The Glenn Beck Program - April 27, 2022


Elon Musk vs. the World | Guests: Rob Collins & Riaz Patel | 4⧸27⧸22


Episode Stats

Length

2 hours and 4 minutes

Words per Minute

159.63023

Word Count

19,824

Sentence Count

1,921

Misogynist Sentences

15

Hate Speech Sentences

26


Summary

Glenn Beck and Stu discuss the crazy housing market, the rise and fall of the stock market, and the growing number of cyber criminals targeting victims of home title fraud. Plus, a story about a public school teacher teaching students about the subculture of furries.


Transcript

00:00:00.000 Let me talk about the housing market a little bit.
00:00:01.480 You know, the housing market has been going crazy.
00:00:03.840 I have a friend who had 15 showings in the first day when they put their house on the
00:00:08.680 market and had two offers over their asking price by a pretty significant amount.
00:00:13.080 I mean, the market is still going crazy, at least here in Texas.
00:00:15.840 I don't know if that's still holding up everywhere, but in Texas it is.
00:00:19.080 And one of the side effects of this is your equity is more and more and more.
00:00:25.220 You have more equity, which is great, typically, unless, of course, you're a victim of home
00:00:29.240 title fraud.
00:00:29.980 This makes you a real target for home title fraud because the more equity we have, you
00:00:35.360 have, the bigger the payday is for the cyber criminal who's stealing your home title.
00:00:40.480 It's something you do not want to go through.
00:00:42.240 You do not want to try to unwind this with the banks and insurance companies and local
00:00:45.800 governments and all this other stuff.
00:00:47.420 So go to hometitlelock.com and read testimonials from FBI agents and government officials.
00:00:52.340 See if this is right for you.
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00:01:02.120 Mention Stu to get the listener discount is hometitlelock.com.
00:01:05.640 Got no room to compromise.
00:01:30.640 What you are about to hear is the fusion of entertainment and enlightenment.
00:01:56.540 This is the Glenn Beck Program.
00:02:02.540 Hello, America.
00:02:04.720 Between the freedom of speech and the upside down, inside out world that we live in, we've
00:02:13.360 got a lot to talk about today.
00:02:16.640 We begin with what's being taught in our schools in 60 seconds.
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00:03:48.020 So, Stu, there was a story, and I want to see if you have much on this.
00:03:53.660 There was a story from Austin where a second grade teacher at a public school district was
00:04:00.360 teaching students about the subculture of furries.
00:04:04.840 Okay?
00:04:05.840 Yeah.
00:04:06.460 All right.
00:04:06.980 Okay, so the parents found out through flyers or second graders at the Austin Independent School District
00:04:12.760 learned about youth subcultures from goths to furries and many more.
00:04:18.840 This is happening during the second week of April.
00:04:21.480 One worksheet was titled Design Your Fursona, and students were asked if their fursona were male, female, or non-binary.
00:04:32.680 Now, Austin ISD said this isn't in their curriculum.
00:04:35.920 They have no information on it.
00:04:37.220 Right.
00:04:37.720 Is this true?
00:04:38.840 It does seem to be false, actually, this one.
00:04:41.380 There is a former Reddit community that, like, basically tries to hoax the media and come out with, I think it's called R-Drama.
00:04:51.760 Like, they want to create drama, basically.
00:04:53.460 So, they made false flyers.
00:04:56.400 So, this would be fake news.
00:04:59.600 This seems to be fake news.
00:05:01.020 From the left or from the right?
00:05:06.520 I don't know if they have an ideology or if they just like to create drama, but it does seem like some of this is not true.
00:05:17.480 Okay.
00:05:18.480 Which is, I guess, I mean, it doesn't mean that we haven't seen this exact type of thing in 20 other places, but this particular flyer.
00:05:24.880 That's good.
00:05:25.420 But I want you to know, I looked into furries.
00:05:29.780 You did?
00:05:30.020 Yeah.
00:05:30.420 Yeah.
00:05:30.920 And there is actually.
00:05:31.840 Is that something you want to admit on the radio?
00:05:33.760 Do you know who we're on?
00:05:34.660 No, it's just science, man.
00:05:36.280 I'm a science.
00:05:37.220 I'm a doctor, man.
00:05:39.000 You are a doctor.
00:05:40.080 That's true.
00:05:41.260 So, the furry fiesta did a.
00:05:45.760 Hmm?
00:05:46.380 Is that a site you frequent or is that?
00:05:48.400 No, I think that's a festival of furries.
00:05:51.700 Okay.
00:05:52.560 They did a survey of furries.
00:05:56.840 And furries are basically people that dress up like animals.
00:05:59.860 Let's not pretend you don't know what furries are.
00:06:02.760 Is that to explain it to the audience?
00:06:04.680 Obviously, I'm well-versed in the world of furries.
00:06:07.300 But is that basically what it is?
00:06:09.140 You're like, do you dress up like a mascot?
00:06:10.400 I think it's more than that.
00:06:12.820 You identify as a mascot.
00:06:15.180 As a mascot.
00:06:16.640 Okay.
00:06:16.880 Okay.
00:06:17.260 All right.
00:06:17.620 Okay.
00:06:18.260 So, these are the questions and the answers.
00:06:23.460 And now let's just see if we needed a survey to figure out a lot of these things.
00:06:28.260 Okay.
00:06:29.160 How much of the furry fandom is Therian, Otherkin, Brony, or Human?
00:06:39.080 Now, I didn't know you were going to break down the furries because I'm a little loose on the furry thing already.
00:06:45.780 You know what I mean?
00:06:46.500 Well, I think I got it.
00:06:48.820 So, I think I know two of those terms.
00:06:50.760 Okay.
00:06:50.900 Go ahead.
00:06:51.400 Go ahead.
00:06:51.600 Human.
00:06:52.760 Okay.
00:06:53.300 Good.
00:06:53.440 I think I know that one.
00:06:54.220 You know that one.
00:06:54.980 All right.
00:06:55.220 I have heard of the term brony before, which I believe are male fans of My Little Pony.
00:07:02.260 Like, you're a bro and you're a fan of My Little Pony.
00:07:05.060 Yes.
00:07:05.600 Okay.
00:07:05.840 Yes?
00:07:06.080 Where friendship is magic.
00:07:08.120 It is magic.
00:07:08.820 Okay.
00:07:09.220 It is.
00:07:09.540 All right.
00:07:09.860 So, the data shows that you find about one in five furries will self-identify as Therian,
00:07:21.120 which is somebody who describes themselves as a particular species of animal.
00:07:30.540 So, they are, I'm a wolf.
00:07:33.340 I'm a Therian.
00:07:34.280 I'm not just a furry.
00:07:36.400 I'm a Therian.
00:07:37.460 So, you're a specific type.
00:07:39.500 You're not just like.
00:07:40.040 I am not cheating with other animals.
00:07:42.220 I am strictly wolf.
00:07:44.500 Obviously.
00:07:45.140 Okay.
00:07:45.300 All right.
00:07:46.340 20 to 25% of furries also self-identify as a brony, where friendship is magic.
00:07:56.260 Finally, 65% of the sample checked human.
00:08:02.840 Hmm.
00:08:03.280 Now, here's where it gets interesting.
00:08:06.340 A test revealed they just broke it out in different ways.
00:08:10.760 69.5% of non-Therians check the human box, but only 43% of Therians check the box.
00:08:22.280 So, in other words, if you're a wolf and only a wolf, you're less likely to claim you're
00:08:27.560 a human, too.
00:08:29.980 Okay?
00:08:30.480 Okay.
00:08:30.820 I think that's really crucial.
00:08:32.840 Therians are more likely to identify as members of non-human animal species, less likely to
00:08:38.780 self-identify as humans.
00:08:40.640 So, I just want to throw that out there so you know.
00:08:43.160 Okay.
00:08:43.700 Now, what is the relationship status of most furries?
00:08:52.520 I mean.
00:08:54.260 I don't know.
00:08:55.120 That's a good question.
00:08:55.760 I would assume it's.
00:08:56.560 6.5% are in a master pet relationship.
00:09:00.840 Okay.
00:09:01.340 Master pet.
00:09:02.960 Polyamorous, 5.8.
00:09:05.580 An open relationship.
00:09:07.760 I don't know.
00:09:08.260 Maybe you're.
00:09:09.940 I don't know.
00:09:10.960 Chris Rock, look out.
00:09:12.580 I'm just saying.
00:09:13.880 A furry might come and slap you across the face if you say anything about their pet.
00:09:18.040 Anyway, polyamorous, 5.8.
00:09:19.920 Open relationship, 6.9.
00:09:22.260 Common law, 0.3.
00:09:25.640 Married.
00:09:26.220 I'm surprised that's so low.
00:09:27.520 I know.
00:09:28.240 Married, 5.8.
00:09:29.820 Engage, 5.4.
00:09:31.120 Dating, 25.
00:09:33.080 And a surprising 56% are single.
00:09:37.720 Really?
00:09:38.420 Yeah.
00:09:39.060 Yeah.
00:09:39.640 Yeah.
00:09:40.080 Now, remember, dating is an option.
00:09:43.540 So, over half of the furries aren't even dating.
00:09:47.380 They're just single and alone.
00:09:49.560 This is stunning.
00:09:51.140 Right?
00:09:51.820 I thought so.
00:09:52.940 I thought so.
00:09:54.000 The living accommodations of the average furry.
00:09:59.460 Let's see.
00:10:00.280 We have.
00:10:00.980 Is there a category for under bridge?
00:10:03.980 No, there's not.
00:10:04.780 Okay.
00:10:04.900 15% of furries live alone.
00:10:08.140 Wait.
00:10:08.360 If you said furries, are they angry?
00:10:10.220 Sorry.
00:10:10.580 Sorry.
00:10:10.900 Furries live alone.
00:10:13.180 Okay.
00:10:13.580 But the majority live?
00:10:19.640 With their parents.
00:10:20.260 With their parents.
00:10:20.940 Absolutely.
00:10:21.460 All right.
00:10:21.680 Yes.
00:10:21.980 Okay.
00:10:22.180 I know.
00:10:23.040 Okay.
00:10:23.500 I mean, you know, I just wanted to say.
00:10:25.020 Now, they said that that's because, you know, these guys are, you know, I mean, these
00:10:29.620 furries are, you know, in their 20s and sometimes early 30s and, you know, they're going to college
00:10:38.320 and they're caring for their wonderful.
00:10:40.920 See, are they their parents, though?
00:10:43.080 Hmm.
00:10:43.700 Well, if they are an animal, are their parents also animals or are they just a human gave birth
00:10:52.920 to an animal?
00:10:53.680 Don't make fun of this.
00:10:54.720 This is science, man.
00:10:56.060 This is a legitimate question.
00:10:56.720 This is science.
00:10:58.500 Okay.
00:10:58.760 You don't have the answer to it.
00:11:00.040 That's why you're avoiding the question.
00:11:01.340 So do these people have a full-time job?
00:11:04.640 Okay.
00:11:05.640 People who identify as, you know, an animal.
00:11:09.340 Do they have a full-time job?
00:11:11.760 Shockingly, only 30% have a full-time job.
00:11:16.460 23% have part-time, but 35% have full-time education going for them.
00:11:23.540 Okay.
00:11:24.120 So that's good.
00:11:25.300 22% completely unemployed.
00:11:27.380 Now, let's look at that as a part of the population.
00:11:31.600 Okay.
00:11:32.940 22% unemployed.
00:11:36.000 I think that's a little higher than the average rate, but that just could be me.
00:11:40.840 Now, does post-secondary education, does that play a role in freedom?
00:11:47.520 Apparently, yes.
00:11:49.600 So in other words, if you go to college, you're more likely to become a furry.
00:11:55.860 Again, a surprising result of this test.
00:12:00.340 I didn't see that coming.
00:12:02.440 I didn't see that coming.
00:12:04.240 Now, the political orientation of the furry population.
00:12:11.020 What do you think?
00:12:14.220 It's going to shock you.
00:12:15.480 Green Party?
00:12:17.060 Quite socially liberal.
00:12:18.600 Yes.
00:12:18.780 Really?
00:12:19.100 Yes, yes, yes.
00:12:21.820 Almost all furries own pets, which is strange, really.
00:12:26.860 Yeah, wait.
00:12:27.560 So are they pets?
00:12:29.040 Are they equals?
00:12:30.300 Exactly.
00:12:31.260 Can you own a pet if you're a furry?
00:12:34.040 And how does that go with the master pet relationship?
00:12:36.760 Which one's the pet?
00:12:37.600 Which one's the master?
00:12:38.520 And if you're a furry owning a pet, isn't that slavery?
00:12:41.360 I think it is.
00:12:42.760 It is.
00:12:43.280 And if you're not a vegan, you're also a cannibal.
00:12:48.520 Past psychological research.
00:12:50.800 Now, here it is.
00:12:51.740 How much fantasy do furries engage in?
00:12:54.560 Past psychological research suggests that fantasy engagement is pretty universal.
00:13:01.420 That the average person has a pretty active fantasy life.
00:13:06.300 Now, some would say, and I'm not a, oh, I am a doctor.
00:13:10.080 Uh, so some would say, including experts like me, that sure, fantasy, you know, is, is fine.
00:13:20.440 Thinking that you have a tail or that you are a wolf or just any animal that you choose to be at any time.
00:13:31.300 And that's a big part of your life.
00:13:33.780 I think that might be a problem.
00:13:35.540 Now, take that from a doctor.
00:13:36.960 Not all doctors, you know, only nine out of ten doctors agree when they're not subject to some sort of abuse by social media.
00:13:46.640 So they're looking at why do you engage in this fantasy?
00:13:53.680 The more furry a person was, the more they used fantasy to fulfill some currently unfulfilled need in their life.
00:14:04.420 Now, I find that surprising.
00:14:05.700 So, in other words, they're pretending to be an animal because something is missing in their life.
00:14:14.200 Oh, man.
00:14:16.020 I hope the federal government paid for this.
00:14:19.080 The more furry a person was, the more they tended to use fantasy as a means of motivating themselves.
00:14:25.480 I'm trying to figure that one out.
00:14:31.260 The more.
00:14:32.040 Well, actually, I don't have to.
00:14:34.580 Only.
00:14:35.180 What was it?
00:14:35.760 Thirty two percent are employed.
00:14:37.220 So, not worried.
00:14:40.180 Anyway, the more furry the person was, the more they tended to use fantasy as a means of coping with setbacks and failures.
00:14:49.680 Hmm.
00:14:50.160 The more furry a person was, the more they tended to use fantasy as a means of escape from the real world.
00:14:57.080 Now, none of these really sound healthy, but maybe that's just me, because the next question that they asked, is this healthy?
00:15:09.500 Well, yes.
00:15:11.640 According to the furries, they said, yeah, it's just a way to express yourself and to escape from reality.
00:15:20.100 Oh, okay.
00:15:22.980 All right.
00:15:23.940 Okay.
00:15:25.680 By the way, I could go into this, but I don't think we have time because it gets really, really deep and very scientific on how furries and bronies view each other because there's a split.
00:15:37.900 The bronies and the furries don't really like each other.
00:15:40.860 And it's weird because, you know, they both say they like each other, but then when they get down into the numbers here, it looks like there is real division.
00:15:53.800 And there could be there could be some problems between the furries and the bronies coming up.
00:16:01.140 Intramural squabble of some sort.
00:16:03.200 Yes.
00:16:03.560 Now, here's the here's the best part of it.
00:16:05.660 They just took part of the survey just for fun, and it was furry creativity.
00:16:11.660 And I want I want to read this on how they how they said perhaps one of the most interesting questions we asked was assessing furry creativity.
00:16:22.400 These questions taken from a well-validated creativity test developed by psychologists studying the psychology of creativity asked participants to create a number of different, oftentimes seemingly pointless writing tasks.
00:16:37.040 I mean, seemingly pointless.
00:16:39.340 That's right up their alley.
00:16:40.660 The goal of questions is to assess the creativity of furries based on the uniqueness of the answers provided and the sheer number of answers provided.
00:16:52.520 Furries are oftentimes said to be some of the most creative and non-conventional thinkers you'll ever meet.
00:16:59.600 Really?
00:17:00.320 Yeah.
00:17:00.740 Yeah.
00:17:00.960 Non-conventional.
00:17:01.780 Non-conventional.
00:17:02.580 Huh.
00:17:03.020 Below the researcher says I've compiled some of my favorite answers to the creativity questions that just will emphasize how creative and often hilarious furries can be.
00:17:16.140 OK, so they're going to be this.
00:17:18.000 They go.
00:17:18.380 These are going to blow you away.
00:17:19.800 Here's the question.
00:17:21.500 Please write down all of the different things you can do with a brick.
00:17:27.500 OK, this is great.
00:17:28.840 OK, some of these are one make a brick cube.
00:17:33.020 Draw eyes and a mouth on it to confuse someone.
00:17:39.360 Sell it and use the profits for anything.
00:17:43.940 That's so creative.
00:17:45.840 Create a nuclear reactor.
00:17:50.460 Wow.
00:17:51.100 These guys are OK.
00:17:52.340 Here's the next question.
00:17:53.600 What?
00:17:53.960 Please.
00:17:54.640 No, these are creative.
00:17:56.080 I'm showing you how creative these people are.
00:17:59.060 Please indicate all of the things that a chair and a desk have in common.
00:18:02.640 Try to avoid the obvious.
00:18:06.140 Both could be used to obstruct zombies.
00:18:10.380 Both taste bad.
00:18:13.040 Both could be used in as weapons in professional wrestling.
00:18:16.600 Both hurt when you stub your toe on them.
00:18:19.360 Both are fun to kick across the room.
00:18:22.380 You're right.
00:18:23.080 They're both affected by gravity.
00:18:26.500 Oh, man.
00:18:28.100 I mean, look out America.
00:18:31.180 When these guys are in charge of America.
00:18:36.120 Problems fixed.
00:18:37.300 American financing.
00:18:40.660 NMLS.
00:18:41.220 Wow.
00:18:41.560 82334.
00:18:42.720 www.nmlsconsumeraccess.org.
00:18:46.040 So let's say you're not a furry and you actually, you know, are going to make decent money and you have a house.
00:18:54.160 OK.
00:18:55.140 Then you have children and that furry is, you know, living in your basement and they have to buy all kinds of furry things, new tails, etc.
00:19:06.200 And they don't have a job.
00:19:07.160 So you're like, you just use the credit card.
00:19:09.460 Credit card gets maxed out on all those very important furry things.
00:19:12.960 And now you're sitting here with 19% interest.
00:19:16.660 And the furry is like, I don't even know what that means.
00:19:19.860 What?
00:19:20.980 I thought I just used this plastic thing and it gave me stuff.
00:19:24.640 Nope.
00:19:25.160 Doesn't work that way.
00:19:26.140 Now, if you're sitting there with high interest rates, please call American financing.
00:19:31.040 American financing can help you get out of those 19% interest rates.
00:19:35.540 That's the average, gang.
00:19:37.240 That's what the average card is sitting at.
00:19:39.340 19% now.
00:19:40.580 That number is going to go up and that will cripple all of us.
00:19:44.880 You got to get out of those high interest credit card debt.
00:19:48.360 If you have a house, please consider refinancing those credit cards.
00:19:55.040 Do a consolidation loan.
00:19:56.720 American financing at 800-906-2440.
00:19:59.760 800-906-2440.
00:20:01.800 Go to Americanfinancing.net.
00:20:04.540 10 seconds.
00:20:05.180 Station ID.
00:20:06.980 Create a nuclear reactor with a brick.
00:20:09.900 That's so creative.
00:20:12.420 Creative and funny.
00:20:13.660 Oh, man.
00:20:14.920 By the way, tonight at 9 p.m. on the Wednesday night special.
00:20:18.340 If you say it's about furries.
00:20:21.720 It better not be.
00:20:24.500 A detailed look at the war on gender and the dark money network that is driving it.
00:20:30.480 I don't think we can rule furries out.
00:20:31.840 I honestly don't think you can.
00:20:33.860 This is something that was planted decades ago in academia.
00:20:40.120 It's called gender ideology.
00:20:41.400 Since the 2015 Supreme Court decision legalizing gay marriage, there has been an explosion of the trans agenda, the trans agenda across media, business, government and education.
00:20:53.520 And it is all driving towards the utopia of total freedom from outdated distinctions of male and female and unrestricted sexual freedom of any and all types.
00:21:08.440 OK, well, this seems to be something that is just springing up and it's a change of the times.
00:21:15.080 But that is not true.
00:21:16.920 This is not grassroots.
00:21:19.100 There is nothing organic about it.
00:21:21.800 As we started doing our research on this, we were blown away.
00:21:24.940 An academic ideology on its own cannot take hold in a culture.
00:21:30.440 It requires patrons who have tons and tons of money.
00:21:36.420 Dangerous ideology combined with super wealthy progressives, corporations, international organizations and an army of nonprofits to form the poison that is currently coursing through the system of America.
00:21:49.960 That is tonight.
00:21:51.260 Join me for the Dark Money Network funding the war on gender.
00:21:56.340 That's tonight at 9 p.m.
00:21:58.700 only on Blaze TV and Blaze TV YouTube.
00:22:03.280 You can also find it on Pluto.
00:22:06.100 Just look for the Blaze TV channel on Pluto.
00:22:09.320 That's tonight at 9 p.m.
00:22:12.800 Well, I'm going to take off my bunny costume now.
00:22:17.080 I mean, it was a sexy bunny costume.
00:22:19.360 It wasn't I wasn't anywhere near the president last night.
00:22:22.560 I didn't want to confuse him.
00:22:23.660 I was like, don't listen to me.
00:22:25.000 I'm I'm a sexy bunny.
00:22:27.280 That was the Easter bunny.
00:22:28.940 And he and he looked right at me and said, no joke, man.
00:22:41.420 The Glenn Beck program.
00:22:43.380 Two kinds of people in the world when it comes to dealing with disasters.
00:22:46.420 There are the people who are surprised and the people who were prepared for it.
00:22:52.120 There's actually three of the kind that were prepared for it, not surprised.
00:22:56.440 And then the surprise people come over and go, when did this happen?
00:22:59.360 And those the third group of the people that snap on the first group of people.
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00:23:57.100 Back to back tonight.
00:23:57.840 Studios America and Glenn special on furries.
00:24:00.260 It's at blaze TV dot com slash Glenn.
00:24:02.300 The promo code is George Soros in a bunny outfit.
00:24:11.820 Welcome to the Glenn Beck program.
00:24:13.980 So glad that you have tuned in today.
00:24:16.740 We have Eric Schmidt.
00:24:17.780 He is the Missouri attorney general.
00:24:21.140 He's also a candidate for the U.S.
00:24:23.440 Senate.
00:24:24.440 And he was he was one of the guys along with Texas that is asking the Supreme Court for a reinstatement of the remain in Mexico policy.
00:24:35.420 Because this the Biden policy is killing us, killing us.
00:24:41.560 Welcome to the program, Eric.
00:24:43.340 How are you, sir?
00:24:44.900 Great to be back with you, Glenn.
00:24:45.980 I'm doing great.
00:24:46.460 Good.
00:24:46.960 How's your campaign going for Senate, by the way?
00:24:49.760 It's good.
00:24:50.300 I think people are responding.
00:24:51.440 They want to fight her right now to shake up Washington, you know, coming from Missouri.
00:24:55.340 And that's certainly been my records, attorney general.
00:24:57.380 We need reinforcements to save America.
00:24:59.820 I know you talk about it every day.
00:25:01.160 And that's my mission.
00:25:02.280 So things are going well.
00:25:03.240 OK.
00:25:03.400 So as the attorney general of Missouri, you are filing this motion with the Supreme Court.
00:25:10.300 They accepted it.
00:25:11.100 You argued in front of them yesterday.
00:25:13.720 Explain what you're arguing for.
00:25:15.960 Is this the same thing as the title?
00:25:20.080 What is it?
00:25:20.600 I want to say title nine, but it's not.
00:25:22.060 Forty two or.
00:25:22.920 Oh, forty two.
00:25:23.560 Yeah.
00:25:23.780 Is it the same thing?
00:25:25.700 It's not.
00:25:26.420 So I'll take a step back here.
00:25:29.240 So last year, Missouri and Texas challenged Biden trying to cancel.
00:25:33.020 We came into office on day one.
00:25:34.760 He reflexively tried to undo all of President Trump's successes, including the border security
00:25:39.720 that we had.
00:25:40.340 And so there were a couple of pieces in place, including, by the way, finishing his border
00:25:44.460 wall.
00:25:44.700 We've got a lawsuit on that as well.
00:25:46.060 But on on Remain in Mexico, President Trump came in and said, look, we're not going to do
00:25:51.260 this catch and release business because people never show up for their court.
00:25:54.420 Right.
00:25:54.700 So Mexico will be the waiting room while you wait for your asylum hearing.
00:25:59.960 OK, very effective.
00:26:01.580 And by the way, it sent a signal to the cartels that their business model will be disrupted
00:26:05.560 because right now all they really need to do is get people across the border.
00:26:08.860 They get paid.
00:26:09.760 And so Remain in Mexico is a big part of that.
00:26:11.760 So we filed a suit last year.
00:26:13.560 We actually got a restraining order and we got an injunction.
00:26:17.740 We went all the way to the Supreme Court.
00:26:19.060 The Supreme Court said the injunction will remain.
00:26:21.000 Now, we've been fighting with the Biden administration every month to try to get them to, you know,
00:26:26.100 reinstate it.
00:26:27.260 Yeah.
00:26:27.860 Reinstate it.
00:26:28.420 It's been a challenge.
00:26:29.460 But the Supreme Court now heard it again, the argument on the merits.
00:26:33.080 Now, previously, they said we were likely to prevail on the merits.
00:26:36.680 So we're hopeful.
00:26:37.620 But we'll we'll see.
00:26:38.760 So that's a battle on Remain in Mexico.
00:26:40.840 OK.
00:26:41.000 So hang on just a second, because all of the reporting that is coming out is saying that
00:26:47.320 it looks like they are not going to uphold the Remain in Mexico.
00:26:53.920 Well, we'll find out.
00:26:55.220 It's hard to, you know, basing it on the justice's questions.
00:26:59.180 Yes.
00:26:59.360 It's kind of a tricky game.
00:27:00.840 Yes.
00:27:01.420 So we don't know.
00:27:02.560 Right.
00:27:02.780 That's what kind of hangs in the balance.
00:27:04.280 So far, we've been successful in kind of pushing them not to completely abandon it.
00:27:09.180 Right. So we were able to win before.
00:27:11.400 But yesterday is a new ballgame.
00:27:12.900 Right.
00:27:13.160 Yeah.
00:27:13.340 We'll ultimately weigh in.
00:27:15.140 Title 42 is different.
00:27:16.420 Title 42 accounts for about 50 percent of all the expulsions.
00:27:20.500 OK.
00:27:20.680 President Trump created this, said, look, we don't know where these people are coming from.
00:27:25.440 We they might have and probably do have communicable diseases.
00:27:29.020 Therefore, you can turn them back based on that public health rationale.
00:27:32.600 That's Title 42.
00:27:34.040 OK.
00:27:34.520 That had remained in place and still continued, even though it's a porous border.
00:27:39.480 About 50 percent of the expulsions.
00:27:41.620 If that goes away, Glenn, the estimates are of 18,000 people a day coming illegally that we know of.
00:27:49.480 It would be a right now we've seen waves and waves of illegal immigration.
00:27:53.320 It would be an absolute tsunami if that happens because we're entering a busy season anyway.
00:27:58.900 There's no good time to do it.
00:28:00.460 This is certainly a terrible time to do it.
00:28:02.380 Biden knows it, wants to do it anyway.
00:28:05.300 And we would see, you know, Lieutenant Governor Patrick in Texas are giving credit for citing the statistic.
00:28:10.240 If you extrapolate, you get rid of Romaine in Mexico, you get rid of Title 42, you don't have the border wall.
00:28:15.380 If you extrapolate that over his four years, that could be 30 million people coming here illegally.
00:28:21.560 That's the state of Texas.
00:28:23.560 That's five Missouris.
00:28:26.100 OK.
00:28:26.380 They are fundamentally trying to change this country through their illegal immigration policy.
00:28:31.120 So earlier this week, Glenn, we obtained a temporary restraining order preventing them from ending Title 42.
00:28:38.460 But we're going to be back in court on May 13th.
00:28:40.980 So this is the fight goes on.
00:28:42.400 But those are two from me in Mexico.
00:28:44.000 Title 42 are two big pieces of the Trump era policies that were working that Biden wants to dismantle.
00:28:49.620 How is this effect?
00:28:50.380 I know how it's affecting Texas.
00:28:52.900 It is.
00:28:53.740 I mean, it is overwhelming Texas, especially any of these border towns.
00:28:59.180 They're just, you know, people are just being dumped off.
00:29:02.540 And there are soon there will be in many of these towns more illegals than there are citizens.
00:29:10.980 And, you know, what do you do about it?
00:29:13.960 So how is this?
00:29:15.520 Yeah.
00:29:15.840 How is this affecting Missouri and the rest of the country?
00:29:21.020 Every state is a border state, Glenn, because I've been to the border twice.
00:29:25.760 The problems, the criminal activity, the fentanyl, the drugs, the human trafficking, it doesn't just stop in El Paso.
00:29:33.380 It doesn't just stop in McAllen.
00:29:35.240 It ends up in Columbia, Missouri, in Joplin, Missouri, in Columbus, Ohio, in Denver, Colorado.
00:29:42.460 Every state's a border state when you have this crisis that we see at the border.
00:29:46.200 And so, you know, we've taken on human trafficking.
00:29:48.680 We see fentanyl now killing people in every community across this country.
00:29:53.100 Overdose deaths now account for the highest cause of death now for 18 to 45-year-olds.
00:30:00.260 And it is flooding across the border.
00:30:02.260 A law enforcement agent told me last time I was down there, Glenn, that the economic value for the human smuggling alone is $100 million a week.
00:30:12.180 Oh, my gosh.
00:30:14.180 They're running the show.
00:30:15.900 And this administration is willingly doing it.
00:30:18.800 And my contention is that this is on purpose.
00:30:21.560 They know a reckoning is coming in November.
00:30:24.500 They want to pack the court.
00:30:26.020 They want to add states to the union.
00:30:27.280 They want to federalize our elections.
00:30:28.760 They want to fundamentally change this country forever.
00:30:31.500 And what they're doing at the border now is all part and parcel of that.
00:30:34.680 And so we've got to do everything we can to stop it.
00:30:37.180 But it's very obvious what they're doing.
00:30:38.820 Elizabeth Warren just this past weekend said, well, you know, now that they're over here, we ought to just grant amnesty.
00:30:44.580 So they're saying the quiet part out loud.
00:30:46.940 And it's just a mess.
00:30:48.300 It's a disaster.
00:30:50.400 All right.
00:30:51.040 Well, the Supreme Court, are they going to come out with this decision earlier than the summer, do you think?
00:30:58.340 I mean.
00:30:58.860 No, I think they'll come down with the rest of their decisions here in a couple of months is likely when this will come down.
00:31:05.700 Well, if Title 42 goes down, I mean, that's almost too late then, isn't it?
00:31:11.340 I mean.
00:31:11.800 Title 42 is a big one.
00:31:14.320 And, again, here's what the level of lawlessness going on.
00:31:17.600 I don't think people even appreciate sometimes.
00:31:20.280 They were talking about ending Title 42 in mid-May.
00:31:24.180 There were reports then that he was just instructing.
00:31:27.680 They were instructing Border Patrol agents just to stop enforcing Title 42 altogether even before mid-May,
00:31:34.180 which is why we went in this week and said, hey, we need a temporary restraining order to prevent them from doing that before our hearing in mid-May.
00:31:42.360 So, again, they're playing for keeps.
00:31:44.860 They got their pedal to metal.
00:31:46.740 But, you know, it's going to be up to states like Missouri and Texas to push back.
00:31:50.160 We're doing it.
00:31:51.260 And we're going to do everything we can to save this republic.
00:31:53.740 Thank you very much, Eric.
00:31:54.820 I appreciate it.
00:31:55.480 Eric Schmidt, he is the Missouri Attorney General that joined with the Attorney General of Texas to try to get our borders under control.
00:32:02.960 Also running for U.S. Senate.
00:32:05.680 You can find him at schmidtforsenate.gov.
00:32:09.760 Thanks so much, Eric.
00:32:10.900 I appreciate it.
00:32:12.240 Take care, Glenn.
00:32:13.060 You bet.
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00:33:41.240 The Glenn Beck Program.
00:33:43.780 Welcome to the Glenn Beck Program.
00:33:58.380 We're glad you're here.
00:33:58.920 I don't know if the average person is following the Twitter thing as much as those of us in the media are.
00:34:06.060 It's a big deal.
00:34:07.060 Well, I think maybe the average person is looking at Elon Musk as a white knight that is riding in and somebody finally sticking up for them who has the clout to do it.
00:34:18.720 I think that's a universal feeling, at least for half the country.
00:34:23.160 The other half is freaking out of their mind.
00:34:25.520 It's so weird.
00:34:26.600 So bizarre.
00:34:27.020 All he is saying is he wants people to be able to speak freely more often.
00:34:34.160 And he says, my definition of freedom of speech is what's legal speech.
00:34:39.880 Yeah.
00:34:40.160 If it's not legal or people don't want it to be legal, then they'll pass laws to make it not legal.
00:34:45.660 I really think that's something that more companies should embrace as a philosophy.
00:34:49.000 I complain about this all the time in the NFL and other sports where teams are constantly supposed to be able to investigate some potential crime committed by one of their players and punish them outside of the legal system.
00:35:05.700 Like just if they get if they're charged or convicted with a crime, then you react to it.
00:35:10.700 You don't need to go and send detectives out to try to solve crimes.
00:35:14.840 That it's not your job.
00:35:16.820 It's not your job as an organization that's a private business.
00:35:20.860 And I think they try to do this all the time.
00:35:22.400 If you if you violate a law, I don't think any of us have any problem with with there being ramifications on a social network.
00:35:30.360 The problem is, of course, that it's just been one way and it's been weaponized and it's not nothing to do with legal or not.
00:35:36.360 It's just opinions.
00:35:37.580 Yeah.
00:35:37.820 So I keep coming back to this.
00:35:39.540 Like, I think Elon Musk will improve this.
00:35:42.280 I think conservatives at some level will be disappointed that it's not going to be perfect.
00:35:47.600 And at times, you know, I think he's going to make decisions that we don't like.
00:35:51.420 Yeah.
00:35:52.040 You know, I mean, and not just Elon Musk, but the company under Elon Musk.
00:35:55.620 And, you know, so when he does censor a conservative, people are going to freak out about it because it probably will happen.
00:36:01.260 He's talked about it already.
00:36:02.900 He's just said he's going to give people timeouts instead of permanent bans.
00:36:06.560 You know, people are going to be upset about that, I think, on the conservative side at some level.
00:36:10.420 Look, the first thing that's going to happen, day one, he takes over and says, OK, it's free.
00:36:15.360 Everybody can say what they want.
00:36:16.760 Day one, you're going to have the freaks from the fringes, both sides coming in.
00:36:21.300 You're going to have the Jesse Smollett's who are pretending to be conservative, saying all kinds of stuff.
00:36:26.940 You know what I mean?
00:36:28.020 Everybody should just brace for that.
00:36:29.420 No, it's a bunch of idiots.
00:36:31.320 And it will be the fringes that take control of the media again.
00:36:35.200 And the media will spin it.
00:36:36.740 But it won't be that way.
00:36:38.060 Here's the thing that concerns me.
00:36:39.620 Elon Musk has a lot of his, you know, he's he's making batteries.
00:36:46.900 He's making cars.
00:36:48.700 He's doing international trade.
00:36:52.180 Yeah.
00:36:52.860 He's he's involved in financing all of these things.
00:36:56.780 Neuralink.
00:36:57.140 Yeah.
00:36:57.340 Neuralink.
00:36:58.120 That guy is messing with the U.S. government, the Chinese government, all social media, the entire left, all media organizations on earth.
00:37:14.460 Anybody who has any power, the great reset, all of it.
00:37:19.320 I mean, if this guy is still standing in two years, it'll be amazing.
00:37:26.340 He is taking on quite a hell on him.
00:37:28.660 He's taking on quite a bit.
00:37:29.780 I will say, too, I keep there's this weird strain of thought that's like, OK, look, he's not going to make that much.
00:37:35.200 Yes, he might improve free speech a little bit.
00:37:37.240 But I think your Twitter experience is going to be pretty much the same.
00:37:39.960 I mean, he's not going to it's not going to be that much different.
00:37:41.640 People are expecting all this difference.
00:37:43.500 What has Elon Musk done that would make you believe he's going to keep this thing the same?
00:37:48.440 Nothing ever.
00:37:49.160 Nothing.
00:37:49.620 The guy makes flamethrowers.
00:37:51.540 Yeah.
00:37:52.600 People will tweet at him and say, hey, wouldn't it be funny if my Tesla honked at the along with the Carol of the Bells song?
00:38:00.320 And then he just installs it as a feature in his car.
00:38:02.680 Yeah.
00:38:03.320 The technology is going to be vastly improved.
00:38:05.760 I think the company is going to make tons and tons more money.
00:38:08.640 He's a really good at this.
00:38:09.820 Well, the problem with the money thing again is.
00:38:13.500 If he I mean, they could shut him off right now.
00:38:15.720 Just think of the Great Reset.
00:38:17.160 All they have to do is just go, you know what?
00:38:20.180 Twitter, they're they're they're part of the problem and they'll drive all of the sponsors away, all of the sponsors away.
00:38:28.740 So, I mean, he could be sitting here if they decide to do what they've done to people like us.
00:38:36.180 It takes an enormous effort to survive.
00:38:39.360 That's true.
00:38:40.200 And I just don't know.
00:38:41.300 Remember, this is not a guy who's going to violate ESG scores or at least the E part of it.
00:38:46.840 He's the ultimate E.
00:38:48.280 He is the E at ESG.
00:38:50.500 I know.
00:38:50.820 He is.
00:38:51.900 This is something to get wrap your arms around.
00:38:54.300 When we look at Elon Musk as a hero.
00:38:55.860 He is an environmental extremist.
00:38:59.040 He is not.
00:39:00.400 He's not even like I love the Earth.
00:39:02.520 He is building spaceships to escape the Earth partially because of global warming.
00:39:08.180 Right.
00:39:08.320 But he doesn't believe in ESG.
00:39:10.700 No, he doesn't.
00:39:11.460 But he hates ESG in the Great Reset.
00:39:13.660 He's totally in the right on that.
00:39:15.700 But he is not going to violate the E.
00:39:18.660 No.
00:39:19.060 He is.
00:39:19.460 He's going to violate the S.
00:39:21.000 But I don't have a problem if you are.
00:39:23.100 I don't either.
00:39:23.580 If you're like Elon Musk.
00:39:24.860 Yeah.
00:39:25.240 I don't either.
00:39:26.000 I respect him for building space.
00:39:27.280 He's doing what he really believes.
00:39:29.940 I agree.
00:39:30.420 Good for him.
00:39:31.060 Yeah.
00:39:31.400 Just don't force everybody else to do it.
00:39:33.820 Yeah.
00:39:33.940 There's just that.
00:39:34.460 I think there's this thing because he's just not crazy.
00:39:38.640 You know, on a lot of these things when it comes to free speech and gender and COVID and
00:39:45.220 all these other things, because he's just not insane, we think, oh, this guy's conservative.
00:39:49.600 He's not.
00:39:50.120 He's not.
00:39:50.580 He's not conservative.
00:39:51.540 Nor does he want anyone to believe he's conservative.
00:39:53.360 Yeah.
00:39:53.640 He is really his own thing.
00:39:55.240 And when you get to have $280 billion, you get to be your own thing.
00:39:58.340 I know that he is South African.
00:40:01.680 So, you know, technically I understand.
00:40:03.480 But he is the quintessential American.
00:40:06.860 He is a guy who comes from another place.
00:40:11.140 He leaves South Africa because he doesn't want to fight in the army to suppress blacks
00:40:16.820 during apartheid.
00:40:18.120 So he comes to the United States.
00:40:20.660 He has an idea.
00:40:22.220 He builds this empire.
00:40:24.280 That's what America is.
00:40:26.220 Yeah.
00:40:26.400 I think it was.
00:40:27.020 I want to say it was Jeremy Boring over at our friend over at the Daily Wire who tweeted
00:40:30.340 something to the effect of like Elon Musk is the greatest living American.
00:40:33.760 And of course, everyone on the left is like, he's not.
00:40:35.960 He's from South Africa, you idiot.
00:40:39.020 I don't know.
00:40:39.640 I consider immigrants Americans when they come here legally.
00:40:42.400 Exactly right.
00:40:42.920 That's what I think of them.
00:40:43.500 And the reason why he left was because he didn't want to serve.
00:40:47.000 Right.
00:40:47.600 What are they going to call him?
00:40:48.600 A draft dodger?
00:40:49.960 A draft dodger?
00:40:51.480 Yeah.
00:40:52.100 Are you going to call him?
00:40:53.280 There were people on the left who have been like, you know, this guy wants the return
00:40:56.300 of apartheid.
00:40:57.280 Like, really?
00:40:57.760 He seemed to try to go away from that.
00:40:59.580 That's why he left South Africa.
00:41:01.640 It really is amazing.
00:41:02.580 I know that.
00:41:02.800 It's amazing to see this stuff happen.
00:41:05.460 And it is great to see the left expose itself because it is.
00:41:11.800 They are against free speech.
00:41:13.280 And I'm glad they're doing it with Elon Musk because he has the balls to continue to stand.
00:41:17.960 This is the Glenn Beck Program.
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00:42:18.320 Let them help you now.
00:42:19.660 Americanfinancing.net, 800-906-2440.
00:42:38.400 Americanfinancing.net.
00:42:51.480 Barbara Kremeriwald
00:42:51.700 Let's stand up straight and hold the line.
00:42:58.780 It's a new day on time to rise.
00:43:02.580 What you are about to hear is the fusion of entertainment and enlightenment.
00:43:10.680 This is the Glenn Beck Program.
00:43:16.260 Hello, America.
00:43:17.600 Most people in America are supporting the Ukrainians.
00:43:22.440 Most people are saying, yes, we should do more to help them.
00:43:26.280 Well, maybe we should, maybe we shouldn't.
00:43:28.580 But the way we're going about it is a bit disturbing.
00:43:31.640 Something doesn't feel right.
00:43:33.180 We talk about that in 60 seconds.
00:43:38.260 So what does the Weimar Republic, Zimbabwe, and Venezuela all have in common?
00:43:45.180 We all know they ended up looking like our country is about to look
00:43:50.360 if we can't turn the ship around on, you know, this economic inflation iceberg.
00:43:57.280 Inflation is running rampant in the United States and through Europe.
00:44:01.780 Do you know inflation now?
00:44:03.320 In Germany is the highest it's been since 1945.
00:44:08.120 It's running at 30% inflation.
00:44:12.000 That's nuts.
00:44:13.800 So we know about printing of money.
00:44:16.900 But how come we're not?
00:44:18.420 How come we're surprised by this inflation?
00:44:20.780 How come we don't look at the people that printed the money and say, hey, this has got to stop?
00:44:26.940 The reason why and the reason why we're going to accept any solution is because we don't really know what causes it.
00:44:34.480 We don't know how it works.
00:44:35.740 And we don't know the people behind it.
00:44:38.920 People behind it, really, the Treasury and the Fed.
00:44:42.720 The Fed, they just loaned Japan in two quarters last year, $7 trillion.
00:44:50.320 We had to just print that money up.
00:44:52.920 That's how inflation gets to be a real problem for countries.
00:44:58.640 There is a new book out by the Tuttle Twins.
00:45:01.480 The Tuttle Twins, I've been telling you about these books, they're for your kids in your house to teach them the basic principles.
00:45:09.300 There's one on the Fed now and inflation that I think is so important that everyone should have.
00:45:13.920 It's so critical that you understand it as well as teach it to your kids.
00:45:17.480 You can get it for free now at TuttleTwinsBeck.com.
00:45:20.920 Free copy, Tuttle Twins and the Creature from Jekyll Island.
00:45:24.960 TuttleTwinsBeck.com.
00:45:26.220 This is your last chance to get this free book.
00:45:28.880 It ends this week.
00:45:31.360 TuttleTwinsBeck.com.
00:45:33.780 Okay, so I want to go through a couple of things.
00:45:37.460 First of all, there is real problems in China.
00:45:41.660 China is still closing everything down.
00:45:46.120 And their society is collapsing.
00:45:49.460 Shanghai, there are stories now.
00:45:51.740 And it's amazing because these are Americans that live in Shanghai.
00:45:55.320 Shanghai, and in the story that was, I can't remember, it was an American journal, they did not want to be identified in fear of repercussions.
00:46:05.840 And what they're saying is, as soon as this lockdown is over, I'm out of here.
00:46:11.920 I love the quote from one of them that said, the problem with this is, there's no one to turn to for help.
00:46:20.580 Bingo.
00:46:21.100 Now you understand the problem with an all-encompassing government.
00:46:26.840 Whenever they decide they're going to do something, there's no one to turn for help.
00:46:34.360 Who's going to help you?
00:46:36.020 You're going to call the police?
00:46:37.120 Because that's the government.
00:46:38.400 You're going to call the politician?
00:46:40.560 Because that's the government.
00:46:41.480 You're going to call the military?
00:46:42.400 Because that's the government.
00:46:43.940 You're going to call the media?
00:46:45.300 Because that's the government.
00:46:46.300 So, it's falling apart badly, and the ships that are stuck in port and trying to get into port, unlike anything the world has ever seen.
00:46:59.740 This is much worse than it was with COVID.
00:47:02.560 Remember when we couldn't get anything?
00:47:05.640 Now it's causing all kinds of problems, and we are just at the beginning of this story.
00:47:11.420 This is an epic black swan event, and with the war in Ukraine and the bird flu pandemic, I don't know if anybody's been paying attention to that, but that's causing real problems here in the United States.
00:47:27.040 And this is assuming now that in the next 12 months, there are no natural disasters.
00:47:33.480 We are now facing the worst global food crisis since World War II.
00:47:39.360 I want you to think about this.
00:47:41.420 The worst food crisis since World War II.
00:47:48.740 This is a problem Senator Roger Marshall said that we are going into a worldwide famine, and, quote, it is definitely going to happen.
00:48:01.900 Now, let me just give you a couple of things that just, you know, the low-hanging fruit here so you can understand what's coming.
00:48:09.140 You're going into the grocery store.
00:48:12.260 Have you noticed that there's not empty shelves, but they're not as full as they usually are?
00:48:19.000 If you've noticed that, you might have noticed that in the canned dog food.
00:48:23.860 Canned dog food is there's starting to be a shortage in America of canned dog food.
00:48:28.600 You're not going to be able to get it.
00:48:31.000 Why?
00:48:31.780 A couple of reasons.
00:48:33.200 Chicken and turkey, because of the Asian flu, now going through our bird population, which we are just slaughtering turkeys and chickens left and right.
00:48:42.560 You can't get cheap food for your dog.
00:48:47.820 You can't get the chicken and the turkey for the dog food.
00:48:50.980 Plus, there's an aluminum can shortage.
00:48:54.360 There's a shortage of aluminum.
00:48:58.560 Those two things are only going to get worse.
00:49:03.140 Now, if you also are heading into summer, wherever you live, and there are pools around, try buying chlorine.
00:49:14.200 You're about to see a growing problem with chlorine.
00:49:18.660 The pandemic is not the problem this time.
00:49:22.460 This is Hurricane Laura in late 2020.
00:49:26.480 It leveled the facilities of a major chlorine manufacturing plant in Louisiana.
00:49:33.400 Forty percent of all of our chlorine is made at that plant.
00:49:37.000 Well, that was two years ago.
00:49:38.460 But why isn't that plant back online?
00:49:41.000 Because of the building supply shortage.
00:49:44.820 They can't get it back online because they don't have the supplies they need to rebuild it.
00:49:52.320 There's also the baby formula shortage that is continuing and getting worse.
00:49:57.880 Have you tried to buy bulk food?
00:50:03.380 You know, I kind of hang in the circles of preppers.
00:50:07.640 And my church is big on this.
00:50:10.660 Because you try to go to, they're always like, we got food, we got food, don't worry.
00:50:16.680 You can just come get food and buy the food here at cheap price.
00:50:19.920 You can't buy it.
00:50:21.680 You can only buy it in limited supplies now.
00:50:24.880 That is remarkable.
00:50:28.200 Rice is going to go up.
00:50:31.500 Rice is going to go way up.
00:50:34.060 The food shortages are going to get worse.
00:50:36.580 And we will feel them here.
00:50:38.820 Over in Europe, they're already rationing cooking oil because of the Ukrainian war.
00:50:47.780 Inflation, supply chain, shortages of energy, food, raw materials, and labor are all going to accelerate this.
00:50:59.340 And the war is only going to make things worse.
00:51:03.900 Which brings me to two things.
00:51:06.340 First of all, Russia has just cut off a major supply of natural gas to Poland.
00:51:14.260 Gazprom just cut off the gas supplies to two countries that are both NATO members.
00:51:20.900 And it marks the first time of us being able to say, yeah, Ronald Reagan said this would happen.
00:51:27.840 Why did you let them do this?
00:51:31.600 But they have become dependent on Gazprom and dependent on Russian fuel.
00:51:37.680 And now they've turned it off.
00:51:41.360 It's the first time since the Soviet era that Russia reacted this way.
00:51:49.880 So now gas supplies are down.
00:51:53.180 We are not doing anything about it here.
00:51:55.460 In fact, I mean, Biden is delaying more things that we could do to help with the gas supply.
00:52:02.960 And he's saying no at this point for environmental reasons.
00:52:06.680 But here's what's really disturbing.
00:52:08.580 Listen to the story from the Washington Examiner.
00:52:12.900 Near the beginning of the Russian invasion in Ukraine, which commenced February 24th, U.S. intel provided to the Ukrainians help that defeated a Russian operation that was meant to wrest control of the airport near Kiev.
00:52:29.640 They helped and it gave the Ukrainians the ability to shoot down a Russian transport plane carrying hundreds of Russian troops, according to NBC News.
00:52:46.120 Had Russia been able to maintain the control of the airport, its forces captured it for a short time.
00:52:51.900 Moscow could have used it to solve many of its logistical and supply problems.
00:52:56.760 Various U.S. defense and intelligence officials have spoken spoken in broad terms about the intelligence sharing with Ukrainians while frequently choosing not to get into specifics.
00:53:12.720 However, in a statement, a spokesperson for the National Security Council told the outlet, quote,
00:53:19.800 We are regularly providing detailed, timely intelligence to the Ukrainians on the battlefield to help them defend their country against Russian aggression, and we will continue to do so.
00:53:35.560 General Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told the House Armed Services Committee that, quote,
00:53:42.180 We have, and I'm not going to reveal in an open hearing, the intelligence we have collected and how we did all that,
00:53:50.580 but this war has arguably been the most successful intelligence operation in U.S. military history.
00:53:56.780 The chairman also pointed out that the U.S. played significant role in providing Ukraine with the tools to ensure Russia did not achieve air superiority.
00:54:05.960 Quote, the fundamental significance of air defense systems in order to deny an opponent that ability to achieve air superiority and supremacy.
00:54:15.940 That's what's been done by the Ukrainians.
00:54:18.560 But it was done with a huge amount of help from the United States with Stinger missiles.
00:54:24.740 Also because of our intelligence feeds.
00:54:28.440 End quote.
00:54:29.260 Why the hell are we saying these things?
00:54:37.280 There is a great article in The Federalist.
00:54:41.740 Listen to this.
00:54:43.200 As the war in Ukraine drags on, the United States is making a clash with Russia, more likely with each passing week.
00:54:50.420 What are we to make of a comment from Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin that the Biden administration's goal in Ukraine is to see Russia weakened to the degree that they can't do the kinds of things that it is done in invading Ukraine?
00:55:06.500 Austin made the remark in a press conference with the secretary of state after the pair met with Ukraine's president Zelensky in Kiev in in what was the highest level visit by U.S. officials since Russia invaded Ukraine.
00:55:22.120 One obvious conclusion we can draw from Austin's comment is that the Biden administration is now committed openly to a policy of escalation in Ukraine.
00:55:30.780 The White House intends on keeping the war in Ukraine alive with the stated goal of weakening Moscow by continuing to pour new and more advanced weaponry onto the war ravaged country.
00:55:41.580 Indeed, Austin and Blinken announced a new round of military aid on Monday to Ukraine, bringing the total amount to three point seven billion dollars since the invasion began.
00:55:53.300 After resisting pressure early in the conflict to support Ukraine with advanced weapons systems, the Biden administration has changed course.
00:56:03.440 It is now preparing to send heavy artillery, helicopters, armored personnel carriers, anti-aircraft radar systems, advanced attack drones and other weapons.
00:56:14.100 Austin told members of the press that the Defense Department won't just send weapons, but will expand military training for Ukrainian service members in the region on certain weapon systems being provided.
00:56:28.240 Quote, delivering all of this aid is an escalation of the U.S. involvement in the war.
00:56:34.440 For senior U.S. military officers at a facility in Poland, described accelerating logistical network for supplying weapons and material to Ukraine.
00:56:45.340 So they are sending all of this stuff over.
00:56:48.460 They're sending it into Ukraine from Poland by railroad.
00:56:52.520 Now, did you hear that after these clowns were over in Ukraine, meeting with Zelensky, that just after they left the country, Russia bombed the train stations?
00:57:13.860 How did Blinken leave Ukraine?
00:57:19.800 By train by train.
00:57:22.980 Minutes later, they bombed the train stations.
00:57:28.360 Imagine if there would have been a timing issue on that one.
00:57:33.760 What was it the foreign minister said from Russia this week?
00:57:37.820 Sergei Lavrov.
00:57:38.740 You'll remember him from, you know, many, much of the Trump Russia talk back in the day that the media was so obsessed with.
00:57:46.640 He came out and in on state run media said the danger for World War three was real.
00:57:55.620 The danger is serious.
00:57:57.320 It is real.
00:57:58.200 You can't underestimate it.
00:58:00.440 Also spoke about the possibility of nuclear war being real.
00:58:04.600 And, you know, all of this stuff doesn't make any sense.
00:58:09.420 You're totally right saying, you know, we shouldn't be announcing all this stuff all the time.
00:58:15.260 Even like, for example, the Blinken visit.
00:58:17.840 Right.
00:58:19.240 They announced this.
00:58:20.820 What's his face from Great Britain went over there and we found out about it when he was already there or had already left.
00:58:27.220 It always happens.
00:58:27.920 It's the way it always happens.
00:58:29.020 We are instead saying it in advance.
00:58:30.820 So we're like, hey, on Saturday, Blinken's going to be over there, our secretary of state.
00:58:35.500 Now, that opens you up to all sorts of issues.
00:58:38.080 For example, even the type of thing where a rogue group of Ukrainians, right, who want to draw us into this war could affect that situation.
00:58:52.200 What if one of our officials is over there and God forbid something happens to them?
00:58:56.800 Whether I mean, of course, obviously, the suspicion immediately is going to be Russian forces, but it could be anybody.
00:59:02.420 And if that were to happen, we could be drawn into this war.
00:59:05.660 And we tell them in advance we're going to be there.
00:59:08.780 Seems like a massive mistake to me.
00:59:10.920 Luckily, nothing happened.
00:59:12.060 But as you point out, it was pretty close.
00:59:13.760 I mean, if they're saying the Russians are signaling to us, don't come, don't do this, don't be involved in this.
00:59:21.340 And we keep saying, well, not only are we going to be involved in it, we're going to embarrass you publicly by telling everyone that we're involved in it and you can't do anything about it.
00:59:32.720 Now, as Russia gets more and more desperate here and cornered.
00:59:37.080 So what are they going to do?
00:59:38.940 So let me tell you what some are speculating is coming.
00:59:43.400 And it's the key date of I think it's May 15th.
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01:00:55.880 So if we look at what is happening over in Ukraine, and you look at where things could head,
01:01:22.020 you have Putin and Russia painted into a corner, military seemingly teetering on collapse.
01:01:30.500 They have zero replacement capacity for most of the weapon systems that they've lost, too many high-tech components.
01:01:37.420 And unless he can dramatically change the narrative in Russia, he needs a million volunteers to join the army.
01:01:44.500 And that would be a solid six months before any of the new recruits could come online.
01:01:50.540 So there's two ways he can handle this.
01:01:54.740 Surrender or up the stakes.
01:02:00.120 So it's not the 15th.
01:02:01.780 It's the 9th.
01:02:03.480 May 9th is a huge holiday and celebration in Russia.
01:02:08.120 It's the day that they beat the Nazis.
01:02:16.660 Remember, they lost like 20 million people in the war against the Nazis in Russia.
01:02:22.420 It was a horrific thing.
01:02:24.480 So they remember this.
01:02:25.660 And this is a huge day of celebration.
01:02:27.920 There is a shot that May 9th is such an important day that Putin will use May 9th as a launching ground.
01:02:41.280 Possibly.
01:02:41.940 I mean, some people think nukes, tactical nukes, which he will say, oh, we're not bluffing.
01:02:49.720 Your turn.
01:02:52.080 It wouldn't be an ICBM kind of thing.
01:02:54.940 This is a, you know, a tactical nuke.
01:02:57.680 It would be used, you know, over troops or something like that.
01:03:03.600 But it is a nuke.
01:03:05.640 How would we respond?
01:03:09.540 That could be happening as soon as May 9th.
01:03:13.400 Just say a prayer that everybody stays calm until that goes.
01:03:18.300 And and somehow or another, we don't inflame the situation.
01:03:22.360 I think it is not insane.
01:03:26.080 Historic.
01:03:27.080 Historically speaking, the progressives, the Fabian socialists in in Great Britain, they wanted World War One.
01:03:37.720 They wanted it with bated breath.
01:03:39.940 They helped egg it along.
01:03:42.960 I just fear that there are those all over the world that feel the same way about this.
01:03:49.360 They want the Great Resets cover.
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01:04:18.480 It doesn't need to happen to you, but it will if we don't protect ourselves.
01:04:23.420 Take some basic things.
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01:05:09.980 All right.
01:05:10.600 Get the Great Reset.
01:05:11.780 It's the brand new book from Glenn Beck.
01:05:13.960 You can get it at glennsnewbook.com.
01:05:21.380 This is the Glenn Beck program.
01:05:28.360 Welcome tonight on my Wednesday night special, a detailed look at the war on gender and the dark money network that's driving it.
01:05:38.040 What we're witnessing is something that was the seeds were planted a long time ago, gender ideology.
01:05:48.100 And this is not spreading because of, you know, natural pollinization.
01:05:55.400 This is there, this, there are bees pollinizing, giving pollen to everywhere they possibly can to make these things grow.
01:06:06.160 And, uh, those bees have been very, very busy.
01:06:10.620 Uh, it's dangerous ideology combined with super wealthy progressives.
01:06:17.120 Corporations are involved, international organizations, and an army of nonprofits that form the poison that is currently waking and making its way through the body of America.
01:06:27.460 Dark money network, the funding of the war on gender tonight, only on blaze TV.
01:06:34.600 It's my special at 9 PM.
01:06:36.720 We'll see you there.
01:06:38.020 9 PM blaze tv.com blaze TV, YouTube and Pluto.
01:06:44.920 Now I have been talking to you about a parallel economy and I want to bring to you different things that people are doing to help.
01:06:56.980 And we are playing a, um, a nasty game of catch up.
01:07:01.120 Uh, I talked about the tides foundation, what, 15 years ago, the tides foundation, this, this network of money, uh, his just is astounding as you will see tonight on what the left is doing.
01:07:15.460 And it's all shady.
01:07:17.120 I don't want to be involved in anything shady, but I do want to stop giving my money to places that are not helping.
01:07:25.500 There is a new credit card, uh, that is coming out and I, I want to make sure I understand it.
01:07:31.760 Uh, the credit card, it's a credit card for conservatives.
01:07:35.640 It's called coin C O I G N.
01:07:39.520 Uh, and Rob Collins is the guy who's launching this.
01:07:43.420 He's the founder.
01:07:45.220 Rob, how are you, sir?
01:07:47.220 I'm good.
01:07:48.100 Thanks for having me on.
01:07:49.060 This is a real honor.
01:07:50.200 Long time listener.
01:07:50.880 So I really appreciate, uh, being on your show.
01:07:53.600 So people, so they know who you are.
01:07:55.200 You founded the American action network.
01:07:57.020 You ran the national Republican senatorial campaign in 2014, which was a good year.
01:08:01.980 You also were the confirmation Sherpa, uh, for, um, Neil Gorsuch with Donald Trump.
01:08:10.060 Okay.
01:08:10.700 So, so you've been around, you know, the game that everybody is playing.
01:08:15.420 Tell me what's happening here with coin.
01:08:17.740 Well, as you just described, I spent a lot of time of my twenties, thirties in politics
01:08:26.080 and, um, you know, um, invested a lot of, of that energy I had to, to help win elections.
01:08:33.840 And I loved it and it was great, but, you know, I just started to see that while, while
01:08:38.360 politics is critical and that's how we make our policies, we got to start innovating in
01:08:42.160 the private sector.
01:08:42.860 You know, we got to start disrupting the model because it is so skewed against, you
01:08:49.040 know, 40, 50 million Americans that if we don't innovate in the private sector, we're
01:08:55.240 never going to be able to catch up.
01:08:56.540 I mean, the Tide Center, the Tide Foundation, as you said, you know, the top 10 credit cards
01:09:00.660 have given it over a million and a half dollars.
01:09:03.460 And, uh, let me assure you, there is no analogous contribution for, I think, think, think
01:09:09.160 differently than the Tide Center and conservatives just have been left out.
01:09:13.600 And, and our voices, you know, sometimes they rise up and we've seen that in the last week,
01:09:18.520 but generally it's just a dull murmur because we're spread throughout the credit system.
01:09:23.700 Um, you know, we, we talk about it, we complain to one another, but for the largest ideological
01:09:29.100 group in America, we're out of the public square.
01:09:32.860 You know, we have to whisper even amongst ourselves about things that we don't like.
01:09:36.140 And this is just a way for folks who like to talk about it or folks who are just quiet,
01:09:40.820 but want to give back to know two things.
01:09:43.340 One, uh, with coin, you're going to get a great credit card.
01:09:46.200 You're going to get 1% cash back, all the protections, visa, all the stuff you expect
01:09:50.120 from every other credit card you're at.
01:09:52.000 But every time you swipe coin, the company, our company will take a piece of the merchant
01:09:57.620 fee and contribute it to conservative charities.
01:10:00.660 And, uh, we're going to have a system where, uh, folks will be able to vote and feel like,
01:10:06.660 you know, Hey, I actually, I did something, they asked me to do something.
01:10:09.500 I got my card, I used it.
01:10:11.080 And then, you know, once a quarter that we're going to have four or five charities, we'll
01:10:14.840 put up for a vote.
01:10:16.920 And, and I voted for a charity and they got, you know, 40, $50,000 to do good things that
01:10:21.400 I really support.
01:10:22.140 And, you know, next time we'll have some different charities, but, you know, our biggest thing
01:10:26.900 is, is, is trying to help people find that voice again and find that collective action
01:10:32.640 that says, Hey, um, you know, uh, listen to us and also feel good that their commerce is
01:10:39.120 investing in things that they believe in.
01:10:41.360 I think that's really important.
01:10:43.460 I I'm very concerned about, um, the ESG standards and the banking community.
01:10:49.000 And, and this is still tied to the banking community, right?
01:10:52.720 You're using MasterCard and Visa as your, your backbone, right?
01:10:58.200 Well, you know, yes.
01:10:59.540 I mean, just disrupting is hard.
01:11:01.120 You can't, no, no, I know.
01:11:02.400 Believe me.
01:11:03.100 I can't see.
01:11:04.140 Yeah.
01:11:04.580 You can't see 50 years of control to the left and say, we like it back, please.
01:11:10.820 You know what they, you know, I can tell you, I mean, we have true patriots who as investors,
01:11:16.220 uh, who, because we went to the respectable places.
01:11:20.320 We went to the venture funds and, uh, and they say, you'd start by saying, Hey, we have
01:11:25.420 a, you know, 40% of the American public that's looking for something.
01:11:29.500 We have the market research and they'd say, great.
01:11:31.140 And we'd say conservative and they'd say not interested.
01:11:33.660 So, I mean, we had, yeah, I mean, these are, you know, conservatives longer tenure in
01:11:39.760 their job, own their own home, own their own car, married, you know, they're, they are
01:11:43.480 the cream of the credit crop.
01:11:44.960 Um, and yet we had, we would, we would get our doors, the door slammed in our face cause
01:11:49.200 we'd say the C word.
01:11:51.020 So we, so we, we had to go, uh, to, to really to, to people who, who understand the movement
01:11:57.100 and are willing to invest in parallel economy, uh, startups.
01:12:01.540 And if it wasn't for them, I wouldn't be on your show today.
01:12:04.100 So that's just the reality of where we are.
01:12:06.640 What is the, what is the main goal?
01:12:09.660 You see this in five years.
01:12:10.960 What, what is your hope that this turns into?
01:12:14.640 Um, a, we can, we can donate tens of millions, hundreds of millions of dollars to conservative
01:12:21.960 charities.
01:12:22.680 Now, wait, hang on just a second.
01:12:24.080 When you say conservative charities, what kind of charities are you for?
01:12:28.960 I know it's going to be up for a vote, but are you thinking, uh, for instance, uh, like
01:12:33.560 first Liberty ones that are defending things in the court or, you know, like, um,
01:12:39.940 you know, something that is going to rescue people?
01:12:44.940 I think there's two ways to look at it, which is, you know, we'd love to have people suggest
01:12:49.500 charities on our, we launched yesterday and we've already had, you know, probably 30 or
01:12:53.840 40 emails with people saying, Hey, consider this one.
01:12:56.300 Yeah.
01:12:56.600 Um, so we'd like to have a rotation and we'd like to have, you know, broad categories.
01:13:02.000 Um, you know, you know, we, like I heard earlier, you were talking about, uh, tunnels
01:13:06.680 to towers.
01:13:07.140 I mean, we, we'd love to partner with great veterans charities that aren't afraid of
01:13:10.140 conservatives, um, education, uh, religious freedom, um, smaller, smarter government, uh,
01:13:16.460 conservation, you know, kind of offer folks because, you know, you know, we want to have
01:13:20.740 a broad spectrum, but we want to rotate out the charities.
01:13:23.160 You know, we'd love to find smaller charities that are starting up and give them a little
01:13:27.220 boost, um, but also support bigger ones.
01:13:29.360 You know, I mean, we're not, you know, we really, the biggest thing for us is we want
01:13:32.980 to make sure they're conservative and we want to make sure that if our folks, you know,
01:13:37.480 if coin money is going to our customers, that they deliver, they, they're transparent, you
01:13:42.800 know, uh, the, the, the, that the charity rating firm said these are good charities and
01:13:47.400 that they, that they really, that the ROI for our folks is tangible.
01:13:51.220 That's really important to us.
01:13:52.540 So how do people get involved in, with a coin?
01:13:54.940 Uh, you can go to our website, uh, coign.com and, uh, like us on, you know, whatever social
01:14:04.820 media, you know, Facebook, we're all over the place and just try to, and then just tell
01:14:09.800 your friends, I mean, instead of saying, you know, under, uh, you know, buying closed
01:14:14.760 doors, isn't this so terrible?
01:14:16.840 Like tell your friends, join this and let's, you know, let's start, let's have an open
01:14:20.100 conversations and let's get back kind of where we've always been as a country, which
01:14:24.360 is a, we, you can speak your mind, but also you don't have, you know, the corporations
01:14:29.340 funding causes that like, it's not enough that they want, they push their own worldview.
01:14:34.140 They don't like us and they're trying to push us out and, and, and, and, you know, indoctrinate
01:14:39.480 our kids and tell us what to think and how to act when it should be, you know what, like
01:14:44.240 you're a customer of ours and we respect you, not you should respect us.
01:14:47.580 I know that we have, um, you know, we have a sponsor Patriot mobile and they've done the
01:14:52.480 same thing.
01:14:52.860 They're on the same cell tower.
01:14:54.440 So they're, they're renting space from these big guys so they could provide the coverage.
01:14:59.600 But I know I'm a member because I don't want to give the, the big cell companies any of
01:15:06.960 my money.
01:15:07.580 I know I have to, you know, Patriot mobile is paying them a little bit for the space on
01:15:12.280 the tower, but at this point, that's the best option we have.
01:15:16.960 If I want to stop giving these people money, uh, and this is a, just like Patriot mobile,
01:15:23.020 this is another way to do it, uh, with your credit card.
01:15:26.100 So if you have Visa, MasterCard or anything, uh, you might want to consider today going
01:15:31.160 to coin.com that's C O I G N. Any reason why you spelled it that way other than because
01:15:38.420 you didn't, couldn't get coin.com.
01:15:40.940 You nailed it.
01:15:41.920 Okay.
01:15:43.340 We, we wanted it.
01:15:44.320 We wanted a short, clean website.
01:15:46.020 We wanted a short, clean name and we know we'll have a little, we'll name building to
01:15:50.400 do it.
01:15:50.700 But, uh, uh, just, you know, we like the alliteration coin card for conservatives coin
01:15:55.660 C O I G N.com coin.com Rob, thank you very much.
01:16:01.040 Let us know how it's going.
01:16:02.560 We'd love it.
01:16:03.220 Thanks.
01:16:03.540 Appreciate it.
01:16:04.020 You bet.
01:16:04.300 Bye-bye.
01:16:06.080 All right.
01:16:06.600 I want to talk to you a little bit about, uh, inflation soaring to record highs, uh,
01:16:10.980 in your credit cards are going to store to record highs as well.
01:16:14.900 Most people are going to have to put their life on credit card and this is going to be a
01:16:19.160 problem because the banks are going to start moving that credit card interest rate up higher
01:16:23.360 and higher and higher.
01:16:25.220 Uh, it is, um, gosh, it's the impoverishing of America.
01:16:29.020 It really is a 19%.
01:16:31.440 I think it's 19.9 is, is what the average credit card payers is, um, paying right now.
01:16:37.680 19% you can lower that down to, you know, into the fours or five.
01:16:43.320 If you take the value of your house and you take your credit cards, I bet your house,
01:16:49.140 house has probably grown 20, 30, 40, $50,000 in price.
01:16:55.220 Um, that price is going to start to go down again, but right now you have access to that
01:17:01.160 cash.
01:17:01.900 May I suggest don't put yourself in a worse situation and then, you know, go out and use
01:17:07.520 the credit cards again.
01:17:08.840 Take that 19% interest rate, get it down to 5% in a consolidation loan.
01:17:14.120 Pay that thing off as fast as you can and do it while you have access to the money before
01:17:20.220 your house starts to lose value again.
01:17:22.640 It's American financing.
01:17:23.940 They'll explain all of this to you at 800-906-2440.
01:17:27.760 Go to Americanfinancing.net, Americanfinancing.net, 800-906-2440.
01:17:34.960 Americanfinancing.net, NMLS, 1-823-34, www.nmlsconsumeraccess.org.
01:17:41.520 Stand up!
01:17:42.680 This is the Glenn Beck Program.
01:17:44.920 Evanston Skokie School District number 65 has just adopted a radical gender curriculum
01:18:08.660 that teaches pre-kindergarten through third grade students to celebrate the transgender
01:18:15.820 flag and break the gender binary established by white colonizers.
01:18:22.780 This is ridiculous.
01:18:25.600 Are you telling me that Native Americans didn't know the difference between male and female?
01:18:32.840 That there were a hundred different genders with Africans in Africa?
01:18:38.660 Are you kidding me?
01:18:41.300 They are doing an experiment now with neopronouns such as Z, Zer, and Tree.
01:18:49.720 The Chicago area district's LGBTQ plus equity week administrators of the teachers union adopted
01:18:59.040 last year.
01:19:00.640 Curriculum begins in pre-kindergarten.
01:19:03.760 A series of lessons on sexual orientation and gender identity.
01:19:07.220 The lesson plan opens with an introduction to the rainbow flag and teaches students that
01:19:12.400 each color in the flag has a meaning.
01:19:15.640 The teacher also presents the transgender flag and the basic concepts of gender identity,
01:19:21.460 explaining that we call people with more than one gender or no gender, non-binary or queer.
01:19:29.020 Finally, the lesson plan has the teacher leading the class to create a rainbow flag, which has the
01:19:37.220 instructions to, quote, gather students on the rug, ask them to show you their flags and proudly hang
01:19:43.600 the class flag where they can all see it.
01:19:46.880 There are those children who feel like a girl and a boy or like neither a boy or a girl.
01:19:52.260 And we can call these children transgender.
01:19:56.080 This is from the curriculum.
01:19:58.440 Students are expected to be able to explain the importance of the rainbow flag and trans flag and are asked to consider
01:20:07.140 their own gender identity.
01:20:08.440 Kindergarteners read two books that affirm transgender conversions, study photographs of boys in dresses and learn
01:20:16.760 details about the transgender flag and then perform a rainbow dance.
01:20:25.160 OK, let me just tell you.
01:20:29.880 Last one out.
01:20:31.000 Turn off the lights.
01:20:32.520 I mean, this is really look at what we've done.
01:20:34.620 Our kids, we started in the 90s saying, you know what, every everybody gets a trophy.
01:20:40.840 And now because of that.
01:20:43.160 Now, all these years later, we knew that was wrong.
01:20:46.320 We knew that the majority of Americans knew that was wrong, but the more majority of Americans did nothing,
01:20:51.840 didn't say anything about it.
01:20:52.800 And we all got trophies and we all bitched about it at home.
01:20:55.520 Now that generation is now in school and exiting school and they're crying all the time.
01:21:02.160 It's not fair.
01:21:04.620 Of course, they think that we allowed that to happen.
01:21:08.700 These people are incapable of a free capitalist society.
01:21:15.320 They're incapable.
01:21:17.000 Do you know to be an entrepreneur?
01:21:18.940 It requires great risk, great pain.
01:21:23.540 If you're not willing to risk, you have to work for somebody else and just do as you're told.
01:21:30.600 Do you think Elon Musk got where he was because he was afraid of risk?
01:21:36.200 He was afraid somebody would say something bad, something bad might happen, that he might get hurt.
01:21:42.560 No.
01:21:43.940 Do you think that happened with the people in the space program?
01:21:46.660 I don't know.
01:21:47.780 It could blow up.
01:21:48.940 They knew that they were willing to do it anyway, unless we teach our children the truth.
01:21:57.100 And I mean right now.
01:21:58.620 Do not repeat the past.
01:22:02.180 Everybody gets a trophy.
01:22:03.380 No, they don't.
01:22:04.300 No, they don't.
01:22:04.880 Hey, kids, come on over here.
01:22:06.980 We're going to play a sport where only one team gets the trophy.
01:22:10.960 You either win or you lose.
01:22:12.420 That doesn't make you losers.
01:22:13.940 It just means you didn't do as well as they did.
01:22:17.340 Better luck next time.
01:22:18.880 It is time to stand for the truth.
01:22:23.280 Otherwise, we're doomed as a nation.
01:22:26.080 And last one out, hit the lights.
01:22:29.680 If we have lights.
01:22:32.460 This is the Glenn Beck Program.
01:22:35.200 Legend has it that once upon a time, there was a line of fashionable and customizable belts.
01:22:41.360 Yes, these belts were made in America.
01:22:43.580 They could be gotten at a reasonable price.
01:22:45.220 It seems impossible, but the legends are true.
01:22:49.060 I've seen it with my own eyes, and you can too, at grip6.com slash stew.
01:22:53.220 If you go to grip6.com slash stew, you will find a small company in Utah that sells stuff
01:22:58.340 all over the United States, all over the world, but they source everything here.
01:23:01.660 So they are a fantastic company, and they love this country.
01:23:06.460 How many times have we talked about a company that hates this country, that seems to despise it?
01:23:12.500 Well, that's not grip6.
01:23:13.580 They are the opposite.
01:23:14.440 They love this country.
01:23:15.380 They source things here because they believe in this country.
01:23:18.580 You can get these great belts.
01:23:19.880 They're cool.
01:23:20.420 They're minimalist.
01:23:20.940 They're really, you know, you'll really enjoy them.
01:23:23.900 They also have great wallets.
01:23:25.020 They have great socks as well that keep your feet cold in studios that happen to be 18
01:23:29.000 degrees at any given moment.
01:23:30.920 Grip6.com is the place to go.
01:23:32.480 Grip6.com slash stew.
01:23:33.900 Use the code stew.
01:23:35.220 You'll save 15%.
01:23:36.460 It's grip6.com slash stew.
01:23:40.040 Get 15% off today.
01:23:42.000 Grip6.com slash stew.
01:23:44.360 Radio show starts here in just seconds.
01:23:46.260 Grip6.com slash stew.
01:23:50.940 We've got no room to compromise.
01:24:14.180 We've got to stand together.
01:24:18.300 What you are about to hear is the fusion of entertainment and enlightenment.
01:24:39.080 This is the Glenn Beck Program.
01:24:43.480 Hello, America, and welcome to the Glenn Beck Program.
01:24:50.080 I've got a few stories that just defy category, explanation, proof that truth is stranger than fiction
01:25:00.820 because fiction has got to make sense.
01:25:04.060 As we stop in the news stories that just don't fit this universe in 60 seconds.
01:25:16.340 You know, I made a lot of people mad over the years, and almost to a person, they all asked me the same question.
01:25:22.040 How do you sleep at night?
01:25:23.780 And I can say quite well, quite well, honestly.
01:25:27.140 You should, in fact, I should just give them a card for MyPillow.com because, man, that'll change everything, you know.
01:25:35.500 Now, I don't know how they sleep at night, even with, you know, a MyPillow.
01:25:39.780 Maybe it's because they just hate Mike Lindell so much they just won't do it.
01:25:45.200 But the Giza Dream Sheets, ah, you'll sleep like a baby.
01:25:48.220 For the moment, the Giza Dream Sheets are 60% off.
01:25:52.560 That's as low now as $39.99 if you use the promo code BECK.
01:25:57.180 All MyPillow products come with a 60-day money-back guarantee.
01:26:00.540 It's MyPillow.com.
01:26:01.960 Radio listener specials is what you click on.
01:26:04.140 You put in my name, BECK, and you'll find the Giza Dream Sheets and all their other specials,
01:26:09.680 which will also help you sleep well at night.
01:26:12.680 I mean, unless you're a communist Marxist that just, you know, wants to destroy America,
01:26:17.840 then I don't know how you do it.
01:26:19.680 MyPillow.com, promo code BECK.
01:26:23.620 Stu, this is going to come as a surprise to you.
01:26:27.800 But Diamond Blount, Diamond Blount is somebody that was convicted of rape.
01:26:40.600 Uh, and, uh, Diamond is like, okay, well, you know, that's, that was before I became Diamond.
01:26:52.220 You know, that's when I was Rommel Blount.
01:26:57.160 Okay.
01:26:57.980 Now I'm Diamond.
01:26:59.360 And so a judge in New York.
01:27:02.160 So your entire criminal record should be wiped out, right?
01:27:04.940 Well, maybe, maybe, I mean, he, she did go to prison for rape, but because he was now identifying
01:27:16.360 as a woman, he was housed in the women's facility.
01:27:21.640 Oh, good.
01:27:22.920 This, I, you know, this is one of those things we've always used as an example of the absurd
01:27:26.520 possibilities if this were to continue.
01:27:28.940 And it's good to know that it is actually happening in real life.
01:27:32.080 Yeah.
01:27:32.560 So while he was a resident, I love that, a resident of the Rose M Singer Center, the section
01:27:39.600 of the prison.
01:27:40.280 Not a prisoner, but a resident.
01:27:42.160 A resident.
01:27:42.540 Okay.
01:27:42.780 It was a section of the prison.
01:27:45.300 Uh, maybe it had drapes and everything else and maybe sewing machines for the women, you
01:27:49.200 know, the women folk, they like kitchens.
01:27:51.260 Like Diamond.
01:27:51.660 You know, like Diamond.
01:27:52.820 Sure.
01:27:53.300 Um, but apparently, uh, Diamond also likes to violently rape women in a bathroom.
01:28:01.760 Diamond does?
01:28:02.700 Diamond does.
01:28:03.140 Are you talking about Rommel?
01:28:04.320 No, Diamond.
01:28:05.300 No.
01:28:05.520 Because Rommel did do that.
01:28:07.200 But you're not saying Diamond did it as well.
01:28:09.020 No, Diamond did it as well.
01:28:10.340 Wow.
01:28:10.780 What are the odds?
01:28:12.340 What are the odds?
01:28:13.160 No, I can't.
01:28:13.960 That both, they're both related.
01:28:16.220 I mean, they're both named Blunt.
01:28:17.600 I think they're, I think they're both related, um, but, uh, what's the odds that both of
01:28:23.640 them violently raped women?
01:28:25.280 I don't think the percentage chances of this occurring would be anything over a hundred
01:28:29.180 percent.
01:28:30.160 Well, well, I have to tell you, I, uh, I would like to, I'd like to side with you, but I don't
01:28:37.240 know the lesbian experience.
01:28:41.100 Right.
01:28:41.540 You're, you're not well versed in that.
01:28:43.960 No, I'm not.
01:28:44.740 Because you are not, because I'm not a lesbian.
01:28:47.000 Well, I actually am a lesbian.
01:28:49.380 I am only attracted to women.
01:28:50.900 So I think maybe that, no, so that was rape.
01:28:54.660 Okay.
01:28:55.160 Next story, uh, that just doesn't seem to make sense to me.
01:29:02.640 CNN executives, when they started their streaming platform that lasted a full four weeks, I'd like
01:29:11.940 to spend the time counting, but it's just to one, two, three, it's just too high of a number
01:29:18.780 to spend that kind of time counting the weeks.
01:29:22.000 Um, they, um, the CNN executives thought that they could attract 30 million global subscriptions
01:29:35.060 because they, they broke this.
01:29:41.680 Apparently there's a memo with this, uh, 29 million CNN super fans there.
01:29:50.740 They believe there are 29.
01:29:52.240 They believed, believe, hard D, hard, there's a hard stop on that one.
01:29:59.920 Yeah.
01:30:00.100 Yeah.
01:30:00.360 Uh, they believed that 20, there were 29 million super fans.
01:30:06.440 Now, I don't know where they come up with that number, uh, but most of those super fans
01:30:14.960 feel trapped at the airport.
01:30:17.180 Uh, just saying.
01:30:18.780 Right.
01:30:19.380 They are in a very long delay to go to Albuquerque.
01:30:23.040 Yes.
01:30:23.440 And CNN happens to be on the television.
01:30:25.800 That does not make a super fan.
01:30:27.420 No.
01:30:27.840 It doesn't even make a person who wants to watch.
01:30:29.840 No, it makes a super max.
01:30:30.300 Right?
01:30:30.660 Yeah.
01:30:31.900 It isn't even in people who would, what would be enticed to watch it for free.
01:30:37.800 No.
01:30:38.780 No.
01:30:39.100 They're certainly not going to pay for it.
01:30:40.560 No.
01:30:40.920 No.
01:30:41.460 No.
01:30:41.620 And I, if you had to make an honest guest, a guess of the number legitimately, the number
01:30:50.440 of CNN super fans, and you were in that meeting and they were saying this, no joking around,
01:30:57.860 what would you place that number at?
01:30:59.780 8,300.
01:31:04.840 Yeah, I would say, I would say super fans globally, I would say less than a hundred thousand.
01:31:11.960 Much less than a hundred thousand.
01:31:13.000 You have to include the insane.
01:31:15.740 You have to.
01:31:16.560 There's way more people.
01:31:17.500 The insane people, don't talk trash about them.
01:31:20.320 No, I'm not saying all insane.
01:31:21.680 I'm saying there's a subset of insane people.
01:31:24.180 There may, the insane people of the world may be more likely to delve into the world of
01:31:29.380 CNN plus, but they are not exclusively.
01:31:31.760 Right.
01:31:31.900 Well, the problem is all of those people subscribed.
01:31:34.380 They just, they just did it in their imaginary world.
01:31:38.560 Right.
01:31:38.680 So, those super fans are still enjoying CNN plus.
01:31:43.620 The fact that they had a legitimate estimate, or not a legitimate estimate, but an estimate
01:31:49.540 that someone provided them that they would have 30 million subscribers is crime.
01:31:54.060 You know, I think they're blaming McKinsey for this, the consulting outfit, which is one
01:31:59.620 of the most, you know, world renowned, you know.
01:32:02.060 Were they the ones that came up with 29 million?
01:32:04.020 I've heard them blamed for it.
01:32:05.780 I don't know for sure if it was them, but that is who is at least getting the shade from
01:32:11.820 inside sources.
01:32:13.260 Sure.
01:32:13.480 Well, you can't blame any of the people working at CNN.
01:32:16.400 No.
01:32:17.060 You know, they're above reproach.
01:32:18.880 Well, as you know, Glenn, we, at this time, do not have enough information to judge whether
01:32:23.400 this was a success or failure.
01:32:24.620 I heard that from the potato.
01:32:26.660 I heard that.
01:32:27.360 You heard a potato?
01:32:28.460 Yeah, I think it was a potato.
01:32:29.780 It was a potato in a suit, an ill-fitting suit.
01:32:31.960 Really?
01:32:32.480 Yeah.
01:32:33.080 And he was like, we can't really judge, you know, if this is a success or not.
01:32:38.140 How could one know?
01:32:39.320 How could one?
01:32:39.700 What information has been provided to make a determination?
01:32:43.780 300 million dollars spent.
01:32:45.700 Mm-hmm.
01:32:47.580 No real subscribers.
01:32:49.320 Mm-hmm.
01:32:49.840 Mm-hmm.
01:32:50.140 And other than this, though, and the fact that it's been shut down already.
01:32:53.220 Right.
01:32:53.520 What information do we have as to judge whether it was a success or failure?
01:32:58.600 Other than those things, we don't.
01:32:59.040 We don't have anything.
01:33:00.140 So it's too early to know.
01:33:01.240 I think, my thought is by the year 2318, we will have a beginning of the understanding
01:33:09.420 as to whether CNN Plus was a success or failure.
01:33:12.060 Sure.
01:33:12.520 It's going to take that much time.
01:33:13.780 Yeah.
01:33:14.200 This is just too important a project.
01:33:16.020 It's the most important thing that CNN has done since its launch.
01:33:18.400 It's at least 75 years before we can get to that.
01:33:21.420 I mean, they've got as much information as the CDC and the FDA.
01:33:25.640 Right.
01:33:25.840 We've got to wait.
01:33:26.560 We're never going to know.
01:33:27.300 Um, so, uh, Hiko Kondo from Japan has just married Hatsume Miku, which, uh, is lovely.
01:33:39.400 Uh, she's a fictional computer synthesized pop singer.
01:33:44.860 Um, and, uh, he was very disappointed because he said no one in his family showed up for
01:33:52.400 the wedding.
01:33:53.140 You're kidding me.
01:33:54.220 And I would just like to say that's one of the first things that's come out of Japan
01:33:59.540 that has made sense to me in a quite, quite a long time, quite a long time.
01:34:03.940 I think, I think that's the way we should be, you know, we should in America, I'm, I'm not
01:34:13.840 so sure that would happen.
01:34:15.400 I think a lot of people would go, you don't, you don't want to hurt his feelings.
01:34:19.300 You don't, you don't deny that that is a fictional character and just on his computer.
01:34:24.940 That's his love.
01:34:26.180 We got to bet.
01:34:27.560 Love wins.
01:34:28.820 Always love wins.
01:34:31.060 See, I think I would get, if, if that invitation came in the mail, my wife would say, oh, we're
01:34:35.520 not going to that.
01:34:36.200 And I would say, are you kidding me?
01:34:37.420 I got to see this.
01:34:38.580 I've got to be a part of this situation.
01:34:40.900 I would go with you under that guy.
01:34:43.420 I'd be like, yeah.
01:34:44.640 Oh, she's.
01:34:46.600 There's material for weeks.
01:34:47.960 Where are you guys, where are you guys going on your honeymoon?
01:34:51.400 And they should have, he should have invited us.
01:34:52.980 We would have come.
01:34:54.460 I would have flown to Japan to watch that thing happen.
01:34:57.480 That would have been a fun ceremony.
01:35:00.060 Well, here's one, a man with nine wives, nine wives, nine, nine wives.
01:35:08.500 Uh, he has just been married, uh, crazily in a church in Brazil.
01:35:17.260 Um, and, uh, he says that, um, he just has a sexual appetite that just can't be satiated,
01:35:25.360 uh, with just one wife.
01:35:26.640 Uh, he sounds like a dream come true, really.
01:35:29.700 Um, and so he tried to, you know, have sex by appointment, but he said that was just too
01:35:36.600 difficult because there were times that he was thinking about the other girl and then
01:35:41.040 he wanted to be, you know, her.
01:35:42.680 And then it would be easier.
01:35:43.600 You just kind of pick on demand, right?
01:35:45.660 You do walk in, select, it's like when you walk into, uh, you know, uh, 7-Eleven, they
01:35:50.860 have a bunch of different flavors of monster energy drinks.
01:35:54.380 You don't want to have just one that you would schedule in advance.
01:35:56.780 I don't always have cool ranch Doritos.
01:35:58.860 Right.
01:35:59.340 You might want nacho cheese.
01:36:00.380 You might want spicy nacho.
01:36:01.400 You might want that spicy chili, which is spicy, sweet chili, which is delicious.
01:36:04.880 Yeah.
01:36:05.020 It's really good.
01:36:05.920 Sometimes I, you know, I, I just want a candy bar, you know, so you should be able to have
01:36:11.800 whatever you want, whenever, whenever, whenever, asterisk within the bounds of holy matrimony.
01:36:20.040 That is a really important thing.
01:36:21.720 I don't want, it would be really a bad thing if people decided they could just have sex outside
01:36:27.060 of marriage when this is going on.
01:36:29.440 Instead, marry as many people as you can and then just rotate through.
01:36:33.300 So that's the, that's the, it's the godly way of doing it.
01:36:36.340 I think it's going to last.
01:36:37.640 Well, now I should say he married, he married eight.
01:36:41.180 He's already lost one.
01:36:42.540 No.
01:36:42.960 Yes.
01:36:44.100 He lost one.
01:36:45.080 Yeah.
01:36:45.580 She on second thought, you know, when she sobered up, uh, she thought I might've had too much
01:36:52.960 communion wine here.
01:36:53.980 Oh really?
01:36:54.340 I, yeah, I don't, I thought they were my bridesmaids.
01:36:58.100 Uh, and apparently no, they were all his wife.
01:37:00.600 This is why you marry fictional characters.
01:37:02.660 Yeah.
01:37:02.940 They, they always stick around.
01:37:06.120 Yeah.
01:37:06.340 And they don't see, you could delete them.
01:37:07.960 Right.
01:37:08.560 You know what I mean?
01:37:09.400 Boop.
01:37:09.760 They're gone.
01:37:10.500 Let me tell you about gold line.
01:37:11.820 Uh, the premier precious metals provider in America, um, gold line clients, about 30%
01:37:18.980 of gold line clients buy silver instead of gold.
01:37:22.140 Um, silver I think is going to become more and more important because, uh, it's not as expensive
01:37:28.580 as gold, uh, and it's better for trading, uh, and it's better for trading, you know, Hey,
01:37:34.000 you've got some collector coins.
01:37:35.520 I have some collector coins.
01:37:36.960 It's definitely, you know, not currency, but we can trade, um, good for barter.
01:37:44.360 You know, Oh, by the way, we have a Ben Franklin silver round that I designed.
01:37:49.280 Uh, it's sold out every week, but a new supply has now been minted.
01:37:54.400 You can call and say that I sent you.
01:37:57.100 You'll, when you buy the, uh, Ben Franklin silver round, you'll get, uh, a mind your business
01:38:03.600 bar of silver with every purchase that includes silver, uh, Ben Franklin rounds.
01:38:09.520 The more you buy, the more you get for free.
01:38:12.020 It's silver.
01:38:13.200 Good reason to have silver call them and ask them why call gold line today.
01:38:18.220 Find out how to get started.
01:38:19.400 It's eight, six, six gold line, eight, six, six gold line or gold line.com 10 seconds.
01:38:26.680 Station ID.
01:38:38.100 Tonight on the Wednesday night special, a detailed look at the war on gender and the dark money
01:38:45.000 network that is driving it.
01:38:47.140 You know, the problem is we have been played for fools in many ways.
01:38:52.240 We're a very, I think, accepting nation.
01:38:55.600 You know, we're the most, by far the most diverse nation in the history of the world.
01:39:02.240 There is nobody that has had this.
01:39:05.140 I mean, cause we're all pretty much, we're all from someplace else and we came over here
01:39:11.640 and we united around a few, you know, really important principles like, Hey, leave other
01:39:17.500 people alone and don't steal their stuff, you know?
01:39:20.300 Uh, and, um, we're very tolerant because of that.
01:39:24.920 It has been used against us.
01:39:27.020 Uh, and now we're called a bigot for any reason whatsoever.
01:39:30.660 This gender ideology thing is really, really very dangerous.
01:39:36.660 Uh, there was just a story that I gave you out of the Chicago area where they're teaching
01:39:41.880 it to preschool kids.
01:39:44.440 Um, that, you know, you don't have to be a boy or a girl.
01:39:47.760 This is insanity.
01:39:49.200 It's insanity.
01:39:50.500 The culture is not changing just because times are changing.
01:39:57.620 This is a well calculated plan and also a very well funded plan.
01:40:04.640 This is not a new civil rights movement.
01:40:08.080 This is a dangerous ideology and it is coming from super wealthy progressives and corporations
01:40:14.080 and international organizations that are funding all of this.
01:40:18.560 Tonight, I will show you that connection and that collection of people from the nonprofits
01:40:26.140 to the international, uh, organizations, uh, corporations, and the very super wealthy
01:40:33.220 progressives.
01:40:34.280 You need to see how this is.
01:40:36.280 This is not something that is naturally springing up.
01:40:39.420 We've done our homework in tonight.
01:40:41.680 We give it to you.
01:40:43.120 The dark money network funding the war on gender.
01:40:46.600 If you're not a subscriber, will you please become a subscriber?
01:40:50.080 Use the promo code Glenn at blaze tv.com.
01:40:53.640 That's tonight at a nine o'clock right after my new Stu does America.
01:40:59.400 It's got to say it.
01:41:00.220 I'm excited because the music's up.
01:41:01.520 Stu does America.
01:41:02.780 Yeah.
01:41:03.240 Yeah.
01:41:03.440 Tonight.
01:41:04.140 8 p.m.
01:41:04.560 Eastern.
01:41:05.140 And then we're going to have a, you're going to be popping on the show today.
01:41:07.320 I think Glenn to kind of give a little preview.
01:41:09.180 I always enjoy our conversations.
01:41:10.760 Um, you know, I mean, that's one of us, not as not, not, not, not, not sincerely, but
01:41:16.860 I do for public consumption.
01:41:19.580 I enjoy our conversation.
01:41:20.800 Okay.
01:41:21.260 All right.
01:41:21.700 That's great.
01:41:22.180 They're wonderful.
01:41:23.280 Yeah.
01:41:23.620 They really are.
01:41:24.300 For the year I'll play along.
01:41:25.240 Sure.
01:41:25.720 It's great.
01:41:26.560 It's a great time.
01:41:27.820 And I think people will, it actually is.
01:41:29.880 It's weird because we talk for three hours with each other and then I get on your show
01:41:34.540 and it's like a completely different conversation.
01:41:36.560 It's weird.
01:41:37.000 Yeah.
01:41:37.360 I think it's because you're the host.
01:41:38.520 Yeah.
01:41:38.920 I guess that is the way it works.
01:41:40.500 It's nice to be the guest.
01:41:42.180 It's great to be the guest is the place to be.
01:41:44.780 It is.
01:41:45.200 Cause you just come on and you just get to people ask you questions and you just rant
01:41:48.420 and then you go home and you don't care if the show succeeds or not.
01:41:50.640 Yeah.
01:41:50.940 You just like, you know, I don't care.
01:41:52.380 You just, where are we on the air?
01:41:54.360 Don't know.
01:41:54.880 Don't care.
01:41:55.300 Don't know.
01:41:55.640 Don't care.
01:41:56.080 Don't care.
01:41:56.500 Don't care.
01:41:57.000 If the thing fails, if it falls in the toilet, gets canceled tomorrow.
01:41:59.820 Not my fault.
01:42:00.500 Yeah.
01:42:00.920 It's the host's fault.
01:42:01.780 Yeah.
01:42:02.620 And it is in this particular case.
01:42:05.140 Um, let, can I play, uh, MSNBC has Twitter.
01:42:08.520 Disinformation, disinformation concerns.
01:42:13.640 The big lie still loom large over the party, which has gone all in on disinformation to
01:42:19.320 serve its political ends.
01:42:20.700 And now news yesterday that Elon Musk, who seems to, at least at this point, possess more
01:42:26.540 expansive views on speech than Twitter's current management has purchased Twitter that has sent
01:42:32.560 shockwaves through much of the anti disinformation political universe.
01:42:36.400 Musk's purchase of Twitter comes after years in which we've all witnessed and lived through
01:42:42.140 the power and the peril of rampant disinformation.
01:42:46.020 Really?
01:42:46.200 The New York Times puts it like this, quote, the 2016 U.S. presidential election and the
01:42:51.060 Brexit vote that same year gave Silicon Valley executives, U.S. elected officials, and the
01:42:57.620 public a peek into what can go wrong.
01:43:00.080 Okay.
01:43:00.380 Stop.
01:43:01.200 Look at that.
01:43:01.620 Do you see what she's saying?
01:43:02.500 In 2016, there were, there was no, there was, there was no Russian collusion.
01:43:10.520 I mean, there was a sum, but not what they said it was.
01:43:14.560 Not collusion, but they were attack.
01:43:16.840 Yeah.
01:43:16.980 And there wasn't enough to make a difference in that particular one.
01:43:21.160 There was the kind of the opening foray into that, but not enough to make difference.
01:43:25.900 And then the Brexit vote.
01:43:28.440 So she's saying we see what happens.
01:43:30.980 I mean, look at that.
01:43:31.880 Look what happened.
01:43:32.500 When you allow speech, people vote for things I don't like.
01:43:35.160 Yes.
01:43:35.760 That's their standard.
01:43:36.800 Yeah.
01:43:37.420 And Nicole Wallace, I've never seen a clip of her where she doesn't look like she's about
01:43:40.240 to burst into tears.
01:43:42.340 I think they all are.
01:43:43.440 I think they, again, what are, what is he advocating for?
01:43:47.220 He's advocating for people to be able to say the things they want to say.
01:43:51.580 He's advocating for a transparent process.
01:43:54.540 If you do violate their rules.
01:43:56.340 If I said this to you, if I said this to you in 2002, Stu, we are going to get to a place
01:44:02.200 to where you won't be able to say that you agree with the former president.
01:44:09.200 They've banned the president on all.
01:44:13.800 He's not talking.
01:44:14.800 He's not allowed to talk out in the open unless he's given a speech at a private thing.
01:44:19.480 He's not allowed to use any of the social services or any of the networks.
01:44:23.360 They just don't cover him.
01:44:25.560 And you can't say that a man can't have a baby.
01:44:31.120 You would have never believed.
01:44:32.840 I would have been like, what the hell is a social network?
01:44:35.120 Yeah.
01:44:35.460 You know, that's what is it?
01:44:36.940 No, it's true, though.
01:44:39.800 I mean, you would have never.
01:44:40.860 I would have never believed it.
01:44:41.840 I wouldn't have ever believed it.
01:44:43.000 And you know me.
01:44:43.900 I've been on the cutting edge of the crazy stuff.
01:44:47.160 I would have never believed that we would be here.
01:44:49.640 And you can you could tell that they're not sincere.
01:44:51.540 I mean, they keep arguing for people to have no restrictions on voting.
01:44:56.740 So the people they want the fringiest of fringe voters with almost no interest in politics
01:45:01.760 on a day to day basis to be able to vote who are obviously the people who are most affected
01:45:06.600 by disinformation.
01:45:08.080 They don't have any heartfelt foundations.
01:45:10.740 Right.
01:45:11.200 So they can be won over very easily.
01:45:13.720 They want those people voting because they know those people vote for them.
01:45:17.460 That's why they care.
01:45:18.540 It has nothing to do with disinformation.
01:45:20.220 They just want control.
01:45:23.760 The Glenn back program.
01:45:25.520 She read a series of books called control.
01:45:27.860 That's a good idea.
01:45:28.960 Yeah.
01:45:29.540 Brooke wrote in about her dog's experience with rough greens.
01:45:32.220 She says, I wasn't sure my German shepherd would eat it or even like it.
01:45:36.000 But I heard you talking about Uno and how much he liked it.
01:45:38.260 And I decided to try the free trial.
01:45:40.320 Well, she loves rough greens.
01:45:42.840 We were out for about two days once and she wouldn't eat.
01:45:46.300 She was protesting until her monthly bag arrived.
01:45:49.840 Don't I know it, Brooke?
01:45:52.220 She's been bright eyed, energetic lately.
01:45:55.540 I cannot recommend rough greens highly enough.
01:45:58.220 I'm with you.
01:45:58.900 This it's really an amazing thing.
01:46:00.560 Now, it's not a dog food.
01:46:02.400 If you are feeding your dog kibble food, that's really where it's going to really make an impact.
01:46:08.260 Vitamins, minerals, probiotics, antioxidants, you name it.
01:46:12.360 If it's healthy for your dog, it's probably in rough greens.
01:46:16.300 The folks at rough greens are so confident that you're going to be like Brooke and her dog or me and my dog.
01:46:21.900 Your dog's going to love it.
01:46:22.920 They have a special deal.
01:46:23.880 You just go to rough greens dot com slash back.
01:46:26.220 They'll give you a free trial bag.
01:46:28.600 It's free.
01:46:29.700 All you do is pay for shipping.
01:46:31.540 Make sure your dog likes it and then order your next bag.
01:46:34.220 And boy, you will see a difference in your dog.
01:46:36.140 I have rough greens dot com slash back tonight.
01:46:39.760 Back to back studios, America and Glenn TV.
01:46:42.780 Don't miss it on blaze TV dot com slash Glenn.
01:46:44.820 The promo code is Glenn.
01:46:55.280 I want to welcome back a very good friend of the program.
01:46:59.080 Somebody if you're a longtime listener of this program, you might remember Riaz Patal.
01:47:04.780 He is now the founder of Connect Effect.
01:47:09.240 He is a TV producer, a two time Emmy nominee.
01:47:12.860 Couldn't get it done.
01:47:13.760 Huh?
01:47:14.920 Martha Stewart.
01:47:15.840 Both times.
01:47:17.120 And she wasn't even there.
01:47:18.340 She wasn't there.
01:47:18.880 Um, but, uh, uh, he's also a guy that I think we met in 2015 or 2016 and, um, there was a
01:47:29.760 shooting.
01:47:30.560 You're a Muslim.
01:47:31.820 Uh, you're a gay man.
01:47:33.900 And there was a shooting and you were, you know, the media was telling you this is really,
01:47:39.180 this is what's happening.
01:47:40.380 And then Trump came along and you're like, okay, I got to know what's really going on.
01:47:44.180 And you went up to Alaska and said, I just want to meet these people because I can't
01:47:49.760 live in a world if that's really what I'm surrounded by.
01:47:52.400 Yes.
01:47:52.760 And you found out that's not.
01:47:54.300 Not remotely.
01:47:55.280 Not remotely.
01:47:55.980 That 50% of the population are not the cliche that I was led to believe.
01:47:59.820 They're actually real human beings.
01:48:01.020 And we had such a great time getting together.
01:48:03.620 I still follow you on Instagram.
01:48:04.640 We, we chat from time to time, but, um, the, the thing that always strike, uh, struck me
01:48:10.520 was how honest you always were.
01:48:13.780 You were really looking for information.
01:48:15.740 You weren't trying to prove anything.
01:48:16.940 You just wanted to know what the truth was and how different our understanding of the
01:48:22.820 news was because you lived in your world and I lived in my world.
01:48:27.760 And I remember putting things up on the chalkboard and you said, none of those things happen.
01:48:31.440 None of those things I knew about.
01:48:32.860 Yeah, not at all big stories to conservatives.
01:48:36.440 It was weird.
01:48:37.060 Never.
01:48:37.340 And it used to be the strangest thing when I would come here and visit you that I'd get
01:48:39.920 on the plane and leave the LA feeds and arrive here, completely different news, completely
01:48:44.920 different stories.
01:48:45.740 And I'm like, this is insane.
01:48:47.260 They're two different worlds.
01:48:48.420 So you've been trying to bridge the gap, uh, for a long time.
01:48:53.020 Uh, and we talked about shows where you could actually talk.
01:48:57.840 Things have only gotten worse.
01:48:59.260 Yes, absolutely.
01:49:00.460 And I think that was the big problem was the screen world.
01:49:03.940 And I call it the screen world.
01:49:04.920 All the edits that magically appear for us on our phone is the screen world is not the
01:49:09.460 real world.
01:49:10.100 It's a very particular point of view and very highly edited.
01:49:14.480 And so to me for seven years, what is the truth?
01:49:17.000 And every time I would bring people together, seven people, 10 people, 50 people in Alaska
01:49:21.160 or, or Dallas or New York, they were never the cliches that I was led to believe.
01:49:26.440 And I constantly was wondering how do they connect and why wouldn't they connect?
01:49:32.500 And really it came down to the power of the screen world is now the way we see the world.
01:49:37.460 Not people can be standing in front of us and we cannot see them or their humanity because
01:49:42.340 we see them through the edits that we think we know about it is really terrifying.
01:49:45.980 Cause that's, you know, we were talking off the air, children's suicide and depression
01:49:50.620 is off the charts.
01:49:52.300 I unbelievable, unbelievable.
01:49:54.340 And, uh, I think it's because of this, there's nothing real.
01:49:58.280 You don't really know people.
01:50:00.360 There's no real, and COVID only made it worse, no real connections going on.
01:50:06.600 And that's the thing.
01:50:07.640 It's so funny.
01:50:08.640 Everyone seems to be lacking true, authentic connection.
01:50:11.860 And the thing that I realized over seven years is that true connection is not remotely
01:50:16.340 information based, even if we're all living in an information age, that the words we exchange
01:50:21.460 are 7% of communication.
01:50:23.500 It's the body language, it's the tone, it's all of those things that create humanity.
01:50:27.320 None of those you get from a screen.
01:50:28.620 You just get the words.
01:50:30.360 Which is why sequentially posting at each other gets us absolutely nowhere fast.
01:50:34.760 And so I kept trying to think, what is a way to do this to hard reset, actually physical
01:50:39.120 people in a room so that they can see each other and not see the edits that they think
01:50:43.680 they know about each other.
01:50:45.020 And that took seven years of testing and testing and testing.
01:50:47.600 So how are you, how are you going to do this?
01:50:49.240 So it's called Connect Effect.
01:50:50.380 And what it is, it's an in-person, it's an entertainment experience.
01:50:53.560 And it's designed that way because I reached out to a policy institute and they said, everything
01:50:57.480 we're doing about bridging and facilitated conversations is not working.
01:51:01.200 People just show up with more information and they just keep exchanging it and no one
01:51:05.040 actually listens and no one actually learns or is impacted.
01:51:07.680 So it was, how can I get people in a physical room, and we do 50 to 100 people at a time,
01:51:12.340 to really see each other, the people in the room, the real world, and not the screen world,
01:51:19.180 not seeing each other through the screen world.
01:51:20.440 And it takes, it's a hard reset of their humanity.
01:51:23.200 So how do you do that?
01:51:25.260 Because you, I would think that you would, depending on where you are, you would have
01:51:29.600 a lot of conservatives show up and some very timid liberals, or a lot of liberals show up
01:51:34.580 and some very timid conservatives, and you would fight an agenda.
01:51:39.980 Yes.
01:51:40.500 You know what I mean?
01:51:41.020 So how do you, how do you, how are you getting that?
01:51:44.000 The thing is, the actual Connect Effect, what it is, is this, is that when you connect with
01:51:48.020 someone in a meaningful, in-person way, in-person, human to human, you'll talk openly and honestly.
01:51:53.740 It's how we met.
01:51:54.240 When we sat down opposite each other in 2016, and I came with my information, we just looked
01:51:58.680 at each other and we're like, oh, you're just a human being who wants to know.
01:52:02.280 Once you have that connection, you'll talk openly and honestly.
01:52:04.860 When you talk openly and honestly, you will understand, and that understanding deepens the
01:52:09.140 connection.
01:52:09.500 That's the Connect Effect.
01:52:10.580 Right.
01:52:10.980 Now people are talking without the connection, and it's just this exchanging of information.
01:52:15.340 So they don't talk first.
01:52:17.000 They sit back, and from the moment the doors open, there's music, there's images on the
01:52:20.820 screen, two sides of stories that people have never seen, whether it's edits they've seen
01:52:24.960 in the news.
01:52:25.380 Oh yeah, that's what CNN ran, that's what Fox, side by side.
01:52:27.980 And it constantly says, which edit do you see?
01:52:30.180 Which edit do you not see?
01:52:31.460 And we're constantly running through history.
01:52:32.800 Here's an edit you do know, an edit.
01:52:34.100 So before we even start the program, they're seeing you're only, that they're only seeing
01:52:38.880 one edit.
01:52:39.340 And so I would imagine it's very important to let the audience know that you're not trying
01:52:46.360 to change them politically.
01:52:48.040 Not at all.
01:52:48.460 You're just trying to say, you don't know the whole story.
01:52:52.160 You don't know the whole story.
01:52:53.540 And the whole story doesn't necessarily even matter when you are trying to fix things in
01:52:58.220 your world.
01:52:59.160 You and I did a podcast special a while ago where we brought seven Americans together
01:53:02.340 to talk about guns.
01:53:04.340 It was so great.
01:53:05.140 And they just spiraled and spiraled until the NRA firearms instructor and the Moms Demand
01:53:10.560 Action woman spent time together, made a joke, and suddenly all the defenses were gone because
01:53:15.660 they had connected.
01:53:16.980 And then they talked openly, they understood, and they realized that we're 90% there.
01:53:20.580 But when they were all in a room guarded with their information...
01:53:23.640 Before we started it, we were both concerned this could be a nightmare.
01:53:29.620 And by the end, I think the Marxist professor was like, this was great.
01:53:34.460 Yeah, because they stopped seeing each other through the screens.
01:53:38.460 And the screens come at you all day, every day.
01:53:41.520 And the way the screens work is for attention extraction, is what they call it at Google.
01:53:45.780 That's all they're doing.
01:53:46.880 And so whatever you like, they'll send you more of it.
01:53:48.960 If you're angry about this, they'll send you more.
01:53:51.040 Because the real facts are that anger makes money.
01:53:54.520 The easiest shift to create in a human being is anger.
01:53:57.860 What travels faster than any virus?
01:54:00.000 Fear.
01:54:00.220 And so if the screens are constantly making you feel the world is burning constantly,
01:54:05.760 then you are never going to be able to connect.
01:54:07.960 But they make cha-ching, cha-ching, cha-ching more money the more you're watching.
01:54:11.580 And so we hard reset the shared humanity of the people in the room.
01:54:14.680 And it's very interesting because at some point they start realizing,
01:54:17.080 wait, I was going to say that, but I only know that from a screen.
01:54:20.960 And so we tell people, talk about what you know.
01:54:23.980 Did you work on the frontline of COVID?
01:54:25.680 Great.
01:54:26.100 Tell us about that.
01:54:26.720 If you didn't, it's your time to sit back and listen because you received a screen edit
01:54:30.900 that was designed to make you upset and angry, to look at more, to look at more, to look at more,
01:54:35.140 to look at more ads.
01:54:36.860 And so I'm trying to get people, the amazing thing is when people meet in the real world,
01:54:40.040 they're constantly engaging each other with what they know from the screen,
01:54:42.680 which has little to no relevance to the person that they're talking to.
01:54:47.280 The first one is happening where?
01:54:49.080 In Orange County?
01:54:49.480 In Orange County this Saturday, April 30th.
01:54:51.720 I'm working with an organization called Civic Genius, and I really was relentless when I was finding a partner
01:54:58.240 that they did not have a political affiliation because I cannot tell someone what the way they should think.
01:55:03.580 I don't live their life.
01:55:04.520 I haven't lived their lives thousands and thousands of days as them.
01:55:07.140 That's not, it's actually not the, I shouldn't say that.
01:55:10.420 The problem is people who are trying to tell people what to think, not how to think, what to think.
01:55:18.860 You will believe this.
01:55:20.180 I don't care what side it's on.
01:55:21.380 You believe this, and there's no compromise.
01:55:23.960 You must believe this, or you are bad.
01:55:26.280 Bad.
01:55:27.460 That's what's killing us.
01:55:28.800 Yeah.
01:55:29.000 That's what's killing us.
01:55:29.580 And when you and I met years ago, I came in with this perception of what I thought you were.
01:55:33.900 And when we sat, the humanity clicked in, and we were able to talk.
01:55:37.840 And all I want, the whole point of this, is I just want people to stop fighting in their families,
01:55:43.340 and stop fighting in their communities.
01:55:44.660 Because if you can't sit down with the people in your community to solve your problems, no one wins.
01:55:50.720 So what age group are you doing?
01:55:52.220 This is mostly aging and over, but 18 to 80.
01:55:55.320 It can be anyone.
01:55:56.400 And when you go, do you have to participate, or can you just watch?
01:56:03.780 You can.
01:56:04.560 So everyone sits, and everything is designed.
01:56:06.480 The way the seats are set up, the way the screen works, it's all highly, highly, highly produced.
01:56:10.300 So everyone sits in this very large U, so there's no hiding in the back.
01:56:14.300 But how people...
01:56:14.800 It's like an AA meeting.
01:56:15.600 It's like an AA.
01:56:16.360 You can't go anywhere.
01:56:17.380 You must stay.
01:56:18.340 But not everyone speaks.
01:56:20.080 And who speaks is random.
01:56:21.240 It's actually done through a way inside their pouches.
01:56:23.500 Some people have a chip, and some people don't.
01:56:25.440 And the people with blue chips have to stand up, and then they have a conversation.
01:56:28.780 It's a way, but before...
01:56:29.700 So you're not speaking to...
01:56:31.000 I mean, you are speaking in front of the whole group, but you're not speaking and having interaction with the whole group.
01:56:36.800 No, the whole group is kind of channeling it through different conversations between...
01:56:40.820 Correct, correct.
01:56:41.300 And a lot of them, we say it's one story told between two worlds.
01:56:44.340 One is the real world, all of us in the room, and the other is all the media we have on the screen.
01:56:48.920 And so the screen plays a large part in it, with edits and media coming at the audience, showing them, well, what is true?
01:56:55.440 Because if this is true on the screen, it can't be true in the real world.
01:56:58.220 And we're constantly juxtaposing the two, and it really ends up being this mind-blowing hard reset.
01:57:03.500 So do you have... Are you going to have video there?
01:57:06.540 Okay. Can you return maybe and show me some video and give me the results of what this happened?
01:57:11.940 We can. We actually have two tests on the website, connecteffect.us, under testimonials.
01:57:16.040 Oh, okay.
01:57:16.440 One, we took women, and we said, if women, once connected, could they solve each other's most deep, challenging question?
01:57:23.740 So we took these total strangers, didn't know each other, connected them, and they're reading these unbelievable, vulnerable questions like,
01:57:30.080 why am I single my whole life? Why do I draw men that would abuse me? And the audience helps them find the answer.
01:57:35.500 That's unbelievable.
01:57:36.100 It's incredible, because all that happens is, we have a problem, we go to an expert. We have a problem, we go to an expert.
01:57:41.040 Diagnosed, medicated. Sometimes we just need opinions of other people and social buffering, and that doesn't exist anymore.
01:57:46.380 So that was one test. The other was at a university, because we had students at this university afraid of each other, not just physically, but ideologically.
01:57:53.860 And so we thought, could we take students, once connected, after 60 minutes, would they be open to the other side's ideology?
01:58:00.780 And you look at the video, they were. They saw the whole thing differently, and they realized that all these people in the real world, in the room, are not the enemies that they perceive coming through the edits.
01:58:11.020 So how do you get people to, I mean, are you just traveling the country? Are you asking for places to host you?
01:58:17.920 We are. We're looking for organizations, we're looking for churches, synagogues, anywhere where people have stopped talking, which is pretty much everywhere.
01:58:24.740 Everywhere.
01:58:25.000 We're looking, and it's not just led by me. It's a system that's replicated and designed to be done by many people. The system is called EPIC. Forbes described it was a game changer a few years ago.
01:58:35.020 It's a different way of approaching people, that you have to engage through equalization, that's the E. If I don't look at you as an equal, what other point are we talking about?
01:58:43.420 Like, why am I talking to you if I don't think you're an equal?
01:58:45.200 And then beyond that, the P is personalization. I don't care what you read, because whatever you read, I've got, you've got stats, I've got stats.
01:58:51.500 You've got articles, I've got articles. Now we go nowhere. What do you know? What have you experienced of racism? What have you experienced of suffering?
01:58:58.480 That's what I need to know. But if you keep bringing, I kept bridging these conversations, and I had seven people in the room, and 480 opinions.
01:59:05.000 And suddenly Nancy Pelosi was there, and Mitch McCollum, and I'm like, why are they in the room? They're certainly not going to be helping you fix your problem in your school.
01:59:11.400 And so it's personalization. Then information gathering. The thing I tell people, stop talking about what you know. We know what you know. Ask people, what do I not know?
01:59:20.920 That is, I think that is one of the real keys to, if people say, I can't talk to them, or I want to just, I need to change their mind.
01:59:31.900 If you're approaching a conversation that way, you are saying to yourself, they don't have anything of value to teach me.
01:59:39.340 Yes.
01:59:39.680 And when you both exchange that, just the basic thing, and I don't mean stats. I mean, you as a person.
01:59:48.280 Yes.
01:59:48.520 How did you get there? As soon as you get there, things change.
01:59:52.980 I always ask people, why are we not cyclopses?
01:59:55.700 Why do we have two eyes that do the exact same thing, not even an inch and a half apart? Because that's the only way to see depth and perspective.
02:00:03.560 So I tell people, look at the world with your view. You need the other view to see the world in more than two dimensions.
02:00:10.140 You have to know what you don't know.
02:00:12.300 Constantly I would come to the blaze, and you and I would sit down, whether we were traveling on a project, and I would learn so much about the world that I never knew, and vice versa.
02:00:20.700 And it was the only way that I saw things with depth. It was no longer a two-dimensional edit. In the screen world, it was three-dimensional in the real world.
02:00:28.720 I've been thinking about this a lot lately. We've got to wrap up. I've been thinking about this a lot lately, the scripture, there must be opposition in all things.
02:00:36.820 All of it. Must be.
02:00:38.040 We don't want to argue, and you've got to agree to one side. No, there must be opposition in all things.
02:00:44.760 For solutions, yes.
02:00:45.840 Yes, and to see depth.
02:00:48.100 Yes.
02:00:48.300 So, Riaz, thank you so much. You can find out more on this at connecteffect.us. That's connecteffect.us.
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02:01:18.860 I'm so happy with the results. This product works, and it's a true blessing.
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02:01:55.680 Stay informed. Sign up for the free newsletter today at GlennBeck.com.
02:02:00.700 Welcome to the Glenn Beck program. Just got to give you some breaking news here on, you know, TikTok.
02:02:25.960 Yeah. TikTok, obviously, this is minor. We need to get back into the important news of Elon Musk buying Twitter here in just a second.
02:02:32.780 But let me just throw this out there just so you have the information.
02:02:36.120 You know, TikTok, the fastest growing social media network in history that's owned by the Chinese government.
02:02:40.640 The new headline is how TikTok Live became a strip club filled with 15-year-olds.
02:02:45.560 Again, can we please talk about the real issue?
02:02:48.000 Yeah, we'll get to that.
02:02:48.880 Freedom of speech with Elon Musk. He's rich.
02:02:52.000 Basically, there's this way that you can apparently tip 15-year-olds to a strip in front of you on TikTok.
02:03:00.140 You know, look, that's a minor thing. I just want to make sure you understand the context of the story before we get back to the important thing.
02:03:06.020 That a rich person has bought Twitter, which before this, I don't know if you know this.
02:03:09.880 No.
02:03:10.180 It was charity.
02:03:11.120 Yeah, it was not a collection of rich people.
02:03:12.600 It was not a collection of rich people.
02:03:13.700 No.
02:03:13.880 Jack from Twitter.
02:03:15.220 Poor.
02:03:15.660 Very, very poor.
02:03:16.540 Even though he's fully endorsed the Elon Musk takeover, we should all, you know, cry about the changes that are going on there.
02:03:27.140 But, you know, I wish you would stop talking because I really got to get back onto the Chinese government funded and operated TikTok.
02:03:34.460 Yeah.
02:03:35.160 But don't think about that.
02:03:37.180 That's not important at all.
02:03:38.440 You know, just because we have a much larger social network that's growing faster than anyone in the history of the Internet, we should just embrace it fully and ignore that growth while we talk about a social network with one-fifth the size.
02:03:55.660 Okay.
02:03:56.120 Changing ownership.
02:03:57.440 Let's focus on that instead.
02:03:59.180 His white power anti-Asian rants.
02:04:02.680 Thank you very much, Stu.
02:04:03.700 We'll see you tonight, tonight, very important show, 9 p.m. on Blaze TV.
02:04:10.060 The Glenn Beck Program.