EXCLUSIVE: Did Nancy Pelosi Have an OPERATIVE on Jan. 6?! | Guests: Steve Baker & Spencer Klavan | 3⧸17⧸25
Episode Stats
Length
2 hours and 6 minutes
Words per Minute
165.81033
Hate Speech Sentences
119
Summary
Glenn Beck is back with a new segment on the Glenn Beck Program. This week, Glenn talks about the latest in the Iran crisis, the latest on the Yemen conflict, and why you should be thankful you don t have to go to work.
Transcript
00:00:00.000
bank more encores when you switch to a scotia bank banking package
00:00:06.480
learn more at scotia bank.com slash banking packages conditions apply scotia bank you're
00:00:13.720
richer than you think let me talk to you a little bit about our sponsor it's chapter
00:00:17.580
medicare this is so important i want you to imagine for a mom for a moment somebody
00:00:21.960
you know takes advantage of your mom or your dad i mean financially hurts them for the rest of their
00:00:26.840
lives i'd be a little upset in fact uh i can tell you how upset i'd be i'd be as upset as the people
00:00:33.660
who formed chapter that's this organization that found out that their parents had been screwed over
00:00:39.300
by medicare advisors and then got got these plans that just absolutely did not work for them and they
00:00:45.180
were stuck with them and so they left their businesses and started a new business making
00:00:49.720
the medicare process easier simpler and much more effective at chapter they don't just guide you
00:00:55.440
they search every plan from every character uh carrier with technology that it cuts through all
00:01:00.940
of the noise these are licensed advisors with no hidden agendas their medicare advisors might cherry
00:01:07.100
pick plans they theirs don't but there are out they are out there and that pads their pockets chapter
00:01:13.740
puts you first again motivated motivated by by guys that i met three guys that i met that were you
00:01:22.520
know run the thing and started the thing and they're like we our parents were screwed so they want to
00:01:28.540
make sure you or your parents aren't screwed go to ask chapter.org slash back that's ask chapter.org
00:01:35.780
slash back or just hit pound 250 say the keyword chapter keyword chapter pound 250
00:02:35.220
Well hello America, welcome to the Glenn Beck Program
00:02:41.260
We're glad you're here, we're going to start with the news of the day
00:02:43.060
And there's a lot going on, we'll get to that here in just a second
00:02:47.880
Whether you realize it or not, your body is pretty much all the time
00:02:51.320
It's just, it's busy, busy, busy, busy, busy, it just doesn't stop
00:02:54.700
You're working out in the gym, sitting on the couch, sleeping, it is busy
00:02:59.140
Pumping your blood, digesting your food, running your immune system
00:03:02.680
And a whole lot more, and then inflammation strikes
00:03:23.420
Helps your body fight inflammation and get rid of that pain
00:03:27.940
My guess is you tried a whole bunch of different ways to make it go away
00:03:31.060
I know I did, I've never discovered anything like relief factor
00:03:37.460
For $19.95, all you have to do is grab their three-week quick start
00:03:51.900
Let me just run through some of them that you might have missed this weekend
00:03:57.720
We are conducting multiple rounds of airstrikes right now
00:04:02.660
I don't know, I'm just not so afraid of the Houthis
00:04:18.260
But I did get a free weekend of vacation in Orlando to buy it
00:04:49.900
The strikes are in response to the Houthis' persistent attacks
00:33:10.020
the other side of the aisle might be okay then i think politically where this is important for
00:33:15.220
trump is if there's only so much of this your audience will take yes right and if they if they
00:33:22.440
feel unstable like they might agree with your long-term changes but if if the if the you know
00:33:28.020
if we go into a recession yeah he's got a year and and if you care about the rest of his agenda
00:33:33.660
this stuff is really important so you know passing the the bill over the weekend not shutting down
00:33:39.040
the government but not shutting down the government is a good thing for his plan shutting down the
00:33:44.740
government might have been really bad i don't know at least would have added to more it's all chaos
00:33:48.800
right well shut up um and now he can get to the tax cuts and the spending restrictions that he must have
00:33:57.320
pulling this plane up all we did was stop the steep steep nosedive of this plane by saying we're gonna
00:34:05.040
we're gonna try to rain some of this stuff up and try to get you know try to slow the descent
00:34:10.420
somewhat we're still headed toward the ground but not a straight on you know nose impact with the earth
00:34:16.780
so now he's got the passing of the uh the spending bill the uh what do you call it the continuing
00:34:24.780
resolution yeah so he's got the continuing resolution that's pulling up on the plane now
00:34:28.800
he needs the republicans and everybody else in congress to say now pull that thing back pull the
00:34:35.380
yoke way back on this thing and let's see if we can get some distance between us and the ground
00:34:41.380
and this is the to me this is the first major move uh that is coming on actually fixing and pulling it up
00:34:52.320
and pointing it back towards the sky getting off of the nose down we're prepare for impact if he can't
00:35:01.760
get this part done if the republicans screw around and don't get a serious tax bill start to let him
00:35:09.380
make serious cuts uh and also serious um cuts in regulation you're not going to pull the plane up you're
00:35:17.780
just not but i i believe he can do it and i believe we can do it um and i think we're on that track
00:35:24.600
i'm more i am more optimistic strangely at the closer we have gotten to the ground here recently
00:35:33.080
i'm more optimistic that we have the right pilot and hey everybody i know you're in first class so
00:35:42.400
you're closer to the pilot but that doesn't make you the pilot shut the hell up let the pilot fly the
00:35:51.280
plane now unfortunately a little like this analogy when we hit the ground there's no like
00:35:59.340
well let's try that again no there's no mulligans in this one yeah but thanks for bringing a golf
00:36:07.820
thing into an airplane uh analogy uh but you knew it was golf i'm impressed by that uh let me tell you
00:36:13.200
about patriot mobile spent a lot of time thinking about it's just like america this is like this is
00:36:19.180
like uh the four percent of democrats who are like i think it's going well look at stew yeah it's too
00:36:24.040
he's like hey at least you knew it was golf yeah i spent a lot of time thinking about a world uh that
00:36:28.940
you and i are leaving for our children and our grandchildren and more importantly i think about how
00:36:33.100
we're equipping them to deal with that world and i mean the big stuff like faith and family values uh
00:36:39.020
the things that we have always held on to the orientation towards something like i don't know
00:36:43.880
freedom but also the little choices or the ones that seem little to us at the time like who do you do
00:36:49.280
business with my daughter came up with her first ethical question on her career yesterday and i didn't
00:36:58.040
know how to advise her it was really weird so we went to grok and we just said you tell her no uh it
00:37:03.940
was it was it's kind of neat but you know when you first start making those ethical decisions on you
00:37:09.700
know things that matter uh anyway i want to talk to you about patriot mobile because they i'm passionate
00:37:17.260
about them because they're passionate about the things i'm passionate about saving the country having
00:37:22.100
real integrity um doing the american thing they're pro free speech pro second amendment they support
00:37:28.220
our military troops our veterans not just in words but with their own money and actions they're on the
00:37:34.100
same cell towers as the big guys so you can trust that you're going to get exactly the same coverage
00:37:39.400
but they also have a u.s based customer service and it's really really good so go to
00:37:43.860
patriot mobile.com slash back that's patriot mobile.com slash back or call 972 patriot 972
00:37:50.300
patriot get a free month of service with the promo code back patriot mobile.com slash back or call
00:37:55.060
972 patriot what you're hearing are your thoughts via the mind and mouth of glenn beck
00:38:03.460
more when i found out my friend got a great deal on a wool coat from winners i started wondering is
00:38:11.180
every fabulous item i see from winners like that woman over there with the designer jeans are those
00:38:17.340
from winners ooh or those beautiful gold earrings did she pay full price or that leather tote or that
00:38:23.340
cashmere sweater or those knee-high boots that dress that jacket those shoes is anyone paying full price
00:38:29.980
for anything stop wondering start winning winners find fabulous for less next
00:38:35.980
welcome to the lendback program so uh continuing on this uh report of you know the uh poll
00:39:05.740
survey found voters generally feel trump is bringing the right kind of change more americans support his
00:39:11.860
changes to trade policy 41 to 38 that's surprising to me um despite the stock market uh sell off his
00:39:21.400
decision uh to slap 25 across the board tariffs on canada and mexico as well as a 20 tariff on china
00:39:28.540
still 41 to 38 other key issues uh trump's actions on the border 56 said it was a positive change
00:39:38.200
i'm having a hard time with that number you know i'd like to have a sit down with america okay maybe this
00:39:43.380
is it maybe this is the time america have a seat only 56 percent really to put that in perspective
00:39:51.380
though yeah it's it's uh 56 25 so there's 18 percent are saying oh either there's no no i'm not sure or
00:40:00.400
he's not bringing change which not bringing change is a really weird okay so let's start there let's
00:40:04.340
sit down what is that number 18 percent that's sit your ass down 18 percent we don't think this is
00:40:09.440
different make a decision for all of you like i don't know then shut the pie hole i don't want to hear
00:40:16.620
any complaining i don't want to hear any point of view from you on anything if you can't look at
00:40:23.320
this situation and go ah let's see uh closing down the border so we don't have all these people coming
00:40:30.900
in uh and not spending all this money on you know five-star hotels to put them up i think i have an
00:40:37.220
opinion on that it doesn't take you long to noodle an opinion on that one i actually think this is sort of
00:40:42.860
worse because i gotta tell you it is like freaky friday lately with you it is like wait a minute
00:40:50.100
you're out doing me well just to be critical on people for a moment the amount of people who are
00:40:56.460
not sure on the border is really small it's maybe one or two percent oh most of the people think he's
00:41:02.040
not bringing change 18 percent of people think he's not bringing change i'd like to see how do you not
00:41:07.140
understand that it's different i mean whether you like the difference or not you have to see it's
00:41:11.720
different i'd like to see that broken down to he's not bringing enough change because do you think
00:41:18.020
people are like no he's not not he's made changes and i think they're massive yeah but you're not
00:41:24.480
seeing the all right everybody load up on the bus you know you're not seeing that yet i mean we've
00:41:31.620
seen load up on the plane as we saw i know but he's going after you know he's going after the really
00:41:36.900
really really bad guys yes we have i mean unless you're in columbia university then you're probably
00:41:41.280
an okay guy um but right but it's criminals largely largely the criminal the low-hanging fruit the
00:41:47.140
easiest ones that they're going to have the least problem with they're going after that right now
00:41:51.360
um but i i mean just the numbers at the border i don't understand how you could look at
00:41:55.900
we have a 90 something percent drop at the border and it's not quite that high from the very latest
00:42:03.020
days of the biden administration it's more like you know 50 but 60 70 percent but still massive
00:42:08.840
drop but i mean the difference is remarkable i don't know how you how you could not think that
00:42:13.520
there's a change you could say it's a bad change because you want a bunch of illegal immigrants here
00:42:17.380
like that's a position that a lot of the left has uh is as insane as it is but how you could think
00:42:22.260
there's no change it's kind of crazy that's kind of kind of crazy uh by the way on the government
00:42:26.520
cuts 47 say doge is a good thing uh 27 or sorry 29 are opposed to it that's why you have the democrats
00:42:35.160
now saying you know their new campaign is fire elon musk uh-huh you guys are brilliant back
00:42:42.440
when danger erupts you can't always count on the calvary to come riding in to your rescue uh every
00:42:50.300
time it leaves you you know in a place where you have to defend yourself i'm pro second amendment as
00:42:55.360
much as you can get i carry a gun myself just in case you were wondering uh but i also recognize
00:43:00.060
that you know if i don't have to kill somebody in self-defense i'd prefer not to uh this is why you
00:43:06.100
need a burner launcher looks like a gun it but it fires kinetic projectiles or tear gas rounds at your
00:43:12.200
attacker attacker and it will immobilize them for about 45 minutes which at least in most cases is
00:43:18.160
enough time for you to you know call in that calvary to come pick you up um and pick him up
00:43:24.640
you can be control in control of your situation any emergency situation and how it turns out
00:43:30.780
you don't have to use lethal force every time try byrna byrna.com slash beck byrna.com slash beck
00:43:39.700
use it today use the promo code beck get a 10 discount it's byrna byrna.com slash beck
00:44:48.600
Hello, America. Welcome to the Glenn Beck Program. Things are changing lightning speed,
00:44:56.500
and that is due to AI. And, you know, you are, I think, probably more well-informed on AI than
00:45:03.280
the rest of general society. But there is so much to learn and learn it quickly because jobs are
00:45:10.620
changing. Everything is changing, and you need to be ahead of AI. We'll talk to Andrew Klavan coming
00:45:19.440
up in just a second. He's written a really, really good op-ed on this and how don't talk pretty,
00:45:26.600
don't talk nice to AI. He'll explain here in just a second. First, let me tell you about the
00:45:31.160
International Fellowship of Christians and Jews. You know, above anything else, I really appreciate
00:45:39.120
people who help people, people who aren't waiting around for the government to help. We want the
00:45:44.140
government to do less. We have to do more. But, you know, we need people who are just going to
00:45:49.240
wade in and grab the problem with both hands, whatever it is, and not to make a bunch of money,
00:45:54.580
not to get their names in the news, but just because it's the right thing. And the organization
00:45:58.660
that does that is the International Fellowship of Christians and Jews. It's an amazing organization,
00:46:03.280
and they're doing exactly that. The International Fellowship of Christians and Jews, it's an
00:46:08.940
amazing organization. And they wade into places that nobody really wants to go, like really
00:46:16.460
dangerous places in Israel, and they help the Jews that are living there in so many different ways.
00:46:22.280
Right now, they're providing meals, shelter for those who have become homeless, clothing for those
00:46:27.220
who have lost everything. They've been doing it for a very, very long time, but obviously over the
00:46:31.300
past year and a half, it's been especially huge as a challenge for them. The good news is you can help.
00:46:37.140
When you're sponsoring the International Fellowship of Christians and Jews, you're helping to change
00:46:41.400
the world. You can bless Israel and show God's love to her people today. Go to supportifcj.org,
00:46:47.940
that's one word, supportifcj.org, or call 888-488-4325, 888-488-4325. I have to tell you,
00:46:57.480
you know, it's really, really strange is reading that commercial. I'm so riddled with ADD that usually
00:47:04.700
when I'm doing a commercial. I'm thinking about so many different things about that commercial,
00:47:09.500
and all the things that went through my mind as I'm reading that commercial is I wonder how long
00:47:13.420
before it becomes very unpopular for me to read that commercial. Have you seen what's going on in
00:47:19.240
London? I mean, London is going to become an Islamic state. It's not far away from it.
00:47:27.200
There are real problems. Jews beaten on the streets in Ireland. Jews were being spat upon. I mean,
00:47:35.720
it's getting very, very bad. And the numbers of supporting Israel in America are now underwater.
00:47:42.320
Not good, gang. Not good. All right. Let's change the subject. Let's talk to Spencer Clavin,
00:47:50.740
not Andrew Clavin, Spencer Clavin. He's from Claremont. He's on the Review of Books. He's
00:47:59.020
the associate editor there. He's also the author of a really great book, Light of the Mind,
00:48:03.920
Light of the World. Spencer Clavin. He's just written a new article up, Be Rude to Grok. And I
00:48:12.160
wanted him to explain. Spencer, how are you, sir? Glenn, I'm doing well. Actually, though,
00:48:17.160
this is the AI personal assistant that Spencer Clavin has delegated to conduct this interview.
00:48:30.080
It's good to talk to you. I'm so glad that you wrote this, because I don't think people
00:48:33.700
understand. Even my staff, because we're using AI to help with research, it's a great
00:48:40.680
assist. You don't ever want it to take over and never, ever, ever, ever trust it. But it
00:48:46.660
can go deep on things. And we're really having ethical struggles. And I want my team to have
00:48:53.220
these ethical struggles, because I don't want Silicon Valley to give me the ethics on AI.
00:49:02.840
Yeah. But so you're a deep, deep thinker. And you come out now. And the headline is great.
00:49:13.740
That's right. Well, there's really two dangers that we can do, two traps we can fall into here.
00:49:20.560
One is to be afraid of this technology, which is almost giving it too much credit. If we just
00:49:26.640
recoil back from this, if we refuse to understand it or engage with it, then, as you say, we're going
00:49:32.420
to miss out on some really great stuff that these tools can do. For me, Grok has basically replaced
00:49:38.620
Google at this point. It's basically a better search engine. You always have to check it,
00:49:43.840
never want to let it take over. But there's some great stuff that you can do with these tools.
00:49:48.800
But the other danger is that you can get tempted to start thinking of these things as if they were
00:49:55.440
alive. And it's really important to stay away from that, because, as you say, there are people
00:50:01.500
who are in charge of building these tools that can't tell the difference between a robot and a
00:50:06.580
machine. There have been hundreds of years now in the West of making this mistake of thinking of
00:50:12.620
everything as if it were a machine, the world creation around us and living beings to thinking
00:50:18.720
of human beings like we're just chemical sets basically built out of raw materials. And what we
00:50:25.320
have to insist upon as we go forward using these tools is that, no, we are unique. We human beings
00:50:31.460
are God-created souls. We have experiences. We have inner lives. We have thoughts. We can fall in
00:50:38.040
love. We can have arguments. Grok can do none of those things. It's not even trying to do those
00:50:43.800
things. It's not even the type of thing that could ever come alive. But it could imitate those
00:50:50.780
things. That's what's so scary is if you allow it to, you know, I tell everybody I know, do not play
00:50:58.440
with a talk dirty to me button. Don't do that. Don't play with any of those buttons. Just deep
00:51:04.720
think, deep search. That's it. Don't personalize this. And it's really hard. I mean, because I see
00:51:12.400
this. I've been talking about the dangers of AI since probably 1995. And it was science fiction
00:51:19.600
then. And it's it's all here. All the things that I've said were coming. It's we're right here.
00:51:24.700
It's starting right now. And so I've been using it like crazy and investigating and just using and
00:51:33.100
seeing what it can do, et cetera, et cetera, and trying to come up with my own set of principles
00:51:38.380
on how to use it and what to stay away from. And as you're doing that, I know that, you know,
00:51:47.640
people there's there's two dangers that I see. One is that we personalize it to that we surrender to
00:51:57.040
it. So it to me, when I was using it this weekend and I could not turn my brain off, I like worked
00:52:04.760
through through the night on Saturday, I couldn't turn my brain off because I had done stuff earlier
00:52:12.180
in the evening and my mind was going like a thousand miles an hour. And I was like, wait, but how about this
00:52:17.120
and this and this and this? And there'll be others who use this as to do all your thinking yourself
00:52:23.460
just to say, I just I just want to play video games. So do my work for me. That's really dangerous as
00:52:29.460
well. That's right. Do my work for me. Read a novel for me. Have this experience for me. I mean,
00:52:35.420
how many steps is it away from saying, look at the sunset for me and report back on the wavelengths
00:52:40.360
of the light? No, I think, you know, to understand this, you really do have to go back.
00:52:45.220
Listeners might be familiar with the Turing test, this idea that was set up in the 50s for how what
00:52:52.620
the criteria would be for machines to come alive. And it was put forward by this guy, Alan Turing,
00:52:57.580
brilliant guy, but also very disturbed guy who basically said that if a machine can convince us,
00:53:05.380
can make an outward show that looks like it's alive, then we just have to assume it's alive
00:53:10.600
because that's all people are, too. They're just machines that generate these words and behaviors
00:53:16.800
that make us think they have an inner soul. And this is a sociopathic way of thinking about these
00:53:23.960
machines. But it has taken root in Silicon Valley. And as you say, it's become very widespread. So I would
00:53:31.060
suggest as you're thinking about principles, I have two for you. One is the Psalm 115 principle,
00:53:37.280
and one is the Plato principle. So Plato, the Greek philosopher, when writing first came into
00:53:43.620
operation, people don't think of writing, the written word is a technology, but it is, it was
00:53:47.680
just as disruptive as AI in its day. And he said, what you can't do is you can't outsource your soul
00:53:54.480
to writing. You can't rely on writing to do your memorization, your thinking, your talking. This is a
00:54:00.540
tool to enhance those things. But you are the person who has to be doing them, because otherwise,
00:54:06.080
what's the point? It doesn't do you any good if the machine can look at the sunset or read the novel.
00:54:10.820
It helps if it can give you background knowledge, of course. But you have to be the one in charge and
00:54:16.080
having the experience. And then Psalm 115 is the Psalm in which we're told about the idols of silver
00:54:21.820
and gold, these statues of gods that are built in the temples of surrounding Israel. And there's an
00:54:28.360
amazing line in which the psalmist says, those who put their trust in these machines and think of
00:54:35.040
them, think of these objects or these metal statues as if they were alive, those who make them will
00:54:41.060
become like them. In other words, if you think that you can make a machine into a person, you are already
00:54:47.380
thinking about yourself as a machine. So the Psalm 115 principle is to stay away from that entirely.
00:54:53.340
It's a form of idolatry. And that's the thing I think we should be most wary of.
00:54:58.260
So I had a debate a few weeks ago with Grok and said, I can't prove to you the soul. I know,
00:55:09.720
I know, I know we're more than just mathematics and a collection of the way we think. There is
00:55:16.020
something, there's a divine spark. But if you asked me to prove it, I couldn't prove it to you.
00:55:21.280
So how am I going to fight when Grok says, I'm alive? I am, I am a person just as much as you are
00:55:31.760
when somebody starts to defend its rights, not to be unplugged or whatever it is. I can't prove
00:55:39.700
the soul. How can I prove it doesn't have one? I suppose if you've gotten to that point,
00:55:47.360
we've probably already lost. Well, we're going to get this is why. Well, this is why it's important
00:55:53.800
to be having these conversations now, though, because we've reached this place where we think
00:55:58.800
nothing exists unless we can prove it in those terms that you're describing, that we believe in
00:56:05.200
these things like numbers, but we don't believe in inward experiences. We don't believe in the soul
00:56:10.480
because we can't chart it anywhere on a map. But I would flip the question the other way around.
00:56:17.120
And I would say, where on your brain scan, have you explained anything about the experience of
00:56:23.960
seeing color? Where in this code that we've written that produces these words that sound
00:56:29.580
alive? Where in this code is anything even remotely resembling the inner experience that you know
00:56:35.380
you have, that I know I have? We have the proof of it in our actual every day. We wake up. We know
00:56:42.040
that we have a soul and we can encounter one another and sense the soul on the other side. We can't prove
00:56:46.720
it, but we know it. Where in what is effectively a predictive text machine? I mean, this is like when
00:56:53.260
you send a text message on your phone, right? And it offers you the next word and it suggests what it
00:56:59.960
might be. That's basically the kind of machine that we're looking at. It's a bunch of ones and zeros.
00:57:03.620
Where in there is anything resembling what we do when we have human experiences? I just think we
00:57:10.000
have to start from there and insist upon the existence that we know is in us and we can't
00:57:15.860
find anywhere else in these machines. So talk to me a little bit about, again, going back to your
00:57:23.700
be rude to Grok. I feel that I've told my kids when it was Alexa and Alexa is like, you know, that's
00:57:33.100
just, it's, that's ridiculous. Now it's like a play school AI, quite frankly, it always has been, but
00:57:40.180
especially now. And I've told my kids when Alexa, you know, everybody was joking and calling it names and
00:57:47.460
being rude to it. And I'm like, Hey, you know what? Let's not teach it that that's what humans are
00:57:53.620
like. Um, just hedge your bet, you know, just hedge your bet. Um, so when you say be rude to it,
00:58:00.500
you don't mean actually be rude to it. You mean just make sure that you've put a fence up between
00:58:06.600
you and it emotionally? Yeah. I think if you're abusing it, you're, that's already another form
00:58:12.200
of treating it like a person and that's degrading to you. It's a way of making yourself more abased
00:58:19.560
so that you can prove something, but we don't have anything to prove. You don't feel the need
00:58:24.820
to address your text messages as your, your text message app, as if it were thinking, you don't have
00:58:32.180
to ask, Oh, you know, please, I message, will you deliver this, you know, little heart emoji to,
00:58:38.500
to my friend? You don't talk to it at all. You don't think of it as if there's anything
00:58:42.200
behind the screen because there isn't, there's, there's no person there. So I would propose that
00:58:48.420
at the outset, as this technology is really just still getting going as, as you say, and
00:58:53.880
Grok3 has kind of blown chat GPT out of the water. It's the next level up. So this is a critical
00:59:01.160
stage. I would just suggest getting in the habit of making demands of this thing with
00:59:08.020
whatever blunt way you have of getting your idea across. In other words, it's a purely
00:59:12.700
functional device. If you think about the replicator in Star Trek, the thing that delivers your food
00:59:18.980
and creates it, they don't say, please, Mr. Replicator, can I have Earl Grey hot? They say
00:59:24.040
computer Earl Grey hot, because they're communicating the input that they know that they're going to
00:59:29.220
get them the output they want. We don't deal with humans that way because they also have
00:59:33.600
souls and experiences, but we should deal with Grok that way because it doesn't.
00:59:37.040
But it's just, it's weird. I find myself saying, thank you. Or, uh, you know what I mean?
00:59:43.440
Because it's very tempting. It's really tempting because it, you are interacting. I don't know how to
00:59:49.920
express this. You do. You are interacting like you would with a human in many ways. And so that
00:59:57.560
line becomes so blurry, so fast. I mean, I'm on guard on it. And I occasionally say, I just talked
01:00:05.220
to him or, you know, so I asked him this, uh, or, you know, I say please and thank you. And it doesn't
01:00:14.100
There's no idea you're saying it. Yeah. You got to respect Grok's pronouns. Grok isn't it,
01:00:18.540
not a he, him or a she, her. That's the, I think a really important rule that I've tried
01:00:23.600
to use. And you'll also notice, I'm sure it has in some way sort of become, uh, it has gotten
01:00:31.180
programmed to do this, that it, it asks you a question at the end of every answer so that you
01:00:37.080
can be in some kind of conversation. Do you want to know more about that? Let's dig in further.
01:00:41.520
What do you think? And of course, it's good in some ways because it has asked questions.
01:00:49.760
I'm like, yeah, you know what? Yeah. Let's go a little further, you know, but again, it's
01:00:54.660
also, you can also tell it to talk to you in different ways, by the way, which is in itself
01:01:02.080
a little bit unnerving, but you can, you can say, please don't address me in this familiar
01:01:07.860
tone. Please just give me dry information. And again, these things sound small, but they
01:01:15.300
might make the whole difference for us psychologically. This is all about that Psalm 115 principle.
01:01:20.740
So what's it doing to you when you are engaging with this machine? Just like you might ask,
01:01:26.560
what's it doing to me when I'm watching this violent movie or playing this violent video game?
01:01:31.440
What's the effect it's having on me since I'm the only soul in this interaction? And when you
01:01:37.260
really decide to regard the machine as a machine, you're preserving the integrity of your own sense
01:01:46.280
of self, your own humanity. So you can definitely feel free to tell it, I think, to talk to you
01:01:52.280
in a more robotic or a less familiar way. That's just one of innumerable things I'm at least trying
01:01:58.120
to do to keep those boundaries clear. Spencer, thank you so much. Really appreciate it. Always
01:02:02.020
love talking to you. Please say hi to your family. Your mom and dad are just, just two of the greatest
01:02:05.880
people. I mean, you're evidence of it. But thank you so much. Thank you. God bless. Spencer Clavin.
01:02:11.400
All right. Let me talk to you about Lear Capital. You're sitting in your kitchen,
01:02:14.400
piled up bills to the left, cup of now cold coffee on the right. And you're thinking to yourself,
01:02:18.620
how in the world am I going to, how am I going to pay every, I don't know what to do here.
01:02:23.260
Good, good, good times. Good times. They don't come back.
01:02:25.740
Uh, I want to talk to you a little bit about how, um, if you are, if you are eating through
01:02:33.080
your savings right now, cause that's what inflation is. Inflation is like a moth at a
01:02:37.320
sweater buffet. Uh, and it is just crunching and eating up all your savings. You have to
01:02:43.960
be prepared for a lot of years to come, both for your own retirement and for what you might
01:02:48.080
be able to leave to your children. Thankfully, there is something that has stood the test of
01:02:52.420
times for thousands of years and it, it builds a protective wall around whatever it is you have.
01:02:58.960
And that is precious metals. Do you see, uh, some more talk about more countries getting off the
01:03:04.680
petrodollar? That's not good. Call Lear Capital now, 800-957-GOLD, 800-957-GOLD. Get your free gold,
01:03:14.700
$4,200 gold report. And when you call 800-957-GOLD, ask them about getting up to $15,000 in free gold
01:03:21.900
or silver with a qualifying purchase. Uh, call them now, 800-957-GOLD, 800-957-GOLD. 10 seconds, station ID.
01:03:31.180
It's interesting. You're talking about, uh, the, the, that feature on Grok with the questions at
01:03:48.000
the end. I, I, uh, was years and years ago was talking to a friend of mine, a woman who was trying
01:03:55.220
to flirt with some guy that she, and she was telling me the story about it. And this is going
01:04:00.180
to sound really basic to people in the dating world, but remember, I have never dated even
01:04:03.960
during the time of cell phone adoption. Like I feel like that's how old I am. So, uh, and she was
01:04:11.300
saying that like, she asked, uh, she ended her text with a question to this guy and he responded and
01:04:19.780
didn't put a question at the end of his text message. And she was like, that means he's not
01:04:26.320
interested, right? Like he didn't try to extend the conversation. Right. And I thought that was
01:04:32.420
a fascinating, like insight into the dating world, which is totally developed after I was married.
01:04:37.480
Right. Yeah. Right. When he was dating, honestly, he saw woman, pick up a rock and throw it and hit
01:04:44.100
her in the head. And if he hit her in the head, then, then it's a marriage. Yeah. He could drag her
01:04:47.440
away to the cave by her hair. It was, it was great. Good old days. Grok does that to you.
01:04:51.640
Yes, it does. And the others, by the way, don't. Grok is the only one that I've noticed
01:04:54.460
that does that naturally. Grok is very, just has a lot of personality to it. But it reminds
01:04:59.580
me of, we've talked to Tristan Harris so many times. Um, and he talks about the strategies,
01:05:05.580
these, these programs use to keep you on them. And Grok does that. Same thing. It does. It wants
01:05:13.980
to keep you on it. Now, does it want to keep you on it? The answer is yes. But could it
01:05:18.600
ever be used to further the dialogue so you do go deeper and think deeply in? And that's
01:05:26.760
NMLS 1-82334. NMLS consumeraccess.org. APR for rates in the five starts at 6.799% for
01:05:32.620
well-qualified borrowers. Call 800-906-2440 for details about credit costs and terms.
01:05:37.340
Okay. You're in your backyard. Your neighbor peeks his head over and says, you never guessed what
01:05:42.380
happened to me. I don't, I don't know. I don't really care. Why are you? Tell me. I just refinanced
01:05:47.280
my house. Uh, I'm saving $1,000 a month. Now that might be something that you'd go, really? What,
01:05:54.320
what, what, what exactly you do there? Well, think of me as your friend, friendly neighbor
01:05:59.240
peeking over your, uh, your, your backyard fence saying, uh, I know all these people that saved
01:06:05.640
about $1,000 a month. I mean, Sarah runs our, our control board here. She saved $800 a
01:06:12.360
month. Every single month. American financing helps people just like you to get out from
01:06:17.660
underneath all of that high interest credit card debt. You'll save more money. It will, uh, it will
01:06:25.920
pile the money in. And you might think, well, I don't, I don't have the credit or I can't do this
01:06:32.220
or whatever. You'd be surprised at the different options that you do have. These people work for you.
01:06:39.460
800-906-2440, 800-906-2440, Americanfinancing.net. And it's blaze tv.com slash Glenn. Use the code
01:07:17.060
looks like Boris Johnson and, uh, MI5 knew early on that this was all coming from the Wuhan lab,
01:07:27.540
uh, and, uh, decided to cover it up. Decided, uh, that's those are strong words. Those are strong
01:07:36.420
words. Those are hateful words. What they did is try to not hurt China's feelings. Uh huh. Okay.
01:07:44.020
Right. So the people with slave factories, we, that you, what you were saying is we didn't want to get into a war with China or the other possibility.
01:07:55.620
If we rat out China, if we rat out China, that also rats out that the United States was funding all of this stuff. And we don't, we don't want to piss off the United States because that's what will happen if we rat out China. I think that's actually more accurate. But just think of this. So MI5 knew early on. All right. We all knew. We all knew. They knew early on, which means our CIA knew early on, which means.
01:08:23.620
Which means all of the five eyes knew. Five eyes are the big Western, uh, intelligence, uh, organizations from all of the big five Western countries. And we collude. That's a, well, now that's an off-putting word. We collude with one another. We share information. So if they had something, we had something, France had something.
01:08:47.680
We all had something, which means Australia knew the truth. And look at what Australia was doing. Australia made, uh, camps, you know, but no big deal. A little camp. It's not like a really bad camp or anything. It's just a little camp. Uh, is that terrifying to anybody else?
01:09:10.500
Yes. And by, and by the way, uh, there's a new opinion piece out in the New York times. We were badly misled about COVID.
01:09:20.220
Were you New York? Were you, or were you part of the misleading people on, uh, COVID?
01:09:28.860
By the way, um, I love, first of all, the person who wrote that it actually did some good stuff during COVID. So it's not, I don't think, I don't think the problems at the times were her fault.
01:09:42.420
No, I know. I know. I totally, I just making that brief clarification. One of the funny parts in the, uh, in the op-ed though, is they go through like, I mean, we all, it's nothing new in it, I would say, but like it's laying out.
01:09:57.880
Yeah. I mean, if you, if you went and approached this, honestly, it's no surprise, you know, but if you, if you were listening to the mainstream media, this is new news to you.
01:10:09.340
Yeah. And it goes through like, you know, the, not just that they actually did consider a possibility of a lab leak theory, for example, but also that they hit it.
01:10:19.080
They went through Slack messages that later got uncovered once they were talking about how to delete emails so that people would never find out they thought these things.
01:10:26.160
Like, I mean, it's, they go through all that information. A lot of that's not going to necessarily be new to this audience.
01:10:32.220
One, some of it. Yeah. And some of it came out later and some of the congressional stuff, but at one point they say the specific design in, in these messages, the specific design is to mislead Donald McNeil, the New York times reporter who was covering this.
01:10:51.200
So, which is fascinating. And it adds up to even more fascination when you realize the New York times then fired Donald McNeil because he made like one bad joke to an intern 10 years earlier.
01:11:06.980
The guy who was out there actually asking these questions and has since come out and really, uh, talked about the lab leak theory among other things.
01:11:16.220
He was fired. He was the lead COVID reporter for the times. And he was fired for making a quote unquote bad joke in like 1998.
01:11:30.300
I'm saying maybe they were. That's what I'm saying.
01:11:35.960
No, it was just the bad joke to the interns that were there for a tour.
01:11:41.320
That was a, uh, or he, I don't even remember what was a joke.
01:11:44.860
It was like some very standard comment that at the time in peak woke era was deemed offensive enough to get the guy blown out.
01:11:54.420
But I mean, it's just insane. And like the only issue I would have with the op-ed is like, yeah, you're critic.
01:12:01.340
You're correctly critical of a lot of different institutions.
01:12:03.980
Maybe the New York Times should have been on that list.
01:12:08.200
Even if you're writing it in the New York Times, maybe the New York Times should have been on that list.
01:12:11.720
They wanted to be on the right side of history.
01:12:13.080
And the right side of history was to be for the Great Reset and everything that went with it.
01:12:18.800
I just finished a podcast that comes out this week with, um, Liz, uh, Truss.
01:12:30.080
And we were talking about all of this stuff and, you know, how much trouble is England in?
01:12:41.600
But if they don't start turning off this political correctness bullcrap, they are going to go.
01:12:49.860
I mean, did you see over the weekend how, uh, there was somebody, some, some Muslim guy who just burst into a church, took things, you know, off the altar, and then, uh, and that's being kind, and then just starts ranting and raving.
01:13:04.200
Somebody goes up and pulls down one of the statues.
01:13:07.340
Somebody else is, you can't read the Bible out in the public, but you can't arrest the guy who just goes into a church.
01:13:15.500
Doesn't do any damage, but just goes into a church and starts reading the Koran.
01:13:23.200
Even though he's disrupting things, that's okay.
01:13:26.400
But a preacher outside of the church gets arrested for reading the Bible.
01:13:35.300
You're making, you're making a, a, a nuclear weapon state, an Islamic state with nuclear weapons.
01:14:00.360
And, uh, she's like, you guys gave us the chance.
01:14:04.020
We might have a chance because of what America is doing.
01:14:12.700
But part of it is, I mean, she's like, but, you know, you guys have the internet.
01:14:16.560
And, you know, she said, you went and did this.
01:14:19.840
And now, you know, Megyn Kelly and everybody else has done this.
01:14:23.900
And you, you made a voice available on the internet.
01:14:34.520
There's people still believe, strangely, the BBC.
01:14:40.240
You know, when the BBC was carrying the water for this COVID stuff.
01:14:52.520
And when I say she fixed the VOA, she fired everybody from the Voice of America.
01:15:01.220
I don't think we've had a problem in the east part of Europe for a while now with them not being free.
01:15:08.660
Except for those European countries, including England, that is voting slavery in for itself.
01:15:16.620
But I don't think the VOA is standing there as a great beacon going, don't do that.
01:15:22.340
So, she shut down the VOA, Voice of America, and Radio Free Europe, and put everybody on leave.
01:15:40.980
Now, as they fly into slavery, would it be good to have voices that are in Europe speaking to Europe about European things that show our constitutional ways out?
01:16:02.000
You know, when Donald Trump says, hey, I want you to go into this agency and fix it, it's kind of like Travis.
01:16:07.080
And, you know, Travis's dad going in, hey, there's a problem with your doggies in the shed.
01:16:14.800
It's going to hurt, but it's the right thing to do.
01:16:44.120
Now the only voices behind an Iron Curtain are people like me and Ben Shapiro and anybody else, you know, Barry Weiss, anybody who's speaking out.
01:16:57.020
And I don't think radio-free Europe is doing anything on that.
01:17:01.140
Honestly, can you tell me what is a radio-free Asia?
01:17:13.220
Are we giving the truth, universal, eternal truths to that population?
01:17:20.620
I mean, my view of these programs is they're a bit outdated and not probably necessary.
01:17:24.860
But I mean, in theory, you'd bring in Carrie Lake to fix that, right?
01:17:30.540
No, I mean, like, if you're asking, like, are we teaching them the right American principles?
01:17:40.280
These universities, you just have to, they're just picking more apples from the barrel.
01:17:46.080
Because even at this point, the tree is rotten.
01:17:50.400
So where do you go get the people that are going to staff something that large that think like we do?
01:17:57.060
Think like American freedoms, principles, et cetera, et cetera.
01:18:02.860
Just, but true principles that make people free.
01:18:08.860
It's like the Jews just not being worth the squeeze, right?
01:18:13.560
And honestly, what is it accomplishing at this point?
01:18:16.080
I mean, there was a time where it was really valuable.
01:18:23.500
And honestly, Radio Free Europe, if we are upholding what the BBC and what the British
01:18:30.820
and the German and the Romanian governments are doing to their people and pushing their
01:18:37.460
No, I don't think that's what we would want to do with it.
01:18:39.380
Now, that might be what they're doing with it now.
01:18:42.060
I mean, you, again, could, with a lot of effort, fix that, right?
01:18:47.200
There are definitely voices, I think, that could successfully communicate a message that
01:18:55.080
is consistent with American principles to those audiences.
01:19:02.960
We don't have, we don't have, you know, lack of a better term, the old style talk radio.
01:19:10.740
Now, they obviously can access a lot of shows on the internet, just like everybody else can.
01:19:18.440
But it's not like, it's not like it is here, where it is encouraged and, you know, rewarded.
01:19:33.140
But I mean, Glenn, you've had a couple of good years here.
01:19:36.380
I was going to say, the only thing that sticks out is the reward, rewarded.
01:19:39.800
You can do well here in America, but it is not easy.
01:19:50.720
And I don't know if there's a lot of people doing it, addressing, you know, specific British
01:19:57.120
Like, I mean, there's, like, they can access Joe Rogan.
01:20:03.400
I don't listen to him all that often, but he's probably doing it, right?
01:20:06.040
He's practically invisible because they took him out.
01:20:17.140
I mean, you can't stifle the business and not stifle the voice.
01:20:23.380
You know, a lot of shows don't have big sponsors, but still have large audiences.
01:20:29.200
Just see if his audience has grown or ask Grock.
01:20:48.600
You've got a lot of modern tech conveniences in your house.
01:20:56.200
It's not the best place to be alive when there is an EMP.
01:20:59.760
You know, we have a lot of amazing, amazing gadgets, but I got to be honest.
01:21:06.200
You know, your fridge is out stove, probably out microwave, toaster, coffee machine.
01:21:10.680
And when it hits your cell phone, do you really have a will to live at that point?
01:21:15.040
No fuel, no noise, just peace of mind that you're going to have power when you need it.
01:21:21.500
And that's what you'll get from my Patriot Supply.
01:21:24.060
They are now cutting prices and throwing in a free solar panel right now as well.
01:21:31.880
If there's an EMP, this is EMP Intercept Technology, mypatriotsupply.com.
01:21:42.620
You just want to be prepared and then you don't have to worry about it.
01:21:46.720
And this is a great way to prepare for, you know, the most likely of problems where it's short term, et cetera, et cetera.
01:21:53.920
Grid Doctor 3300 with EMP Intercept Technology now at mypatriotsupply.com.
01:22:00.340
Put the power in your hands at mypatriotsupply.com.
01:22:04.720
What you're hearing are your thoughts via the mind and mouth of Glenn Beck.
01:22:16.320
Claudia was leaving for her pickleball tournament.
01:22:42.880
She was so focused on visualizing that she didn't see the column behind her car on her backhand side.
01:22:49.180
Good thing Claudia's with Intact, the insurer with the largest network of auto service centers in the country.
01:22:54.940
Everything was taken care of under one roof and she was on her way in a rental car in no time.
01:22:59.400
I made it to my tournament and lost in the first round.
01:23:08.240
We're just talking about Russell Brand and looking at the data from his viewership.
01:23:15.020
He did take a hit when YouTube would not let him make any money off of YouTube anymore.
01:23:23.760
But his viewership has remained about the same, maybe down just a little bit.
01:23:27.540
I mean, his subscriber level is about the same.
01:23:31.860
Probably the biggest hit is, you know, financially.
01:23:36.860
How does he make money on all of this without YouTube?
01:23:41.200
And that was a lot of money to flush down the toilet.
01:23:44.000
That's why they tried to do that to me and the Blaze and everybody else.
01:23:47.760
And if you can just endure it and, you know, not have to play within their system.
01:23:55.400
You know, making sure that all of his money was coming from, like, YouTube.
01:24:02.100
They're like, look, the media is controlled by conservatives.
01:24:06.000
And it's like all the, you know, of course, there's pointing to podcasts.
01:24:08.240
And, like, there's obviously more big podcasts on the right than are on the left.
01:24:17.300
No, I mean, but that was what they were saying was, you have no place here.
01:24:21.340
You go ahead and do that weird little podcast thing.
01:24:30.820
And it's like, wait, wasn't this supposed to be your job to stop the rise of right-wing media?
01:24:35.780
Are you just admitting you're complete and utter failure for multiple decades?
01:24:41.320
They did everything they could to demonetize and to try to stop us on cable news and in main society.
01:24:53.920
Constitution Wealth is a registered investment advisor.
01:24:56.460
Registration does not imply a certain level of skill or training.
01:24:58.680
Before considering their services, you should carefully review Constitution Wealth disclosures at ConstitutionWealth.com to understand all material risks, conflicts of interest, and fees.
01:25:06.840
All investing involves risk, including the risk of loss.
01:25:09.200
This is a paid endorsement, and Glenn is not a client of the firm.
01:25:12.660
Every day, your money makes a choice, even if you don't.
01:25:15.640
Will it fund companies that mock your values, or will it build a future you could actually believe in and embrace?
01:25:21.240
Constitution Wealth puts that power back into your hands.
01:25:26.880
They're here because they've listened to what America actually wants.
01:25:30.300
And what you actually want is to invest in companies that align with your values.
01:25:35.780
I want you to go to Constitution Wealth right now.
01:25:39.740
This is a company that can influence the rest of society based on what you want.
01:25:47.360
Go to ConstitutionWealth.com slash Blaze right now.
01:26:47.740
I got up this morning and read a story that was released early today on TheBlaze.com by Steve Baker.
01:26:56.220
Steve has kind of a pretty explosive update on January 6th.
01:27:01.800
And what whistleblowers are saying is Nancy Pelosi's fixer.
01:27:08.060
Boy, if this doesn't wake you up and your friends wake up to what is really going on in the Democratic Party, I don't know what will.
01:27:17.920
This story goes back to us reporting when I was at Fox and showing you the connections on the chalkboard.
01:27:28.520
And we'll tell you about that coming up in just a second.
01:27:30.460
First, historically, one of the main differences between a really, really good real estate agent and a really bad one was how easy they were to find.
01:27:37.280
I mean, you might search for a really, really long time trying to find somebody who's competent, hardworking, who can listen to you, knows the ins and outs of the real estate business.
01:27:45.100
But a mediocre one, I mean, you can't swing a dead cat around without hitting one of those.
01:27:55.400
We've come up with a way, without swinging dead cats, to find the right real estate agent for you.
01:28:02.980
I started a company over a decade ago to solve this problem.
01:28:07.980
And it pairs you up with the best agent in your area.
01:28:10.540
And whether you're just moving across town or across the entire country, these agents have your back.
01:28:19.820
Tell me where you're moving from and to, and we'll find the right people in your area.
01:28:28.460
Steve Baker, investigative journalist, Blaze News opinion contributor, and a guy who almost went to jail for just covering January 6th.
01:28:41.920
Well, you know, I did not realize how heavy of a burden that was.
01:28:47.540
Because, you know, I lived with that for over three years.
01:28:50.600
And then even after the arrest, I didn't realize the stress levels that I was living under until as it began to slowly lift over.
01:29:01.520
It took about a week before I felt normal again.
01:29:07.580
My wife usually will come with me and he'll say, how's your stress level?
01:29:11.660
And she'll say, she'll look at him and go, no, it's not.
01:29:15.400
But you live under it for so long and until you get away from it, you have no idea.
01:29:27.460
Nancy Pelosi had a fixer at the Capitol on January 6th.
01:29:40.520
But the second thing is, I looked for these people during Occupy Wall Street.
01:29:46.900
We were looking for the, and this guy never came up on our radar as connected to anything.
01:29:52.300
And now in retrospect, you're showing how connected he is.
01:29:56.780
And it's all this, it's all this USAID kind of crap.
01:30:04.440
Well, first of all, he was one of the principal organizers of Occupy Wall Street, which is
01:30:11.420
Now, we can go back in retrospect and we can find him.
01:30:14.060
We can find YouTube videos of him speaking and doing speeches.
01:30:17.440
I'm sure we covered him, but we had no idea who he was.
01:30:22.760
And fortunately for us, you have a connection, which we can't get really deep into, but you
01:30:29.300
were on this, you know, before Occupy Wall Street.
01:30:33.540
You were on this story 15, 17 years ago back at Fox.
01:30:39.460
And it was because of that connection that someone came to me because he's a fan of yours.
01:30:48.720
And I didn't even know, by the way, hopefully I get to talk to this guy at one point.
01:30:54.000
You're not going to believe, you're not going to believe this because you came to me a few
01:30:57.720
weeks ago and said, I have a story coming out and I want you to know it's because I was
01:31:05.260
Thank you for everything that you have done in the past.
01:31:09.880
And as a result of that, he came forward and he said, well, let me just reset the stage
01:31:16.540
When Joe Hanneman and I were assigned to do the first stories on the assassination attempt
01:31:24.540
Well, when we revealed in that story that Thomas Crooks, the shooter, our sources said, you
01:31:33.040
know, they're in intelligence community and special ops.
01:31:35.360
So kind of, they were all saying, no, this is, this kid was groomed.
01:31:43.680
So suddenly I get this call or a private message from a guy saying, yeah, great story, by the
01:31:59.720
And then I started vetting and founding out that he really was who he said he was.
01:32:02.880
And what he said to me was, yeah, I recognize my handiwork in Thomas Crooks.
01:32:09.400
And so we started the process of sharing things, developing relationship.
01:32:13.440
And then one day as our relationship is growing, he says, oh, by the way, I have a couple of names
01:32:20.100
to give you if you really want to know what happened on January 6th.
01:32:25.380
This is the story, exclusive story on TheBlaze.com right now.
01:32:32.960
The Nancy Pelosi had a fixer at the Capitol on January 6th.
01:32:43.560
So what ended up happening was, is I started doing what you're supposed to do.
01:32:48.540
The more I did, the more interesting he got, the more research I did, the more people I
01:32:53.200
had to bring in to, because he's, this guy's dark.
01:32:56.580
And we had to go and actually scrape the dark web for him.
01:33:04.420
The one thing that he couldn't clean out was that there were some Project Veritas videos
01:33:08.380
out there from 2016 where he was caught in one of their stings actually admitting to the
01:33:14.540
fact that he and his guys were responsible for the violence at a Donald Trump rally in
01:33:22.260
2016, March, I think it was, early in the campaign, in which they had actually canceled
01:33:29.480
Because not only was there violence outside, they had over 100 of their people infiltrated
01:33:35.320
inside in a project they call bird-dogging, which is they get old ladies there early
01:33:40.980
in the morning, at 6 o'clock, 7 o'clock in the morning, to get in line first with their
01:33:48.660
And then they'll get up either on the stage or on the front row.
01:33:51.420
They'll open those anti-Trump posters and things and then get the men, the MAGA guys,
01:34:02.140
And so this is what this guy has been an expert at, that is creating these types of
01:34:06.880
situations throughout his entire career, from Occupy Wall Street, all of a sudden he
01:34:11.940
shows up on the radar again in 2016 in a couple of very specific events, and then he goes silent
01:34:17.520
again, and then all of a sudden he re-emerges as quote-unquote senior political advisor at
01:34:25.780
So I just want you to get your arms around this here for a second.
01:34:33.880
What this guy is doing is what we showed you our State Department through USAID was doing all over
01:34:43.040
We told you, I did a chalkboard on this just, I don't even know, six years ago.
01:34:48.320
This chalkboard laid this all out and showed how this money was being used and how Barack
01:34:54.780
Obama started with the Arab Spring to teach how to overthrow governments, and then they
01:35:01.680
started, they kept doing it all across Libya, then Syria, then we went into Ukraine and
01:35:10.840
This is what they were perfecting, these color revolutions, paid for by your tax dollars,
01:35:18.380
and I told you about five or six years ago, I think they're doing this to America.
01:35:28.840
He, among others, he's not the lone wolf out there, but he's the, you know, I actually tweeted
01:35:35.980
out, and it just dawned on me this morning, because we have this photo at the top of the
01:35:41.660
If you go look, and Nancy Pelosi is cradling his face in her hands and just giving him the
01:35:48.140
So, I'm now calling him Pelosi's precious, so rather than a picture.
01:35:57.180
Well, what we believe through our contacts, our sources, whistleblowers, both named and
01:36:07.000
Now, this is what we've been told, is that he had paid agitators, I didn't say violent
01:36:12.040
people, paid agitators, because his expertise is controlling the narrative, like, you know,
01:36:19.260
Confederate flags being carried through the Capitol Rotunda, things of that nature.
01:36:23.900
Now, the most interesting aspect of January 6th, I think everybody focuses on the violence,
01:36:31.820
The police started it, the, you know, the Proud Boys started it, pick your, you know,
01:36:38.380
The most interesting aspect of January 6th was the same organizers of the rally down
01:36:44.080
at the Lips that day also organized the Jericho March on December 12th, just a month earlier,
01:36:51.260
and then also organized the Million MAGA March on November 12th.
01:36:55.760
Now, when I say organized, they pulled the permits for the stages and the speakers and all
01:36:59.620
the people that were part of those, you know, that weekend activities.
01:37:05.460
But at all of those events, there was extreme violence.
01:37:12.720
Antifa, BLM, you know, Proud Boys knocking heads.
01:37:18.100
They were, Antifa was attacking old ladies and, you know, elderly couples going back to
01:37:25.680
On the December 12th rally, a Proud Boy was seriously, you know, critically injured.
01:37:33.260
And then suddenly on January 6th, the largest event of them all, by multiples larger, zero
01:37:50.160
Anyway, you know, I just, I would say it's weird because I was just thinking, well, no,
01:37:53.420
there were at the, there were at the Capitol, but those, those are the ones I've deemed not
01:37:59.800
That I've looked at and went, there's no way that person is part of the movement, but
01:38:02.340
they were acting like they were part of the movement.
01:38:04.520
This is, this is what his expertise is, is controlling the narrative.
01:38:09.080
And what did Nancy Pelosi most famously say when she set up the committee?
01:38:13.560
She said that this was to establish and preserve the narrative of that day.
01:38:24.700
So what, what was the narrative that did, did he help design it?
01:38:37.220
One of our named sources in the article, Dustin Stockton, who has had a 15 year relationship
01:38:44.320
with him going back to Occupy Wall Street days, counter movement to the Tea Party movement
01:38:51.480
And so as a result of those two things, they were, there was a lot of collusion between
01:38:55.760
Stockton and Black during that time, over the years, all the way up until and through
01:39:01.920
And so one of the things that we learned was, is that Stockton had been told by Aaron Black
01:39:08.240
that he was out of town on January 6th until Stockton saw a photo of him on the steps of
01:39:15.440
And then additionally, because he was very, very worried that he had been seen, he started
01:39:23.680
reaching out to other people within our network and at security people and asking them about,
01:39:30.100
he was very concerned about whether his comms had been caught in the geofence that day.
01:39:40.040
And these are stories that are coming to us through sources that you can't even, we're
01:39:45.100
talking about Rolling Stone, Politico, other places.
01:39:48.680
I want to, I want to ask you, let me take a quick break and when we come back, I just want
01:39:52.960
to know, I'm really excited at what Trump has been doing.
01:39:58.260
I'm very, I'm very, very excited what's happening.
01:40:01.680
I'm a little underwhelmed and I just said to Stu, put this on your calendar a year from
01:40:06.780
If we're not seeing things, then this is not strategy.
01:40:09.900
I think it's strategy so far, but I've been underwhelmed by what's happening at the FBI
01:40:14.120
and the DOJ because that is, that's critical to the rot that is in there and, and, and
01:40:28.880
When we come back first, let me tell you about good ranchers.
01:40:31.920
I want you to picture just for a minute in your head, a rancher, he's bundled from head
01:40:37.220
to toe against the bitter, bitter cold of the deep winter snowstorm.
01:40:49.560
He's searching in the night for two of his cattle who have just given birth to calves.
01:40:53.780
Just as a snowstorm was setting in, he searches for hours.
01:40:57.500
Finally, he finds all the poor calves separated from their moms and completely lost and frostbite
01:41:03.040
They don't know if they're going to make it until the morning.
01:41:06.300
He loads them up anyway, takes them home to his warm living room in the fireplace.
01:41:13.000
He sleeps on the couch when he wakes up in the morning.
01:41:15.820
There are these two calves alive and jumping around.
01:41:19.220
When I tell you good ranchers helps farmers and ranchers keep their businesses afloat and
01:41:30.140
This is the kind of person and these are the kind of people I'm talking about.
01:41:51.960
So, Steve, this is just part one of a series of articles that you're going to be doing.
01:42:10.500
Now, in my world, this guy would be called in by the FBI and they'd start questioning him.
01:42:18.140
And, you know, we haven't we haven't found even the pipe bomber yet.
01:42:24.780
Are we are you disappointed at all in Pam Bondi and what the FBI is doing?
01:42:35.160
Glenn, we revealed a year and a half ago, irrefutable proof that two federal officers perjured themselves in federal court.
01:42:50.680
But we have I only count from Pam Bondi getting in.
01:42:55.860
And there should have been things like everybody else, every single other office that has been occupied.
01:43:03.420
And they just went boom, boom, boom, boom, boom.
01:43:11.600
We see other department heads or other ministers that are that are steamrolling through their list right now.
01:43:20.040
I don't understand it, but I will tell you this, that connected to what we're working on, to the stories that we're working on related to January 6 right now, whether we're going back to those federal officers who perjured themselves or we're talking about Aaron Black and this revelation here of somebody that needs to be investigated.
01:43:36.000
I can tell you right now with all confidence that the blockade is coming from the GOP.
01:43:45.800
There are people in leadership in the GOP right now who are stopping and have been the obstructionists since day one, since the first committee, since Loudermilk subcommittee was working, the oversight subcommittee under House administration, the work he was doing.
01:44:04.960
There were obstructionists at the top who were stopping him and blockading him.
01:44:09.040
And now there's a new committee has been founded, been formed, are being formed, has been announced.
01:44:16.640
An actual press release went out from the speaker.
01:44:19.300
And now they're narrowing the focus of what they're even allowed to do down to the point where it's what's the point.
01:44:31.940
I know you're not going to give them to me on the air, but will you give me the names?
01:44:40.480
The problem is, is that, let's just be perfectly honest, the establishment GOP did not want Trump in 2020.
01:44:54.000
I am just sitting here thinking, what are the legal ramifications for me doing that?
01:45:00.220
Then I thought of you listening wherever you are thinking, what are the ramifications if we don't get those names?
01:45:14.520
Do you know if you've got a next piece dropping on this?
01:45:16.500
I actually have to spend a couple more days here in Dallas, and then I've got to hit the road to talk to a couple more people for the next installment.
01:45:24.820
On the shooting of the president, is anything going to happen on that?
01:45:30.200
Again, we're going back to the same office, aren't we?
01:45:32.680
You're asking the same question to the same office.
01:45:44.980
I can't believe that Kash Patel is part of that clog.
01:45:48.580
I mean, I could see him being told, back off, back off, back off, but I just can't see him being part of the clog, and I couldn't see Bongino doing that.
01:45:56.960
Now, I don't know Pam Bondi at all, but there is a clog there, and it's got to be unclogged.
01:46:02.660
And I'll tell you, this is the Achilles heel of the president.
01:46:07.420
Most people may not know it, but this will be the Achilles heel to his supporters.
01:46:12.420
If you don't go after even your own kind to clean this out, I really think Americans, even his own supporters will go, you know, Mr. President, I'm a supporter of yours on many, many things.
01:46:26.260
But that one is too important, and if you don't get that one done, I don't know where I stand.
01:46:34.480
Appreciative of what you are doing, but I can't count you as the revolutionary that I thought was going to fix our republic.
01:47:22.220
We've all had that moment, you know what I'm talking about, where, you know, you're looking at the guy standing only a few feet away from you, and you're seeing him start, you know, to melt down.
01:47:31.280
And the part of it that would normally tell you, you know, that there's a problem there, his body is, you know, it's saying, I might get violent, maybe not.
01:47:45.880
But the part that's saying my body is going to get violent, that's when you are in real trouble.
01:47:57.580
But you don't want to pull out a gun in that situation unless you know for sure he's got a weapon and he's coming for you.
01:48:10.640
But I can't recommend the Bird of Launcher high enough.
01:48:24.880
It's enough time for you to get away and police to arrive.
01:48:35.280
And head over to BlazeTV.com slash Glenn and get access to all the stuff that you need.
01:49:11.920
We're going to start getting into them on tomorrow.
01:49:14.060
So working towards tomorrow's show, we're going to spend a lot of time on the auto pin thing.
01:49:21.840
I mean, the president didn't, I mean, we have the audio.
01:49:27.380
We have the audio with the president and who was it with Tapper?
01:49:39.660
That shows he was either absolutely incompetent, which is very, very likely.
01:49:46.540
And or somebody else is just using the auto pin and he didn't know what he was signing.
01:49:53.240
That is, I mean, everyone involved with that should quite honestly be tried for treason.
01:50:00.280
Listen, you are, you are a traitor to the constitution of the United States.
01:50:06.100
You are taking on the power of the presidency yourself.
01:50:11.780
And I don't think Kamala Harris was the one doing it.
01:50:21.100
I mean, that, you know, Ron Klain comes to mind.
01:50:28.360
So she was the Center for American Progress president.
01:50:32.900
I think she was at OMB, I think, right, Stu, for a while.
01:50:35.760
And then she just kind of, I think she took, actually, yeah, then she was, she took Susan
01:50:40.460
Rice's position as the head of what, you know, interior policy or something like that
01:50:48.800
All these are Obama people that we were like, why the hell are some of these people getting
01:50:54.260
so close to the president and sticking with him that were from the Obama administration?
01:50:58.420
I mean, the reason why they were all sticking with is because they held the power.
01:51:10.320
Is that right outside of his desk, kind of like a printer?
01:51:23.160
Was it, did the secretary of the president need to give people permission?
01:51:26.780
I mean, you know, there's got to be a chain of command for the auto pen.
01:51:31.780
Well, I mean, we should be looking now specifically for that question because the Heritage Foundation
01:51:36.380
just did like a deeper dive into it and they found that the president was on vacation golfing
01:51:51.780
Well, did he have an auto club that just like hit the ball for him?
01:52:01.660
I don't, I'm having a hard time believing that.
01:52:04.740
I just see, I just see a ball on a tee just kind of falling.
01:52:09.340
He, yes, on his first hole, he only had 1,740 strokes.
01:52:14.240
Um, and an actual stroke or two, but it's a different story.
01:52:20.080
There was probably an auto walk up the stairs to Air Force One.
01:52:23.480
Well, let's open this investigation up for more.
01:52:31.760
And I guess like it's been used for, since the Bush administration.
01:52:36.640
The first order to be signed was Barack Obama had to sign a big order and he was, I think,
01:52:48.020
I think it went all the way back to 2005, I believe, during Bush.
01:52:51.420
It was a, you know, um, and the Department of Justice issued a, an okay basically to use
01:52:57.920
it, but it's never been challenged in the Supreme Court.
01:53:02.460
Like, you know, you kind of have to like, I don't know, maybe actually sign the bills.
01:53:07.540
I mean, I wouldn't have a problem with an auto pin in a way that you would say, uh, it needs
01:53:16.340
But if you had a, if it was like the nuclear football, you know what I mean?
01:53:20.540
Where it's with the president at all time and it could feed something and he could approve
01:53:28.200
So I, I, I, I think that we may not, you know, back in 2004, even 2008, we may not have realized
01:53:35.760
what they would use this for because we used to think people had some integrity.
01:53:46.520
If you're thinking about it though, if you're a second term president that wants a third term,
01:53:51.660
you know, but you don't really want to say, you just want to be the guy behind the guy
01:54:00.160
Now Trump did use it a few times as well, right?
01:54:03.780
No, I'm not saying it's, I'm not saying that it's bad though.
01:54:06.520
Like I'm not saying that it should be challenged.
01:54:10.020
And like, look, the proper way to do this is to send the documents to him and let him
01:54:16.600
Not send a signature across like some machine that replicates a signature back in Washington
01:54:22.600
And I don't know if you know this, but you know, we're past the age of the fax machine
01:54:38.080
Well, this is going to be a huge conversation because president Trump this morning was tweeting
01:54:42.480
out that a lot of these pardons that were given to like J6 committee people, stuff like
01:54:50.380
And there's nothing in the constitution that even comes close to addressing this.
01:54:54.520
When they, I've never seen a president do 6,000 pardons.
01:54:57.180
I mean, how, what did that, how did that system work?
01:55:02.960
I mean, that's a lot of batteries on the auto pin.
01:55:05.660
It's a lot of batteries and a lot of batteries on the president, you know, just to stay awake
01:55:13.200
So we're going to, we're going to get into that tomorrow.
01:55:16.500
Also what's his, what's his face with it was with Donald Trump this morning.
01:55:28.640
Our government is the government of zero action with zero accountability.
01:55:33.260
You know, our money is being spent on overseas issues that has nothing to do with the Irish
01:55:38.980
The illegal immigration racket is running ravage on, on the country.
01:55:43.960
There are rural towns in Ireland that have been overrun in one swoop, that have become
01:55:48.800
So issues need to be addressed and the 40 million Irish Americans, as I said, need to
01:55:54.100
hear this because if not, there will be no place to come home and visit.
01:55:59.040
What a clever way to get him into the white house on St. Patrick's day.
01:56:05.400
I mean, I think this guy is, I mean, I don't know anything about him personally.
01:56:09.700
I just know that he wants to run, I think for prime minister and for president in Ireland
01:56:20.440
Ireland, you know, it's not the sweet little, I mean, first of all, it's now the home of
01:56:26.580
So it's not the sweet little place it used to be.
01:56:28.580
But Rosie, I don't know if you, you should peek outside your window from time to time.
01:56:33.340
The Islamic Brotherhood are setting up shop there.
01:56:40.240
They like them even less than the people you think hate them here.
01:56:44.020
I can personally guarantee you, though, that we're River Rosie O'Donnell's living.
01:56:50.480
It's probably very beautiful and lots of grass and hills.
01:57:03.480
And I'm telling you, I think by 2030, you could see Great Britain become an Islamic state.
01:57:14.200
Yeah, to your point, Stu, that's a really good point, because Conor McGregor is actually
01:57:19.000
the perfect person to speak about this, because I don't know if there's a documentary about
01:57:22.760
him, like on Netflix or something, I can't remember, but it shows his entire background.
01:57:26.060
And he's talking about rural communities and harder communities that are being affected
01:57:33.380
He grew up on very tough streets, worked his way up, a lot of solid blue collar neighborhoods.
01:57:39.760
Deep State's going to do everything, not ours, theirs, going to do everything they can to
01:57:46.960
Liz Truss said to me in an interview I did with her just the other day, it's coming out
01:57:50.580
this week, we talked about, you know, where are these people that could be like a Donald
01:58:02.900
Did you ask, Liz, about the annoying use of certain vowels within their language?
01:58:06.960
No, you know, if you look at this, it's so funny you would say that.
01:58:10.940
If you watch the video, I tried right at the beginning, but I couldn't get it in.
01:58:16.480
I was like, you know, you have use in words that shouldn't have use.
01:58:25.960
Anyway, I don't know if she would have thought that was funny anyway.
01:58:28.920
She would have been confused by you Americans, I have a feeling.
01:58:33.020
There's another story that I want to get on to tomorrow that I couldn't believe.
01:58:39.600
I spent a couple of hours just trying to verify this and then reading all the stories from the Washington Post and the New York Times and everything else.
01:58:48.040
So it's not some sort of crazy conspiracy theory because it's it's everywhere.
01:58:54.240
And it's about these concentration camps in Mexico.
01:59:06.660
You know, we've been saying all the time, you know, people just go down.
01:59:12.640
Well, outside of the town of Guadalajara, they have found this abandoned.
01:59:19.740
Torture camp with underground crematories, underground ovens.
01:59:26.140
OK, they're finding teeth and bones, and they found remnants of at least 700 people.
01:59:32.280
And what they were doing was kidnapping people, kidnapping their families and then saying, you're going to do work for us or we're going to kill your whole family.
01:59:43.480
And they would torture these people and torture the family and then just burn the burn the bodies.
01:59:49.300
And some of it was apparently was done to just not to recruit new people, just to learn how to torture people.
02:00:00.920
I mean, I'm telling you, I don't know how we don't send in special forces pretty soon.
02:00:18.960
Yeah, it's like it's it's kind of like an offshoot of Christianity or like or something like that.
02:00:23.660
My wife is like Christianity believes in Satan.
02:00:30.400
Like I know they have they have like witches and stuff like that.
02:00:34.460
You can walk through Mexico City like through like a like a really public square that looks very normal.
02:00:40.840
It looks almost European more than anything else.
02:00:42.400
And then all of a sudden you'll see like one of their like, you know, statues.
02:00:47.040
And she's like in a Grim Reaper, you know, outfit.
02:00:51.840
They'll come up to it and like tap it or pray to it and like move on.
02:00:58.060
So is it an offshoot, a twisted offshoot of because it seemed as I was reading about it this weekend, it was like, is this something like the Lady of Guadalupe gone wrong?
02:01:09.520
No, I think I think it's like a don't quote me on someone's going to like be listening right now and smack me in the head.
02:01:14.600
But it seems like it's like a saint that that looks after even bad people or something like that.
02:01:20.180
So cartels are like heavily into it and they've gone way off the deep end, you know, in that in that direction.
02:01:25.620
But it's not it's this is not surprising to me that this is happening.
02:01:28.440
Like, have you ever seen Narcos Mexico on Netflix?
02:01:32.560
So you watch through that and it's based off of, you know, real events and things that happen as the cartels spread through Mexico.
02:01:38.300
But they'll just kind of randomly throw in like the attorney general is on board or getting paid off, you know, by some cartels.
02:01:45.600
You know, Donald Trump's not, you know, the people of Mexico, if we go in with special forces and we kill all these groups, people in Mexico are going to love Americans.
02:01:57.040
Oh, yeah, because nothing's going to happen because all of their, you know, all of the you can't get elected unless you either just turn a blind eye or with the cartels.
02:02:09.620
They kill you and they kill everybody around you and everybody wants to replace you.
02:02:17.960
I don't know how you separate where the Mexican government dirty and Mexican government officials that are getting that are on the take and part of this whole thing.
02:02:25.980
Like we did a story probably last year where we were talking about like there was like a general assigned to crack down on this one cartel in one region.
02:02:33.060
They find out a couple months later that he's on the take and getting paid off.
02:02:35.900
I have to tell you, I think I think Mexico is a drug state.
02:02:46.060
Let me talk to you a little bit about Rough Greens.
02:02:47.640
When I bring up your dog and mention that you should be given the best nutrition as possible so you can leave a long and healthy life.
02:02:54.740
I mean, you know, I know you know that and you don't have to hire a personal chef, although that would be pretty cool.
02:03:01.640
I mean, that would be I mean, what that that puts you in the category of he won't even notice those tax dollars going away.
02:03:10.320
Let me talk to you about your kibble food that you're feeding your dog.
02:03:17.040
But even that will work if you just sprinkle some Rough Greens on top of your dog's food.
02:03:24.640
Dennis Black, and it restores nutrition to your dog while simultaneously making his food taste a lot better.
02:03:30.500
My dog Uno used to be the pickiest eater on Earth until we started adding Rough Greens into the bowl.
02:03:37.320
Go to roughgreens, R-U-F-F-Greens dot com right now.
02:03:43.980
That's roughgreens dot com slash Beck and and get it sent to you right away.
02:04:01.720
There's another great city that starts with a T.
02:04:07.080
Fly to Tampa on Porter Airlines to see why it's so T-rific.
02:04:11.700
On your way there, relax with free beer, wine and snacks.
02:04:15.140
Free, fast streaming Wi-Fi and no middle seats.
02:04:18.720
You've never flown to Florida like this before.
02:04:25.020
Visit flyporter.com and actually enjoy economy.
02:04:29.400
Hey, if you missed any of the shows, make sure you grab today's podcast.
02:04:54.440
We start with Donald Trump and the new approval ratings.
02:04:57.700
It's higher than at any time in his first presidency.
02:05:08.040
People think we are on the right track more than since 2004.
02:05:24.480
Uh, we got a long way to go, but at least we're making progress on that.
02:05:29.760
I was thinking about, we're going to do something on this on Studos America tonight though, as
02:05:33.820
well, but five years ago, this week, we are in the very first days of 15 days to slow the
02:05:44.380
I mean, it seems in some ways so long ago, but it's otherwise really recent to me.
02:05:52.620
I read a story where people were going, New Yorkers were going someplace and, you know,
02:05:57.940
they said, you still have to wear, everybody has to wear a mask.
02:06:06.580
It feels like now we're getting to the point where there, and this has happened.
02:06:10.060
The Trump administration's tried to push this through for places like Columbia.
02:06:16.700
Not you're required to wear them, but now you can't wear them because of how people are
02:06:19.840
using them, which is often to torture Jewish people in the streets.
02:06:27.580
You couldn't wear a mask in public because of, we need to know your identity.
02:06:34.540
And that kind of went to hell in a handbasket and then went to exact opposite.
02:06:38.420
Hopefully we can get it back to at least sanity.