Do You Trust the Experts Panicking Over the New COVID Variant? | 9⧸5⧸23
Episode Stats
Length
2 hours and 5 minutes
Words per Minute
152.1049
Summary
On this episode of Tuesday Morning Coffee with Glenn Beck: DeSantis rips Biden, the media, and the federal government. Then, a story about how bad things are in Maui, Hawaii and how different things in Florida are than they are in the rest of the country.
Transcript
00:00:00.000
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What you're about to hear is the fusion of entertainment and enlightenment.
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A day for you to call in, tell us exactly what you are thinking, how you are feeling,
00:01:37.980
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00:01:41.820
and ways that we can help you stay more informed.
00:01:45.760
Today is the day to call in, 888-727-BECK, 888-727-BECK.
00:01:52.300
We start, however, in Florida with DeSantis ripping Biden and the media.
00:02:02.980
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00:03:27.180
Seeing what happened in Hawaii just a few weeks ago and East Palestine a few months ago,
00:03:41.480
I think we should have all the answers to that.
00:03:43.720
But it's interesting how incurious our corporate media is about what happened in Maui.
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I mean, I don't see them interviewing parents who can't find their kids and people we know.
00:03:59.540
I mean, really heartbreaking to hear some of the stories, even though they're not being publicized.
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So he goes on to talk about how bad things are in Maui and how different things are in Florida.
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In Florida, we're so fine-tuned that local governments, in some respects,
00:04:21.120
play even more important roles than the state government does.
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The most power, the quickest response should come from the locals, the cities, then the state, then the government.
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But meanwhile, we have something else going on.
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We have homeless people in Wyoming speaking out about the homeless problem in his city,
00:05:04.380
claiming they destroyed a motel and left hundreds of pounds of poop in the streets and the sidewalk.
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200 people, homeless, residing there have created a mess.
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It's third world country stuff happening in Casper.
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He and the city staffers had to clean up 500 pounds of poop downtown.
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He said the homeless population stay in nearby parks or sleep in their cars.
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He said in addition to defecating on the streets, they have destroyed a vacant motel.
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The mayor says that they've been squatting in the former Econo Lodge motel in Casper and caused millions of dollars in damages.
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Trash littered, poop on the floors, furniture scattered.
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The city has condemned the property and now it's been boarded up by the bank.
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Are you questioning whether it's homeless people or whether it's a problem?
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No, I think there's something else that is going on besides.
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Why all of a sudden is everyone pooping in the streets?
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Why is it that they feel they can go into homes or to, you know, motels and just destroy them?
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It seems to me to be connected to another problem that we're having where people in unison run into stores and just start grabbing things.
00:07:07.520
And they start burning cities to the ground and very few of them see any repercussions from that.
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A viral video caught the moment that several women engaged in a vicious cat fight in and around port-a-potties at a Morgan Wallen concert in Pittsburgh.
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Woman gets into the face of another female concert gore, screams, F you, you don't cut in front of me.
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Then they start shoving each other and then they one pushes them the other one in to a port-a-potty and.
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This is from Axios concert goers throwing things at performers, people talking on their cell phones for movies, tourists defacing historic landmarks in pursuit of the perfect selfie.
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The first truly post pandemic summer has shown the bad behaviors unleashed during the stress of covid and they're not slowing down.
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A mix of worsening mental health and decaying societal connections, both exacerbated by the pandemic, may be driving this trend in rude behavior that could extend far beyond covid's upheaval.
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Mental health experts told Axios, though factors, other factors are also at play.
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The pandemic changed us for the first time in anyone's lifetime.
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I guess some were for a while, but that happens all the time.
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You mean as far as every whenever there's a tragedy or like a there's a snowstorm or a natural disaster that happens all the time.
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I do think there was a unique level of stress put on the population by shutting it down for six to nine months.
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Yes, but that's not fighting over toilet paper.
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Maybe it was, you know, one of the things people talked about a lot, but I didn't I mean, people weren't fighting over anything.
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They're all sitting at home until they started burning cities to the ground.
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You know, we were having a conversation about this with some friends.
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We had some friends over the other day and we were all talking about what happened to us.
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There was something that I would have never predicted.
00:10:02.120
I would think that we would all want to go back to work and everything else.
00:10:05.980
All of a sudden, because of pandemic, nobody wanted to go back to work.
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I don't think that I think that has more to do with social media than anything else.
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Everybody is, you know, taking pictures of themselves and their food.
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And, you know, I was watching some some people taking selfies.
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They were up on the big screen at my son's football game and I'm watching them on the big screen.
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And there's these women and they're taking pictures, selfies of themselves as a group.
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And then as soon as the picture is taken, they all just like.
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My wife is quite the picture taker on, you know, Instagram and all these other things.
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And they've developed that thing where they smile at the camera.
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And then as soon as the picture is over, they just go back to normal state.
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It's not at all capturing reality half the time.
00:11:16.360
And that's something that's interesting because it's it's this, you know, this generation of kids
00:11:20.420
are the first ones that really have ever had to deal with that.
00:11:24.880
Like we're in that situation where people now growing up, I guess it'd be now going to probably
00:11:31.100
voting age right now, have been pictures, have had pictures taken of them basically their
00:11:36.980
entire life constantly and with a phone, with a phone and they have popped up and smiled
00:11:43.180
and then they've stopped and they've they've developed essentially an innate sense of when
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to show that they're happy and when to go back to reality.
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It probably is going to screw us all up really badly.
00:12:08.540
Our own, you know, really great sound system in it.
00:12:17.760
You you're driving around, especially these SUVs.
00:12:25.780
And somebody else who's in front of you or beside you is all of a sudden interrupting
00:12:51.200
I mean, how how thirsty are you all the time or don't you?
00:13:02.580
I like I mean, I think these are positive developments mostly, but it does.
00:13:07.440
I mean, I don't think that you had a shared sense of community while you were driving in
00:13:14.240
I just I don't understand what's happening to us.
00:13:20.980
I can understand how we have stopped listening to each other.
00:13:26.280
I can understand how we all just think we're in our own movie.
00:13:32.980
You know, you're constantly taking pictures of yourself and your food and where you are
00:13:40.480
It's not even it's like a different it's not exactly faking it.
00:13:44.680
You know, sometimes some people are doing that, right?
00:13:46.420
Like if you've ever seen those accounts that that document influencers out in the wild.
00:13:51.960
No, I think it's a great trend where you just see someone else taking a picture of the
00:13:57.080
influencer trying to get the perfect shot and they just look like idiots.
00:14:01.300
It's so satisfying because all their pictures, of course, look perfect.
00:14:04.660
But watching them set up for the pictures, watching video of them try to set up, they just look
00:14:14.420
Well, of course, I guess we all are at some level, honestly, at this point.
00:14:20.140
Maybe we're a little different on this one in that I kind of feel like we never have fully
00:14:33.400
But for what happened in the pandemic, like the fact that we just shut the country down
00:14:45.180
Some places it was 18 months or more, you know, doing that to a group of people and
00:14:51.760
then throwing in there what I think one of the first effects of the post pandemic period
00:14:58.600
was the rage that manifested after George Floyd.
00:15:04.000
And we saw a society that all of a sudden was like, well, rule of law is not really that
00:15:10.440
If you have the right opinion, you know, you want to go burn down a city.
00:15:13.800
You want to you want to you want to enter a police station and take it over.
00:15:18.140
We're going to kind of shrug our shoulders at that.
00:15:21.200
And everyone can pretty much go home and we'll say, well, yeah, but racism like that is
00:15:25.840
like those two things together really put us into a weird place.
00:15:31.020
And just, you know, economically and societally, like we have we've paid a heavy price for that,
00:15:38.260
But I don't know that we've paid the full price for it yet.
00:15:46.660
I thought we were on the other opposite sides here.
00:15:48.760
No, I do feel like we just, you know, economically, we're starting to see something on this, you
00:15:57.320
Yes, we kind of are in a proxy war with Russia.
00:15:59.380
But other than that, this should be a time where our deficits are going down and have gone
00:16:04.620
down in every other similar period throughout history.
00:16:11.020
There are certain circumstances where it explodes.
00:16:15.180
Well, here we are with Bidenomics in full flow where we're supposed, everything's, we're told
00:16:23.440
The spending, it was supposed to be a trillion dollars over, you know, what we had.
00:16:30.000
Spending a trillion dollars more than we actually took in.
00:16:39.180
And this doesn't even include what's going to happen with the interest on the debt over
00:16:43.940
a period of time is if these rates stay where they are or go up.
00:16:48.440
I mean, we are really, we are really, we're, we're face planting in a lot of these areas.
00:16:54.560
Let's go to the audience and see if you have something else.
00:17:03.580
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So I was watching something on Redacted, and they talked about Russia putting their nuclear
00:18:47.560
And the Satan 2 missiles are being, I guess, prepared for something, and the media is not
00:18:58.540
And I was wondering what your thoughts are, why the media is not discussing this, and what's
00:19:05.280
the likelihood of us being in a hot war with Russia soon?
00:19:08.880
So I don't, I, you know, I honestly don't know.
00:19:14.280
Here's what my, what do they call it, combat duty?
00:19:31.600
Times like these, to complete fundamental transformations, you need all-out war.
00:19:39.260
If you listen to the fourth turning, if you look at how these things happen in 80-year
00:19:47.180
cycles, or 100-year cycles, you will see that if you go back, it was World War I, and you
00:19:57.580
You go back again, it was the American Revolution.
00:20:01.020
And when you get into these time periods, the way to transform everything is through war.
00:20:12.120
I really fear that there are many people in our government that look at war as a way to
00:20:23.180
solve a lot of problems, to make a fundamental transformation of our nation, of the financial
00:20:36.980
situation that we're in, change our dollar into digital, to take control of the social media
00:20:47.700
All you need is a full-out war, and you can do those things, just the War Powers Act.
00:20:54.940
It, uh, I hope I am wrong, but I, we're one event away from something, and we are racing
00:21:06.700
into nuclear war, racing into it, and I don't, I don't understand why.
00:21:14.260
I've, I've never lived in a time period where the government had no, uh, regard for what
00:21:28.820
I think, I think, you know, people feel like, okay, this could be important, or it's not
00:21:34.580
But very few people are like, yeah, war at all costs, except that's what it seems like our
00:21:51.480
But if there is a regime change here in America, and it goes to the Republicans, especially if
00:22:01.220
it is Donald Trump, I think the, that path will be turned around quickly.
00:22:07.200
It's whether or not something happens between now and then.
00:22:15.740
Today, when you're driving home from work, or to pick up your kids to go get groceries,
00:22:19.780
or whatever it is, I want you to remember something.
00:22:21.660
One of these days, probably not too long from now, something's going to break down in your
00:22:25.860
And when it does, you either have to have deep pockets, or have a coverage plan.
00:22:31.060
Look, I know people are living month to month, uh, paycheck to paycheck, but when something
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catastrophic happens, you need to have car shield.
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Now you can get, this is like health insurance for your car, and you can get it as low as $100
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So, you know, you stop paying, you stop paying, and when you pay, as you keep that going, uh,
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No matter how many claims you file, it'll, won't go up.
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No matter how many miles you put on your car, car shield.
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00:23:47.720
Hey, welcome to 9, 10 a.m. Detroit's News Talk Superstation.
00:23:57.540
Uh, it is, uh, 9, 10 Detroit's News Talk Superstation.
00:24:04.120
Thank you so much for listening to the program and joining us, Detroit.
00:24:09.280
Um, we're talking to, well, first of all, I want to bring Pat in.
00:24:20.900
I mean, I hate seeing these icons from our childhood all dropping over now.
00:24:24.580
And doesn't it feel like we, I mean, I just, when I heard Jimmy Buffett, you hear somebody
00:24:35.040
Jimmy Buffett just seemed to be like somebody who, can we investigate that?
00:24:39.420
Why would it be a surprise for Jimmy Buffett to die, but not Elton John?
00:24:43.000
Because Jimmy Buffett felt like he was going to live forever.
00:24:47.280
He's like on an island, you know, he's going to be 800 years old.
00:24:53.000
It does feel like, that's how I thought this turned out.
00:25:40.800
Any number can be divisible by three if you wait long enough.
00:25:45.740
We're going to John in Ohio, who's a little frustrating.
00:25:50.560
Glenn, I've been a long-time listener for over a decade and love you, but the last couple
00:25:54.960
of months listening to your radio program has been frustrating and leaving me perplexed
00:26:00.160
because you said for a long time that we shouldn't treat our politicians as kings and
00:26:04.560
queens, and you've talked about how humble Truman was when he's left, but listening to
00:26:08.960
your program, it seems that you've put two personalities over what we've always wanted
00:26:13.340
So, with Trump, it's been almost like we've already coronated him, and why have the primary?
00:26:22.000
And there's also no reason to say that maybe he's so mad that he would be the strong man
00:26:26.440
you worry about, using the deep state to exact revenge on his enemies, or just use this campaign
00:26:35.800
And then on the other end, it seems at times that you've treated your radio program as
00:26:39.760
an in-kind contribution to Vivek, who I did listen on Friday, but his answers were almost
00:26:46.460
And then there's also questions about, well, is he really running to run, or is he running
00:26:50.480
to elevate his own profile, and elevate the money in his own stocks with the companies
00:26:56.520
But meanwhile, there's a guy in Florida who's been everything we've ever wanted with originalist,
00:27:01.500
conservative values, in line with the heart of the founders ever since Reagan's left.
00:27:07.120
But listening to your program, it's almost been like two personalities, and it's sounded
00:27:12.000
at times as an in-kind contribution for all of those guys.
00:27:15.580
Well, I'm sorry that you feel that way, because it's really not.
00:27:21.140
I started the show with DeSantis and nobody else.
00:27:25.580
I think the problem comes from us talking about what is in the news, what's happening.
00:27:35.560
I am working really hard not to lean one way or another.
00:27:40.300
I have my own views on DeSantis being president, Vivek being president, Trump being president.
00:27:46.600
I have my own views, but I think 80% of the audience would be surprised by what I think.
00:27:58.540
There is no in-kind contribution happening on this program.
00:28:06.660
And the things that you brought up on each of them, I think, are true and should be weighed
00:28:18.880
You're saying the problems with some of the candidates and concerns.
00:28:29.720
You're bringing up a dumb point that's not true.
00:28:31.600
And I love you, and you're great, and I love you.
00:28:33.680
I'm sure you're a great listener, and I appreciate you sticking around, but none of that's true.
00:28:45.060
Right, if you really like Ron DeSantis, which, by the way, I believe all three of us really
00:28:50.660
I think he'd be a great president if he winds up winning this.
00:28:53.180
So I have nothing disparaging at all to say about DeSantis.
00:28:56.700
I think he's been an incredible, not even a good governor, an incredible governor.
00:29:01.220
I think he's one of the best governors, politicians I have seen come around in my lifetime.
00:29:09.160
And see, now you're going to get a call from a Trump supporter saying, why are you all about
00:29:14.480
And this is why you have to understand what it's like to be, you know, to do a show like
00:29:19.720
That's why I always say primary season is the dumbest season.
00:29:24.100
It's like everyone loses their mind and acts like every word you say is some dig, some
00:29:29.720
secret dig against another candidate or whatever.
00:29:32.600
Look, you were very hard on Vivek the other day.
00:29:35.540
Many of the questions that we talked about in a previous meeting before talking about
00:29:39.180
Vivek came from people who don't like Vivek, not on the air.
00:29:44.720
I think he's, you know, he was on the show beforehand.
00:29:47.360
I think he has a lot to add to the conversation.
00:29:49.620
I think the criticisms that the caller brought up are legitimate.
00:29:53.640
You know what isn't legitimate is that he's too smooth or too good.
00:30:02.140
So you're going to punish him because he's well-spoken, well-thought-out, intelligent,
00:30:12.120
If he's too liberal, that's what you should be going after.
00:30:22.360
That's an in-kind contribution to Vivek's contribution.
00:30:34.020
I'm still waiting to hear because I want to get Vivek on the air and ask him the questions
00:30:41.700
He's one of those guys, and this is the thing I think people like about him as a candidate.
00:30:50.220
He's been on nine million shows, and he likes doing it that way.
00:30:58.560
If Ted Cruz could speak like Vivek, he'd be president right now.
00:31:03.780
And I think somebody else who is really, really smooth is DeSantis.
00:31:11.420
It doesn't have the same style, but he is really good.
00:31:14.980
The guy just doesn't make foot-in-your-mouth kind of comments very often.
00:31:26.200
I thought he made a couple of things, and I was like, oh, wow, that wasn't good.
00:31:29.760
Yeah, I think with Vivek, which maybe this caller was pointing out, and I've heard this
00:31:33.880
from multiple people, is he sort of does feel at times like he's the smart guy you know
00:31:40.000
from work who said something that's not right and keeps thinking he can talk his way out
00:31:46.480
He feels like he can constantly talk his way out of everything.
00:31:49.420
And eventually, people around you at work kind of roll their eyes at that.
00:31:54.920
Where, like, I think DeSantis and his style, and Trump and his style, certainly seem much
00:31:59.180
more like they're just talking off the top of their heads.
00:32:02.020
Where it feels at times with Vivek that the answer is so well-prepared that it almost seems
00:32:07.540
like it can't just be coming off the top of his head.
00:32:11.220
I think that is amazing that we would look at somebody who is super, super smart.
00:32:22.340
Look at somebody who is that put together and that smart.
00:32:26.120
And I understand, because I think he comes off, you know, his smiles and everything else.
00:32:32.220
He can come off like a car salesman at times, okay?
00:32:41.260
It's not that the car salesman is so much smarter than everybody else on the lot.
00:32:51.280
Like, he is really, really a reasoned, probably genius.
00:33:00.360
But, I mean, it makes him somebody who doesn't ever say, um.
00:33:06.880
I mean, you know, Donald Trump went to Wharton, as he points out often.
00:33:19.520
And, look, I think what I keep coming back to is it's not our job to be everybody's dad
00:33:28.680
I think we all kind of come to the conclusion that all these people are better than Joe Biden.
00:33:41.200
I mean, I don't think he'd be a good president.
00:33:43.360
But he'd be a heck of a lot better than what we're dealing with right now.
00:33:48.460
Yeah, it's hard to feel inspired about that point.
00:33:51.020
As I'm thinking about it, I'm like, wow, he is so bad.
00:33:55.780
A bowl of Campbell's soup would be better than Joe Biden.
00:34:06.500
It is this whole deep state has just taken root and is just chugging.
00:34:15.860
Who is it that has the best plan for taking on the deep state?
00:34:23.440
And part of me says Donald Trump because Donald Trump's just a wrecking ball.
00:34:31.640
It's true, but it thrived while he was president, clearly.
00:34:37.040
I mean, it's hard to argue the other side of that.
00:34:38.060
But he has also told me that he didn't understand how deep it was.
00:34:44.200
But he also is a little scary on that because, you know, I mean, a surgical knife would be better than nitroglycerin.
00:34:54.600
And I think the argument on the DeSantis side, I'm sure this is what the caller, who clearly was a DeSantis supporter, was bringing up is, you know, I think DeSantis has had that surgical approach in Florida.
00:35:04.920
I mean, he's gone after these specific prosecutors.
00:35:09.040
He's gone after certain companies and the giveaways that they've had, obviously Disney being the highest profile example there.
00:35:17.860
And Vivek has a very bold, I mean, some people think it's a way over the top bold plan going into the Oval Office as well.
00:35:29.600
Some argue that, you know, that some of his plans don't necessarily fall on the right side of the constitutional balance.
00:35:39.020
Look, if you are, the problem is the administrative state.
00:35:42.060
So which candidate is going to cut the administrative state and give the power back to Congress?
00:35:50.800
The best argument I have heard is, wait, if I'm the administrator, I'm the head of the administrative state.
00:35:59.780
So all these cabinet agencies, they all work for me.
00:36:17.180
That, I think, that should be decided by the Supreme Court.
00:36:20.380
If the president can't fire people in his own agencies where he is the head, who do they work for?
00:36:48.100
You can hear his podcast on Blaze TV or wherever you get your podcast or live on Blaze.
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I want to talk to you about real estate agents I trust.
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This is a company that I started with Robert, who we grew up together.
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And we were both frustrated about real estate and buying and selling houses.
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And, you know, how do you find a great real estate agent?
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Started doing work with the 500 best real estate agents in the country.
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And I started asking them questions after a few years just getting to know these people.
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There really is a step-by-step kind of formula.
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If you really want to be great, there are best practices.
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And so these are the things that we look for in real estate agents.
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Somebody that, you know, you can do a deal on a handshake.
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You might have a contract, but they're handshake people.
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That's where you should go if you're buying or selling a house across the street or across the country.
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If you're someone who takes shooting seriously, you know that getting good requires a heck of a lot of practice.
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And a lot of practice means a lot of money on ammunition, on range fees, on all sorts of stuff.
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00:40:03.180
Hey, just real quick, you and I do have a lot in common.
00:40:11.160
And you graduated high school with my brother, Glenn.
00:40:26.800
Well, so when I initially got on, I wanted to go in a specific direction.
00:40:30.480
But the previous conversation took me to a completely different area.
00:40:34.440
And it has more to do with, you know, what social media is doing to people and the strategy
00:40:40.320
for being able to not only win the White House, but really understanding what is going to happen
00:40:46.040
if Trump gets acquitted of anything or even wins the presidency.
00:40:51.000
And this goes back to what you talked about prior to the last election and the plans that
00:40:58.580
And the reality is what they're going to have this time, I would guess you would agree with
00:41:04.440
this, is going to be tenfold, the amount of riots and violence and everything they're
00:41:11.720
And I honestly think that what they're doing to Trump right now can play into our favor
00:41:16.640
if we as a conservative group and Republicans spent more time, or I should say, be more nuanced.
00:41:27.860
In other words, one, we've got to get Trump to stop bashing DeSantis because that's not
00:41:41.200
And even though I don't agree with her on Ukraine, I'll even put Nikki Haley in there
00:41:47.200
Because if we can get attention on them and take a lot of it off of Trump, I honestly believe
00:41:54.300
it's going to take away a lot of the energy and steam that the left is using to persecute
00:41:59.540
Trump and get it focused elsewhere and get the American people focused elsewhere.
00:42:07.120
Eric, I want you to hold on for a second because I would like you to go to where you are
00:42:30.280
It is a high-tech, easy-to-use system that is widely used now by the military, and it helps
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How steady is the gun when you start to pull the trigger?
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in real time what is happening and then how to correct that.
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Is the fusion of entertainment and enlightenment
00:44:18.760
Hello America, welcome to the Glenn Beck Program
00:44:56.980
The very last thing you want to be worried about
00:45:01.060
Are going to have enough food to make it through
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It's better to have emergency food and not need it
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Fortunately, the place to go is my Patriot Supply
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They are the nation's leader in high-quality emergency food
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The other callers kind of shifted me in a different direction
00:46:30.760
And you have a unique ability to bring people together
00:46:44.380
It's a little bit more difficult to create that movement
00:46:52.140
And yes, obviously because you're a conservative
00:46:56.120
There are going to be some people that just are not going to listen to you
00:47:03.220
The people that have the eyes and ears to see and hear
00:47:43.020
If we can get them focused on what you're doing
00:47:46.340
It can be a distraction away from what they're trying to do with Trump
00:47:53.340
If he would again have the maturity to get off of DeSantis
00:47:58.400
He could then start to gain even better headway with independents
00:48:16.820
And I don't like charging people an arm and a leg
00:48:23.420
To be able to go and see something or do something
00:48:29.840
I don't know where we're going to come down on this
00:48:32.620
But we are in talks of doing something next year
00:48:36.160
Probably as many as 10 or 12 stops around the country
00:48:48.780
Just going back to something you talked about on Friday
00:49:08.420
And, you know, going through those first three steps
00:49:10.900
And, you know, I think that's where our country is
00:49:23.100
They could care less about, you know, their neighbor
00:49:31.460
And, you know, if we could get back to what it is
00:49:42.300
And, you know, listening to what Oliver Anthony had to say
00:50:35.020
And that's what, you know, I think we need to get back to
01:25:15.060
what you're about to hear is the fusion of entertainment and enlightenment
01:25:35.600
hello america welcome to the glenbeck program mark meadows has just pleaded not
01:25:42.980
guilty and the georgia election case we'll have more on that coming up in just a second also i
01:25:50.260
really want to talk to you we're going to get right to the phones 888-727-BECK we begin in 60 seconds
01:25:58.080
first let me tell you there is a growing alarm the gdp data has been revised downwards the jobs
01:26:07.300
revised downwards biden uh bidenomics is all that we told you it would be it's wonderful isn't it
01:26:18.200
the federal reserve is now saying had the guts to come out this weekend and say you know with the
01:26:27.360
with the job numbers actually going down and the price of things going up and people not having
01:26:34.580
savings and living you know hand to mouth this is actually reason we may not have to increase
01:26:43.320
the interest rates in other words what they've said is we've destroyed enough jobs and destroyed
01:26:49.500
enough wealth in the average person that maybe we don't have to keep destroying it
01:26:55.660
that's that's what they're doing and i have to tell you if we go to war or we have some really bad
01:27:04.620
shock you're going to see our dollar take a nosedive already today we just got news that
01:27:11.300
our deficit is twice the number that we thought it was you know we have a debt a u.s debt but the
01:27:19.080
deficit is the yearly debt how much money are we taking in how much are we spending and then what's
01:27:26.560
the deficit joe biden with bidenomics said oh it's going to be a trillion dollars and that's a good
01:27:32.620
thing celebrate no as it turns out now it's two trillion dollars this year not a trillion so we've
01:27:41.020
doubled that what do you think that's going to do please call goldline now help them or let them help
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all right let me go right to the phones rosa in california hello rosa hi how are you i'm very good
01:28:38.680
so i am so freaking honored uh to finally talk to you i always uh um imagined me um dragging you into
01:28:49.900
this mission i had in california when i came here as an immigrant as a dutch farmer who saved the world
01:28:57.400
starting in la i always thought i would share my american dream with you but never i thought it would be
01:29:05.460
when it turned into this california nightmare so you came from uh holland uh you're a dutch farmer
01:29:14.520
why did you come here and when oh that was in the beginning it was love no when i was eight years old
01:29:22.600
ronald reagan said let's make america great again and i had a box of country and western records that i
01:29:31.220
always listened to and i wanted to be an american cowgirl and a little bit i know yeah so you moved
01:29:37.420
to california and california was i would imagine fairly good for a while when did you start to
01:29:44.900
question your move when i uh thought it was cool as an agricultural activist and accidental city farmer
01:29:56.360
at that point um garcetti dragged me into some green new deal bs um stuff i realized i was being used
01:30:09.560
to play the green card and it was kind of um i was interviewed for the la times about how i obtained the
01:30:19.200
url make america great again dot com and um they turned it into this hit piece when i didn't want to
01:30:28.100
play that i was this bernie sanders babe and um they turned the end of the article into that i was some
01:30:38.700
crazy white trash trump supporting butcher that would butcher my own favorite sheep which wasn't even
01:30:46.500
true but it was kind of a revenge of those people on the la times so you were the original owner of
01:30:54.880
make america great dot com no strange enough i got it before trump got elected i got it in september
01:31:03.160
i got it from a lady who was the original owner uh she had it for two years she was a lady who
01:31:10.700
in the midwest and she put it on ebay and i found out through some back record my brother was a
01:31:18.600
professional hacker so i learned to think are too looking the back record um and i found i was kind
01:31:27.740
of this hidden auction that i thought i got like into and i thought it was super cool that i was playing
01:31:34.660
with the big guys and i was there uh waiting for the day and nothing happened in the 10 minutes before
01:31:42.480
the auction on ebay was over and i ended up being impatient i actually had an inspector i was trying
01:31:49.940
to fight for the city farm with eric garcetti actually the court case i mentioned i i had an
01:31:56.780
inspector outside and i thought these people need to bust a move because i want to know who's going to own
01:32:01.820
this website so i do something there and show my projects to save the day and help people and
01:32:10.620
homeless sheep wagons and the the clue the cheap solutions to fixing homeless problems and that
01:32:17.160
la can't afford so anyway long story short i ended up bidding five thousand dollars that i didn't have
01:32:24.320
you can read all this in the la times look up my my name and and farmer and and then it happened
01:32:31.800
that i owned it and my whole family neighbors everybody turned against me just for owning the
01:32:37.760
website did you sell it to trump no i've been sitting on it and people call me crazy i lost my
01:32:44.760
friends family my home everything over it and i'm hustling with my kids on the street but we're on a
01:32:51.320
mission and we can't we have dual citizenship we can go back to spain or where i grew up or to holland
01:32:57.700
and that's what we'll do eventually but first i do want to show them and that was my main question
01:33:04.600
to you like so much time i've been trying to teach them the art of never giving up right go for it
01:33:11.680
and i've had so much loss and they've seen me suffering so much basically since since they were
01:33:19.460
born it was not good for them the situation and then we lost her home in 2018 living with them in a
01:33:26.940
car on the streets in la and now i want to teach them the art of giving up like how do you do that
01:33:33.460
they're like 10 and 11 and how do you switch to that and how do you actually bow out so let me let me
01:33:43.780
see see see if i have this right um you are um you've taught your kids not to give up now you
01:33:55.020
want to teach your kids that it's okay sometimes to give up um do i have that right yeah but still
01:34:02.900
i don't want to leave america you know i i was taught to leave a place at least the same or preferably
01:34:09.460
better than how you find it right and i don't want to leave this place with all my plans and dreams and
01:34:15.480
people that invested and helped from all over the world and in the background have been supporting me
01:34:21.200
and waiting for me to to expose you know this corruption i've been doing and hey well i want
01:34:27.540
to show that but i don't need to be in america if we have dual citizenship and we can go back to
01:34:33.460
europe so we can do it remotely all right rosa uh thank you for your call i think um it's a very
01:34:52.640
and the reason i named it that is because one of my heroes is orson wells
01:35:03.380
at eight years old i listened to war the worlds and i listened to the shadow which starred orson wells
01:35:09.940
and i loved his ability to paint with his mouth he could he painted pictures with the words that he
01:35:21.680
spoke and i always i just was fascinated by him from eight and the more i learned about him
01:35:30.500
the more i learned don't ever give up don't ever say it can't be done
01:35:51.940
uh biggest star on broadway biggest star on radio 23 years old
01:36:01.260
he was pretty much he had set his course for the rest of his life being kind of a disaster
01:37:05.600
every time somebody has said that to me in my life
01:37:22.600
you can't keep beating the same drum over and over again
01:37:50.120
judy wrote in about her experience with a relief factor
01:57:06.840
schizophrenic yes wow teach my students i teach
01:57:38.460
capstones uh save they do it real world capstones
01:57:44.900
thousands of dollars so it's great it is it works
01:57:48.460
yeah so i think i think we need to to to uh make
01:57:53.020
our own way instead of responding with the environment
01:57:56.120
and with social justice i want us to stop responding
01:57:59.940
and find good conservative solutions and common ground
01:58:04.460
because we americans are the best at innovation
01:58:08.800
so what is the best way to get this message out
01:58:22.820
don't really understand that that's not common sense to a lot of people
01:58:31.100
and it's it's really not um especially when it comes to
01:58:36.260
uh things like what you're what you're talking about we
01:58:39.660
are very good at innovation um when our back is against the wall
01:58:45.320
we're usually at our best but we have we have somehow or another
01:58:51.180
perverted this um and i think it's all due to politics
01:59:00.340
just all grab on to one solution because it's the state solution
01:59:05.560
and science says when i think the average person
01:59:11.080
is totally cool with you know uh solar panels wind power
01:59:17.300
everything else if it worked but it doesn't work
01:59:25.320
yet um and i think because of the politics involved with it
01:59:31.640
you have global warming this is why they're screaming that we have 10 years to
01:59:38.760
people just to be so afraid that they don't think
01:59:41.740
because if it's a hundred year problem which it is
01:59:44.680
just quantum computing will solve many of these problems
01:59:49.700
and that's right that's here now that's here now
02:00:03.440
and if you really cared you would be going for nuclear power
02:00:08.260
and you'd be making hydrogen at night when the power load is down
02:00:12.680
i mean the the the answers are simple which leads you to believe that no one's
02:00:18.060
really looking for answers and so i think that um
02:00:23.340
uh trying to trying to um get people to stop living in fear
02:00:29.660
and start looking at um truth i mean that's i mean i think that's the only way we make a difference
02:00:39.620
i agree too and i think there's a there is something to be said about constantly being
02:00:44.660
on defense on so many issues i think the environment is one of them
02:00:47.940
where a lot of times conservatives are just like well we don't think fossil fuels are that bad of a problem
02:00:52.580
and that doesn't advance anything i i think um one of the i the candidate who i think is speaking
02:00:58.220
most clearly and effectively on this right now is vivek ramaswamy
02:01:01.160
who i who addresses this really well and it's important to understand that if we can kind of
02:01:07.380
change the framing of this constantly the the environmental debate is about human impact
02:01:12.700
what is the human impact of of our policies where the debate should be about human flourishing
02:01:18.460
how do we how do we make uh the lives of human beings more uh you know extended and and and happy
02:01:30.180
and bountiful and and how do we how do we make this whole situation better for people not how do we
02:01:37.080
make it less bad for the earth which is like a you know you know it's a rock floating through space
02:01:42.020
here but it's not it's not a person it's not they try to make it into this mother earth it's not
02:01:47.000
actually a mother right like yes it's important that we sustain the you know the environment and we
02:01:53.000
we do all these things we want clean air we want clear water why do we want those things because we
02:01:56.720
want our children to be able to breathe and drink clean things and and and i think that i think
02:02:02.840
that's clear when you look at conservative for instance hunters they are the best uh at wildlife
02:02:10.460
preservation and everything else they care about the balance we should stop demonizing each other
02:02:16.100
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02:03:32.340
welcome to the glenn beck program we're glad you're here so what was the reason you did the
02:03:37.660
show like this today just taking calls um a i learned in uh 2015 2016 listen to the audience
02:03:46.980
um uh second um it's weird so much is going on but i i didn't know that i had anything to add
02:03:58.280
that was of real value today i looked at all these things i could have done three shows on the things
02:04:04.220
that i had prepped but it just didn't feel right and i want to listen to the audience
02:04:08.360
is that something you think is important going forward should we do this more often
02:04:12.660
yeah well we we've done this yeah have you been around have you been listening yeah on and off we should
02:04:18.260
do it once a week i think we should maybe once every two weeks but every especially as things start
02:04:24.360
to get a little crazy in the in the primary because we we always go crazy in primaries everybody
02:04:29.500
starts to turn against each other and that's yeah you know i think you know some caller said this
02:04:34.620
early on you know we can't have these guys beating each other up and i think that's true i don't know
02:04:41.300
what benefit it does for us no i know what it does for them yeah i know what it does for politicians
02:04:45.000
and donations and all that crap i don't know what it does for the country no there's there's enough
02:04:48.680
to uh to stand against we should unite as much as we possibly can at this point see the differences
02:04:55.740
but know that we're all in this together as one