldozed.
00:02:01.320
What you're about to hear is the fusion of entertainment and enlightenment.
00:02:19.940
We're going to start with the world being upside down.
00:02:27.200
Let's just talk about that for a second because NBC shed some new light on that.
00:02:34.360
Daniel wrote in about his dog's experience with Rough Greens.
00:02:39.760
He writes in that Finnegan is 12 years old, a husky lab who used to sleep most of the day.
00:02:46.640
He had to spike his food every day with cheese, and then he wouldn't eat most of his food sometime for days.
00:02:55.620
A month or so into Rough Greens, Finnegan is incredibly active, runs and plays with all the other dogs.
00:03:01.880
I wish I would have discovered Rough Greens years ago.
00:03:06.900
It's a supplement developed by naturopathic Dr. Dennis Black that you sprinkle on your dog's food.
00:03:19.780
Anyway, this is filled with vitamins, minerals, probiotics, antioxidants, you name it.
00:03:30.940
The folks at Rough Greens are so confident your dog is going to love it.
00:03:37.280
They'll give you your first trial bag for free.
00:03:52.180
They're with their grandparents, so I don't know.
00:04:09.280
I bet it was the grandparents of that guy that steals luggage.
00:04:19.700
I'm the grandparent of that guy who I can't remember that used to work at the nuclear thing.
00:04:32.180
Over the weekend, everybody's been talking about this video that has been circulating, New York City Pride March.
00:04:42.300
The chant has apparently, according to many, has been used for years.
00:04:55.020
Gay rights activists, they use these expressions to counter the slurs against LGBTQ people.
00:05:04.760
Now, I would just like to point out to anybody who is on the right, if you're marching, the slur is always that you're some sort of a Nazi or something.
00:06:16.300
I look over and Stu's Eyes are just wide like, what the hell is coming?
00:06:22.900
I hate when these stories come and I don't know how they end.
00:06:27.980
You know how they have stories of you wake up and you're doing a speech and then you look down and you don't have your pants on?
00:06:37.380
So, I was invited to participate in a parade at the Johnson Space Center in Houston.
00:06:51.240
Now, I happened to be riding on a giant-like boombox, which provided me a microphone for the boombox.
00:07:07.700
All of these astronauts and everything are all around in cars, you know, in Corvettes or whatever.
00:07:14.480
And I thought it would be funny if I just said, hi, it's all a hoax.
00:07:24.600
I died laughing until about a quarter of the way into the parade.
00:07:40.320
Somebody jumped out of a car and said, I'm with the families of the Challenger.
00:08:01.340
There's a reason nobody knows that story until now.
00:08:11.440
But the only reason why I bring it up is because sometimes people are that stupid.
00:08:18.720
So I'll give you the benefit of the doubt that there are stupid people.
00:08:24.620
And I'll give you the benefit of the doubt that maybe it used to be funny.
00:08:39.520
Especially when people are concerned about their children in schools.
00:08:46.100
You know, before the drag queens were doing drag queen story hour.
00:08:50.960
Before you were telling our children that, you know, hey queen, you can be a queen too.
00:09:13.740
Because if you don't stop saying it, we have to take you seriously.
00:09:28.760
When someone threatens you or your family, I take you seriously.
00:09:37.380
Uh, hey, NASA astronauts, I'm coming for your children.
00:09:45.320
People tend not to have a sense of humor when their children are threatened.
00:09:49.640
Especially when, you know, people are like, hey, I think people are grooming children.
00:10:09.960
Conservative politicians, pundits have increasingly referred to advocates for the LGBTQ community as groomers,
00:10:18.000
associating people who oppose laws that restrict drag performances or classroom discussions of gender identity with pedophiles.
00:10:25.340
The charge is an echo of a decades-old trope anti-gay activists have used to paint the community as a threat to the country's youth.
00:10:35.100
The allegation is that some advocates say endangers LGBTQ people.
00:10:40.360
And the intense reaction to the video has scared some attendees who insist the quip has been taken out of context.
00:11:01.720
I think by, you know, marching in the streets, like drag queens, exposed breasts, you know, naked, whatever,
00:11:14.920
Now, I miss the ha, ha, ha, ha, that's funny part of it because of the times in which we live.
00:11:23.780
You know what wouldn't be funny is Mel Brooks' History of the World Part 1 or Part 2
00:11:33.280
when he's doing the Inquisition and also the Nazi Roundup.
00:11:41.180
Springtime for Hitler would not be funny while people were concerned about being put into ovens.
00:11:48.860
It can be funny after, it can be funny after, it can be funny before, but it's not funny during the debate.
00:11:56.480
Now, I can't believe I am quoting this from NBC.
00:12:32.720
I thought it was a dumb idea, and I started chanting on top of it with alternative verses.
00:12:39.760
Fussy Lomain, as if that is their real name, is right.
00:12:49.180
Fussy Lomain, organizer of this year's drag march, known as Huckle Fairy Ken.
00:13:05.940
Who also performs in drag is as Sister La-Di-Da.
00:13:24.680
She was citing fears for his safety in light of the backlash of the video clip.
00:13:32.760
But he said in an email that coming for your children chant was a bad joke that is being used to serve the interest.
00:13:40.160
Listen to this, listen to this, to serve the interest of parasitic, predatory, political propaganda and policy.
00:13:49.080
So they are mad, because I don't know which, I'm not sure which way we're going here.
00:13:54.980
But so they are mad that this chant of theirs is being misused.
00:14:05.740
I was going to say it was the opposite, but bad joke that is being used to serve the interest of the parasitic.
00:14:12.240
Parasitic, you wouldn't call, you call a parasite something that goes into a movement and eats it and becomes its, you know, destroys the host.
00:14:28.020
I thought I took that as they're saying basically conservatives are using this bad joke, which is just a joke, to destroy the LGBT movement from within.
00:14:40.540
Yeah, then that would be a very enlightened point of view from Sister La-Di-Da.
00:14:47.580
Which is, it would be so out of character for Sister La-Di-Da to have such a basic understanding of this and really done no deep thought.
00:14:56.940
You think when you come to Sister La-Di-Da, you're going to get somebody who's really put a lot of time and thought into each statement made.
00:15:05.740
And this is totally, like, I don't think it's nearly as in-depth as Sister La-Di-Da's thesis on this topic that you can, of course, read online, I'm sure.
00:15:16.080
I think under the nom de plume of Sister La-Di-Da, you'd have to look it up under Huckle Fairy Ken.
00:15:23.700
Huckle Fairy Ken is obviously, you know, a well-known figure.
00:15:32.140
If you're living with pain in your life, I'm not going to pretend that I know exactly what you're going through every moment of every day.
00:15:39.000
But I can tell you, I've had pain before, really bad pain, and it's probably nothing like yours.
00:15:45.380
But getting up every day, oof, every day I would get up and I would just be like, I've got to go back to bed.
00:15:53.860
How long is it going to be before I can lay down again?
00:16:02.620
And in large part, because I have it here to take it for this morning, relief factor.
00:16:13.980
When things get really bad, I take them three times a day.
00:16:24.440
And 70% of the people who try it for three weeks just as a trial go on to order more month after month.
00:16:32.660
The three-week quick start, 1995 trial pack, not a drug, developed by doctors to not whack you out.
00:17:05.960
Glenn, are you familiar with the latest front in the LGBTQQIA2 plus rights movement?
00:17:13.600
No, I'm not sure about the new front on the LGBTQIA2 plus movement.
00:17:22.880
So this is going to seem, I think, almost quaint in comparison to we're coming for your children at a parade.
00:17:33.340
Basically, the ramifications of these giant changes in society are far-reaching, right?
00:17:41.600
You have a change like, for example, gay marriage, which, you know, is now supported by the majority of Americans.
00:17:50.040
The latest thing is, if you, let's say, are a straight couple, man and a woman, and you try to conceive children, and you are unable to do so, you go to a fertility expert, and perhaps they come up with some way, I don't know, you know, test tubes and magic dust or whatever it is.
00:18:10.880
Right, yeah, whatever it is, like, and they figure out a way, hopefully, for you to conceive.
00:18:16.120
They have all sorts of treatments, and everyone knows about that.
00:18:21.320
Well, the new front on this is lesbian and gay couples who are saying, well, we can't conceive either.
00:18:27.980
So, we go to our doctors and ask our health insurance to cover treatments so that we can.
00:18:46.100
I can tell you why from the insurance point of view.
00:18:54.980
They put a price on it, hoping that you're not going to get catastrophically sick.
00:19:01.760
When the more data they have and go, okay, you've got a long history of being really, really ill,
00:19:07.080
so we're going to make you pay more because we're taking the risk.
00:19:12.860
If you're married and you're a same-sex couple or whatever it is, and you want a child, there is no risk.
00:19:32.540
If you get married and you want me to cover that, okay, I'm just going to look at the price of what it will take to find a baby for you and stuff it in your belly or whatever it is we're going to do.
00:19:47.220
And I'm just going to write that and you're just going to pay that as a monthly figure broken up over two years.
00:19:54.520
And that would be the right thing to do for the insurance company.
00:20:01.740
You looked at it from the insurance company's perspective, and I think that's true because one of the things that they do,
00:20:07.940
like health insurance, is designed to say your body's supposed to work in this way.
00:20:14.620
We need to give you treatment, and your insurance will cover that to try to make your body work the way it's supposed to.
00:20:20.360
Well, these couples, the lesbian and gay couples, their bodies are working the way they're supposed to.
00:20:25.740
They're not designed, when these two people come together, to produce a child.
00:20:32.100
The problem is, you think our society is going to go forward admitting that?
00:20:37.900
Is this a country that you're confident will actually admit that two women cannot have a child together,
00:20:48.440
We're sitting here currently saying that men can get pregnant.
00:20:52.880
There's no way our society holds the line on that.
00:20:58.860
They've already said that Disney provides this treatment already, by the way.
00:21:03.400
Are you denying that pigs have wings and wishes are horses and the moon is not made of stilton?
00:21:19.960
But if you want to go through that process, that's something you're going to have to pony up and pay for, in my world.
00:21:27.200
In this world, though, are you telling me that this country is not going to come together
00:21:32.040
and force every single insurance company in America, because of fairness, to provide this?
00:21:38.460
All that will do is drive everybody's insurance through the roof, because somebody's going to have to pay for it.
00:21:46.540
And so we'll spread out the non-risk risk, and everybody will pay for it.
00:21:55.300
But you might as well have the way, if we continue to force the insurance companies to take risks that they don't want to take,
00:22:10.040
And then everybody's going to have crappy health care.
00:22:13.340
I mean, I know some people have really crappy health care.
00:22:15.960
And I'm sorry, and I'd like to free the insurance companies up from maybe even being cross-state.
00:22:24.100
If you can go cross-state lines and insure people, well, guess what?
00:22:35.560
And all the government is doing is forcing people to lose more and more money.
00:22:41.620
I don't like greedy insurance companies, but I do like insurance when it's run properly.
00:22:48.880
And if you don't like the bet, and bet that you're not going to turn out this way or that way,
00:22:56.380
you want a guaranteed outcome, well, then you're just going to have to pay the full price.
00:23:08.300
There is going to come a day, hopefully not that far in the future,
00:23:11.420
where the people of the future will look back and be appalled at the freest country in the world
00:23:21.080
that killed millions, tens of millions, of their own unborn children.
00:23:27.260
It is our job as people who live at this time to try to bring that day as fast as possible.
00:23:33.780
Every day, the Ministry of Preborn stands up to fight against abortion
00:23:38.220
by providing expecting mothers with free ultrasounds and postnatal care for up to two years.
00:23:47.380
That's 200 babies who are going to go on and live their lives and become members of society.
00:23:56.800
Would you consider donating anything but in honor of the 64 million babies that have been lost,
00:24:02.740
would you consider donating $64 to honor the precious lives lost to keep the lives of those safe from this risk?
00:24:14.440
Just dial pound 250, keyword baby, or preborn.com slash back.
00:24:19.980
Okay, I toured the Smithsonian a couple of months ago back in Washington, D.C.,
00:24:38.520
and coming here and seeing this display gives you a totally different perspective of what American history was.
00:24:47.420
I did not know that Teddy Roosevelt had been shot.
00:24:52.780
and so to see the letter with the bullet holes in it and everything, amazing.
00:24:58.000
I think it was pretty cool being Native American from Chico, California,
00:25:01.980
that George Washington gave a medal to a Native American.
00:25:12.100
I would stand, but never said it, never put my heart on my chest because I had believed that the government,
00:25:20.480
which some, everybody, you know, people are people, destroyed Indians, you know, and they did.
00:25:27.300
But at the same time, there was Indians, the code talkers, you know, that were there.
00:25:34.480
And, you know, as I learned more and more history, it's kind of cool to be like,
00:25:38.640
all right, there's some people who are fighting for Native Americans, you know,
00:25:44.940
black people, Chinese people, Japanese people, all the people that come to America to be an American
00:25:54.720
So, yeah, George Washington giving a medal to a Native American was awesome.
00:25:58.680
I think I feel inspired, empowered, really, you know, kind of a sense of needing to speak out
00:26:06.660
and to stand for freedom and kind of figure out what my part is in all of this and go do it.
00:26:18.100
Like I said, we don't know if we're going to win or not or what the outcome is going to be,
00:26:24.860
Not to stand on the sidelines, but to, you know, to be an active participant in our history
00:26:37.940
We're here in St. George and we're doing the History Museum, taking it on road.
00:26:44.160
To make sure that your kids know the truth this Independence Day about American history.
00:26:50.920
Hopefully, we are going to be putting it on the road all across America.
00:26:57.860
We'd love to know if you wanted it in your community.
00:27:01.340
But it is something that I think at this point in our history, we have to decide.
00:27:08.080
People are saying something hit them, you know, and it's weird
00:27:15.180
I think when people see the first draft of the Declaration of Independence
00:27:18.720
and then the final draft of the stone copy of it from 1823,
00:27:37.420
All of these things that you may never have seen before or didn't even know existed are here.
00:27:50.240
They don't let me in, but I'm going to sneak in.
00:28:06.040
We wanted to make sure that it wasn't too crowded, and it's not.
00:28:12.840
You might get here and you may have to wait an hour or something to get in.
00:28:16.660
But it's filling it now to capacity, larger capacity than we thought we could hold.
00:28:23.720
You can get your tickets also on unitedwepledge.org.
00:28:38.660
You wouldn't believe how many Tanya's here, and she's been walking around in the museum,
00:28:41.900
and some people recognize her, and they are all like, don't hate him.
00:28:52.400
I mean, first of all, there's a hundred reasons why they would,
00:28:57.040
but I think the main one they're talking about there is the purchase of all these
00:29:01.300
historical documents and items, which are great if you are going to a museum.
00:29:10.120
it's a great thing that you've purchased all of this stuff to preserve.
00:29:14.720
If you happen to be married to the guy who's hemorrhaging every cent out of your bank account
00:29:21.820
to purchase it, it's not as fun, I would imagine.
00:29:32.980
Keep your painting going, because that seems to be the only thing purchasing all of this.
00:29:37.460
That is, I mean, I do, I paint for two reasons.
00:29:41.060
One, because it lets me escape into another world for a few hours, you know, every day
00:29:47.980
And the other is because I got to sell something to, I mean, we're going to be living, I swear
00:29:55.180
to you, if you listen to my wife, we're going to be living under a bridge with George Washington's
00:30:04.540
compass and Abraham Lincoln's, you know, clothing from the day that he dies.
00:30:12.260
But we got that going for us, because that's all we'll have going for us.
00:30:28.960
And I've made fun of Glen for this in the past, because when he started painting, he
00:30:42.520
I think the normal reaction to someone who hears this, that your art is hanging in a
00:30:46.420
gallery, is like, how does this Hunter Biden-like scam work?
00:30:59.560
I'm just nodding, apparently, on the scam, because I've asked that.
00:31:08.640
And I mean, but people, I think mine's much better than Hunter Biden, quite honestly.
00:31:15.660
We have G Clay's, and we have posters of it, and t-shirts of it, and the originals.
00:31:21.800
So bring your checkbook, if you happen to be rich.
00:31:25.760
Bring your checkbook, because we're going to milk you for every cent you have.
00:31:30.560
Just saying, we're trying to put this thing on the road.
00:31:32.340
You could do the posters, which are very nice and reasonably priced.
00:31:36.080
Although I will say, if you think of the difference, essentially, Hunter Biden's scam was like, he comes out with art, and then that fuels a bunch of Coke-filled, hooker-wasted weekends, where yours goes to George Washington's handkerchief.
00:31:59.460
It's sort of the same thing, except less cocaine and more really nerdy documents.
00:32:06.080
There is something coming up for sale on July 7th.
00:32:09.100
I'm just saying, I haven't talked to my wife about it yet, but I will.
00:32:13.120
If I sell some of this art, it's a very important piece.
00:32:22.360
I'll tell you when I get it, or if I don't get it, what it was.
00:32:32.840
So you know what the number one bestseller is here?
00:32:52.960
And it's better to get it unsigned, because it's actually worth more.
00:32:59.340
I have seen them, old books on eBay, and a non-signed book will be, you know, I don't know,
00:33:16.360
Let me tell you about our sponsor, This Half Hour.
00:33:24.800
Let me ask you, where are you now in terms of debt?
00:33:30.200
But you do have to think about it for a second, and I'm sorry to make you think about it.
00:33:33.380
If you have long-term debt in the form of credit cards, that's a real problem.
00:33:44.560
And I understand if everybody is racking up their credit cards, I get it.
00:33:58.160
American Financing works with the banks, but they are not part of the banks.
00:34:05.840
They're more of a broker, and they'll look for the right loan for you that fits your budget
00:34:14.400
So if you're going to buy a new home, buying homes appears to be up again.
00:34:19.620
But if you're buying a new home or if you have this high-interest credit card debt,
00:34:28.060
Right now, just on consolidation of your credit card loans, they're saving people up to $700 a month.
00:34:41.780
You go from a 20% interest rate on your credit cards to about a 5% or 6% interest rate.
00:35:03.100
Well, in case you didn't know, the things you do with your money matter.
00:35:20.320
You can often affect change in this country with your wallet as much as you can with your vote.
00:35:24.480
We've certainly seen that over the past few months.
00:35:26.620
One way of doing this is by buying things that are made in America.
00:35:30.200
And I mean, really made in America, because a lot of things say they're made in America, but surprise, surprise, they're not.
00:35:37.980
It's hard to know, honestly, at times, who to trust.
00:35:40.700
But I can tell you at least one place that you can trust, and that's American Giant.
00:35:44.620
When you buy from American Giant, you get your clothing there, you know you are getting true American quality.
00:35:51.320
A product with merit made by people in this country for a fair wage.
00:35:55.040
Each, every stitch of thread, every metal rivet, every drop of ink is made and assembled here.
00:36:01.240
I mean, I'm wearing one of the sweatshirts right now.
00:36:05.140
And I honestly go in to get dressed, and I'm just like, I just want to wear that again.
00:36:09.280
I need to get more of it, because I can't rotate it out fast enough.
00:36:16.320
My wife, who actually knows something about clothing, loves their stuff.
00:36:19.920
She got leggings from American Giant, and they're her favorite pair immediately.
00:36:24.200
The American Giant patch is sewn on because it means something.
00:36:27.200
It means a company that actually likes the country you live in.
00:36:41.360
Well, last year at this time, we were still recovering from the Roe versus Wade decision being released and overturned.
00:36:59.520
And I believe it was about this time that we had some of our Supreme Court justices, you know, under attack.
00:37:20.420
I think I have it at four, is the story that I was reading.
00:37:27.580
We still have the Joe Biden loan forgiveness to come through and quite a few others.
00:37:35.600
The loan forgiveness one, to me, is the biggest one because it would basically be overturning our entire republic if they were allowed this to happen.
00:37:43.000
I mean, it's almost that critical that they shoot this down.
00:37:49.960
Even people on the left, even Joe Biden's own administration, people like Nancy Pelosi have said this.
00:37:57.580
Even you're talking about basically saying Congress has no power and the president has the power to throw around hundreds of billions of dollars without even asking Congress.
00:38:13.760
It's hard to overstate what that would mean to our country if this can go forward.
00:38:22.180
And if you think about Roe versus Wade initially, they kind of dug out a right that didn't exist with some weird justification.
00:38:29.840
This is taking what everyone knows is in the Constitution and completely reversing it, reversing our entire structure of government.
00:38:48.980
Maybe we'll get lucky and they'll let us do it.
00:38:51.900
And if the Supreme Court overturns it, we'll just complain about the court, right?
00:38:55.480
Like, we know we can't really do this, but we'll have an out and we'll say, these darn Supreme Court justices, oh, they stopped us from giving you all these free loans.
00:39:05.040
They never thought they would get this through the Supreme Court.
00:39:09.060
But if that were to go the wrong way, I think it would be massively problematic.
00:39:13.960
We would be a dictator state that would be run by an administrator, and that's Woodrow Wilson's literally his dream, and it would fundamentally change the United States.
00:39:26.740
There's the affirmative action one for colleges, both public and private, where basically, can you discriminate against Asians because they're really smart?
00:39:39.140
They're like, hey, Asians do well in these tests.
00:39:40.880
We should be able to tell them they can't come to college.
00:39:46.720
There's another First Amendment site, you know, someone that runs a web design company who didn't want to do a gay marriage website, another one of these types of cases.
00:40:01.500
There is a postal worker who said they didn't want to work on Sundays for religious reasons.
00:40:08.800
There's also a religious thing, religious rights and compelled speech.
00:40:16.900
You know, this is the web designer that, you know...
00:40:22.980
It's the cake decorator type of case, again, which should not be controversial in this country.
00:40:29.360
We should also mention the one that came down yesterday, which was this federal elections situation where you have a situation where basically, like, the idea was can this legislative supremacy idea where can a state legislature basically overturn...
00:40:52.360
You know, it doesn't have more power than essentially the courts do and everything else to make election law.
00:40:56.820
And it's sort of in the Constitution that way without qualifiers, though also there's other things that, you know, checks and balances exist.
00:41:06.220
It was a 6-3 decision where Amy Coney Barrett, John Roberts, and Brett Kavanaugh all went with the liberal bloc.
00:41:14.320
The conservative bloc, Gorsuch, Alito, and Thomas wrote a dissent.
00:41:17.440
But if you look at the dissent, it's really more about whether the point was moot at this point because the specific case they're talking about has already been dealt with.
00:41:28.380
But what's interesting to me about it is for months, the left-wing press told us how horrible the Supreme Court was and how they were going to rule in favor of these state legislatures so that they could just overturn elections on a whim.
00:41:46.280
This court, we have to pack the court because they're going to rule.
00:41:49.220
That, you know, conservative states could just overturn the presidential election on a whim whenever they want and cannot be any – there would be no checks and balances.
00:41:58.080
And then when it came down to it, after months and months and months of them crying like, you know, again, the handmaid's tale is coming.
00:42:07.700
The court goes the opposite way and there's not one bit of self-reflection.
00:42:14.220
Not one bit of why did we write 500 stories telling the American people that the country was going to end because they were going to go down this road.
00:42:22.460
We were totally wrong for months and months and months and months telling the American people this.
00:42:29.280
And now that the other side has happened and this court just said, actually, no, you can't just do that.
00:42:36.100
Which I think is probably the right ruling in this particular case, though, you know, Clarence Thomas, I think, is right that maybe it shouldn't have been ruled on at all.
00:42:45.560
But the bottom line here is that they were wrong this whole time.
00:42:50.400
They were totally hyping up an issue that did not exist.
00:42:55.240
And then there's no apologies at the end of it.
00:43:03.900
Most people will never know that what they said was wrong.
00:43:13.520
I got to tell you, it is supposed to be super, super hot here in St. George.
00:43:22.780
Texas is your blood shoots out of your eyes every time you walk outside.
00:43:30.040
I don't need sweat block quite as much as I do in Dallas.
00:43:35.900
I'd like to take a bath in sweat block when I'm in Dallas.
00:43:43.480
Sweat block will make sure that you are not sweating all the time.
00:43:53.220
These are things that you just put underneath your arm once a week.
00:43:58.360
You just kind of wipe underneath your arm once a week, and it lasts five, six, seven days.
00:44:06.280
You can find it at Amazon or wherever you buy your products online.
00:44:56.500
What you're about to hear is the fusion of entertainment and enlightenment.
00:45:17.660
I'm sitting here next to my dad, and he's really upset.
00:45:31.280
If you are excited about new technologies, I am.
00:45:42.680
Unfortunately, cyber criminals are making giant keys for all of your locked up stuff,
00:45:49.780
whether that is physical or, you know, digital.
00:45:54.160
AI assistants now are being used to create authentic-sounding messages and contents used in phishing campaigns.
00:46:00.560
Just another way to get the robots to participate in the fun of harming people.
00:46:05.200
Don't you love it when we train robots, these things?
00:46:07.520
Your security from people who want to rob you is more important online than you think it is.
00:46:18.180
Don't wait for somebody to steal your personal information.
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The best in the business at protecting what's yours.
00:46:37.520
All right, Stu, I mean, we already have the smoking gun.
00:46:44.540
I think we're about to put the body, the blood, the splatters on the wall, and the chalk outline out.
00:46:53.320
And it seems like mainstream media is like, what murder?
00:47:01.040
Sure, we have the whole thing on video, but really, is that enough?
00:47:04.760
That is, I will say there has been at least a couple mainstream sources that have actually pursued this.
00:47:10.920
I mean, CBS News did a piece on it yesterday, surprisingly.
00:47:13.780
The, you know, Corinne Jean-Pierre went through a five-minute...
00:47:16.320
If only anyone watched CBS News, that would be really good.
00:47:20.000
Corinne Jean-Pierre had a really, I would say, tough press conference where, I mean,
00:47:25.140
for five straight minutes, White House reporters came after her asking questions about this.
00:47:30.220
And of course, she just bumbled her way through it because she's terrible at her job.
00:47:33.680
But it was interesting to even see her have to go through that exercise.
00:47:40.840
Every once in a while, one of these things breaks through.
00:47:43.180
And a lot of times it has to do with people doing something super selfish.
00:47:49.880
And this, you know, this seems to be Joe Biden selfishly using the power of his office in a corrupt way to protect his son.
00:47:59.360
And maybe, I don't know, maybe that breaks through.
00:48:02.480
Maybe the average mainstream reporter looks at this and says, this is going to be a problem later on.
00:48:08.660
We should get him out of here now while Gavin Newsom still has a chance to step in or something.
00:48:15.720
House Republicans yesterday released more WhatsApp messages.
00:48:20.280
They say they were written by Hunter Biden as he worked on a business deal with the Chinese energy company.
00:48:26.020
In messages from August 2017, the First Sun pushed that $10 million was needed,
00:48:31.620
and it needed to be invested annually into the joint venture with CEFC China Energy.
00:48:39.580
He called a $5 million proposal new to me and not acceptable.
00:48:46.400
$5 million just isn't enough for all the things that Hunter Biden could bring to the table, like drugs.
00:48:55.940
Anyways, the House Oversight Committee, the Twitter account, said that Hunter was messaging Guangwen Dong,
00:49:05.180
a CEFC China Energy associate who used the nickname Kevin.
00:49:20.300
He was in the United States, and I had to call his hotel room and use a codename.
00:49:27.220
And when I saw the codename, I thought it was ridiculous.
00:49:31.100
And so I called the hotel, and I said, John Smith, please.
00:49:38.080
And it rang through, and I said, Prime Minister, how are you?
00:49:48.620
I was hoping for something a little more clever.
00:49:55.820
I'm sure it wasn't actually John Smith, of course, but yes.
00:50:12.260
The House Oversight Committee's Twitter account said that he used the messaging with Kevin.
00:50:23.620
I can make $5 million in salary from any law firm in America.
00:50:38.940
The Bidens are the best at doing exactly what the chairman wants from this partnership.
00:50:55.660
He's got his sister-in-law, his ex-sister-in-law.
00:51:02.640
So, uh, and then the brother, who we all know is an expert in, um, well, anyway, all
00:51:13.740
those Bidens are the best at bringing the chairman what he wants, and it has nothing to do with
00:51:22.540
We all now know this is, this is true, that Biden is selling his country out for cash.
00:51:33.460
And if, if Hunter is right, and it's not about cash, what is it?
00:51:42.740
I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm having a hard time, uh, getting my arms around it, but Hunter is going
00:51:49.640
to be deposed tomorrow, and we will give you more on that, uh, deposition and the questions
00:51:55.900
that need to be asked, uh, coming up probably on tomorrow's program.
00:52:03.120
I was going to say, do you think that's why we're getting these WhatsApp messages?
00:52:06.380
Like, man, if the Republicans had these this whole time, I'm a bit perplexed on the timeline
00:52:14.080
We're hearing about this after this deal has been cut.
00:52:16.800
Are they just trying to say, Hey, don't let this deal go through because we have so much
00:52:27.440
Because I don't think these have anything to do with, uh, the deal.
00:52:32.260
He can make whatever deal, but he didn't make a deal on this.
00:52:37.140
I mean, the way it was covered, cover this, the press, the way the press wrote about this
00:52:41.080
was this was designed, this deal was designed to knock out all the criminal questions on
00:52:49.900
They looked at everything and this is what they came up with and it should clear him from
00:52:54.140
Now, I don't know if legally you can clear his dad.
00:52:56.760
Doesn't clear his dad, doesn't clear his, his uncle either, who was a huge part of this
00:53:00.620
particularly, but I don't like, I just, I hope that I mean, I really hope they go in
00:53:06.220
there tomorrow and the judge is like, no, I'm not taking this.
00:53:10.200
Go back to the drawing board because this clearly there's more going on here than him not paying
00:53:20.500
And we're talking about influence, uh, at the highest levels of our government.
00:53:25.560
And if that, if that is just ignored, uh, we, uh, you know, it's going to incentivize
00:53:33.800
And we still don't know what, what happened here.
00:53:36.080
We don't know if there was policies that were implemented when he became president later
00:53:40.000
We don't know what was, we don't know what influence this stuff bought, but I doubt it.
00:53:45.620
You don't spend $5 million, $10 million, $100 million on something and get nothing back
00:53:54.920
So yesterday on a related note, uh, Hunter Biden settled with his baby mama and baby mama wanted
00:54:15.160
I, I, I really got stuck on the, the Biden name.
00:54:19.560
She's felt that that carried weight in society, not anything good.
00:54:24.560
Would you want to strap your child with the name Biden?
00:54:49.780
He ran to Los Angeles, stayed at the YMCA where he had been repeatedly raped.
00:54:54.560
He only told me this at the end, towards the end of his life.
00:54:57.460
He never told anybody, um, in the family ever when none of us knew, um, and, and did everything
00:55:06.540
He was kind of a distant dad because, um, he didn't want to be his father.
00:55:14.800
And I understood so much more about my childhood with him, just not being around, uh, much more
00:55:25.120
But now I can at times be a distant dad because I'm working all the time and it's something
00:55:34.600
that I'm trying to conquer and abuse has happened in my family with my sisters and it has been
00:55:43.880
my goal to stop all of the abuse in the family.
00:55:48.100
So somebody's got to stand up for the women in our family and I, and I've taught my son
00:56:03.440
That's a Herculean thing to try to even take on and change in one generation.
00:56:15.660
Um, and I know one of the things that played into me when I was very young was my mother
00:56:29.440
And I remember in my twenties, uh, feeling like that was inevitable.
00:56:38.000
That's, I mean, it had happened in my family and it's just the way we do things.
00:56:41.920
The mark that the Bidens are putting on their children and grandchildren forever.
00:56:48.880
However, it's going to take somebody with real spine and I don't see anyone in that family
00:56:55.440
with any kind of spine, but to reverse the damage to that family is, is going to take
00:57:08.420
And what's crazy is Hunter Biden is in the position to do it, but I don't think he'll ever
00:57:16.300
I mean, look, wouldn't you be embarrassed to be in public right now?
00:57:19.980
If you were one of them, wouldn't you almost be afraid to be in public?
00:57:23.440
You'd be like, I sold out my country with my dad and he's president.
00:57:27.160
I would be really ashamed and worried about being in public right now.
00:57:35.320
And, uh, unfortunately when it comes to families and repentance and everything else, it takes humility.
00:57:42.220
And if this doesn't humble that family, what will back in just a minute, let me tell you
00:57:51.920
When you are facing pain every day, uh, don't give up.
00:58:00.460
That's usually what I do when, um, I have to talk to my wife because I just bought something
00:58:11.800
Uh, yeah, I'm going to talk to her about that tomorrow.
00:58:13.860
It only makes things worse when it comes to pain in your life.
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If you've ever had the experience of being in pain all the time and then getting out
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00:59:15.300
One of the other parts that I think is really interesting about this baby mama situation is
00:59:36.200
I mean, forget the drug use and all the other crimes he's committed.
00:59:39.540
This kid now has to live with, uh, with the knowledge that his father wanted so little
00:59:47.660
to do with him, but he wouldn't even allow the mother to use the last name for the child.
00:59:55.100
And I, you know, I go back to this all the time when it comes to, uh, the pro-life pro-choice
01:00:00.200
You know, the, the, the value of a life is not determined by the circumstances of the
01:00:09.240
The fact that he was screwing around with some stripper and had sex with her and, and
01:00:15.360
it resulted in a child does not mean that the life of this child should mean any less.
01:00:21.200
And it certainly shouldn't mean any less to the actual father.
01:00:29.260
The fact that the president of the United States will not even acknowledge his own grandson.
01:00:40.160
And not one person in the press has pushed the president of the United States to address
01:00:53.620
I understand why that's a, that's a proficient political calculation, but it is a disgusting,
01:01:00.680
a disgusting series of choices for any, for a man.
01:01:06.040
I don't think it is a, I don't think it is a political choice anymore.
01:01:08.920
Maybe it used to be, maybe just when, you know, back in the, I don't know, forties or
01:01:13.340
whenever, and you had a, uh, what was called a bastard child and you didn't want to acknowledge,
01:01:20.340
Now, babies are had out of wedlock all the time.
01:01:23.860
Usually not by, um, you know, famous disgusting animals like, uh, Hunter Biden, but, uh, it is
01:01:36.460
He's living the life of an old, you know, the, uh, Prince of the realm, you know, 500 years
01:01:46.060
ago where Kings would go out and have their mistress and they'd never recognize their
01:01:52.680
This guy is so crass and grotesque that all he wanted was sex that night.
01:02:04.440
I mean, how do they, how does the left reconcile this?
01:02:09.140
I, I'm left to the, to the conclusion that there, there just isn't anybody honest that
01:02:17.100
There's nobody that is like, that really cares about women and says, no, no women shouldn't
01:02:24.840
And I know that his dad is on my side on X, Y, and Z, but this is horrific.
01:02:33.020
And they don't do it on a number of things, especially with women.
01:02:37.140
How is it helping women to have men put on a bathing suit, say they're a woman and then
01:02:51.560
Where are the ones that actually believe in something?
01:02:54.840
Yeah, no, I mean, that, that would be, be nice to see.
01:02:58.600
And I think, you know, you'd also like to see someone press the president of the United
01:03:02.740
States on these WhatsApp messages, you know, it, okay.
01:03:06.600
We all know that he did talk to his son about his business and he was lying that whole time,
01:03:10.780
but like there could theoretically be an out where Hunter was using his dad's influence
01:03:20.100
And, um, uh, the president maybe didn't know about it or the, the, the, the, the,
01:03:24.840
this is before he was president, but maybe he didn't know about it.
01:03:27.260
Like whatever his excuse would be, but he needs to get on the record with that, if that's
01:03:32.120
And he also needs to say, Hey, um, you know what?
01:03:35.880
Like I've been telling everybody that, that this wasn't happening.
01:03:39.500
And now these messages are showing that, you know what?
01:03:43.040
I, I, maybe I, he, this is probably a lie, but he could say, Hey, I didn't know about
01:03:48.340
I'm very disappointed in my son, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
01:03:51.120
But he should be on record because when he's caught, we need to know that he was lying
01:03:57.700
Well, we know he was lying if he ever says that, because we know from the state department
01:04:02.700
that the state department was concerned about his son attending all these meetings in China,
01:04:12.740
And warned the president, then vice president, uh, then, uh, Obama and the vice president.
01:04:19.080
We have, we have it on record that they warned and said, this looks very, very bad.
01:04:30.400
He knew he can't claim that I, the GI, he was just on the plane, same plane with me.
01:04:45.220
Um, and by the way, people are, are correcting me that it is, is, uh, Joe Biden's granddaughter,
01:04:51.280
And now I, I don't like the fact that people are doing that because they're assuming, uh,
01:04:57.880
But, uh, I was upset at you when you said grandson, because how do you know it's a boy
01:05:11.600
By the way, there's a story out from Reuters that is, uh, scrutinizing the ancestry of the
01:05:20.800
It's funny because we did this, uh, long, long time ago and they didn't seem to care.
01:05:25.360
But now Reuters has published, uh, part one of slavery's descendants, uh, entitled Americans,
01:05:32.160
America's family secret found, uh, that two Supreme court justices, five living presidents,
01:05:40.460
presidents, 11 governors, a hundred legislators have all descended from ancestors who enslaved
01:05:50.160
Among the living presidents, Donald Trump was the sole outlier, didn't own slaves.
01:05:59.780
Jimmy Carter, George Bush, Bill Clinton, Barack Obama, Joe Biden.
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Live from St. George, Utah, which, uh, may I just say from experience this week, bring
01:07:36.660
I, I, I feel like a desert is just going to crack open my face here soon.
01:07:44.600
There's a couple of things that you need to know about.
01:07:46.360
First of all, uh, Donald Trump, uh, jacked up the threats, um, on Monday and then again
01:07:52.580
yesterday says he's going to skip at least the first Republican debate because it's Fox
01:08:03.980
I think these guys should stop doing these debates, uh, with the mainstream media.
01:08:09.800
I mean, oh boy, Stu's looking at me skeptically.
01:08:15.880
I mean, as look, I don't think Fox's news coverage is perfect by any means, but certainly it's
01:08:21.820
more friendly than the mainstream media as a whole.
01:08:26.140
We're just including Fox news and mainstream media now.
01:08:29.540
Is that, is that kind of where, where you're going with us?
01:08:35.080
I don't, I mean, I, I don't think that that's always the case.
01:08:37.380
I think they're, I think they are way off course from where they used to be.
01:08:42.500
Um, and now I, you know, now it's just, I kind of don't trust them.
01:08:46.700
You know, when, when Tucker was there, I knew Tucker was fighting and fighting the, uh, the
01:08:54.320
And now, uh, I mean, who do you really trust over there?
01:09:06.180
He is a pretty, I mean, if Carl Rove, uh, you know, Brett bear is a, is a straight news
01:09:12.020
So I think does certainly, I mean, I, you know, maybe not comparing him to whatever your
01:09:17.360
ideal Fox is, but like compare him to NBC news coverage.
01:09:22.460
I mean, I take Brett bear a thousand times in a row.
01:09:25.060
Yeah, I would too, but you don't have to settle for that now anymore.
01:09:31.580
Oh, I would take, I would take, uh, the daily wire.
01:09:43.340
I do think that, that, that what you're talking about here, and cause obviously, you know, somewhat
01:09:51.080
Uh, we, we, you know, certainly like the daily wire.
01:09:53.460
There's a lot of outlets like that, but what I think is interesting, I would put Glenn,
01:09:57.480
Glenn Greenwald and put, I would build a panel of people that are, are going to ask honest
01:10:07.860
I don't want questions coming from a, um, any one point of view.
01:10:13.400
I want people who will ask the honest question.
01:10:24.100
And I, look, I, sometimes Fox has done a good job with that in previous debates sometimes,
01:10:29.720
but I would say like, one of the things that's most interesting to me about your idea here
01:10:34.660
is that what we get out of mainstream media are questions that would theoretically interest
01:10:44.060
And often that question is, you know, something like, Hey, did you really rape?
01:10:55.580
And it's like, all right, like I get, that's what, you know, Rachel Maddow's audience probably
01:11:03.440
But like, I would like to hear like much more, like I would like to hear from Donald Trump.
01:11:08.780
Hey, you know, you're talking a lot about, you know, beating the deep state, right?
01:11:12.500
And, and how important that is, you know, one of your main justifications for running.
01:11:16.440
Well, if you're out of office right now, right.
01:11:20.360
And you're saying this election was stolen from you.
01:11:26.740
Why didn't you do something when you had the power to do it?
01:11:30.180
Like, that's a question that like, I think that's something that like,
01:11:33.840
like would be a real question of like how he's going to govern.
01:11:43.360
Like, there's a lot of questions there that about Donald Trump's presidency
01:11:46.300
that might be interesting to a conservative trying to decipher between two conservatives.
01:11:51.360
What we get from the mainstream media is, is like this pitch of why Donald Trump is so evil
01:12:00.200
And I think there's very little value in a primary for that.
01:12:04.040
So here's what I, because I asked Donald Trump that question,
01:12:07.900
and I don't know if it was publicly or privately, but I said,
01:12:19.580
He said, I had absolutely no idea how deep it went, but I do now.
01:12:28.880
It's a reasonable answer, but I mean, I think it's fair to, to worry about that.
01:12:32.960
If you're, if you're, if you're putting someone back into office who missed it last time,
01:12:39.500
And I think the same question to go, and I'm not saying this to beat up on Trump.
01:12:43.140
He's just the one that everyone knows their story better.
01:12:45.140
I mean, like you could ask the same question about Ron DeSantis, you know, DeSantis is coming
01:12:49.520
He's never dealt with the Washington people like this.
01:12:52.580
Obviously he was a congressman, but you know, is he going to be able to perform in the situation?
01:12:58.640
Ask him about, you know, are you on, a lot of people are uncomfortable with how he's using
01:13:03.480
his power in the state, you know, as it, maybe it's too, uh, top down, right.
01:13:09.400
For a conservative audience, let's go back and forth and hear from another candidate who
01:13:13.660
says, you know what, maybe you're doing too much from the, from the, the governor's mansion.
01:13:19.260
You're not saying what right or wrong there, but like, how do you decipher between two conservatives
01:13:23.600
has nothing to do with whether Donald Trump kept documents.
01:13:28.300
That means nothing to me as it, as it regards to going to try to pick somebody in a primary.
01:13:34.480
Well, I have a feeling that the left feels the same way about those, uh, documents.
01:13:40.480
You remember somehow or another, this recording was leaked.
01:13:46.980
There's so many leaks, none, none apparently, uh, on the, uh, left that we should even either
01:13:54.260
listen to or take credible, but so many leaks on Donald Trump, uh, the, uh, the whole leak
01:14:01.980
was him talking about a plan apparently, uh, with Iran and he had the document and those
01:14:08.760
were one of the, you know, they took those documents away from him because he was being
01:14:13.700
Well, guess what wasn't with the documents and guess what wasn't even listed, uh, when
01:14:24.400
So wait, we're, we've been arguing about, uh, a conversation he had where he said he was
01:14:32.760
holding up a magazine, uh, and they don't even have the document.
01:14:37.380
I mean, I would, I would say highly unlikely if, if he, if they had the document and he had
01:14:44.280
the document, he'd reach over and grab it and say, look at this.
01:14:47.100
But if the document doesn't exist, at least in the file, then you have to go to, he shredded
01:14:53.300
it, which is now a conspiracy theorist, uh, or, or what?
01:15:01.440
I mean, and I think too, this is a situation where it's not like we don't have the murder
01:15:08.100
Like there's, we have no idea if he actually killed someone in this murder case, the document,
01:15:14.820
if the document doesn't exist, who knows, you know, maybe that's that again, as your
01:15:18.700
conspiracy theory, you're like, you know, you think maybe he shredded it, but if you
01:15:21.880
don't have any evidence of that, what do you have here?
01:15:24.800
Again, I, this story I think is just nonsensical.
01:15:28.420
It's got nothing to do with the future of the country.
01:15:31.480
This is just a side show, a side show, yet another attempt to throw Donald Trump out of
01:15:38.500
office when you, what you could do to get him out of office, which is just beat him,
01:15:44.520
If you're a Democrat and you don't want Donald Trump to be president, then win.
01:15:48.200
You don't need to, they keep trying to do this by some other means and they, you know,
01:15:55.020
Do the American people care if the president who's, who literally was given this document
01:16:00.240
in office to see it instead of having it in front of him, just remembers the details.
01:16:11.820
The question is, does he have it in his possession or not?
01:16:14.180
That's really what we're going to determine the future of this country on.
01:16:19.560
By the way, Chip Roy, who we're trying to get on, Chip Roy has come out and said that
01:16:24.480
a number of Republicans don't believe Department of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas
01:16:31.380
should be impeached over his handling of the border.
01:16:38.300
May I ask, how low is the bar for unemployment or employment at the Biden administration?
01:16:47.700
Because it seems like everyone can get, keep their job and they're all doing fine.
01:17:03.160
Why don't you just, it's just Xerox the book and just hand it to all the reporters.
01:17:08.040
If you're going to read all of the answers, they got them there.
01:17:29.780
Does he have to start driving drug cartel members across the border and, and have them sleep
01:17:42.620
Uh, he would remain no matter what, which is incredible.
01:17:48.300
Uh, by the way, Glenn, uh, one update on the border situation, you know, the whole, uh,
01:17:51.760
DeSantis flying people into, uh, Martha's Vineyard.
01:17:54.700
It was the worst thing any governor had ever done in history.
01:17:57.820
And we were all told about all these awful things.
01:18:01.000
Uh, now there's a new story in the New York times that the people who did stay, which was
01:18:05.760
And they booted most of them out immediately, but the people who did stay really enjoying
01:18:18.120
It's why all of our presidents built houses there.
01:18:21.740
They just dropped me in, you know, one of the greatest vacation paradises of all time,
01:18:35.220
However, it should be a surprise to anyone who reads the New York times who were told
01:18:38.620
this was the, one of the worst things the governor has ever done.
01:18:41.480
And they're, they're making it seem like, oh, well, they put it in the face of Ron DeSantis
01:18:48.040
Was DeSantis trying to punish them by pushing, putting them there?
01:18:51.260
He was trying to point out, Hey, the burden can't be held by only Southern states.
01:18:56.340
And while, you know, these people of course are going to enjoy it there.
01:19:01.400
I, I think this is a great policy for everybody.
01:19:06.280
You clearly send them to Philadelphia or Washington DC.
01:19:14.200
How'd you like to, uh, the chance to win a free trip for you and your family to Boston
01:19:18.920
to visit the historic sites, learn about, uh, our founding fathers firsthand.
01:19:25.540
Tuttle twins are on a mission to help families right now, learn from history.
01:19:29.680
If we can just understand the stories and the ideas that make America so special and
01:19:35.780
unique, we'll now, we'll know how important it is to preserve those ideas, which are so
01:19:44.680
They teach facts of dates and names and places.
01:19:51.480
The Tuttle twins, American history books, they teach the stories.
01:19:56.140
Kids love them and they will come away with a real appreciation of the ideas that make
01:20:03.240
No better time to teach your kids or your grandkids to love American history.
01:20:09.720
The Tuttle twins are giving one family, a vacation getaway in Boston to visit where our
01:20:16.880
Go to, I mean, we could send you to Philadelphia, but again, that would be a punishment.
01:20:25.440
Go there, order the book and get information and the official rules for the vacation getaway.
01:20:31.180
You don't have to purchase anything to qualify.
01:21:03.160
I, um, we're here in St. George, uh, where we are putting on the blueprints of Liberty
01:21:10.400
It is, um, uh, it's a pretty amazing thing to come and see and you will learn history that
01:21:17.120
you probably didn't know before along with all of the facts and documents and everything
01:21:23.860
Uh, it is, it's really something great for you and your family to do, um, uh, this holiday
01:21:33.320
I, I, I will tell you that there's one place that we are a little thin and that is, I just
01:21:40.480
purchased a bunch of documents for the museum to preserve them.
01:21:49.340
Uh, we got some from when he was, you know, a Hitler, uh, guy.
01:21:54.160
And then when he was working on the space program, I haven't made up my mind on Werner von Braun.
01:22:04.420
Um, but I'm trying to find things like a space suit.
01:22:10.900
I can't get anything, um, because it's against the law.
01:22:14.600
And I really think that we are coming to a place to where 15 years from now, if we become,
01:22:22.400
um, a secondary or a third kind of nation, third world nation, uh, nobody's going to
01:22:29.600
And the more the government discredits itself, the worse that becomes.
01:22:36.380
Um, we were just talking, David is a listener and he was, he's, um, in the studio here and
01:22:41.460
we were just talking about, uh, JFK and, you know, things that he knows from, you know,
01:22:50.860
And, uh, there's something much more, something deeper than just Oswald.
01:22:56.960
And we know that from the documents that are coming out here in the last year, I would just
01:23:01.940
so love a presidential candidate to say, look, I'm just going to bear it all.
01:23:09.060
You, you should see it all and know the good and the bad of what we've done.
01:23:14.280
Cause I think we've done a lot of bad and I'm willing to accept that.
01:23:19.100
Um, especially, you know, if it's 40 years in the past, I'm a little hard to accept it,
01:23:24.020
you know, in the, if you're still in office, I'm having a hard time with that.
01:23:28.540
Um, but we should know all of these things so we can know the good and the bad and decide
01:23:37.920
Uh, and if it is, how do we learn from the bad in the past?
01:23:45.400
One of the things is stop with all this secrecy.
01:23:48.360
You can't run a country where everything is secret.
01:23:53.920
If people are above the law, if they can skirt around it and do dark ops, it's, that's not
01:24:05.360
Perhaps, perhaps it will end, uh, not in our demise.
01:24:10.200
If the people rise up and begin to speak truth and make sure that the weasels that we elect
01:24:17.700
stop being so easily, make sure that you have a very long memory of who's doing what and
01:24:28.860
Yes, your congressman, your senator, not somebody else's, yours.
01:24:40.200
In the 1960s, 95% of the clothing Americans bought were made right here in America.
01:24:49.700
That's a complete reversal on the way things used to be in this country.
01:24:56.960
American Giant is all about made in America and American workers and products that they
01:25:03.380
It's about good paying jobs that allow people to take pride in their hard work that they
01:25:07.640
When they began in 2012, a clothing factory in North Carolina was just going to shut down.
01:25:12.800
They worked with the factory to invest in new machinery and new skill development.
01:25:17.040
And it has changed not just the factory and the people that work there, but the whole community.
01:25:23.380
They make the best hoodie you've ever owned and a lot of other really high quality clothing
01:25:27.940
with cotton that's grown here in America, milled in America, sewn here in America.
01:26:05.840
what you're about to hear is the fusion of entertainment and enlightenment
01:26:23.760
well hello america and welcome to the glenn beck program
01:26:32.540
today this hour you're gonna learn history that you probably didn't know and i warn you
01:26:43.100
it's all backed up with evidence so there won't be any imagining of anybody's history
01:26:49.800
today we begin in 60 seconds you want beef you want chicken you want seafood and you don't want
01:26:57.500
to cost more than uh than it already does at the grocery store the groceries are going up and up
01:27:03.440
and i'm telling you meat is going to go through the roof the best thing you could do is go into
01:27:08.240
your grocery store talk to your butcher i'm sure he's going to be fine with doing this and saying
01:27:12.900
hey look i'm going to buy my meat from you but then you're not going to raise the price on me
01:27:18.620
ever and he's going to say oh sure sure absolutely what do you think i am good ranchers and that's
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when you're going to go to good ranchers.com slash glenn and you're going to get your one
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01:28:01.020
timothy barton is uh with us now from wall builders hi tim how are you i'm good glenn good to see you
01:28:10.440
good to see you thank you so much for coming to the uh to liberty week here in saint george
01:28:16.200
well i love being here yeah you and your dad are across the street now uh doing another um
01:28:23.260
american history uh seminar yep and usually when we do these and maybe it's because of me because
01:28:30.540
i'm such a loud mouth they last three days but this is being done in one day so actually we were
01:28:38.100
going to do one day seminars and we said there's no way we can squeeze three days into one day so
01:28:41.120
we're doing a two-day seminar we found the happy middle ground okay uh so you're at
01:28:46.400
wow you're at then today you'd be at my part where it gets really really dark correct yeah
01:28:53.160
correct how are you going to do that you're so happy well that's the reason i left it's up to my
01:28:57.340
dad now i'm already saying right now i could get back and the whole story's changed i have no idea
01:29:02.140
right you know the amazing thing is and people are seeing this here backed up by facts we are
01:29:07.980
a country that is is both jamestown and uh plymouth absolutely and this is a choice we
01:29:16.840
have this great map that was printed by congress in 1870 um that shows the tree that comes from
01:29:23.700
jamestown which is nasty it's all it ends in treason and murder and death and slavery and the tree from
01:29:32.960
the pilgrims leads to freedom yep uh and people don't understand the difference between those two
01:29:41.060
and that we have to make a choice every day between those two yes the map specifically people are want
01:29:47.400
to look it up it came out in 1888 if they look for a map of jamestown and plymouth uh they can find
01:29:52.640
that map and it shows the legacy and what's great about even the imagery it came out at the end of
01:29:56.740
reconstruction and so as america's gone through the civil war 13th 14th 15th amendment rights are being
01:30:02.300
restored at this point you still have the union army in the south enforcing all of those civil rights
01:30:07.380
before democrats took over and when president cleveland comes in and they revoke all of the
01:30:12.760
civil rights laws passed in reconstruction but up to this point they're why did they wait wait why did
01:30:16.440
they do that why did why did cleveland do that well part of what was going on there was a a discrepancy
01:30:22.260
in in the presidency um leading up to democrats getting control of congress again and and part of
01:30:27.980
uh that there was not enough electoral votes and this is before cleveland i think it was was it
01:30:33.180
haze i'd have to look that up i'm just i'm i'm so overloaded with my haze uh information that i can't
01:30:41.300
sort through it fast enough well and yeah we've been studying for a different conversation and so
01:30:45.400
now i'm like wait a second which what is this uh but you go back that it was the last republican
01:30:49.740
before democrats take over and there wasn't enough electoral votes to declare presidential winner so it
01:30:55.440
goes to congress and in congress it still wasn't really clear that they're still divided of who's
01:30:59.220
going to be the president and some of the congressmen from the south said we will we will
01:31:03.780
acquiesce we'll say republicans you can have the president if you remove the union army from the south
01:31:09.280
because the union army is who was enforcing all of these civil rights laws and not everybody in the
01:31:14.540
south was against some of what was going on but certainly the political leaders and there were some
01:31:20.440
absolutely racist embedded thoughts in those political leaders in many of the southern states
01:31:25.040
and so they said we'll give you the presidency if you remove these the union army from our different
01:31:31.420
towns when the union army is removed they begin revoking some of those civil rights laws that were
01:31:35.080
allowing black americans to vote well once you have removed the ability for black americans to vote
01:31:39.700
there was at that point a lot of black elected officials in southern states all republicans
01:31:43.820
but once blacks can no longer vote in those states anymore all of a sudden democrats not only come out
01:31:50.000
to power they have been a super majority coming back with what they're doing and when they get
01:31:54.800
that power from the south all of the southern elected individuals become democrat again that's
01:32:01.000
when you begin to see not only democrats uh having power in congress that the presidency coming back
01:32:06.520
that's when you start seeing them go back to some of that racist uh racist uh roots where they're
01:32:11.900
saying right jim crow this is when that kind of enters um and this is part of the legacy of jamestown
01:32:16.860
and plymouth and and even to that map what's worth noting is when you look at at where jamestown and
01:32:21.620
plymouth are it shows there are two things uh that they are rooted in and in plymouth it is built on
01:32:29.140
the bible and it's very clearly there's a book says bible on the side but jamestown it's a coin we have
01:32:33.420
hang on just like we have downstairs their uh uh their their letter um from uh uh or their their oath
01:32:41.460
that they had to take as a citizen of of plymouth that it's all about god yes all about god yeah it's
01:32:49.600
i mean really when you start looking at historical documents there's there's no question at all
01:32:53.500
that these were individuals who were rooted in faith when even we have the first printing of
01:32:58.380
governor bradford's journal and and he identified at times that it's been six to eight hours a day
01:33:02.240
studying the bible that this is who they were and so it shows in the map that is a foundation of
01:33:07.900
plymouth and then it shows the tree growing from there and jamestown it shows that the foundation
01:33:12.700
of jamestown is a coin on the side it says mammon and what they were pointing out is is that some of
01:33:17.580
these individuals where they had gone wrong the bible says it tells us that the love of money is the
01:33:22.100
root of all evil and where they went wrong is they cared more about making money than they did
01:33:26.100
about individuals i think the same thing could be said about columbus he's coming over he's very very
01:33:32.300
humble he gets here he starts to think oh my gosh i'm going to be famous i'm going to be the governor
01:33:38.680
i can make money and it goes awry and he's humbled again i mean whenever anyone is pursuing at least on
01:33:46.680
this land when they are just pursuing money they're destroyed unquestionably and i think this is also part
01:33:54.880
of the dichotomy even in human history where even with jamestown and plymouth this isn't this is not a
01:34:00.240
new thought or idea uh you can go back to the famous novel by charles dickens a tale of two cities
01:34:05.380
right this was always kind of you have two options and what option you're going to take and america
01:34:09.900
took both options but it's also worth noting even that that early 1888 map depicts it very well the
01:34:15.720
majority of america was far more impacted by plymouth than they were jamestown which one of the
01:34:19.780
things that that we will illustrate for people when someone says america's evil we had jim crow laws in
01:34:24.600
america unquestionably we had jim crow laws in america but we always ask the question where do we have
01:34:28.920
jim crow laws because right now we're sitting in utah you know who didn't have jim crow laws utah
01:34:32.960
neither did colorado neither did nebraska neither really when you start looking at the tree that came
01:34:39.060
from plymouth and it goes across all of the northern u.s and spreads into the western u.s so all of
01:34:44.100
the northern states the only the only part that really embraced the jim crow laws were the deep
01:34:49.300
democratic south where that racism was embedded in much of their culture so at what point did the
01:34:55.080
clan um because we have some stuff down in the museum that is horrifying yep and um one of them
01:35:02.520
is a little clan card with faces of mostly black but a lot of whites as well that basically is a clan
01:35:10.880
killing card correct they would hand them out and say if you see these people kill them or call us
01:35:16.160
yeah it was it was the republican legislature of south carolina and in south carolina the republicans
01:35:22.180
the one fighting for equal rights well that was the republican party was the party that all of the
01:35:27.180
former slaves the black people were joining because that was the party of freedom and equality right and
01:35:31.680
it was because really the first platform the republican party didn't have anything like worse for lower
01:35:37.820
taxes it was all about anti-slavery which we also have that so the first republican platform came in
01:35:43.560
in 1856 and had nine planks so nine things of what we fundamentally believe well seven of the nine planks
01:35:49.040
were against slavery so right this is where it's not confusing at all the republican party was against
01:35:54.060
slavery which also leads into when lincoln gets elected in 1860 on the republican platform the
01:35:58.900
republican platform is still absolutely anti-slavery when he gets elected and south carolina was the
01:36:04.840
first state to secede south carolina released what was known as a declaration of causes it was like
01:36:09.720
their version of the declaration of independence and what they acknowledged is that we know with
01:36:15.240
this new republican leadership that their goal is to end and emancipate the slaves in slavery emancipate
01:36:21.980
the slaves and we know that slavery is no longer south if we remain in the union and so they conclude
01:36:28.620
this declaration of causes by saying we invite all other slave holding states to join us in forming
01:36:33.960
a pro-slavery confederation that this is where when people even talk about states rights we'd encourage
01:36:40.740
people go back and read why they actually said they're separating because the political leaders
01:36:44.620
did not argue states rights now we also make the distinction not everybody in the south was pro-slavery
01:36:49.540
just like not everybody in the north was anti-slavery you had people from new york as a great example they
01:36:53.960
were very much pro-slavery but they were pro-union whereas the political leaders in the south they were
01:36:58.300
so pro-slavery they said we don't care about the union we care more about our slaves and this is where
01:37:03.300
we would tell people of the 11 states that seceded five of them released declaration of causes where they are
01:37:08.440
literally saying why they're seceding and in every one of their declaration of causes they're talking
01:37:12.920
about slavery being the primary reason they are seceding well you're also you if you look at the
01:37:17.880
constitution of the southern states you can't join the secession unless you agree with slavery
01:37:26.080
will have slavery and agree to expand slavery elsewhere correct i mean so it's it's pretty darn clear
01:37:33.300
and what's also worth noting about even the confederate constitution it's almost a verbatim
01:37:38.220
copy of the u.s constitution and then they just added several parts they thought would make it
01:37:42.100
better and the parts they added were parts to protect and defend and expand slavery as new
01:37:47.980
territories would join that would be a hard time to do they adopt the bill of rights as well because
01:37:52.580
i don't know how you square that well that's actually a super interesting question because in
01:37:57.080
the confederate constitution there is no bill of rights correct which is right which is super
01:38:01.120
interesting i i have not looked into the conversations they had about not including the bill of rights but
01:38:05.960
absolutely that would be an interesting conversation or interesting research i want to take you to
01:38:10.940
lincoln uh and john quincy adams here in just a second we'll do that in a minute first uh the world of
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i'm really going to push you and see how much you know see how see how much you've listened to your dad
01:40:04.980
i'm not nervous at all i know you're not uh maybe a little bit i think that's a slam against me um all
01:40:12.320
right so uh tell me about the role of not the but the other adams family the original the original adams
01:40:23.980
family and lincoln the connection all the way through this is fascinating so i mean really the
01:40:31.740
john quincy adams story is is what we're alluding to it's worth backing up john adams is one of the
01:40:35.880
founding fathers who never owned slaves and fought against slavery his whole life hated it so john quincy
01:40:40.720
adams grows up in this when john quincy adams is eight years old he he's at the battle of bunker
01:40:44.060
hill he and his mom are watching off in the distance they watch uh one of their friends family
01:40:48.040
doctor dr joseph warren he has killed the most famous painting at the battle of bunker hill is
01:40:52.500
known as the the murder of dr warren it shows him in the very front he's the one being bayoneted
01:40:56.120
that's the one that has peter salem off on the side acknowledging this black hero from the battle
01:41:00.060
bunker hill john quincy adams grows up in that when he's 11 years old he receives a congressional
01:41:04.240
appointment to go with his father over to paris he's the official secretary to america's diplomat who was
01:41:08.840
his father when how old is he then that's when he's 11 11 and he's the official secretary correct
01:41:15.100
when he's 14 he received a second congressional appointment this time before the throne of
01:41:18.500
katherine the great in russia and this time he was the interpreter for the delegation think about just
01:41:23.560
just think about this think how little we must think of our children when these kids you know george
01:41:33.280
washington at 13 14 years old he's surveying making maps all by himself in virginia i mean these these
01:41:40.000
guys are amazing they just don't expect it so so 14 he's the official interpreter he's already fluent
01:41:45.540
in six languages one of them being russian which is why he's chosen to go so he grows up doing a lot
01:41:50.580
of this stuff when george washington became president george washington chose john quincy adams to be
01:41:54.740
america's top ambassador uh when john adams becomes president john quincy adams is again america's top
01:41:59.320
ambassador when thomas jefferson becomes president because of the drama between
01:42:03.000
jefferson and adams yeah jefferson does not ask him to remain but he is elected to be a u.s senator
01:42:08.340
when madison becomes president john quincy adams is elected or is chosen again to be america's top
01:42:15.000
diplomat john quincy adams the one that negotiates the end of the war of 1812 under monroe he's elected
01:42:19.760
secretary of state he then became the sixth president uh at the end of his presidency he knew there was more
01:42:25.180
to his life he knew he wasn't done stop how much of that did you know about john quincy adams
01:42:31.760
i know we all grow up knowing john quincy adams is the son of john adams move on think about what
01:42:42.640
you've missed just not knowing that amount of history but wait it gets really good i really
01:42:50.440
think john quincy adams is probably the most impressive president when it comes to resumes
01:42:54.260
just genuinely so after being president he feels like his life still is still has purpose and
01:43:00.480
meaning he ends up running for congress and the reason was he said there's a great enmity or excuse
01:43:04.840
me a great evil that is yet to be remedied and it was the evil of slavery he became the leader of the
01:43:09.500
anti-slavery movement in congress while he's there he fights for 17 years against slavery at the time he
01:43:15.480
said that congress was nearly 80 percent of congress was either in favor of or like totally fine with
01:43:20.780
slavery just status quo leave it as it is so he knew he had a major uphill battle okay hang on just
01:43:25.960
a second but it was kind of like it is now with the budget right people will say if they're in the
01:43:32.660
right you know in the in a district that happens to agree they'll say oh i am so against it but they
01:43:37.760
all do it that was and that's what his number was reflecting because there were more congressmen than
01:43:42.520
that that would have said oh slavery is wrong and then he got there and he's like these people
01:43:46.380
aren't really against slavery right which is where he came up with a number nearly 80 percent was fine
01:43:51.000
with it they weren't actually fighting against this he became the leader of the anti-slavery movement
01:43:55.080
in congress new congressmen are elected every two years his last term in john quincy adams last term
01:43:59.960
in congress one of the freshmen that was elected came and joins the anti-slavery movement john quincy
01:44:05.100
adams is doing these impassioned floor speeches every single week against slavery and at this point
01:44:10.020
they've actually passed new uh new laws or i guess it's a house rule they went to the house
01:44:16.500
rules committee they passed a new rule uh that was known as a john quincy adams gag order it was
01:44:20.200
literally to stop this guy from talking against slavery the rule was that you can't talk about
01:44:24.160
any issue that's already been resolved especially if it's about slavery right they're like just dude
01:44:28.360
you're done see adams rule kind of totally well he he was able to fight long enough that got revoked
01:44:34.720
but like this is this is what john quincy adams has dealt with so this young freshman
01:44:38.100
joins the anti-slavery movement john quincy adams just again every week making these impassioned please
01:44:43.620
we have to end slavery it's evil john quincy adams gets up one day they thought he was going to make
01:44:48.580
a speech he had a stroke he clutched his chest fell over his desk he ends up dying in the capitol
01:44:52.600
building when he dies uh the anti-slavery movement is incredibly strong in this moment we like he has led
01:45:00.020
this there's a lot of people ready to step up and this freshman congressman decides he's gonna he's
01:45:05.040
gonna carry on the torch he runs for re-election and of course if people have heard this they know
01:45:09.700
the story right he runs for re-election he loses he runs for re-election loses runs for senate loses
01:45:14.200
run for state office loses and this person didn't win another election until he became president abraham
01:45:18.540
lincoln and everything that lincoln did to fight against slavery is what he had learned under john quincy
01:45:24.920
adams in the anti-slavery movement of congress now here's the question because lincoln at first says
01:45:33.980
i can't do anything i i'm i'm a president i i don't have the power to end slavery um and so he
01:45:42.000
concentrates on the saving of the republic and people dismiss that as see he didn't really care
01:45:47.980
about slaves which is is what they say because he gave a speech where he said if i could if i could
01:45:53.180
end slavery today and preserve the union i would if i if i could keep slave and preserve the union i would
01:45:57.820
because preserving the union is the most important thing and that's where people discount him saying
01:46:01.080
he wasn't really anti-slavery that's not correct at all he actually was a state legislature in
01:46:05.660
illinois before he became a congressman and and he was actually recruited by the love joys in illinois
01:46:11.820
who were the leaders of the anti-slavery movement of illinois and they recruited lincoln to run
01:46:15.560
in state house as an anti-slavery state legislator so lincoln already has a track record of this he has a
01:46:21.340
track record of being mentored to some extent by john quincy adams in congress and then he runs on the
01:46:26.680
republican platform which that platform is explicitly anti-slavery what's also a fun tidbit is in the u.s
01:46:32.760
constitution it says that no states can form any confederation or make their own treaties etc has to
01:46:38.120
go through congress so when the southern states begin to secede and form their own confederation
01:46:42.300
that is literally a violation of the constitution which then gives the president the power to step in
01:46:46.800
and put a stop to it which leads to the emancipation proclamation what's really amazing
01:46:51.540
is in the museum where we're at the emancipation proclamation we have a letter that was written
01:46:59.280
hastily by lincoln and sent to the senate and says stop what you're doing it's not going to work i have
01:47:06.080
a different idea give me some time i'm uh i'm going to go there with tim barton live from the glenn
01:47:14.060
back program blueprints of liberty museum in saint george utah first i want to talk to you a little bit
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about gold line uh gold line is the hedge against insanity people say a hedge against gold is a hedge
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against uh inflation we're way beyond inflation we are in the place where admit it the entire world
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01:47:44.900
and i believe it will um you're going to see a collapse of the dollar and when that happens we
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is glenn to save 10 bucks off blaze tv so we're talking to timothy barton about history and we're
01:48:49.780
going to do a lot of history in the next few days uh as we're here getting ready to celebrate
01:48:54.360
independence day um but we're at the point of john quincy adams he's dead lincoln kind of replaces him
01:49:02.480
as the head of the anti-slavery he becomes pregnant he why not he could he's a man but men can get
01:49:09.980
anyway he becomes president uh and um and uh john quincy adams has a son and as john quincy adams
01:49:22.720
his son is now coming of age he kind of repeats the pattern and plays a very important role
01:49:29.360
in grandpa was the guy who's worked when the independence of the united states the declaration
01:49:36.900
of independence then you have john quincy adams who's a president and a strong abolitionist in
01:49:42.900
congress and then his son yeah well and to speak of john adams is the guy that helped in the american
01:49:48.280
revolution with the peace treaty paris john quincy adams is the guy that helps in the war of 1812 and
01:49:52.880
also a fun side note in the war of 1812 is part of our agreement with england at the end of the war of
01:49:58.700
1812 and both nations america and england at that point had already banned the slave trade and we
01:50:03.840
were adamantly both nations adamantly opposed to the evil of the slave trade and john quincy adams
01:50:08.160
part of his agreement with england to end the war of 1812 is that we would send our navies in
01:50:13.420
collaboration off the coast of africa to turn back any slave ships and try to stop the slave trade from
01:50:18.900
africa nobody ever talks about that that drives me out of my mind we had warships trying to stop the
01:50:26.520
slave trade 1813 it was so it is they get over there in 1819 but then they're they're there from
01:50:32.640
1819 all the way until 1861 when the civil war begins lincoln recalls them back in 1861 to come
01:50:38.980
join the union army to fight against the confederate navy is why the the ships came back from africa that
01:50:44.620
point as the as the civil war unfolds one of the things that the confederates at this point are sending
01:50:51.700
their leaders over into europe they're trying to find allies and they begin courting france and
01:50:57.400
france is pretty close to joining the confederates for all available evidence and the ambassador for
01:51:03.820
the north the union was a guy named charles francis adams the son of john quincy adams and he goes to
01:51:09.700
the actually the the british and the french and says guys you you don't want to do this because i
01:51:16.540
understand they're telling you they're just fighting for their independence it's it's a little more
01:51:20.160
that it's a slavery issue and and he's being told well right these guys are not saying their
01:51:26.100
number one issue slavery their number one issue they're saying is freedom independence from
01:51:29.060
oppression and he says no no this is really about slavery he says just give us a little time he says
01:51:35.460
if you will wait just a few months it will become very clear this is an issue of slavery well they
01:51:40.040
wait a few months and january 1st 1863 the emancipation proclamation comes out where lincoln says all
01:51:45.520
right we're freeing all the slaves from all of the confederate states that are currently in rebellion
01:51:49.580
and when that happens that's when france washes their hands they're like all right we're out we
01:51:54.960
we cannot join in this movement because at this point france is already coming out against slavery
01:51:59.660
as well and they don't want to be supportive of a nation that's fighting to preserve their slaves
01:52:04.040
but literally you have john adams john quincy adams and now charles francis adams who are the ones
01:52:09.480
navigating to help end these wars and all of them are very strong anti-slavery individuals it wasn't
01:52:17.180
rush limbaugh's wife and adams correct yeah isn't that crazy descendants of yeah yeah um all right
01:52:22.680
so let me uh let me go back and uh talk about the emancipation proclamation a bit because congress
01:52:28.780
had already enacted kind of an emancipation if you will and the slaves could be free but it was
01:52:36.080
it was murky and screwed up and then they went back to write it again and we have a letter in the
01:52:43.460
museum from lincoln just hastily written to the senate leader and saying don't adjourn don't
01:52:50.500
adjourn right i'm working on something tell me that story so that was he was working on what was known
01:52:55.580
as the second confiscation act and that is the confiscation acts was a little bit of a precursor
01:53:01.360
to the emancipation proclamation but the idea was because these states are in rebellion um then we have
01:53:06.400
the power and authority to go in and step in and see some of these things which is also
01:53:09.800
for people listening this is where some individuals in the south are like lincoln was a tyrant look at
01:53:15.020
what he did and and even though certainly that could be very tyrannical depending on what your
01:53:20.680
position was in the south because they're they're absolutely indications that there were some people
01:53:24.640
in the south that were thrust in the middle of this that had some of their property confiscated
01:53:29.560
and literally they're like we we weren't even trying to fight you guys right now or there were some
01:53:34.780
confederates who uh once they were captured in a war they were there's some interviews that were
01:53:40.640
done and some of these interviews are worth note where unit officers would ask them you guys seem
01:53:46.380
like honorable people right we're trying to end slavery and yet you're fighting against us why are
01:53:50.260
you doing this and they said well it's because you were on my land and we say that to give a little
01:53:54.660
context because the political position of the south was very clear but not everybody supported that
01:54:00.480
it's a little bit like our and i think not everybody was aware well and and to make the
01:54:05.280
full connection it's like our political leaders today right like do we fully support what president
01:54:10.280
biden or what nancy pelosi or some of our congressional leaders even right now the republicans like do we
01:54:14.840
fully support everything they're doing of course not but they are we go to war with russia how many
01:54:20.020
people that voted for uh joe biden are going to be like yeah absolutely i'm for it i don't think most
01:54:26.860
people on either side know what the hell we're doing over there no and this is i think where there
01:54:31.260
were definitely people in the south that did not support that position but the political leaders
01:54:36.080
were very clear and historically politicians write checks all the time they make their people cash and
01:54:41.000
it's not always great for people cashing the checks however with that being said the document
01:54:44.740
we have is lincoln writing the senate saying guys i know you're about to adjourn stay a little
01:54:50.020
longer i'm working on something it was a second confiscation act it was the update to the first
01:54:53.620
confiscation act saying that those individuals in rebellion that that they can at this point they
01:54:59.040
would forfeit some of their property their possessions well this leads the emancipation
01:55:02.680
proclamation and as we just celebrated june 19th there's many people thinking right well that's when
01:55:09.100
slavery ended well again that's like we have so many dumb historical assessments in america today
01:55:14.080
that's not correct june 19th is when gordon granger a union officer arrived in galveston texas he makes
01:55:21.500
the announcement uh that hey the civil war is over and emancipation proclamation has happened and there
01:55:26.100
were slaves in texas that had not heard any of that news they didn't they didn't know the civil war
01:55:29.900
is over that they were freed so this was an incredible celebration well this is more than two years after
01:55:34.680
the emancipation proclamation came out crazy what's also worth noting about this is that the emancipation
01:55:40.640
proclamation only applied to those states that were actively in rebellion in the civil war and there
01:55:45.000
were some states that had already been retaken by the union before the emancipation
01:55:48.880
proclamation and there were some states that were pro-slavery that had slaves but that supported
01:55:53.920
the union and so the emancipation proclamation did not free all the slaves in america so even june 19th
01:55:59.020
when people say this is what ended slavery no it's not there's a reason we had the 13th amendment
01:56:02.960
and the 13th amendment is what actually ended slavery in america in the sense of what we knew from
01:56:08.680
african slavery no slavery in america in the sense that we knew um of african slavery
01:56:14.580
yes i guess you're technically right in america but not in the uh the the map of america
01:56:24.140
because there's another country several other countries several other countries in our country
01:56:30.380
correct that we always forget about right so one of the things that we as you're alluding to we forget
01:56:35.960
about is there are sovereign nations that live inside the united states of america and those sovereign
01:56:40.080
nations are indian nations and in those so there were several tribes at that point the 1860 census
01:56:45.880
identified there were five major tribes in all those tribes they had african slaves in fact i think
01:56:51.260
it was 13 12 or 13 percent of those those tribes were african slaves uh it was the census data that came
01:56:58.120
out um from i believe it was 1860 is when that's from but the the american government had to do new
01:57:04.520
treaties with those indian tribes to get them to free their slaves after the 13th amendment is passed and
01:57:09.860
ratified and in it we ended up paying those nations essentially we essentially right it's like we
01:57:15.680
bought the slaves and then freed the slaves in american government but even once america ended
01:57:19.400
slavery that's not to your point when slavery exactly ended in the the territory of the united
01:57:25.040
states of america because there were sovereign nations the indian nations that still had slaves
01:57:28.780
but the american government was so set at that point on ending slavery that they were going at that
01:57:33.980
point actively to those tribes saying what can we do let's let's renegotiate and then there were new
01:57:37.880
treaties written saying that there could be no further slavery in those tribes so how long was it
01:57:42.540
before slavery was truly ended in the territorial united states the following year is when they went to
01:57:50.520
those tribes and then the treaty was written several years after but i believe all of all of
01:57:56.300
the slaves had already been freed in that following year so i would say really by 1866
01:58:01.980
is when practically slavery is is ended in america you are going to learn so much history if you come
01:58:10.260
through now if you can't get here that's fine um you can find out all the information at united
01:58:16.980
we pledge.org and i think they're selling walk-up tickets i'm not sure um but uh you're invited to come
01:58:25.380
if you can't come we did a special on blaze tv that takes you through and shows you some of the
01:58:31.840
documents some of the artifacts some things that you probably didn't even know exist that really change
01:58:38.840
history um i want to i'm gonna see if i can get um uh steven mansfield on because he's got a
01:58:48.280
different look at lincoln i i really think it's important that we learn the good side and the bad side
01:58:54.180
of everybody and of every country uh and you know we've done monstrous things in our country
01:59:00.900
um but we've also done some really glorious things mansfield has a book out about lincoln's battle with
01:59:08.600
god and he really was before he uh uh found god or found his way he was really kind of a dark dude
01:59:21.700
wasn't he he lincoln did embrace and really go a very different direction than what he's remembered
01:59:27.780
for in a lot of respects where you've identified before you've talked about it where lincoln grew
01:59:32.120
up in a very abusive home his father was a christian but he was an alcoholic he he beat lincoln he beat
01:59:37.080
the mom and and so when lincoln kind of comes of age and leaves home he decides he's going to be an
01:59:42.680
atheist because he can't stand what his father did and it's if his father represents christianity he
01:59:47.840
wanted nothing to do with it so lincoln ran headlong in the opposite direction and and lincoln
01:59:52.720
becomes an avid outspoken atheist he hates christianity he uh begins visiting brothels has
01:59:59.040
many mental breakdowns uh many of them associated to he thought he because he had been visiting
02:00:04.600
these brothels he thought he had contracted syphilis and was going to die of syphilis and
02:00:07.800
when i mean when you see lincoln it's very evident he was running as far away as he could from what
02:00:13.860
he had heard is what christianity was and that is absolutely not the story we generally get of
02:00:20.100
of lincoln but it's also as you're saying we want to learn the good and bad i mean really what what
02:00:25.620
you're indicating is we want to learn the true story yeah and if it's it's one thing that i think
02:00:30.900
is important too to balance is if we're looking for example at george washington and saying we need to
02:00:34.440
learn the good and bad we'll learn the whole story and if someone says but you're highlighting more
02:00:38.100
good about washington than bad well that's because you're going to find way more good in his life than
02:00:42.020
bad right but and and the bad would have just led to his personal destruction the bad in lincoln
02:00:50.060
really stopped before he uh gained public office and it's not what he did the good is what you
02:00:58.460
remember him for if he were visiting brothels and everything else while he were president it would
02:01:03.380
probably play a bigger important role but you're not held to things of your past if you repent for
02:01:10.360
them right or pay the you know the civil price if you broke the law and that's where as even we
02:01:16.460
navigate history there are some people that say you need to balance it and then say as many good
02:01:20.460
things as bad things and that's just not honest or accurate historically some people had way more
02:01:24.780
bad than good some had way more good than bad but you want to learn the honest story you notice nobody
02:01:28.320
says that about hitler right yeah nobody says what are the good things yeah he invented freeways
02:01:34.740
okay that doesn't really balance anything wasn't he an artist too yeah he was an artist i hear all
02:01:41.660
artists have a dark side well no no not not all artists timothy uh timothy barton from wallbuilders.com
02:01:50.400
they do and just amazing work uh with teachers with education uh history they are really they're my
02:01:59.600
good dear friends and have done so much um unsung good uh and it's a privilege to have you on thank
02:02:09.160
you thank you timothy tim tim tim barton on the glennbeck program from wallbuilders.com
02:02:14.320
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what does it say about the republican party that the next guy
02:04:09.340
down is ron de santis who who is running the most openly fascist campaign open i think i've ever
02:04:15.160
seen and i'm saying that having covered donald trump oh running for president that's the next guy down
02:04:20.800
yeah i mean i suppose if you're inside the santis war room you've got to think of a way to get
02:04:26.280
yourself indicted to get up ahead of donald trump um that's funny you know this just goes to my point
02:04:33.440
that this is what the party wants to be and it's a hard thing for a lot of us who worked in the party
02:04:39.360
to accept that we helped create this model but we did and and this this is very purposeful by the
02:04:47.200
party it's not something they've stumbled into their second choice is a guy who was worse than trump
02:04:53.040
so oh there we go here we go all right that's uh from by the way uh noted homophobe joy reeds
02:04:59.680
program talking what it wants again about now de santis is is worse than trump and this is what
02:05:05.400
happens every single time a republican runs for office we've obviously trump gets the worst of
02:05:10.560
this probably over the past few years but if you go back remember they were calling george w bush a
02:05:14.820
terrorist a terrorist and then giuliani took the lead and he was going to be worse than trump and then
02:05:21.480
mccain got the nomination he was going to be worse than trump and then romney got it and he was going
02:05:26.180
to be worse excuse me than bush and then trump got it and he was the worst and then now de santis is
02:05:31.900
worse than even trump who they've been spending two years telling us he was uniquely horrible
02:05:36.760
for so many reasons and now the new guy who's behind trump in the polls is going to be worse than
02:05:45.740
trump it's the same story over and over and over again and why would anyone believe
02:05:51.420
it we'll have more tomorrow here on the glennbeck program