The Glenn Beck Program - January 21, 2026


EXCLUSIVE: NASA Head Reveals America's Epic Moon-Shot Plans | Guests: Jared Isaacman & Liz Wheeler | 1⧸21⧸26


Episode Stats

Length

2 hours and 8 minutes

Words per Minute

165.20215

Word Count

21,182

Sentence Count

1,698

Misogynist Sentences

13

Hate Speech Sentences

28


Summary

Learn English with Donald Trump. President Donald Trump delivers one of the most important speeches of his presidency, delivered live from Davos, Switzerland, at the World Economic Forum (WEF) on Davos Day, January 25th.


Transcript

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00:01:01.860 Hello, America. You know we've been fighting every single day. We push back against the lies,
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00:02:15.100 Glenn Beck is on.
00:02:17.060 Glenn Beck is on.
00:02:18.600 Hello, America. It's Davos Day. The WEF is happening right now. The president is speaking. We've been
00:02:48.060 listening. I've been making notes. We'll bring you up to speed here in just a second. We're going to
00:02:52.380 move our commercial here. Sarah, I want to go right back to the president because it is live,
00:02:56.320 and he is speaking in Davos. One of the most important speeches I think a president has given
00:03:02.300 in decades, at least so far. He was just talking about Greenland. Let's pick it up live from Davos.
00:03:07.940 Think of it. When I went in a landslide, a giant landslide, won all seven swing states,
00:03:12.700 won the popular vote, won everything. And they only get negative press. That means that it has no
00:03:19.920 credibility. And if they're going to get credibility, they're going to have to be fair. So you need a
00:03:25.080 fair press. But you also need those other elements. And I inherited a terrible, terrible situation.
00:03:35.780 If you look, the border was open. The inflation was raging. Everything was bad with the United
00:03:41.940 States when I came into office. But I also inherited a mess with Ukraine and Russia, something that would
00:03:47.920 have never happened. And I know Putin very well. He and I would discuss Ukraine. It was the apple of
00:03:53.520 his eye. But he wasn't going to do anything. I said, Vladimir, you're not doing it. He would never have
00:03:58.700 done it. It was terrible what happened. I could see it happening, too. After I left, I could see it
00:04:03.600 happening. Biden had given Ukraine and NATO $350 billion, a staggering sum, $350 billion. I came in and
00:04:14.160 just like the southern border, just like inflation, just like our economy, I said, wow, this place is in
00:04:23.920 trouble, meaning our country. All of these things were out of control. But the border was out of control. We fixed
00:04:32.000 it with the strongest border anywhere in the world. And I've now been working on this war for one year,
00:04:38.520 during which time I settled eight other wars, India, Pakistan. I mean, I settled other wars that were
00:04:44.900 Vladimir Putin called me, Armenia, Abir, Bajan. He said, I can't believe you settled that one. They were
00:04:53.900 going on for 35 years. I settled it in one day. And President Putin called me. He said,
00:05:01.900 you know, I can't believe I worked on that war for 10 years trying to settle it. I couldn't do it.
00:05:06.260 I said, do me a favor, focus on settling your war. Don't worry about that one.
00:05:11.120 What does the United States get out of all of this work, all of this money, other than death,
00:05:17.840 destruction, and massive amounts of cash going to people who don't appreciate what we do? They don't
00:05:24.840 appreciate what we do. Talking about NATO. I'm talking about Europe. They have to work on Ukraine.
00:05:34.980 We don't. The United States is very far away. We have a big, beautiful ocean separating us. We have
00:05:40.380 nothing to do with it. Until I came along, NATO was only supposed to pay 2% of GDP. But they weren't
00:05:47.800 paying. Most of the countries weren't paying anything. The United States was paying for
00:05:53.360 virtually 100% of NATO. And I got that stopped. I said, that's not fair. But then more importantly,
00:06:02.000 I got NATO to pay 5%. And now they were paying. And now they are paying. So something nobody said
00:06:07.860 was possible. They said, we will never go up higher than 2%. But they went to 5%. And now they're
00:06:14.820 paying the 5%. They didn't pay the 2%. And now they're paying the 5%. And they're stronger for it.
00:06:19.580 And they have an excellent, by the way, Secretary General, who's possibly in the room. Mark, are you here?
00:06:27.800 Yes, he's here. Hello, Mark. We never asked for anything. And we never got anything. We probably
00:06:36.680 won't get anything unless I decide to use excessive strength and force, where we would be, frankly,
00:06:42.780 unstoppable. But I won't do that. Okay? Now everyone's saying, oh, good. That's probably the
00:06:52.480 biggest statement I made. Because people thought I would use force. I don't have to use force. I
00:06:57.240 don't want to use force. I won't use force. All the United States is asking for is a place called
00:07:03.440 Greenland, where we already had it as a trustee, but respectfully returned it back to Denmark not long
00:07:11.480 ago after we defeated the Germans, the Japanese, the Italians, and others in World War II. We gave it
00:07:18.520 back to them. We were a powerful force then, but we are a much more powerful force now. After I rebuilt
00:07:25.760 the military in my first term and continue to do so today, we have a budget of $1.5 trillion.
00:07:31.620 We're bringing back battleships. The battleship is 100 times more powerful than the great battleships you
00:07:41.520 saw in World War II, those great, big, gorgeous ships, the Missouri, the Iowa, the Alabama.
00:07:49.400 Because I thought maybe we could take them out of mothballs. They said, no, sir, these ships are 100,
00:07:55.380 think of that, 100 times more powerful than those big, big, magnificent pieces of art that you
00:08:05.260 saw so many times ago that you still see on television. You say, wow, what a force. 100 times,
00:08:12.080 each ship 100 times more powerful than the big battleships of the past. So that was the end of
00:08:19.160 the mothball story. So what we have gotten out of NATO is nothing except to protect Europe from
00:08:30.640 the Soviet Union and now Russia. I mean, we've helped them for so many years. We've never gotten
00:08:35.060 anything except we pay for NATO. And we paid for many years until I came along. We paid for, in my
00:08:42.380 opinion, 100 percent of NATO because they weren't paying their bills. And all we're asking for is to
00:08:49.340 get Greenland, including right title and ownership, because you need the ownership to defend it. You can't
00:08:57.220 defend it on a lease. Number one, legally, it's not defensible that way, totally. And number two, psychologically,
00:09:06.620 who the hell wants to defend a license agreement or a lease, which is a large piece of ice in the middle of the
00:09:15.980 ocean where if there is a war, much of the action will take place on that piece of ice. Think of it. Those missiles
00:09:23.420 would be flying right over the center of that piece of ice. All we want from Denmark for national and
00:09:31.860 international security and to keep our very energetic and dangerous potential enemies at bay
00:09:38.220 is this land on which we're going to build the greatest golden dome ever built. We're building
00:09:44.020 a golden dome that's going to, just by its very nature, going to be defending Canada. Canada gets a lot
00:09:54.300 of freebies from us, by the way. They should be grateful also, but they're not. I watched your
00:09:58.380 prime minister yesterday. He wasn't so grateful. But they should be grateful to us. Canada. Canada lives because of
00:10:07.000 the United States. Remember that, Mark, the next time you make your statements. What we did for Israel was amazing.
00:10:15.780 But that's nothing compared to what we have planned for the United States, Canada and the rest of the world. We are
00:10:21.240 going to build a dome like no other. We did it. We did it for Israel. And by the way, I told Bibi, Bibi, stop
00:10:28.320 taking credit for the dome. That's our technology. That's our stuff. But they had a lot of courage and
00:10:35.240 they were good fighters and they did a good job. And we wiped out the Iran nuclear threat like nobody
00:10:40.220 can believe. Nobody's ever seen anything like it. That, Venezuela, taking down Soleimani, wiping out
00:10:50.520 al-Baghdadi when he tried to reinstitute ISIS. We did a lot. I did a lot. A lot of big things.
00:10:57.440 All perfectly executed. Everyone was perfectly executed. Somebody told me that. A military expert
00:11:02.620 told me, sir, everything you've done has been perfectly executed. I said, I know.
00:11:09.440 So other presidents have spent, whether foolishly or not, trillions and trillions of dollars on NATO
00:11:14.960 and gotten absolutely nothing in return. We've never asked for anything. It's always a one way
00:11:20.840 street. Now they want us to help them with Ukraine. And let me say, we're going to you. I'm really
00:11:26.520 helping, not even them. I want to see last week, if you saw, it was 10,000 soldiers, but last month it
00:11:33.980 was 31,000 soldiers died. 31,000. That's this room times, the number of people in this room times 30.
00:11:44.960 Think of it. 30,000 soldiers died in one month. The month before it was 27,000. The month before that
00:11:53.900 it was 28,000. The month before that it was 25,000. It's a bloodbath over there. And that's what I want
00:12:02.600 to stop. Doesn't help the United States, but these are souls. These are young, young people. Look like
00:12:12.140 you. Look like some of you right in the front row. They go to war. Their parents are so proud. Oh,
00:12:17.580 there he goes, comes back. Two weeks later, they're going to call you. Your son's head's been blown off.
00:12:23.400 I want to stop it. It's a horrible war. It's the worst since World War II. They keep going. They'll
00:12:30.620 exceed World War II. The numbers are staggering how many people they've lost. They don't want to talk
00:12:34.840 about it. Ukraine and Russia lost just tremendous amounts. And I'm dealing with President Putin and
00:12:42.780 he wants to make a deal, I believe. I'm dealing with President Zelensky and I think he wants to
00:12:48.700 make a deal. I'm meeting him today. He might be in the audience right now. But they got to get that
00:12:55.440 war stopped because too many people are dying, needlessly dying. Too many souls are being lost.
00:13:03.300 It's the only reason I'm interested in doing it. But in doing it, I'm helping Europe. I'm helping
00:13:09.000 NATO. And until the last few days when I told them about Iceland, they loved me. They called me daddy,
00:13:17.340 right, last time. A very smart man said, he's our daddy. He's running it. I was like running it. I went
00:13:24.220 from running it to being a terrible human being. But now what I'm asking for is a piece of ice,
00:13:32.380 cold and poorly located, that can play a vital role in world peace and world protection.
00:13:40.900 It's a very small ask compared to what we have given them for many, many decades.
00:13:48.740 But the problem with NATO is that we'll be there for them 100%. But I'm not sure that they'd be there
00:13:59.100 for us if we gave them the call. Gentlemen, we are being attacked. We're under attack by such and
00:14:07.400 such a nation. I know them all very well. I'm not sure that they'd be there. I know we'd be there for
00:14:13.260 them. I don't know that they'd be there for us. So with all of the money we expend, with all of the
00:14:18.840 blood, sweat and tears, I don't know that they'd be there for us. They're not there for us on
00:14:24.760 Iceland, that I can tell you. I mean, our stock market took the first dip yesterday because of
00:14:30.240 Iceland. So Iceland's already cost us a lot of money. But that dip is peanuts compared to what
00:14:36.560 it's gone up. And we have an unbelievable future in that stock. That stock market is going to be
00:14:41.920 doubled. We're going to hit 50,000 and that stock market's going to double in a relatively short
00:14:48.560 period of time because of everything that's happening. But this is a good example. After giving
00:14:54.440 NATO and European nations trillions and trillions of dollars in defense, they buy our weapons. We make
00:15:02.360 the greatest weapons in the world, but now we're going to make them faster, much faster. You saw
00:15:06.700 that. I put a cap on the salaries. Then I put no buybacks, no stock buybacks, no various other things
00:15:16.440 that they were doing. I mean, they were making $50 million, but it would take them three years to give
00:15:21.900 you a Patriot missile. I said, that's not good. My chauffeur can do a better job than that. And he makes
00:15:28.420 slightly less than $50 million. They make big salaries. If they're going to make those big
00:15:32.960 salaries, they're going to have to produce a lot faster. The good news is we have the greatest
00:15:36.440 equipment in the world. Now we're going to start making it a lot faster. They're going to build
00:15:39.760 additional plants. And all of the money that goes into stock buybacks is going to go into building
00:15:46.240 plants. We're not allowing stock buybacks by defense companies any longer. They're going to build
00:15:50.380 new plants to make Tomahawks, Patriots. We have the best equipment. F-35s, F-47, the new one just
00:15:59.320 coming out. They say it's the most devastating plane, fighter jet ever. Who knows? They called it
00:16:04.440 47. If I don't like it, I'm going to take the 47 off it. I wonder why they called it 47. What do you
00:16:10.240 think about it? We'll give you right now, 10 seconds, station ID. I'm going to take that 47 off.
00:16:14.500 But it's supposed to be the stage six. It's supposed to be the first stage six plane,
00:16:20.300 undetectable, like our B-2 bombers were undetectable. If you ride over Iran, they were undetectable.
00:16:26.940 And they did their job and they got their life.
00:16:30.440 So we want a piece of ice for world protection. And they won't give it. We've never asked for
00:16:37.260 anything else. And we could have kept that piece of land and we didn't. So they have a choice.
00:16:46.220 You can say yes, and we will be very appreciative. Or you can say no, and we will remember.
00:16:56.480 A strong and secure America means a strong NATO. And that's one reason why I'm working every day
00:17:04.040 to ensure our military is very powerful. Our borders are very strong. And above all,
00:17:10.180 our economy is strong because national security requires economic security and economic prosperity.
00:17:15.940 And we have the greatest that we've ever had. Biden and his allies destroyed our economy
00:17:22.380 and gave us perhaps the worst inflation in American history. They say 48 years.
00:17:27.520 I want to take just a second here and kind of recap what he has done because he's been speaking
00:17:33.560 for about 45 minutes now. And there is a clear theme. He came out in the first 20 minutes before
00:17:41.240 we joined him on the podcast. And he is, his theme was how strong America is economically, energy,
00:17:53.140 energy, everything that, everything that is going on and how the globalists have failed and how that
00:18:00.040 was rotting, uh, the middle class and how that is in the past. Um, but he kept coming back to,
00:18:09.040 here's our strength. Here's our strength. Here's what's coming. Here's the power plants that we're
00:18:14.560 building. Here's how we're working with some of the people in this very room who didn't believe me.
00:18:18.920 When I said, you can build your own power plant and you're going to have permission within two
00:18:22.480 weeks. Um, he said, uh, we didn't have the grid to be able to sustain. We didn't have the energy.
00:18:31.740 So he spent the first part talking about our economic growth. He talked about a GDP growth of
00:18:37.860 5.6%. That's way beyond what the IMF said that we would be growing at. Um, and I heard a speech
00:18:45.560 before the president, you know, the EU, the European union was very excited, uh, to talk
00:18:50.660 about their, I think 1.6% GDP growth. Um, so it is, it's remarkable in comparison to the rest of the
00:18:58.960 world. But then he said, I believe most of this stuff is ad lib. Um, because he said right before
00:19:08.560 we went on the air, friends of mine would say, you know, he said, I think I'd get bad reviews
00:19:13.640 if I didn't talk about Greenland. And he said, do you want me to talk about Greenland? Um, he said,
00:19:19.780 because I, I think I need to address that here. I wasn't going to, but let's talk about Greenland.
00:19:25.220 And he has spent now the last half an hour one way or another speaking about Greenland.
00:19:31.640 Um, and there are a few remarkable things that he has, uh, that he has said, he has said, uh,
00:19:41.820 I love Europe. Uh, there are parts of Europe you can't even recognize anymore. Um, that has to
00:19:50.240 stop. The leaders either don't understand or you do understand and you won't do anything about it.
00:19:55.300 Um, he said, that's why we are changing, um, because this system doesn't work. He then said,
00:20:03.860 he then talked about Venezuela and how strong America was in Venezuela and what had just happened.
00:20:10.220 Uh, and he said, you know, with Venezuela, I told them to make a deal. Oh, they were willing to make
00:20:16.400 a deal after the attack. And then he said something really interesting. Let's make a deal. They didn't
00:20:23.120 until after the attack, gee, more people should do that, which I thought was really interesting.
00:20:30.660 It was around this time in his speech, he was getting some laughs from leaders when he would
00:20:35.420 make jokes or say things like that. Um, it kind of an uncomfortable laugh from time to time.
00:20:41.940 There has been no laugh line here. He has said things that he means as a joke a couple of times,
00:20:47.960 but you've noticed there hasn't been any laugh, uh, not a single laugh line. The world leaders are
00:20:54.480 listening to him. I think this is the most consequential speech I have heard a president
00:21:01.440 give since possibly the Berlin wall speech or the, um, or the evil empire speech given by Ronald Reagan.
00:21:10.220 But this is much, much deeper. He is breaking up the United nations. He is breaking up the,
00:21:18.640 um, the bureaucracy of the W E F. He is putting Europe on notice. Um, and we come down a lot.
00:21:27.740 He then has been going in here. This during the, the, um, Greenland part in the last 20, 30 minutes.
00:21:35.960 No more than that. I said, Emmanuel, he, he keeps coming back to how powerful the United States
00:21:44.880 is. He broke some news. Uh, let me see if I can find it. He broke, I think some news where he said,
00:21:51.860 um, Trump rolls out using military force. Yeah. The, a couple of things. One, he, um, as he's listing
00:22:00.980 the list of military, um, accomplishments, he talked about how we have things that nobody understood
00:22:08.820 that we are now, uh, looking, uh, at these, uh, dangerous weapons. This was it. We have dangerous
00:22:17.800 weapons, more dangerous than people recognize in, in Venezuela. They pressed the trigger and nothing
00:22:24.960 happened and couldn't figure out what any of that meant. Then the other breaking news is Ricky just
00:22:33.040 reminded me was Monday morning. We're putting, we're not going to attack. I, I don't want to attack
00:22:40.780 and I won't attack. But again, his last words on that right after that was you can say yes to giving
00:22:50.360 us Greenland. You can come to the table. We'll make a deal or you can say no, but we will remember
00:22:57.680 this is the strongest language I have ever seen a president of the United States give because he's
00:23:04.940 putting the entire world on notice. The world is changing. You don't have the cojones or the power
00:23:11.940 to be able to deal with us in any other way. Come to the table now. Makes me uncomfortable.
00:23:20.360 But I'm glad the president is standing. All right, just a second. Uh, we'll come back. Let me tell you
00:23:25.860 about rush tax. If you've ever had to deal with a tax problem, you have probably dealt with more
00:23:29.860 used car salesman types than advisors. Um, rush tax is very different. They are not trying to push
00:23:35.620 you into something that you don't need. These are the, this, this is the Rolls Royce of, of tax
00:23:40.120 resolution people. I was just on the phone with them yesterday. I really like their approach. I like
00:23:44.660 who they are. Um, you know, I like their, I like their business model, which is we just try to help
00:23:50.220 people. We just want to help people. If we can help people, especially the entrepreneur, especially
00:23:54.500 the small businessman, you get, you do everything right. You think you get behind the eight ball.
00:23:59.860 Then the IRS hits you with a letter and you don't know that's not your job. I mean, the government is
00:24:06.580 scary. They're the scariest tax collectors or the scariest collection agencies on the planet
00:24:11.100 because they have guns and jail. That's why rush is there and they will provide a free IRS transcript
00:24:17.640 investigation. Other, but other people will charge you 500 bucks for that. They give it to you for
00:24:22.580 free and they will not take your case unless they know they can help you period. So don't hope the
00:24:28.000 problem disappears. I want you to call 877-554-RUSH 877-554-RUSH, rushtaxresolution.com.
00:24:36.320 The show behind the show is available on The Torch and you can get it at glennbeck.com.
00:24:43.480 Sign up now. It's free this month at glennbeck.com.
00:24:45.820 I got to tell you, I think today is very consequential. I don't know how it's all going to work out.
00:25:07.360 I hope that it works out in our favor, but I've never heard a president speak to the world like
00:25:11.420 this. Um, and he means it and he knows he is carrying a very, very large stick. He knows it.
00:25:19.860 And you know, there are parts of the speech that he was the typical Donald Trump, you know,
00:25:25.320 and I'm the greatest and you all know it. Um, which always makes me a little uncomfortable.
00:25:30.000 I wish you were a little more humble, but that's Donald Trump. Um, but he did say over and over and
00:25:36.200 over again, probably six times, how much he loved and respected Europe, how he is, his family is from
00:25:41.720 Germany and Scotland, um, and how important they are. Um, and how much he, you know, the history
00:25:48.180 between us and how much Western culture means, however, Western culture is dying in Europe because
00:25:53.840 you refuse to stand up for it. Um, when he got into Greenland, he really started to, um,
00:26:00.540 you know, he started really, you know, he said, Europe has turned their backs on things that have
00:26:07.840 made us strong. He took on Canada in a way I have never heard before. He talked about, uh, how,
00:26:16.680 you know, Greenland is important because we're going to use it to defend not just, not just the
00:26:22.360 United States, but also Canada and Europe. And he said, uh, you know, the Canadian prime minister
00:26:28.800 spoke yesterday and I didn't think he did very well. And then he said, he's probably in here,
00:26:32.860 Mark, I wouldn't speak that way again or something like that. And it, it was shocking the way he
00:26:39.600 didn't, he didn't even show him the deference of being prime minister. It was Mark, you should
00:26:44.600 watch your words. Um, he is not fooling around and he is declaring an end to this new world order,
00:26:54.720 this globalist kind of thing, uh, that the world has been building, uh, been building. He did,
00:27:00.400 like I said, a minute ago, he said, I will not use force on Greenland. Uh, I don't want to use it
00:27:08.200 and I won't use force, which I think is, uh, uh, significant. So let's start with Greenland. Jason,
00:27:19.520 I just heard you talking on the insider broadcast, by the way, the insider, it is still free this
00:27:24.440 week, next week, it'll start going into, you'll have to subscribe to get it. Uh, but if you go
00:27:29.820 to glennbeck.com, you get the insider. When the radio show goes into commercial breaks, Jason joins
00:27:35.580 us, uh, from behind the scenes and he is, he's, he's giving more information on what we're talking
00:27:42.180 about and deeper analysis. Uh, and we work together a couple of hours before the show. So we are in sync
00:27:48.880 and he gives all the information. I just don't have time to give, but you gave a great stat a
00:27:52.820 minute ago about how Greenland pledged during the Trump first term, he went to Europe and said,
00:28:00.640 NATO allies, you need to pony up for your own defense. We are paying for all of it and we're
00:28:06.160 done paying for all of it. And he went to Greenland and he said, it's time for you to step to the plate.
00:28:11.600 And they pledged to pay, which is a lot for Greenland, $200 million in their own defense.
00:28:17.780 Uh, and so he accepted that. Jason, tell me what happened as soon as Trump left office. How much
00:28:25.360 did they pay of that $200 million? Hey Glenn. So yeah, this was a big part of their negotiations
00:28:30.220 with, at that time they were trying to get NATO to allocate more money, everyone. And it was largely
00:28:35.800 being successful what Trump was trying to do. But Denmark, they allocated $224 million. They said,
00:28:41.840 we agree with you. We're going to be expanding airspace surveillance. That's great. Uh,
00:28:46.640 reconnaissance. Awesome. Uh, Arctic defense measures. I mean, it was, it sounded really,
00:28:51.700 really good. Well, what they ended up doing after Trump left office was they only allocated
00:28:57.320 1% of that entire $224 million. And that must, and most of that money that they set aside for defense
00:29:06.260 went to social programs. That's when it, that's been their biggest Achilles heel. Every time they
00:29:11.920 always go off and they, you know, they fund the welfare state every single time. That's what they
00:29:17.200 did. They do not treat security seriously. So what Trump is doing right now, and it's all across the
00:29:23.600 board on a lot of these measures is I think the best way I'm, I can describe this is tough love.
00:29:29.400 We're seeing a eulogy and a funeral right now at the WF, which actually is amazing to see,
00:29:34.720 but you have, and Trump just said, you know, daddy Trump, he's providing the tough love. This is after
00:29:40.360 the son lost his basketball game. And instead of the dad saying, you can, you'll get him next time.
00:29:46.180 You'll be fine. No, he's saying, get your butt into the gym, work out and practice your jump shot.
00:29:52.480 That's what he's saying.
00:29:53.360 Ricky and Stu like you to join in most significant takeaways that you heard from the president's
00:30:01.820 speech today. I liked his rebuke of Carney. And for those viewers and listeners who don't have
00:30:07.720 context, we do have two cuts from yesterday. So they understand why Trump was so heated about
00:30:13.520 prime minister, uh, Carney from Canada. Let's, let's play those two cuts. Here's what Carney said
00:30:19.240 yesterday in his speech to the WF. We understand that this rupture calls for more than adaptation.
00:30:26.200 It calls for honesty about the world as it is. We are taking the sign out of the window. We know
00:30:32.880 the old order is not coming back. We shouldn't mourn it. Nostalgia is not a strategy, but we believe
00:30:41.460 that from the fracture, we can build something bigger, better, stronger, more just. This is the task
00:30:48.440 of the middle powers, the countries that have the most to lose from a world of fortresses and a
00:30:54.400 most to gain from genuine cooperation. The powerful have their power. We have something to the capacity
00:31:04.860 to stop. I want you to listen. I want you to hear what he just said. He just said the old order is not
00:31:11.360 coming back. That is 100% accurate. Now, what order is he talking about? The order of Bretton Woods,
00:31:19.940 the order of the petrodollar, the, the order that the United States set up, uh, back in 1945. It's,
00:31:28.120 it's over. It doesn't work. Trump, he is saying exactly the same thing that Trump is saying.
00:31:35.140 However, Carney is saying we need to, that's why we need to band together and have a new world order.
00:31:44.440 This, this great reset kind of order. We'll have a new world order where, uh, the elites all get
00:31:52.600 together from all over the world and they make the decisions. Trump, the beginning of his speech,
00:31:57.760 he was talking and addressing that very thing that hasn't worked. More bureaucracy will not fix it.
00:32:06.520 More globalization, more melding of our countries together will not fix this. That is not the way
00:32:14.160 to go. That is more of what was built in 1945. That is not working. It's time to end all of that.
00:32:22.060 Here's cut two from Carney. For decades, countries like Canada prospered under what we called the
00:32:27.900 rules-based international order. We joined its institutions. We praised its principles. We
00:32:32.980 benefited from its predictability. And because of that, we could pursue values-based foreign policies
00:32:39.320 under its protection. We knew the story of the international rules-based order was partially false.
00:32:45.820 that the strongest would exempt themselves when convenient. That trade rules were enforced
00:32:52.700 asymmetrically. And we knew that international law applied with varying rigor, depending on the
00:32:59.200 identity of the accused or the victim. Can we stop here for a pause just for a second? That is amazing
00:33:06.460 that he is saying that because he is describing exactly the order that they are trying to impose
00:33:12.380 on people. That if you're an elite, you get away with it. But if you're a little guy or you're on the
00:33:17.960 wrong side, you don't get away with it. You pay a very heavy penalty. He's saying that he's implying
00:33:24.460 here that the United States, uh, was the one that won every single time in little countries like Canada
00:33:30.440 did not win. I would suggest, um, Mr. Prime Minister, you won a bucket load. You won a bucket load.
00:33:41.260 Canada. And I don't want, I do not want to Canada bash. I love Canada. I love Canadians. I don't want
00:33:47.360 to have a problem with Canadians, but let's please just admit the truth. The United States has foot
00:33:54.740 the bill for your security. You have all benefited from the United States being as strong as it was.
00:34:02.400 Meanwhile, every one of you hollowed us out. We allowed you to do it, but we got into the world
00:34:10.540 trade organization. We did all these things and said, you know what, we're going to, we're going
00:34:15.240 to spread the wealth some. And you all benefited from that. Most importantly, you benefited from the
00:34:23.460 shield of the United States military. You want to know what the world is like without the United States.
00:34:31.440 I think Donald Trump should say no more protection for anyone, but the United States and the American
00:34:37.960 people would cheer. We're not footing the bill for a single war, not a single tank, not a single
00:34:44.280 airplane, nothing. You get nothing from the United States in defense. That is almost exactly what he
00:34:50.880 said in much shorter form. What he said, his quote was, uh, Canada lives because of the U S
00:34:56.920 remember that Mark, the next time you make your statements and that's really direct and clear.
00:35:03.500 And I've, have you ever heard Stu, have you ever heard a president of the United States speak like
00:35:09.220 that? No, but I, you know, how common is this Glenn? I've been doing this for a long time. How
00:35:14.280 common is it when we would just, we, we cover another nation who has received all sorts of bounty and
00:35:21.460 gifts and protection and favors and all sorts of things from the United States come up and do their
00:35:27.740 speech in front of the UN in front of Davos, whatever it is and bash us over and over and
00:35:34.140 over and over again. It feels good to have a president that stands up and says, no, you're
00:35:38.740 not doing that anymore. If you want anything from us, good. And they really should be a little more
00:35:43.440 careful with the way that they treat us. I, you know, there's, you can argue with some of the
00:35:47.880 stuff that, that Trump does and whether he should be treating allies in certain ways that, you know,
00:35:51.720 there are all those conversations can be valid at times, but like we never hold these people to
00:35:57.120 those standards. They're constantly trashing us. They're constantly telling us we're involved in
00:36:01.960 genocides around the world. I'm sick of it. I'm done with it. Glenn, do you think that Carney has
00:36:06.880 found this newfound confidence and boldness and bravado because of this strategic alliance he's
00:36:13.460 trying to build with China? No, I think he believes in the new world order. He believes in the power of
00:36:21.720 the banking community. You know, he believes in, he believes in the WEF. He also believes that China,
00:36:28.560 you know, is, uh, is a great, uh, you know, is a great ally for China, at least to threaten with,
00:36:35.480 but China will eat you. Canada, China will eat you. Good luck with that. Um, the only thing that I
00:36:41.800 have seen that would make sense, I, I hesitate to even say it, but no world leader is listening to me.
00:36:47.520 So, um, but the only thing that you could actually threaten the United States with and make a
00:36:53.260 difference is if, if Europe started to say, we're going to sell all of our U S treasuries. We don't
00:36:58.560 believe in U S treasuries. You start selling our treasuries. That's the only power you have to hold
00:37:06.000 over our head. And Denmark just said they were going to start doing that. We don't believe in U S treasuries
00:37:10.500 anymore. We're thinking about liquidating all of our treasuries now, whether they do or not is another
00:37:15.500 thing. Cause that will only hurt your own people. You, you it's, it's the only investment you can
00:37:20.820 make. What are you going to invest in? Where are you going to put your money? You're gonna put it
00:37:24.720 in the United States and the United States stock market, or are you going to pull it all out and
00:37:28.340 put it someplace else? You're not going to do that. I mean, you will only hurt your own people,
00:37:32.620 but that is the only threat that could possibly, um, come up against the United States. So I think
00:37:39.460 Carney is, is wildly mistaken. You know, you've got to remember how Donald Trump negotiates.
00:37:46.720 Donald Trump negotiates. He first says it nicely. And he's like, Hey, let's work together on this.
00:37:53.280 I'd like to do this. What do you think about this? How can we make a deal for both of us here? That's
00:37:58.760 good on this. Once you say no, if he is determined to get it done, then he starts upping the ante.
00:38:07.060 Then he starts saying, you know what? Well, you don't do that. I'm going to do this.
00:38:11.000 And he makes promises. He never makes threats. He makes promises. I am going to do this.
00:38:19.600 If you don't do the Venezuela Maduro leave, or we'll come and get you. Iran, knock it off,
00:38:27.760 or we will put your power plants, your nuclear power plants out of business and knock you back
00:38:33.780 into the stone age in that department. He says what he means and means what he says. And he starts
00:38:40.260 making promises, not threats. So when, when president Trump, uh, is all he's asking for here,
00:38:50.040 and you may not like the way he's asking for it, but it's high time that somebody in America has
00:38:55.460 stood up for us in America. Um, when he says, look, we are only asking for something that is
00:39:04.640 good for your security, good for my security, uh, you know, our United States security, you and Canada
00:39:11.760 security. We have not asked you for anything since 1945. And you guys have been living off of us
00:39:21.160 and living on our teat since 1945, all of these things, the United States agreed to and developed
00:39:30.460 and made the world stable. So you could rebuild Europe. Will you rebuild Europe, you know, 20 years
00:39:37.840 after the war and you've been sucking us dry ever since we're asking for one thing, give it to us
00:39:45.260 or we will remember it's, it is the toughest love I have ever seen, but I would put my money on
00:39:53.320 Donald Trump. All right. Let me tell you about rapid radios. Um, there's a comfort that comes
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00:40:32.320 working with us. He took one of our, our, our four by fours and he accidentally drove off the side
00:40:38.820 of a cliff ended up upside down with the forerunner in a tree. Uh, we didn't know where he was. We had
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00:41:12.320 More Glenn Beck straight ahead.
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00:43:03.480 We have so much stuff. We're jam packed today. I'm going to be listening to the insider when we go
00:43:07.900 into this commercial break, because I want to hear what people are saying who are listening to us about
00:43:11.740 Trump. I want to hear their reaction. We'll report on that coming up. Also, uh, next hour,
00:43:16.540 we have the new head of NASA. We're going to talk about, uh, Artemis two going back to the moon.
00:43:22.180 That's just a few weeks away, uh, believe it or not. And also some breaking news around NASA that
00:43:27.860 we're going to get into some exciting things and some important things as well, all on, uh, this
00:43:34.700 program next hour. If you miss any part of the radio show or podcast, make sure you download it. Go to
00:43:40.560 glennbeck.com. We are in the middle of one of the worst flu seasons we've seen in decades. And I
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00:45:26.940 The fusion of entertainment, enlightenment, and empowerment.
00:45:35.880 This is the Glenn Beck Program.
00:45:39.780 Glenn Beck is on.
00:45:42.800 Welcome to the Glenn Beck Program.
00:45:44.980 We're glad you're here.
00:45:45.800 Today is Davos Day and a lot of breaking news today,
00:45:49.580 especially with the president,
00:45:50.740 but also some breaking news coming up with the head of NASA,
00:45:53.120 who is going to be joining me here in just a minute.
00:45:54.900 Today we're going to be talking about Artemis and also Crew 11
00:45:57.940 that was just returned because of an emergency.
00:46:00.500 First time in global history this has happened due to a medical emergency.
00:46:05.920 Not a lot is known about it.
00:46:07.060 We're going to talk to the head of NASA about that here in just a second.
00:46:10.080 This guy is an absolute freaking genius.
00:46:13.740 This guy is another kind of Elon Musk character in our life.
00:46:18.120 You know, I remember thinking years ago,
00:46:20.420 can you imagine what it must have been like to be in the founding era
00:46:23.700 when you had the greatest minds on Earth all coming together and saying,
00:46:29.500 hey, let's fix this.
00:46:30.560 Let's do something different.
00:46:32.620 We're seeing that again.
00:46:34.500 We have some of the greatest minds to have ever lived,
00:46:38.160 all working together now and trying to come up with a better way to live
00:46:43.380 and fixing things.
00:46:45.620 And our new head of NASA is one of those guys, as is Elon Musk.
00:46:50.800 Okay, we're going to do that in a second.
00:46:52.380 But it's Davos Day.
00:46:53.720 I want to quickly recap what the president said just in a couple of sentences.
00:46:58.060 But then I want to explain what Davos really is.
00:47:00.700 Because I don't know if, I don't know how many people really understand.
00:47:04.560 You might.
00:47:05.480 But how many of your friends, can you explain what Davos is?
00:47:09.240 We're going to get to that and so much more here in just a second.
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00:48:13.880 So let me start here.
00:48:15.820 The president just spoke.
00:48:17.080 He made some really big news.
00:48:19.120 He is still on stage.
00:48:20.100 He's fielding questions now, and some of them are about Greenland.
00:48:23.600 Most of them are about Greenland and war.
00:48:26.220 He just said that he felt that the world was in a very precarious situation
00:48:31.580 because of all the miscalculations that were done by the previous administration.
00:48:35.080 He said, honestly, I think if Kamala Harris would have been elected,
00:48:37.820 we might be in World War III right now.
00:48:40.940 He said, but it is our duty to avoid war at all costs.
00:48:44.340 We don't want war.
00:48:45.460 He's been talking about ending war a lot today.
00:48:49.220 Um, but he also is talking about negotiating now for Greenland.
00:48:53.800 Um, and he's being very, very tough on it, but he is, he made the announcement today.
00:48:58.820 I will not use force to take Greenland, but he was also very clear.
00:49:04.480 You have the opportunity Europe to say, yes, we're going to work with America.
00:49:11.400 Or you have the choice to say, no, we won't.
00:49:14.280 And if that's your choice, we will remember, um, really, really strong language.
00:49:21.460 Uh, but he is couching it all as national and international security imperatives.
00:49:27.860 So this is all happening up in this little Swiss town in the Swiss Alps called Davos.
00:49:32.860 And, um, you know, this was a place that if you had tuberculosis years ago, you would go to
00:49:38.120 because it was really clean air up in the mountains.
00:49:40.120 And so, you know, it would, it would clean out your lungs and your soul and, and it was
00:49:45.580 cold and inconvenient, uh, and it was neutral on all soul things.
00:49:49.220 Uh, and that mattered, um, in 1971, an economics professor named Klaus Schwab, uh, decided, you
00:49:58.140 know, I'm going to invite some people up, uh, to Davos for a meeting.
00:50:01.280 And it wasn't a summit.
00:50:02.240 It wasn't a conclave at the time.
00:50:03.480 It was just a meeting of, of, of minds that he respected.
00:50:08.060 He believed in something radical at the time that corporations had obligations, not just
00:50:14.420 to shareholders, but to society.
00:50:16.740 And he came up with something called stakeholder capitalism.
00:50:20.240 It completely reversed the idea of capitalism and how it worked.
00:50:24.900 Um, and so he invited European business leaders to come up and talk, no heads of state, no grand
00:50:30.400 ideology at this point, just managers comparing notes and notes on how to survive changing worlds.
00:50:35.540 Now this is in 1971, what happens in 1971, the world goes to hell in a handbasket.
00:50:41.680 All of a sudden we have the energy crisis.
00:50:43.700 Um, we get off the gold standard, everything, everything changes oil shocks, inflation, and
00:50:52.320 it's a slow collapse of the post world war two world order.
00:50:56.900 And so all of a sudden he thinks, oh, you know, we're even more important because governments
00:51:03.560 don't understand the markets and markets don't trust government.
00:51:06.520 So he thought, you know what?
00:51:08.620 I think we can start bringing everybody together and we can really change the world.
00:51:12.620 Now I'm saying this as a story form, but I want you to know, I'm not neutral on this.
00:51:16.520 I think Klaus Schwab is absolute born and bred evil.
00:51:20.460 I think what he believes is evil.
00:51:23.000 I believe what he created was evil.
00:51:24.960 I believe what's happening in Davos is evil, but I'm just telling you the story of how it
00:51:30.000 happened.
00:51:30.380 So by the 1980s, Schwab starts to invite all of these politicians, um, not to speak to
00:51:38.140 any voter, but to speak off the record.
00:51:40.820 And then the bankers came and then the central planners came and then the media figures came
00:51:44.920 and they offered something you really unique, no elections, no parliaments, no transcripts
00:51:51.660 and no voters by 1987, they rename it the world economic forum and the word, the use of
00:52:00.600 the word world at that time, world economic forum, what was not aspirational.
00:52:05.260 It was declarative.
00:52:06.900 This is now the world economic forum.
00:52:10.260 Okay.
00:52:11.300 And the turning point came as soon as the Berlin wall fell.
00:52:14.920 1989 Berlin wall falls, 1991 Soviet union collapses.
00:52:19.820 And suddenly the world is up for redesign.
00:52:22.560 We, the useless, stupid slugs of the world, like me, we thought we won capitalism one.
00:52:29.840 Now the planners and the central planners that were meeting up in Davos, they saw this and
00:52:36.320 they thought, ha ha ha ha, we can change the world and move into a completely new system
00:52:43.300 and global trade works were framed out in Davos before you ever heard about it.
00:52:48.200 Years before you ever heard about them.
00:52:50.060 Okay.
00:52:50.440 It was Davos that Greece and Turkey avoided war in 1988 through back channel talks.
00:52:56.980 It was Davos that South Africa's apartheid era leaders engaged future leaders and they
00:53:03.740 were real successes.
00:53:04.680 And everybody was like, wow, that's great.
00:53:06.220 But that success taught, uh, the world, uh, the world, uh, the world, uh, the world, uh,
00:53:11.120 lesson decisions are a lot easier to make when voters are nowhere near the room.
00:53:19.120 So by the 1990s, Davos is starting to become what it is.
00:53:23.740 It's no longer a conference.
00:53:25.160 It's a shadow anti-chamber of governments and they're starting to groom new government leaders.
00:53:32.100 Okay.
00:53:34.720 Davos stopped explaining and started deciding in the early two thousands Davos had a predictable
00:53:43.260 cast.
00:53:43.880 They had the heads of States, the central bankers, the tech CEOs, the NGO leaders, the intelligent
00:53:50.680 linked advisors, the media executives.
00:53:53.220 They had them all coming in and they all arrived by private jet first to talk about climate policy,
00:54:00.020 which is just hysterical.
00:54:02.240 Then financial regulation, pandemic preparedness, just two years before the pandemic, digital
00:54:09.340 identity and energy rationing.
00:54:11.960 And everything was, how do we, how do we move from the capitalist American style, uh, governance
00:54:20.840 where it was a sovereign state into a new world order, uh, a global system where you, the voter
00:54:28.880 really aren't participating.
00:54:31.140 And the conversation begins to change in the early two thousands on not, not should we, but
00:54:38.380 how do we, how do we implement this?
00:54:41.040 How do we get this done?
00:54:42.060 Not what do the voters want, but how do we manage the public acceptance?
00:54:47.620 How do we make sure they just go along with this?
00:54:50.500 And that's when critics began to notice something very, very chilling.
00:54:54.960 The policies that were announced as national decisions were first panel discussions in Davos.
00:55:02.660 Same phrases, same frameworks, same talking points.
00:55:06.960 For instance, I'm trying to remember the, um, the, uh, build back better was used by seven
00:55:14.500 different prime ministers and presidents in their election in 2020.
00:55:18.120 I mean, it, it, that all came from panel discussions that, that wasn't, that was not homegrown.
00:55:23.700 That was a globalist panel discussion.
00:55:26.640 Okay, so we're sitting here now looking at what it is today.
00:55:35.640 There are 3000 people in attendance today.
00:55:38.920 There are 130 countries represented.
00:55:42.540 There are 400 leaders, presidents, prime ministers, Kings, ministers, regulators.
00:55:48.580 They represent 40% of the earth's population.
00:55:53.040 The 3000 people that were listening to Donald Trump today in that room represent 40% of the
00:56:00.980 global population, 65 heads of state and 850 top CEOs.
00:56:07.560 So, you know, it's not cheap to get in to the WEF.
00:56:12.040 It is $75,000, um, to get in.
00:56:16.940 This is, this is the posted cost.
00:56:18.580 They say it's an average of about 45,000, but the posted cost is 75,000.
00:56:23.160 And if you want a real seat at the table, the price is $758,000.
00:56:30.080 Okay.
00:56:30.700 So you just put in three quarters of a million dollars and you can, you know, sit somewhere
00:56:34.980 near to these leaders.
00:56:37.040 And here's what it has become.
00:56:38.600 Let me give you the pipeline, uh, here of, of Davos, because this is what, this is why
00:56:48.380 Davos matters.
00:56:49.400 You know, everybody makes fun of Davos if they know what it is and they're like, oh, it's
00:56:54.100 conspiracy.
00:56:54.860 Well, it's not a conspiracy.
00:56:56.140 It's all right there in the right in front of you.
00:56:59.760 Okay.
00:57:00.540 So let me tell you what the pipeline is.
00:57:02.480 The pipeline starts with everybody gathering, getting off their plane, gathering at these,
00:57:08.120 these meetings in Davos where they discuss everything and they, they're like a little
00:57:12.480 hive mind.
00:57:13.420 And then they share that with the think tanks and the NGOs that then also is shared with
00:57:19.640 the government agencies all around the world.
00:57:22.500 They don't pass the laws.
00:57:25.120 They've already made the agreement globally.
00:57:27.900 So now all they have to do is get it from the agencies and the NGOs to the regulators
00:57:33.120 and then the regulators write all of the regulations and then it's your life.
00:57:38.500 You didn't even know this was coming.
00:57:40.720 You had no idea.
00:57:41.840 You didn't have a vote in it.
00:57:43.020 You had nothing.
00:57:44.560 It started in Davos, think tanks, NGOs, agencies, regulations, right to your life.
00:57:50.860 And now they control your life.
00:57:55.180 Okay.
00:57:55.960 Through the agency rules.
00:57:57.960 Tell me, who'd you vote for that's running the EPA?
00:58:03.980 Who did you vote for that is running the labor department?
00:58:09.280 Who did you vote?
00:58:10.160 Who, when you have a problem with the, uh, I don't even know with the IRS, who do you know
00:58:19.200 that you can vote out to make sure that that changes, you know, that's right there with
00:58:24.980 the IRS that are operating on regulations that the agency itself wrote.
00:58:31.500 How do you change those?
00:58:33.080 You don't, you don't.
00:58:36.780 So you now have the higher energy costs.
00:58:42.140 That all comes from Davos because they were the ones who, uh, said these higher energy
00:58:49.000 costs have to do it because of global commitments.
00:58:51.800 We have to stop using, uh, energy and go into green energy.
00:58:56.280 The banking rules that are all written by ESG stores, scores, which involve DEI.
00:59:03.000 All of that stuff came from Davos.
00:59:05.520 If you're a small business, you're buried under compliance.
00:59:09.080 That also comes from Davos, any speech that is labeled misinformation and you don't get
00:59:16.700 a chance to fight it.
00:59:18.980 That also comes from Davos, your higher energy costs, your higher food costs, your higher
00:59:24.260 housing costs.
00:59:25.600 You're told that it's necessary.
00:59:27.540 Why?
00:59:28.400 Because of the regulations and all of the things they planned in Davos.
00:59:32.660 And when you object, they say, sorry, it's, it's global.
00:59:36.300 I mean, you can't do anything about it.
00:59:39.080 But there is something you can do about it.
00:59:41.740 And it's called consent.
00:59:46.980 Consent from the people.
00:59:49.500 When elected officials attend private forums, like they do in Davos that are funded by you,
00:59:56.280 funded by you to coordinate policies globally before you have ever even heard of them.
01:00:05.640 That's not leadership.
01:00:07.140 That's management.
01:00:08.520 And that is exactly what Donald Trump is, is now taking apart in his speech.
01:00:14.540 He is, he was very, very clear.
01:00:16.740 The world of management, instead of listening to the voters, instead of responding to your
01:00:22.960 own people in your own country, you're responding to these, this room of clowns.
01:00:28.400 And you're making the decisions.
01:00:30.800 You're managing people.
01:00:32.840 But managed societies don't remain free.
01:00:36.760 At least not for long.
01:00:38.100 That's what Davos is.
01:00:41.840 That's why this makes, why it is so very important that you pay attention.
01:00:47.680 And why, I mean, I just watched the president's speech.
01:00:51.200 I think it is the most powerful speech, most important and impactful international speech
01:00:56.640 given by a president, at least since Ronald Reagan said the evil empire speech and Mr.
01:01:03.580 Gorbachev tear down this wall.
01:01:06.060 He changed the world order today.
01:01:09.320 All right, let me break here.
01:01:13.000 For two minutes, I have to make up a commercial for, we missed just last hour because of the
01:01:17.940 president's speech.
01:01:19.300 First, let me tell you about relief factor.
01:01:20.740 When people talk about living with pain, they often talk about it like it's a character flaw.
01:01:24.440 Like, you know, you just push harder, ignore it long enough.
01:01:27.040 It's just going to go away.
01:01:28.240 You know, just tell yourself it doesn't hurt.
01:01:30.260 Oh, shut up.
01:01:31.820 If you are spending your day managing a problem instead of dealing with that problem, it is
01:01:36.940 a bigger problem.
01:01:38.300 A lot of that daily discomfort comes down to inflammation that you can't just talk yourself
01:01:42.700 out of.
01:01:43.340 It's what makes our joints stiff and our muscles sore and recovery slower than it should
01:01:47.200 be.
01:01:47.380 And when inflammation becomes chronic, it affects how you move, how you sleep, how much energy
01:01:51.800 you have to get through the normal day.
01:01:53.440 That's why relief factor was designed.
01:01:55.800 They were designed it to help address that root issue.
01:01:58.500 Instead of just covering up pain, it will work to support the body's response to inflammation.
01:02:02.960 So things can start to feel balanced and more comfortable over time.
01:02:06.380 Take it as directed.
01:02:07.800 It's a 100% drug-free product.
01:02:10.800 It targets the inflammation that causes our pain.
01:02:13.460 So you can actually enjoy life again.
01:02:15.960 Try it for three weeks.
01:02:16.960 They're quick start.
01:02:17.640 1995.
01:02:18.480 Take it as directed for three weeks.
01:02:20.100 If you don't feel any difference, stop taking it.
01:02:23.080 It won't work for you.
01:02:23.760 It works for about 70% of the people who try it.
01:02:26.040 But if you do, keep taking it and you will see the difference that I have seen and so
01:02:30.580 many others have seen in this audience as well.
01:02:32.680 It's relieffactor.com.
01:02:33.860 800-4-RELIEF.
01:02:35.420 800, the number four relief.
01:02:37.900 Let's see if you're next getting out of pain.
01:02:40.160 Sarah, what is the other commercial I have to make up for?
01:02:43.720 Oh, it's Rough Greens.
01:02:45.240 Let me tell you about Rough Greens.
01:02:46.540 Rough Greens is a great product that when I had a dog, I miss Uno so much.
01:02:51.640 We just can't put ourselves through it again.
01:02:53.340 We just can't do it.
01:02:54.200 Um, we have had German Shepherds our whole life and, uh, they just, they die young and
01:03:00.560 we just can't take it anymore.
01:03:01.980 But, um, we love our dogs, just love them.
01:03:06.500 And we want them to be healthy.
01:03:07.940 And all I really wanted when I started feeding, uh, Uno was that he would eat, he would eat,
01:03:13.720 he would never eat.
01:03:14.960 We'd have to hand feed him.
01:03:16.280 It was like, come on, man, you're not the Prince of dogs eat.
01:03:20.780 Uh, and he wouldn't.
01:03:21.920 Uh, and so all I wanted with Rough Greens, will it make him eat this, you know, and actually
01:03:26.980 enjoy it?
01:03:27.680 Yes, it did.
01:03:28.500 He would race to the bowl, but I found something else.
01:03:30.880 And this is the main thing they sell is the nutritional supplement that is in the food
01:03:36.000 because a kibble food is stripped of everything.
01:03:38.420 That's really important.
01:03:39.320 This puts all of the live nutrients back into your dog's food that they need.
01:03:44.700 And I saw, not only did he race to his bowl and eat, I saw change in him.
01:03:49.400 It was like he became younger again.
01:03:51.920 You won't believe the difference in your dog.
01:03:53.820 Try Rough Greens.
01:03:54.700 Now go to roughgreens.com.
01:03:56.160 Use the promo code Beck and, uh, get your jumpstart trial bag at roughgreens.com.
01:04:00.860 You just pay for shipping.
01:04:02.400 It's a free bag.
01:04:03.640 R U F F greens.com promo code Beck at roughgreens and watch the health benefits come alive.
01:04:09.460 10 seconds.
01:04:09.980 Station ID.
01:04:10.540 Ricky, we were just talking off air just a few minutes ago, Ricky, and I forgot that
01:04:26.200 there was something that we wanted to play.
01:04:28.520 Yes.
01:04:29.000 I wanted to lower the IQ level of this commentary and remind everyone that the emperor has no
01:04:37.060 clothes when we're talking about Macron yesterday at Davos.
01:04:40.500 That's cut three.
01:04:41.300 But what we need is more Chinese foreign direct investment in Europe in some key sectors to
01:04:48.400 contribute to our growth, to transfer some technologies and not just to.
01:04:53.600 If you're not watching, if you're just listening, you may not think anything is funny other than
01:04:59.160 he's a Frenchman.
01:05:00.600 He's wearing like aviator, dark sunglasses on stage in, in the, the only other person I've
01:05:07.660 ever seen do that is Joe Biden, but we expected Joe Biden, you know, I don't know if there were
01:05:12.680 any actual eyes behind those glasses with Joe Biden.
01:05:15.620 Why is Macron wearing sunglasses when he's giving this speech and nobody says anything?
01:05:23.640 Nobody says it.
01:05:24.720 It's so weird when you're looking at it, it is so weird.
01:05:27.540 And no one says a world, a word.
01:05:30.940 And that's because he's taking on Donald Trump.
01:05:34.960 He's saying all of the things that, you know, all the elites, uh, are, are thinking and just
01:05:41.380 don't have the balls to say he does.
01:05:43.740 Okay.
01:05:45.620 Donald Trump.
01:05:46.780 You want to, you want to talk a little bit about what Donald Trump noticed that the emperor
01:05:52.280 wasn't wearing any clothes and he called that out today at Davos.
01:05:56.840 I believe we have that clip.
01:05:58.740 So when I called up Emmanuel Macron, I watched him yesterday with those beautiful sunglasses.
01:06:06.940 What the hell happened?
01:06:13.700 Oh, no, but you know what?
01:06:15.620 Nobody causes me to laugh harder as a politician than Donald Trump.
01:06:21.360 And most people just don't get it.
01:06:23.120 All right.
01:06:23.560 Let me tell you about the burner launcher.
01:06:24.760 There is a big difference between wanting to feel safe.
01:06:26.860 By the way, the head of NASA is coming up, breaking news coming up in just a second, going back
01:06:30.860 to the moon.
01:06:31.260 We'll tell you about it.
01:06:31.860 Um, but you, you, you know, you want your life to feel safe.
01:06:35.080 You want to live like, you know, like, like you're constantly expecting the best, not the
01:06:40.140 worst.
01:06:40.500 And most people aren't looking for a confrontation.
01:06:42.360 They just, you know, they just want a way to protect themselves.
01:06:44.820 It doesn't require making their day-to-day world more complicated, more complicated or dangerous,
01:06:49.480 but that's where the burner launcher fits in.
01:06:51.680 It is a less lethal self-defense option designed for real people who want a serious tool without
01:06:57.920 all the risks and responsibilities that come from a firearm.
01:07:01.000 You might live in one of these crappy States, by the way, Virginia, I've got a lot to say
01:07:04.800 to you.
01:07:05.160 Uh, you might live in one of these crappy States that just, you know, try to deny, uh, the
01:07:09.640 second amendment, you know?
01:07:11.560 And so you're like, I don't, I just can't carry a gun or whatever.
01:07:14.600 The burner is a great, great option there, but I carry a burner.
01:07:19.240 My wife has a burner in her purse.
01:07:20.820 We keep it in one in the car.
01:07:21.940 My kids who are over 18 have it in their backpack.
01:07:24.520 It is a great option for safety.
01:07:26.900 Berna, B-Y-R-N-A dot com slash Glenn.
01:07:29.440 Learn more.
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01:07:35.160 So much exclusive content is on the torch.
01:07:40.120 Go to Glenn Beck dot com and try it out for free this month.
01:07:44.180 Glenn Beck dot com.
01:08:00.320 I'm so excited for this next segment with our next guest, Jared Isaacman.
01:08:04.140 Um, he has, uh, he is now the head of NASA.
01:08:08.080 He was, if you remember, he was nominated to be the head of NASA.
01:08:11.400 Um, and then for some reason or another, that was rescinded and they went a different direction.
01:08:17.280 Um, and I had him on a podcast.
01:08:19.300 I don't even know a few months back.
01:08:20.840 And, uh, he's just fascinating.
01:08:23.800 And I'm talking to him like, you've got to be the head of the NASA of NASA.
01:08:27.180 And lo and behold, Trump decides we're going to, we're going to renominate you.
01:08:31.360 And so he is now the head of NASA.
01:08:33.900 And, uh, if you have never seen a NASA launch, I was there for one of the last, or if not the last space shuttle launch.
01:08:42.340 Um, and I brought my kids, they were too young to remember now, but, uh, it is a wonder of the world.
01:08:48.540 And Artemis two is going up here in about a month, I think.
01:08:52.440 Um, and I mean, I've, I've got to tell you, I will be one of those, even if I have to pull off to the side of the highway, I am going to watch this because we are going back to the moon.
01:09:02.360 This will be the first time that we have gone and sent people to circle the moon.
01:09:06.200 Um, one, one last time before we actually land on the moon again.
01:09:10.700 Um, but Jared is with us now.
01:09:12.420 Hello, Jared.
01:09:12.920 How are you?
01:09:14.380 Hello, sir.
01:09:14.940 Thanks for having me back.
01:09:16.720 You bet.
01:09:17.480 It's great.
01:09:18.100 Great to talk to you.
01:09:18.900 Congratulations.
01:09:19.480 First of all, on your appointment and, uh, and I'm expecting huge.
01:09:22.440 Things from you.
01:09:23.060 Cause you are, I mean, finally an entrepreneur in charge of, uh, of NASA.
01:09:28.560 Um, can we start with what happened with, uh, crew 11, the space station for the first time in, in history of 25 years of the, uh, of, uh, of the space program, uh, and of, you know, our labs up in space.
01:09:43.440 We had to bring an, we had to bring the astronauts or the crew back because of a health related issue.
01:09:48.540 Can you tell us what happened and is the astronaut okay?
01:09:52.720 Sure.
01:09:53.240 I do want to just start by saying, since I heard your intro, uh, you don't have to camp out on the side of the road for the Artemis 2 launch.
01:09:59.740 I'll certainly make sure you, we've got a seat reserved for you, especially since I know how much of a, uh, a fan you are of America's space program and all of the great history you collect at your studio that I was lucky enough to see when I visited.
01:10:12.340 So you can, you can guarantee we'll have a spot for you.
01:10:15.880 And, uh, as far as crew, as far as, and it's what an exciting mission, right?
01:10:20.460 I'm sure we'll talk about it, but, uh, as far as crew 11, um, you know, one of the greatest accomplishments, uh, that we've done at the international space station, uh, is the continuous human presence in space over a quarter of a century.
01:10:33.920 Right.
01:10:34.760 And that we're, we're keeping our astronauts alive in an environment that is incredibly, uh, harsh on their body.
01:10:41.160 Um, microgravity does a lot of things to you from, um, your vestibular system, cardiovascular system, bone density laws.
01:10:48.100 It's a, it's a radiation environment, right?
01:10:51.100 But we're there to learn.
01:10:52.880 Um, and we expect that there will be circumstances, uh, that will appear.
01:10:58.100 This is why we, we do extensive training.
01:11:00.500 Our, our astronauts are, are, are, they're practically physicians.
01:11:03.880 In fact, many of them are, um, we put them through extensive medical training.
01:11:07.900 We put, uh, medical kits in all our spaceships.
01:11:10.760 The international space station itself is like, uh, almost an urgent care center because they use a lot of those tools for, for science and research.
01:11:18.100 And then we drill, we train for the day that there is going to be, um, you know, an, uh, an unexpected, uh, health related incident.
01:11:26.160 And it happened and everyone did an extraordinary job.
01:11:30.160 Uh, the, the crew, 11, uh, astronauts, there are other expedition mates on the international space stations, the flight surgeons in mission control.
01:11:38.000 They all responded accordingly.
01:11:40.140 Uh, the, the, uh, the incident was stabilized very quickly.
01:11:44.540 Um, and then we evaluated.
01:11:46.160 So, unfortunately, due to the, you know, the, the, you know, medical privacy, um, rules, I can't tell you exactly what it was other than clearly it was a very serious situation.
01:11:57.160 Um, you know, something we had not seen before, uh, in space, but had, uh, accounted for the possibility.
01:12:05.060 And that is why, uh, you know, we put in motion the option to bring our astronauts home, uh, early, which I think really speaks to American leadership in space.
01:12:14.680 We, we can send, uh, we can send our astronauts up, um, you know, more or less on command, which is what we're going to do with crew 12 is pull their mission forward.
01:12:24.240 And we can bring our astronauts home as required.
01:12:26.920 And this is very important to president Trump and, and obviously his position on American, uh, supremacy in space.
01:12:33.440 So, um, you know, it's bizarre, Jared, because it was, it was not like that under Biden.
01:12:38.620 I mean, how long did we wait to pull those astronauts back, uh, last time?
01:12:42.060 And, and you pulled this off quickly.
01:12:43.840 And when does, when does crew 12 go up?
01:12:46.580 When are you going to launch them up?
01:12:48.500 Well, we're evaluating that timeline now because we're also preparing for the Artemis 2 mission, which is the one you mentioned in your opening comments, where we're going to send our astronauts farther into space than we've ever sent humans before past the moon, back around the moon and safely back to earth.
01:13:02.180 So, so there's some overlap in timelines now.
01:13:05.040 So we're evaluating both, which is a great problem to have, by the way, I love the idea that we are trying to de-conflict multiple, you know, uh, historic space flight missions.
01:13:15.300 Um, but I do want to just give a compliment again, the crew 11 made it easy for us to bring them home early.
01:13:20.900 They'd completed all their mission objectives, um, you know, almost ahead of schedule.
01:13:25.140 They were due to come home in a matter of weeks anyway, they made it easy on us to bring them home early.
01:13:29.540 And then to your point, we're preparing crew 12 ahead of schedule and we're preparing, uh, our Artemis 2 mission.
01:13:36.400 Okay.
01:13:37.160 Now Artemis 2, can you explain for people who don't know what this is?
01:13:41.000 Why, what is Artemis 2?
01:13:43.220 How big is the rocket?
01:13:45.500 Um, why are we going around the moon?
01:13:47.580 Why is this the first time we've done this since the 1970s?
01:13:51.780 Why are we going to the moon again?
01:13:54.380 Okay.
01:13:54.820 So these are all great questions.
01:13:56.200 So first there is a big difference between the missions that, um, you know, uh, we've all been watching take place over the last call it, you know, five years.
01:14:05.540 You know, you see a, uh, a SpaceX Falcon 9 and Dragon send four astronauts to the international space station almost every six months.
01:14:13.140 They do it so often that it looks, you know, it looks easy and it looks routine.
01:14:17.600 It's still extremely hard, you know, that you're taking a Falcon 9 rocket about 1.8 million pounds of thrust and a controlled explosion and accelerating those four astronauts to 17,500 miles an hour.
01:14:30.500 And you're sending them to the international space station.
01:14:33.220 That's hard.
01:14:34.320 You want to know what's harder is 8.8 million pounds of thrust accelerating four astronauts to nearly 25,000 miles per hour.
01:14:43.920 Because now you have to get to near earth escape velocity, right?
01:14:47.980 Which is what's essential if you're going to send astronauts to the moon or past the moon where you need to exceed earth escape velocity to do missions in the future to Mars.
01:14:56.660 So that's what we're talking about coming up with Artemis 2.
01:14:59.460 This is a whole nother caliber of, of rocket.
01:15:02.960 Uh, it's going to have two solid rocket boosters throwback from the shuttle era.
01:15:06.700 Even the center core, um, you know, looks like the, the shuttle, uh, main fuel tank.
01:15:12.160 It's got, uh, shuttle main engines on it.
01:15:14.640 Uh, it's liquid oxygen, liquid hydrogen, and it is, it is going to accelerate the, uh, you know, those brave crew, uh, Artemis 2 astronauts, uh, farther into space than we've ever seen anyone before.
01:15:25.100 And this is step one on a journey to put astronauts back on the moon.
01:15:30.180 Is this bigger or around the same size as the shuttle?
01:15:34.120 Uh, so this will be the most powerful rocket, uh, that humans have ever, uh, traveled on.
01:15:41.660 So it is, it is more powerful, uh, than the shuttle.
01:15:45.220 It is going to be able to accelerate.
01:15:48.380 It is more powerful than the Saturn V.
01:15:51.960 Wow.
01:15:52.440 I can't wait.
01:15:54.460 I can't wait.
01:15:55.620 It is.
01:15:55.940 I mean, for anybody, I hate to be, but I was a kid in the sixties and seventies.
01:16:00.120 And I got to tell you, this makes me feel like a kid.
01:16:02.600 It is a wonder of the world.
01:16:04.500 If you've never seen this, you will not believe your eyes.
01:16:09.220 It is a wonder.
01:16:12.180 You just can't imagine man has, is able to do it.
01:16:15.800 It's, it's remarkable.
01:16:16.780 Um, so why are we extraordinary and it's step one.
01:16:22.960 I can't emphasize that enough.
01:16:24.280 You know, president Trump with his national space policy, he created the Artemis program
01:16:28.120 during his first term.
01:16:29.200 And he said, we're not just going back to the moon to plant the flag and pick up rocks.
01:16:34.600 He, he wants an enduring presence.
01:16:36.680 He wants America to return to the moon and have the ability to stay.
01:16:40.540 So this might be Artemis two coming up, but our children someday are going to watch Artemis
01:16:45.280 100.
01:16:46.300 I mean, this, this mission sets up a series of, of, uh, of, of launches to and from the
01:16:52.900 moon, the construction of a lunar base.
01:16:55.360 So we can realize the scientific and economic value of being on the lunar surface.
01:16:59.600 So this is a major commitment by the president.
01:17:02.140 It's very exciting.
01:17:04.840 What are the, I mean, as an entrepreneur, you know, we run out of money.
01:17:10.060 At some point, if we just keep thinking we can print money, how does this affect us
01:17:15.500 economically?
01:17:16.540 Why, why is this important to do this?
01:17:18.960 How do we get a payoff on this other than look at us?
01:17:22.180 We're on the moon.
01:17:24.300 It's such a great question.
01:17:25.720 So in part, we have, we, we are fulfilling a promise to the American people for 35 years.
01:17:31.580 Presidents have called for a return to the moon.
01:17:33.840 We've spent over a hundred billion dollars to do it.
01:17:36.500 It wasn't until president Trump in his first term where he really committed us.
01:17:40.060 on that path by creating the Artemis program, again, in his second term, recommitting us
01:17:44.640 and establishing the lunar base.
01:17:46.900 So we're delivering on a promise here.
01:17:49.600 It's a promise to the American people and the pioneers from the 1960s who built the foundation
01:17:55.300 that we stand upon today.
01:17:57.280 Second, we don't know what we're going to find out there that could change things here
01:18:01.480 on earth.
01:18:01.980 You know, uh, on the lunar surface, you could be mining helium three, um, which has the potential
01:18:08.900 to change, uh, change things in, in energy.
01:18:12.060 It's going to be a more efficient, uh, source of fusion power someday in the future.
01:18:16.740 It has applications in quantum computing.
01:18:18.740 Do we want to come in second place on that?
01:18:20.900 Because certainly the Chinese are setting out to do this.
01:18:23.480 The Russians want to do this someday.
01:18:25.180 So we have an obligation for American leadership in the high ground of space.
01:18:29.480 The next stop is the moon, which is what we're, our, our, our courses on today.
01:18:33.640 But the president, even through his national space policy committed us to the investments
01:18:38.120 in nuclear power and propulsion to someday achieve American astronauts on Mars.
01:18:42.800 So to your second point on, is this expensive?
01:18:45.680 It is, but what's different today than it was in the 1960s is it's not all on the taxpayer
01:18:51.160 shoulders.
01:18:51.940 I mean, in the 1960s, we went to the moon with NASA's budget at four and a half percent of
01:18:56.820 the discretionary budget right now.
01:18:58.640 It's about a quarter of a percentage of that who's making up the difference.
01:19:01.540 You've got some fantastic entrepreneurs across commercial space industry, Elon Musk at SpaceX,
01:19:07.000 Jeff Bezos at blue origin, dozens of other companies putting their resources on the line here
01:19:12.020 for a capability for the benefit of the American people and really the world.
01:19:18.460 The significance of the United States having a moon base and being the first to have a
01:19:26.320 moon base, what does that mean strategically?
01:19:29.060 I mean, we've been talking about Greenland this week and everything else.
01:19:31.920 I know that Space Force was used for the first time with Venezuela or at least officially used
01:19:37.200 in a mission like what we saw in Venezuela.
01:19:43.260 What is the significance strategically of a moon base?
01:19:47.640 Well, really, it's about what you're trying to accomplish on the lunar surface and what
01:19:52.760 you can learn, right?
01:19:53.900 So if you have a orbiting base above the moon, which we have in our plans called Gateway,
01:20:01.800 that has potentially some benefit from a logistics perspective, but you're not interacting with
01:20:07.120 the regolith.
01:20:07.760 You're not constructing infrastructure.
01:20:10.160 You're not mining.
01:20:11.000 You're not doing in-situ resource manufacturing, which is essential to future Mars missions.
01:20:16.640 You're not able to develop a lunar economy above the moon, but you can develop a lunar economy
01:20:21.620 on the moon.
01:20:22.340 So it's vitally important, certainly that the president of the United States, President
01:20:28.160 Trump appreciates the strategic significance of certain real estate out there.
01:20:34.520 No one is better at this than the president of the United States and some of the most important
01:20:39.440 real estate that's within our reach where we can, again, begin to realize scientific and
01:20:44.760 economic value.
01:20:45.740 It's on the lunar surface.
01:20:48.400 Amazing.
01:20:49.480 It is always great to talk to you, Jared.
01:20:50.880 I'm so happy that you are the guy running NASA.
01:20:53.140 I mean, you are, you were born for this moment and, uh, it's a thrill to know you.
01:20:57.260 Thank you so much.
01:20:58.840 I'm grateful for the opportunity.
01:21:00.480 Thank you.
01:21:01.360 You bet.
01:21:01.860 You bet.
01:21:02.560 Um, you know, I just want to, I'm going to leave you with this, you know, Artemis, do
01:21:06.120 you know what Artemis is?
01:21:07.160 It's, it's Greek, it's ancient Greek.
01:21:08.800 Um, and it, it is the ancient goddess of the moon, the hunt protection and precision and
01:21:20.780 independence and resolve.
01:21:22.600 It is the twin sister of Apollo as in the Apollo program.
01:21:33.700 It is the Apollo program was to prove that it could be done, that man could go to the
01:21:42.880 moon.
01:21:43.140 Artemis is meant to prove we belong there.
01:21:48.760 We can live there and we can build there.
01:21:52.820 This is historic back in just a minute.
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01:25:07.740 Welcome to the Glenn Beck program.
01:25:09.420 I'm sorry.
01:25:09.840 I got choked up.
01:25:10.460 I felt like it was five, uh, all of a sudden speaking to him about NASA and Artemis too.
01:25:15.940 He talked about the lunar economy.
01:25:18.840 Um, I don't know how many people, Ricky, do you even know what lunar economy is?
01:25:23.300 I wanted you to ask, but we didn't have time.
01:25:25.560 Can you tell me what he means?
01:25:27.520 Yeah.
01:25:27.980 So the lunar economy, think Star Trek in the long run, think Star Trek.
01:25:32.240 Okay.
01:25:32.700 The lunar economy, um, think transportation services to and from other planets, fuel depots,
01:25:40.480 um, construction modules, habitation on the moon, mapping, serve, uh, surveying rights,
01:25:48.680 uh, data, security, uh, military.
01:25:52.300 All of this stuff is going on, including because the, because the moon has constant solar power.
01:25:59.380 We are now working on power beam concepts to take that solar energy, concentrate it and
01:26:07.220 shoot it at the earth.
01:26:09.040 Um, so you have constant power plus helium three, all of this stuff that is sitting there on
01:26:15.680 the moon.
01:26:16.080 Um, but it is when he says the moon economy, what he basically is talking about is all of
01:26:23.340 the trillions of dollars that will be sitting up there through private industry to get us
01:26:30.360 to move to other planets.
01:26:32.500 Now it's, we're living in remarkable, magical times.
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01:28:14.700 Glenn Beck is on, Glenn Beck is on.
01:28:19.600 The fusion of entertainment, enlightenment, and empowerment.
01:28:36.640 This is the Glenn Beck program.
01:28:40.640 Glenn Beck is on.
01:28:41.980 I was at a fundraiser a couple of, I don't know, a couple of months ago and, uh, I was
01:28:47.540 doing an interview with, um, Winston Marshall, who I just think is brilliant.
01:28:52.160 And I met his fiance and I thought Winston is bearing up.
01:28:57.160 I mean, how Winston, how are you pulling this one off?
01:28:59.520 She's brilliant.
01:29:00.700 Um, and I've been following her and, um, she has explained the case for Greenland better
01:29:08.940 than anybody I have, I have heard.
01:29:11.260 Um, and I wanted to get her on.
01:29:13.100 So, because I don't think the president's doing a very good job.
01:29:15.960 I'm not doing a good job.
01:29:17.160 I haven't heard anybody really make this case.
01:29:19.400 So, Europe and the average person in Canada and America understand what he's trying to do.
01:29:27.100 Why this is so important.
01:29:29.240 Melissa Chen can make that case.
01:29:31.320 She's managing director of, uh, strategy risks.
01:29:33.840 And, uh, she's joining us here in just a second.
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01:30:58.840 Melissa, welcome to the program.
01:31:01.420 How are you?
01:31:03.340 Hi, Glenn.
01:31:04.280 That was a very kind introduction that you gave me.
01:31:07.280 Well, very true.
01:31:08.340 Very, very true introduction.
01:31:10.760 You just did a series of tweets.
01:31:13.100 I saw it.
01:31:13.640 I think it was over the weekend where you were explaining the case for Greenland.
01:31:17.620 I wish the president would read it and follow it because it's, it's, it makes total sense.
01:31:24.680 Can you take us through this case?
01:31:27.980 Absolutely.
01:31:28.960 So, I mean, just practice this by saying, you know, I'm born in Singapore and I immigrated
01:31:34.020 to the U.S. where I lived until only very recently when I moved to London.
01:31:38.400 I bring this up to actually demonstrate that I'm quite emotionally detached from any nationalistic
01:31:44.540 sentiment and unburdened by, you know, alliance ties.
01:31:47.940 Because what I found talking about Greenland online on X is something very curious.
01:31:53.260 You know, we always see the Europeans as very sophisticated.
01:31:57.300 They view jingoistic nationalism as something barbaric and backwards.
01:32:02.400 And so it's very curious because all of a sudden with President Trump's comments on
01:32:06.220 Greenland, it's kind of triggered this nationalistic pride that I thought was, was
01:32:11.940 dormant.
01:32:12.620 You know, because that's the lesson the Europeans took wrongly, in my opinion, from World War
01:32:18.200 II.
01:32:19.180 And that's why they always berate the one leader who emphasizes nationalism and sovereignty
01:32:23.760 in Europe.
01:32:24.760 And that's Victor Orban.
01:32:27.180 So, yeah, let's get into the case of Greenland.
01:32:29.720 I mean, first, it's, it's just, it's geography.
01:32:32.700 You know, Donald Trump didn't just look at the map, saw some white space and say, I want
01:32:38.520 that.
01:32:38.820 He didn't wake up one day and say that.
01:32:40.020 And it wasn't even his original idea.
01:32:43.140 The U.S. has on so many occasions tried to acquire Greenland, beginning with William
01:32:48.380 Seward in 1867.
01:32:51.140 He, of course, is the one that successfully negotiated the purchase of Alaska from the
01:32:56.720 Russians.
01:32:57.620 And at the time, back then, it was called Seward's Folly.
01:33:01.220 Right.
01:33:01.400 And now it's 160 years later.
01:33:03.200 And we cannot imagine anything other than Alaska being American.
01:33:08.320 So all this to say is that this noise, maybe in one generation, will be completely over.
01:33:16.080 If you look at a map and ask a seven-year-old to name all the continents in the world and
01:33:20.120 then ask, where does Greenland belong?
01:33:22.600 It is so patently obvious.
01:33:24.240 If you just actually stare at a map, the kid would say it belongs to North America because
01:33:29.700 it sits squarely on the North American tectonic plate.
01:33:33.880 So geologically, it's actually just part of North America, but for historical reasons,
01:33:38.200 has political ties to Europe.
01:33:39.800 And it is currently being administrated by the Kingdom of Denmark.
01:33:43.500 The first and foremost thing is about national security.
01:33:50.340 I think this is the main lens in which President Trump is looking at Greenland.
01:33:55.760 Securing Greenland is important because it's about corridor control.
01:34:00.500 So there's two ways to look at this.
01:34:02.420 The first is there's this thing called the Greenland-Icelandic-UK gap.
01:34:08.020 And it's a small little corridor, which is a naval choke point.
01:34:11.840 And it is the only way for Russian naval forces and nuclear submarines to reach the Atlantic
01:34:16.500 from its Arctic basis.
01:34:18.080 And as the Arctic ice starts to melt, more and more sea lanes in the Arctic is going to become navigable
01:34:25.020 for a longer time.
01:34:26.660 And this also opens up the corridor to Asia, right?
01:34:30.660 China self-identifies as a near-Arctic state, and it's been pursuing ambitions to become a polar great power.
01:34:38.000 They released a white paper in 2018 actually detailing its ambitions to build a polar silk road.
01:34:44.960 Misnomer, of course, because it's actually not a road.
01:34:47.560 It's a sea route because they want to make sure that they have a way to access Europe.
01:34:55.540 So right now, the only way to get from China to Europe is through the Suez Canal.
01:35:00.720 And the Suez is controlled by Egypt, which is a U.S. ally.
01:35:06.120 And it takes about 40 days to make that journey.
01:35:10.020 But opening up the sea route for China will cut that almost into half.
01:35:14.520 And so they want to have more navigable sea routes to get access to Europe.
01:35:22.620 And then the other map that showed this very clearly was released by the Wall Street Journal just a few days ago.
01:35:31.760 So if you just actually look at the globe from the top view, so not the way that we are used to seeing it.
01:35:38.380 And we will see that the shortest path for intercontinental missiles would run over Greenland.
01:35:51.940 This is the shortest route.
01:35:53.240 And anyone who's taken a plane to fly from New York City to, say, Tokyo will always see the plane flying through the Arctic route,
01:36:01.300 even if you're flying to Europe, because that is the shortest path.
01:36:04.940 And so right now, Greenland is where all our missile detection, early warning systems for any potential Russian missile launch.
01:36:16.780 And, you know, the Russians have been stockpiling on hypersonic missiles, right?
01:36:20.140 These are weapons that can travel, you know, at speeds that exceed Mach 5.
01:36:25.060 And they have very unpredictable paths because that's one of the things that differentiates them from conventional ballistic missiles,
01:36:31.780 which follow more predictable arcs.
01:36:33.940 And so an early warning system is currently only designed for these slower ballistics.
01:36:41.360 So we actually need to upgrade them.
01:36:43.880 And this is where Greenland is very crucial.
01:36:47.180 These intercontinental ballistic missiles also could be launched from China to target to the United States.
01:36:52.940 I mean, that's a bit more far-fetched, but it's possible that the technology exists.
01:36:57.960 And they, too, would have to traverse the Arctic region and pass over or near Greenland.
01:37:03.900 So why is it that he is so insistent that we own it?
01:37:10.100 Well, it's for a few reasons.
01:37:13.120 You know, the Danes and a lot of people who are, you know, these people have been pushing back on all over X and very bothered by the jingoism would say,
01:37:25.160 why do you need to own it?
01:37:26.720 The 1951 treaty already allows the United States to do whatever it wants.
01:37:31.620 And, you know, it's true, there is currently a space base on Greenland at the southern point of it.
01:37:40.080 But any potential weapons upgrades or expansion of the footprint actually does require a very vague, opaque kind of approval process.
01:37:52.620 You need the Danes involved.
01:37:55.180 You need to consult the Greenlandians.
01:37:57.860 And, I mean, you know, European bureaucracy is legendary, right?
01:38:03.580 So imagine having, imagine trying to run a military operation, something like Operation Absolute Resolve, which took down Maduro.
01:38:11.160 Imagine having to operate something like that in a very high-tension conflict environment.
01:38:15.760 Do we really want to consult Danish working groups and NATO steering committees about whether we can act on something?
01:38:24.880 No.
01:38:25.360 And also, you know, when the U.S. owns something, they actually have skin in the game.
01:38:30.880 And they will defend it in a way like it matters because, you know, it is U.S. soil.
01:38:36.960 And so it will be defended very differently if it was actually U.S. territory.
01:38:43.120 So how do you see this playing out?
01:38:47.000 Because to me, this is such a clear, even if I am not, if I don't get wrapped up in either my Trump hatred or my jingoistic, you know, phobias, and I just look at this case, it's so very clear to me, the only one that should have Greenland is the United States.
01:39:08.420 If I care, if I'm European and I care about my own security and I care not, you know, that I'm not overrun by Russia or China, you know, it's got to go to the United States.
01:39:17.460 It only makes sense to do that.
01:39:19.160 But how do you see this playing out?
01:39:20.620 Because they are digging in and there's like, no, not going to do it.
01:39:24.260 And Donald Trump said today, I won't invade, but I will remember.
01:39:28.660 You either do this or I will remember, and the United States will remember, you owe this to us after everything we've given to you over the last 100 years.
01:39:39.160 Yep, Trump is right.
01:39:40.880 You know, I think I live in Europe now, so I've actually been quite exposed to the way Europeans think about NATO.
01:39:48.640 And this is actually the fundamental problem.
01:39:51.820 Europeans think of NATO as the organization that's meant to defend them from Russia.
01:40:00.500 North Americans see NATO, and it's in the name, the North American, it's actually the name.
01:40:07.220 North Americans see NATO as an entity defending North America as well, or the North Atlantic, sorry, which includes America.
01:40:16.400 The problem is that the European conception of this excludes America.
01:40:20.360 They think it's just for them.
01:40:23.020 And that is the fundamental, you know, misalignment here.
01:40:27.700 Europe needs to understand that, you know, firstly, I know there's a lot of heart feelings, but this is how Trump has negotiated over the years.
01:40:35.760 It's very predictable.
01:40:37.020 He always starts with a maximalist, almost outrageous demand.
01:40:40.680 He, you know, he even mentioned, I think, Greenland in his inauguration speech.
01:40:44.360 And then he threatened, yeah, he did.
01:40:47.520 And then he kind of threatened, and then he, you know, if there's pushback, he escalates.
01:40:52.100 It's kind of an escalation dominance.
01:40:55.100 And then finally, when all the chips fall, there will be a deal, which may bear little resemblance to the original demand, but, you know, it will be hailed as some sort of a great victory.
01:41:06.000 And the Europeans in this case could come back and, you know, have some sort of a compact where most rights are actually granted to American companies, or it may be administered in the same way that the U.S. has arrangements like this with, like, free compact associations.
01:41:25.100 They have agreements with the Marshall Islands and several other places where it's de facto U.S. ownership, but, you know, they still get to fly their flag.
01:41:35.780 Puerto Rico.
01:41:36.960 Yeah, exactly.
01:41:38.740 Exactly.
01:41:39.080 So, you know, I'm watching what's happening at the WEF today, and it's remarkable.
01:41:46.940 I mean, I've never seen a president in my lifetime.
01:41:50.620 Reagan was pretty bold, but not like Donald Trump.
01:41:54.060 I've never seen anything like it in my lifetime.
01:41:57.280 And I would think if I was European, I would be like, screw you, pal.
01:42:01.980 And, you know, Canada is talking about going to China now, and they're drawing up battle plans in Greenland.
01:42:09.760 And, I mean, insane stuff.
01:42:11.760 Do you really think that they would say, screw you, America, we don't need you?
01:42:18.160 I mean, is that reality at all for anybody in Europe?
01:42:22.180 No, because Europe has just no leverage.
01:42:27.300 There are structural asymmetries to the transatlantic relationship.
01:42:31.240 Europe remains more dependent on the U.S. for defense, energy.
01:42:36.100 You know, they've tried to pivot after pivoting away from Russia.
01:42:40.220 Technology, operational security, intelligence.
01:42:44.500 There's no way that, you know, you see a lot of leaders right now, and I think it's so ridiculous hearing someone like Macron say,
01:42:52.180 insist on sovereignty and then welcome, and the WEF welcome, more Chinese direct investment.
01:42:59.440 Because Chinese investment is how you actually decrease your sovereignty.
01:43:03.900 And we've seen that everywhere in the world where the Chinese have infiltrated markets, have infiltrated business relationships, government.
01:43:13.580 You know, and by the way, to go back to the Greenland issue, you know, the reason why it's actually very important for the U.S. to own Greenland is because if Greenland becomes independent, for example,
01:43:28.680 North American security is too precious, is too important to rely on democratic constraints.
01:43:35.580 I mean, you know, you have all these, like, you see this in the U.S. too, local mayors, state governments that can be very easily infiltrated by the Chinese.
01:43:45.400 What if they go to a mayor in Greenland and say, oh, you know, we would love the rights to this airport.
01:43:51.340 Will you sell it to us?
01:43:52.580 What if the Danish government, you know, is run by, say, an Islamist Marxist about, you know, 10 years down the road?
01:44:01.320 And they'd be willing to, you know, basically do China's bidding.
01:44:05.360 So that is the other reason why it's very important for the United States to actually have control over Greenland.
01:44:12.600 So I want to talk to you about two other things.
01:44:15.260 Is Trump right about Europe being over?
01:44:18.000 And also I want to go to Diego Garcia here, something that most people don't even know.
01:44:22.720 It is so important.
01:44:23.660 It is a hinge of world power.
01:44:26.960 And the U.K. is just kind of giving it away.
01:44:29.340 We'll talk about that here in just a second.
01:44:31.020 Let me stop for 120 seconds to tell you about Z-Factor.
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01:45:33.080 Stations, just a note, I had to skip a couple of commercials in the first hour to carry the president's speech, so I'm making up another one here.
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01:46:38.940 Ten seconds, and back to Melissa Chen.
01:46:40.320 So, you know, I saw a post, Melissa, from you about, you know, Starmer and him just approving this mega Chinese embassy,
01:46:59.020 which is just riddled with problems.
01:47:02.340 The way they are dealing now with Islam, just in the UK itself, let alone Europe.
01:47:09.660 Donald Trump, I believe, sees Europe as over.
01:47:12.420 And he kind of said that today.
01:47:14.440 Unless you change your ways, you're not going to make it.
01:47:17.060 And we can't count on you.
01:47:18.140 And we're not counting on you because you're not going to help us.
01:47:22.340 And he invited them to change their ways and join us.
01:47:26.120 But I don't think they're going to.
01:47:27.400 Is he right about the UK and Europe being over?
01:47:31.100 There are many parties that are trying to align the U.S., Europe back closer to the U.S. orbit, right?
01:47:44.080 And that would be your more center-right or right-wing populist parties in Europe.
01:47:48.520 They are for stronger borders.
01:47:51.660 They have been complaining about this mass migration wave.
01:47:56.220 You know, you have Farage in the UK, who, as it stands, if the elections were held tomorrow,
01:48:01.040 he would be the prime minister and his party, you know, would sweep.
01:48:06.060 So it's not over for Europe, but it's very, very late in the day for Europe.
01:48:14.640 They have, you know, disarmed, de-industrialized, which I see this as, you know,
01:48:21.200 you know, the term luxury beliefs, like how, you know, woke ideas are luxury beliefs
01:48:27.340 because it harms the people, you know, that actually hold them.
01:48:32.120 And it's the same with this.
01:48:37.420 Europe has been too steeped in luxury beliefs.
01:48:40.880 And President Trump is trying to encourage Europe to snap out of it, wake up,
01:48:45.040 because that is where Western civilization came from, although right now it's America
01:48:50.180 that is the torchbearer of Western civilization.
01:48:53.640 Melissa, thank you so much.
01:48:54.840 Follow Melissa Chen online.
01:48:56.320 She is fantastic, very super, super smart and a great perspective.
01:49:00.300 Melissa Chen, thank you very much.
01:49:01.920 You can follow her also at her website, melissachen.org.
01:49:04.520 Liz Wheeler joins me about Pam Bondi and the DOJ next.
01:49:15.040 There's a very specific kind of cold that makes you realize how much you take modern comfort for granted.
01:49:28.760 There's a big snowstorm blowing in across the country,
01:49:31.100 and they're saying it's going to knock out Texas all the way to the East Coast.
01:49:35.200 I mean, it's a big storm that's coming your way.
01:49:37.940 How long can you stay warm without electricity?
01:49:41.860 How long are you going to stay warm if power goes out?
01:49:44.000 Because it's going to happen.
01:49:45.180 Someplace in America, it's going to happen this weekend.
01:49:47.400 Well, the Vesta heater exists for that moment.
01:49:52.620 It's also, you know, it also, for everything short of, you know, no power,
01:49:58.160 it is a self-contained heater and stove that doesn't need electricity.
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01:50:32.440 Have it by this weekend.
01:50:33.660 Go to mypatriotsupply.com slash Glenn.
01:50:35.640 Get the show behind the show and exclusive content as part of The Torch.
01:50:42.420 Go to glenbeck.com and sign up for free.
01:50:44.900 glenbeck.com.
01:50:45.840 Welcome to the program.
01:51:03.780 I'm just reading a really great article in Barrett Media right now about how or why AI is forcing radio to adapt faster than ever.
01:51:16.000 Good.
01:51:16.300 Radio should adapt.
01:51:17.280 It should adapt fast.
01:51:18.660 I mean, radio is the most compelling, the strongest, and the most powerful medium out of all of the mediums.
01:51:28.780 And I've done all of them.
01:51:30.480 This is the most powerful medium, the power of the spoken word, especially on radio.
01:51:35.780 One-on-one, live, is completely different than anything else.
01:51:40.620 But they were talking about how there's pushback.
01:51:44.380 And there should be pushback on, you know, I don't like the idea of a digital host.
01:51:50.600 You know, if I'm listening to a show, I want to know that person is real.
01:51:56.260 However, this, as it says in this article, because it has a large section of how we're innovating early this month,
01:52:04.840 Glenn Beck rolled out his own version of AI content.
01:52:07.560 His initial digital podcast was not off-brand.
01:52:11.680 Simultaneously, Beck unveiled his historic-based AI, The Torch, tied to the new foundation he launched to preserve and teach American history using a vast archive of founding documents.
01:52:21.300 The inaugural video featured a digital conversation with George Washington.
01:52:25.120 Beck is one of the first high-profile personalities to use AI to generate complete episodes for his brand,
01:52:31.200 moving beyond digital editing to actually create content for his podcast.
01:52:35.560 What rubs conventional thinking about Beck's brand is that he frequently warns about AI risks.
01:52:40.620 Beck has said that technology is a threat to society, values, and perhaps freedom.
01:52:44.480 He has described AI developments as kind of a quiet detonation that could change how humans live and think.
01:52:50.160 Yes, Beck's dual stance on AI critiquing it externally while embracing it internally creates a clear dichotomy of how he justifies AI-generated content under his media brand.
01:53:01.580 Well, it's very easy.
01:53:03.860 I think nuclear weapons are one of the worst things man has ever done.
01:53:12.140 It is also the one thing that has kept millions of people alive.
01:53:16.420 It ended World War II without millions of more deaths.
01:53:21.860 So you can say something is a very great danger.
01:53:24.880 You have to learn how to use it.
01:53:27.660 That is the problem.
01:53:29.520 Most people who go into AI are just going to let it become them.
01:53:34.140 They're going to use it as a shortcut.
01:53:36.000 They're going to use it as a replacement so they don't have to work as hard or whatever.
01:53:40.600 You use it as a tool to help you do things you currently cannot do.
01:53:47.840 But you are in charge of it.
01:53:50.380 And that is the lesson.
01:53:51.420 I mean, I'm telling you, if you stay away from AI right now, there may come a time when you have to say,
01:53:55.760 I've got to cut it off.
01:53:56.780 I can't use it because it's too X, Y, or Z.
01:54:01.320 But now is not that time.
01:54:02.900 You must learn it is as essential as the computer is and the internet is right now.
01:54:09.120 Imagine not teaching your kids what www.means, what a .com means, how to navigate and use a computer today.
01:54:20.620 You're going to be left in the dust.
01:54:22.640 And now that doesn't mean that the internet and everything is good.
01:54:25.920 It means you have to decide how to use it.
01:54:30.220 All right.
01:54:31.060 I don't want to get into that deeper later, but probably have to do it on a podcast.
01:54:35.420 But Liz Wheeler is joining us now.
01:54:37.380 She is the host of the Liz Wheeler show on Blaze TV.
01:54:40.320 Also, the author of Hide Your Children.
01:54:44.180 And she has been somebody outspoken about Pam Bondi and her effectiveness.
01:54:51.700 And she's with us now.
01:54:53.960 Liz?
01:54:56.320 Glenn, hi.
01:54:57.120 How are you?
01:54:58.640 I'm good.
01:54:59.700 So you, I know, were listening yesterday when I had my jihad on Pam Bondi.
01:55:05.300 I said I would give her a year.
01:55:06.760 It's been a year.
01:55:08.120 And I'm wildly disappointed.
01:55:10.160 And I just scratched the surface on the things that are not happening.
01:55:14.080 Am I being too tough or not tough enough?
01:55:18.080 You know, it's funny because you texted me and said, am I missing anything?
01:55:23.120 Did I get anything wrong here?
01:55:24.940 And my response to that is the only thing that you've done wrong in your analysis.
01:55:29.460 Your episode, by the way, was amazing.
01:55:31.260 The only thing you got wrong is waiting a year when the writing on the wall.
01:55:35.080 I'm sad to say this.
01:55:36.460 I am sad to say this.
01:55:37.700 You know that I believe in giving the benefit of the doubt to people on our side.
01:55:41.120 Yes.
01:55:41.540 To be, I believe in being generous with people.
01:55:43.760 We're all human.
01:55:44.440 We make mistakes.
01:55:45.280 You're walking into the deep state.
01:55:46.940 There's swamp creatures everywhere.
01:55:49.020 I'm sure we can't imagine what that's like.
01:55:51.120 It's not as easy as we think to go in there and reform.
01:55:54.220 However, it's been apparent for many months now that we've seen zero accountability,
01:56:02.400 zero justice for all of the wrongdoings that weren't just inflicted on Trump.
01:56:07.220 They were inflicted on us, Glenn.
01:56:09.020 I mean, COVID, we've seen zero indictments for that.
01:56:12.040 Russia collusion, zero indictments.
01:56:14.600 Ukraine impeachment, zero indictments.
01:56:17.240 FBI agents who targeted parents over critical race theory.
01:56:20.600 FBI agents targeting Project Veritas journalists because they had the audacity to investigate
01:56:26.300 Ashley Biden's diary, which, by the way, turned out to be real.
01:56:30.220 FBI agents labeling Catholics as extremists.
01:56:33.100 Zero indictments.
01:56:34.180 Government officials.
01:56:35.060 And we have the names of these people, Glenn, who colluded with big tech platforms to censor us.
01:56:40.520 If we talked about the COVID vaccine, January 6th, the transgender ideology.
01:56:44.780 All of that was revealed in the Twitter files.
01:56:47.100 Zero indictments for the Mar-a-Lago raid, for Fannie Willis' lawfare, Letitia James, Alvin Bragg.
01:56:53.160 Nothing.
01:56:53.800 We've seen nothing.
01:56:55.100 No indictments for the 2020 election rigging.
01:56:57.480 No indictments for the left-wing radical groups that commit violence against conservatives in the United States.
01:57:03.200 How many Antifa groups have been dismantled since Charlie Kirk's assassination?
01:57:06.920 The answer is zero.
01:57:09.680 So you combine this track record, and it, I mean, a whole year of evidence we have now in front of us.
01:57:14.780 You combine this track record with the reality that Attorney General Pam Bondi has gone after people,
01:57:22.660 either using the power of the Department of Justice to raid a Washington Post journalist,
01:57:27.900 which is just constitutionally unthinkable.
01:57:31.340 That is, there's no constitutional justification for that.
01:57:33.640 Or saying that she's going to target people for hate speech and only correcting herself when people are like,
01:57:39.180 wait a second, hate speech is not real.
01:57:42.020 It's protected under the First Amendment.
01:57:43.340 She's like, oh, I meant violence.
01:57:44.960 Well, that's not what you said.
01:57:46.300 And you don't make that mistake if you understand what you're talking about.
01:57:49.220 Or saying she was going to go after Office Depot because their employee didn't print a certain poster for a conservative.
01:57:56.380 And these things show a fundamental misunderstanding of the America First agenda that we voted for when we voted for President Trump.
01:58:06.000 And so you have to be, go ahead, go ahead.
01:58:08.700 I want to know, because I got a lot of heat yesterday online.
01:58:12.860 People saying, you know, your blindness on Donald Trump is just, I can't take it anymore.
01:58:18.520 You're always defending Donald Trump.
01:58:20.100 And I'm thinking, first I'm thinking, how am I, wait, I was talking about Pam Bondi.
01:58:24.380 And then I understood after like the 50th comment saying she works for Donald Trump.
01:58:30.900 She's, you know, Donald Trump is involved in everything.
01:58:33.560 So why blame her?
01:58:35.740 Why is this not Trump?
01:58:36.880 Well, she's the one that makes those decisions to bring, to not bring those indictments.
01:58:43.340 I mean, remember a couple, this was probably a month ago, President Trump posted on Truth Social what appears to be a private text message that he had sent to Pam Bondi, asking her, holding her to account for the exact same things that you were saying about her yesterday that we're talking about today.
01:58:57.600 I believe President Trump is beginning to share our frustration.
01:59:00.500 Listen, there's a, there's a strange combination of factors when you're the chief executive.
01:59:05.160 Pam Bondi was very loyal to President Trump during his impeachments.
01:59:08.820 And that's a good thing.
01:59:09.600 I'm going to be the first one to give her credit for that.
01:59:11.480 When a lot of Republicans, you know, turned up their nose at Donald Trump, she stood by him.
01:59:16.640 Donald Trump values loyalty and he's going to return that loyalty in large part if that's, if that's given to him.
01:59:22.520 But there comes a point where you can't let a personal relationship or your appreciation for past loyalty color the analysis of whether someone is or is not an effective tool in enacting justice.
01:59:35.880 I mean, if you had asked me this time last year, Glenn, do I think we're going to see perp walks and jumpsuits right when the Trump administration was, you know, right at the inauguration?
01:59:45.360 I would have been like, oh, hell yeah, we're about to justice is about to be served.
01:59:49.620 And you fast forward a year.
01:59:51.980 And if you ask me that same question today, I would say, I don't think so, because it hasn't all year.
01:59:58.780 And the one thing, what changed in the space of that year wasn't President Trump.
02:00:03.000 It wasn't his view on justice.
02:00:04.260 It wasn't President Trump moving away from understanding that the deep state targeted us.
02:00:08.480 They've continued to target him.
02:00:09.840 The answer is Pam Bondi.
02:00:11.520 She's become a liability to achieving what he promised that he would achieve as president.
02:00:16.400 And he's very open minded.
02:00:18.560 He changes his mind when he knows that there's a staff member that is not well suited for that position.
02:00:24.840 So the reason that I don't look at him primarily and say this is Trump's fault is because, well, Pam Bondi was the one who ran the Department of Justice like this.
02:00:32.480 And yes, ultimately, President Trump can choose whether she continues to serve or not.
02:00:36.680 And I hope that he chooses here shortly that, you know, her service is going to be ending.
02:00:42.840 I have a feeling that things are going to change here.
02:00:45.300 I think he took this first year to try to get the world under control and get some of these fires put out so we're not in the Middle East all the time, et cetera, et cetera, and to change the dynamics.
02:00:57.300 I mean, what he did at the Davos World Economic Forum today was amazing.
02:01:03.320 And I have a feeling this next year he's going to start turning internal, which I think is very, very needed and wise.
02:01:10.360 What did you think of his Davos speech today?
02:01:12.520 I thought it was – it's actually the most hilarious, like, goat move ever, what he's doing at Davos.
02:01:19.020 And I think there's some people on our own side who are completely missing the point.
02:01:23.620 I mean, not only is he establishing this board of peace, which obviously takes an enormous amount of power away from the globalist entities, whether it's the United Nations or the World Economic Forum.
02:01:33.120 There have been times that there have been conservatives or Republicans or independents who have tried to establish alternatives to things.
02:01:41.980 The example that's coming to my mind is there was a group of conservatives at one point a couple of years ago that tried to establish an alternative to the White House Correspondence Association because it was corrupted by leftists.
02:01:51.720 But one of the commonalities in the past when someone presented an alternative is they usually take it outside.
02:01:58.880 They don't share turf at all with the entity that they're competing with.
02:02:03.820 And this is totally opposite of what Trump is doing.
02:02:06.320 He's not just proposing this board of peace and saying, we're not going to come to your United Nations and World Economic Forum and Davos Club.
02:02:12.240 He is literally taking away their power in front of their own faces on their home turf.
02:02:17.460 And it is the most base, the most savage, the most no one else.
02:02:21.760 President Trump is unparalleled.
02:02:23.040 No one else in the entire world could pull this off.
02:02:25.260 And it is a delight to watch.
02:02:28.520 It really is.
02:02:29.760 I mean, I was watching.
02:02:30.780 I've I remember Reagan giving the evil empire speech and I was working in Washington, D.C.
02:02:36.260 at WPGC at the time.
02:02:37.620 And and I remember, I mean, when KAL, the Korean airliner, was shot down by the Russians, I thought we were going to war.
02:02:45.980 I thought they're very clearly Reagan and the Russians were at each other's throats and there could have been nuclear war.
02:02:52.560 And I remember standing in the studio going, I'm going to be vaporized at any moment.
02:02:56.560 I could be vaporized.
02:02:58.500 And he was really strong.
02:03:00.520 But he I don't think I've ever seen a president do what this president is doing right now.
02:03:05.540 He is he's not going after the Soviet Union.
02:03:08.020 He is reshaping and destroying intentionally for good reason.
02:03:14.440 Everything that people have said on our side, the United Nations is a problem.
02:03:18.800 The U.N., the international courts, all of this stuff that just takes away people's sovereignty, not just ours, but the rest of the world in Europe.
02:03:26.820 He is just taking it down and without blinking, without hesitation, just taking it down.
02:03:33.780 This is the way it is.
02:03:34.540 Sorry, I've never seen anything like it.
02:03:36.340 Have you?
02:03:37.360 No, it's unbelievable.
02:03:38.360 And it's funny because it only took 21 days into this year to prove your prediction for 2026 to be correct.
02:03:44.040 Remember that episode we did on your show right before the new year?
02:03:47.420 You said we were talking about what the most significant thing that's going to happen in 2026 is based on what happened in 2025.
02:03:53.440 And you said the world order is going to change because Donald Trump is changing it.
02:03:57.560 That's the most long-lasting, significant legacy that he's going to leave.
02:04:02.100 And while it doesn't generate as many headlines as some of the other salacious stuff, you said that's going to be the most important thing that he does watch.
02:04:09.080 And what are we, three weeks in?
02:04:10.120 And it's already happening.
02:04:10.800 Yeah, because nobody pays attention.
02:04:13.480 Nobody, even on our side, nobody understands, truly understands what he's doing.
02:04:18.140 And what he's doing, it would have taken any other group, left or right, at least 20 years to do what he has done in 12 months.
02:04:27.400 It's incredible.
02:04:29.400 Incredible.
02:04:29.820 Liz, as always, great to talk to you.
02:04:33.300 Thank you so much.
02:04:33.980 Thank you, man.
02:04:34.260 Appreciate it.
02:04:35.040 All right.
02:04:35.580 Talk to you again.
02:04:36.360 Liz Wheeler.
02:04:36.960 You can find her on Blaze TV.
02:04:38.600 She's just great, host of the Liz Wheeler Show.
02:04:40.600 All right.
02:04:41.140 Let me tell you about Rough Greens.
02:04:42.380 You know, dogs don't slow down until they absolutely have to.
02:04:44.820 They usually just adapt even, you know, when their body isn't getting everything it needs.
02:04:48.520 And a lot of that comes back when you feed them and you feed them the right things.
02:04:51.760 But most dog food is designed to be just convenient and cheap, consistent, shelf stable, and that way it can, you know, can sit on the shelf for two years.
02:05:02.740 And then it will deliver, you know, what a body, a dog's body needs, or at least that's what they say.
02:05:07.700 But over time, there is a gap because all of the good stuff is cooked out of kibble food.
02:05:15.360 And it's easy to miss this at first because your dog slows down over time, and you don't notice it until you start feeding them the nutrition that they need.
02:05:23.760 Now, Rough Greens is not a food.
02:05:24.960 You sprinkle it on your dog's food.
02:05:27.220 And, I mean, it's almost a reinvention of mealtime.
02:05:30.100 It really is, for the dog at least, and for you seeing your dog.
02:05:33.240 It gives them everything that they're missing.
02:05:35.700 You can get a free Jump Start trial bag.
02:05:38.700 You just go to roughgreens.com slash Beck, roughgreens.com slash Beck.
02:05:42.680 Use the promo code Beck.
02:05:43.520 You pay for shipping.
02:05:44.300 They're going to send you your first bag free.
02:05:45.880 You see if your dog likes it first.
02:05:48.640 And when you start feeding, the change in my dog was almost immediate.
02:05:52.740 Go to roughgreens.com, promo code Beck.
02:05:55.480 Roughgreens, R-U-F-F-Greens.com, promo code Beck.
02:06:00.660 Glenn Beck.
02:06:14.300 Holy cow.
02:06:20.320 What hasn't happened today?
02:06:23.540 Here is Donald Trump at Davos in a new clip on Minnesota and what's happening in Minnesota.
02:06:29.960 Listen to this.
02:06:30.540 Incredible, and that's our great military.
02:06:32.960 The situation in Minnesota reminds us that the West cannot mass import foreign cultures, which have failed to ever build a successful society of their own.
02:06:44.520 I mean, we're taking people from Somalia, and Somalia is a failed, it's not a nation.
02:06:52.060 Got no government, got no police, got no military, got no nothing.
02:06:55.160 And then we have this fake congressperson, who they just reported is worth $30 million.
02:07:02.980 You believe this?
02:07:03.960 Ilan Omar, talking about the Constitution, provides me.
02:07:08.480 She comes from a country that's not a country, and she's telling us how to run America.
02:07:13.320 Not going to get away with it much longer, let me tell you.
02:07:15.700 The explosion of prosperity and conclusion and progress that built the West did not come from our tax cuts.
02:07:26.760 It ultimately came from our very special culture.
02:07:30.280 This is the precious...
02:07:31.500 We're going to cover what he's talking about with Ilan Omar tomorrow, because it is amazing, the latest news.
02:07:37.340 But it's not going to last much longer.
02:07:39.740 That is interesting.
02:07:40.400 Also, don't forget, on glennbeck.com with the torch, our first in-depth special, the Islamification of the West, is happening before the end of first quarter, probably sometime in March.
02:07:52.360 Don't miss.
02:07:53.040 It's all free up until the end of this weekend at glennbeck.com.
02:07:57.340 Check out the torch now at glennbeck.com.
02:08:00.860 Watch the show and behind the scenes and all of the different specials that are already there.
02:08:05.440 glennbeck.com.
02:08:10.400 Glennbeck is on!