Pat Gray fills in for Stew in our socialist update, and we talk about the latest data breach and why we all need to pay attention to that First Home Title Lock scam. We also talk about China and the G7, and how America's morals and values have dramatically changed.
00:07:21.340yay yay he's going to end unemployment uh by 2030 because he's going to create 20 million jobs to solve the climate crisis crisis
00:07:34.520these jobs will be good paying they'll be union jobs with strong benefits and safety standards in steel and auto manufacturing
00:07:46.660really we're going to have cars still construction energy efficiency and retrofitting coding server farms renewable power plants we will also create millions of jobs in sustainable agriculture
00:08:03.000we will also create millions of jobs in engineering reimagined and expanded civilian conservation corps
00:08:09.000so we can go back to what fdr did and preserving our public lands
00:08:18.000we also have direct investment at historic 16.3 trillion dollar public investment it's the new deal and what they did in world war ii but with an explicit choice to include black indigenous and
00:08:25.000other minority communities who were systematically excluded in the past
00:08:32.000a just transition to include black indigenous and other minority communities who were systematically excluded in the past
00:08:40.000a just transition for workers this plan will prioritize the fossil fuel workers who have powered our economy for more than a century and have too often been neglected by corporations and politicians we will guarantee five years of the fossil fuel workers who have powered our economy
00:09:01.000have powered our economy for more than a century
00:09:03.240and have too often been neglected by corporations and politicians.
00:09:07.820We will guarantee five years of all workers' current salaries.
00:26:13.600But I've always called him David Gellertner, and I've done it to his face, and he's never corrected me.
00:26:17.840But he's a really nice guy, so he probably wouldn't.
00:26:20.760Well, if you do the math on this, there's an astrophysicist who used to be from my neck of the woods at Iowa State.
00:26:28.580He ran out at his tenure hearing because he dared to work on the Privileged Planet Intelligent Design Project.
00:26:36.200And he ended up delving into intelligent design because he started doing the math on this.
00:26:40.920And the math essentially says the odds that over a random, natural, reoccurring, purposeless, meaningless processes would result in the universe on a macro level that we see,
00:26:55.480the Earth on a mini macro level that we have, and then individual life comprised of 20 trillion complex cells that each of us possess.
00:27:04.500The odds of that occurring with meaningless, random, purposeless, natural occurrences, no matter any period of time,
00:27:12.060are about the odds of you taking a follicle of your hair, putting it on a tee on the dark side of the moon,
00:27:18.140and then with a driver having it land anywhere on planet Earth.
00:28:52.940They never even met or read each other.
00:28:55.500And then the mapping and sequencing of the human genome, which is essentially what we know about the basis of individual life and how it works,
00:29:03.440that wasn't concluded until well into the 21st century.
00:29:06.520The individual who led that project for many years, Dr. Francis Collins, is actually a theist.
00:29:44.120This was this was very, very bright and could have been.
00:29:48.520But as we have moved forward the last hundred and fifty years, we now know there's no way this is even logical.
00:29:59.040What you're what you just pointed out, you know, we draw this distinction on my show on a regular basis, that there's a difference between liberals and leftists.
00:30:07.020The liberals we all got into this business to defeat and argue against are just people who want government to permit you to do this stuff that God says is dumb and immoral.
00:30:16.700But these new leftists that we're encountering now, these are the dogmas.
00:30:20.520These are this is the new Inquisition, the new Antifada.
00:30:23.500These are people that want government to compel you to do those things.
00:30:26.580And if you're not willing to, then you will be made to care.
00:30:29.760And this is now in the world of so-called science at the exact same time.
00:30:33.520What you're describing with these individuals, these are just men of honest scientific inquiry.
00:30:38.420I have no idea what the religious or philosophical beliefs are, but they're actually just following the scientific method.
00:30:43.840They're noting that we didn't get carbon dating until a full century after origin of species.
00:30:48.460Almost archaeology as a refined science wasn't recognized for another half century after origin of species.
00:30:54.820So they're just following clues and facts as they see them and letting the chips fall where they may.
00:30:59.280Well, it's also, you know, Darwin, Darwin didn't.
00:31:03.480He said in origin of species, which is very well argued.
00:31:07.440I think it's nonsense, but it's very well argued for the time.
00:31:11.160And he says in there he can't explain the Cabrian, the Cambrian explosion, which is a 70 million year period that all of a sudden you go from no life to an explosion of life overnight.
00:31:55.140And the ridiculousness of this is this is now where we're going to take scientific inquiry and we're going to apply worldview and ethical conclusions to it.
00:32:05.120And the ugly stuff of Darwinism that you see with the aborigines and favored races and references to savages,
00:32:12.240you know, a lot of that is in descent of man, which is kind of the Hadith to origin of species.
00:32:18.380Quran, if you get the analogy, you know, we often quote the Quran for ugliness, but the real, real ugliness is in the Hadith.
00:32:24.660And the same thing is true in the descent of man.
00:32:27.320So the philosophical premises, the Nietzsche, the utilitarianism, the Marxist, all of those things are conclusions of where we take.
00:32:35.840If we all agree that life is random and purposelessness, we still need an ethic.
00:32:40.620We need a mythos to define who we are and why we're here.
00:32:43.620And this is where the postmodern deconstructionists come in and say, you know what, we've got an alternative plan for you.
00:32:50.340And that's the alternative religion that these leftists will clutch and hold on to because it's their idol.
00:32:56.520Are you going to be talking about this on your show today?
00:32:59.200I'm sure it'll come up for a couple of minutes, yeah.
00:33:43.240He's one of the greatest mathematicians of our time.
00:33:47.400And, you know, he's looking at this just from a mathematical standpoint, because one of the guys who said, hey, maybe we should look at the genetic code as an actual code.
00:34:03.880Maybe there is something to all of these little things we see, you know, in the microscope.
00:34:08.800Maybe there is something that's like a code.
00:34:11.480And so he started breaking it down, and then that led to the human genome, what do you call it, a project?
00:34:20.520And we have found that it is an actual code.
00:34:24.280And every gene, every piece of DNA has a code, and it's in a certain particular, you know, it's like you got to add a quarter cup of flour, then you have to add the eggs, then you have to have this.
00:34:37.700And it's very different from, you know, a cake to a pie.
00:34:43.820And sometimes it's just the way you order things.
00:34:46.760And what David was saying was, those codes are so complex that if you took a string of, let's say, pearls, and it wrapped, it was a long string of pearls that would go down to your belly, and it could wrap around your neck 15 times.
00:35:03.660The genetic code for each of us in every animal is the equivalent of saying, okay, this one has to be a ruby, then a diamond, then two pearls, then an amethyst, and then whatever, you know, a piece of coral.
00:35:23.180And they have to be in the right place.
00:35:26.240He said, even with all of the time that we have, it doesn't work.
00:35:31.720And it also doesn't work with the Cambrian explosion.
00:35:35.660So he's saying, look, the code doesn't work.
00:35:39.560And then the biggest thing that I thought was they were explaining how if you're going to change an animal from one animal to another, you don't do it at the end.
00:35:53.180So in other words, you don't change a zebra to a cow at the end, because the first DNA strand is that of a zebra.
00:36:07.420The first DNA strand is that of a cow.
00:36:14.160If you take the genetic code of a zebra, it won't have the bone density, it won't have the structure, it won't have the internal systems that a cow has.
00:36:27.440So you can't do it too late, because then it's just a, you know, it's like a horse and a donkey become a mule.
00:36:37.680If you do it too late, you know, it doesn't it doesn't work.
00:36:42.580If you do it too early, which you must do, the entire structure falls apart.
00:36:48.380It is a fascinating conversation, a little heady, but everybody should know it because it I believe this is the beginning of the real undoing of not only this, this nonsense of of just an explosion.
00:37:07.040And things kind of flew together like monkeys at a typewriter.
00:39:17.640Let me just read a couple of things from this.
00:39:19.540Intelligent design is something only Meyer agrees with.
00:39:23.740But Berlinski replies, it's three scientists, replies that as a scientific approach, one can agree or disagree, but you should not reject it.
00:39:32.320Meyer talks about the major discoveries in 1950s and 60s concerning the DNA molecule, which encodes information in a somewhat digital format, providing researchers with the opportunity to trace the information back to its source.
00:39:44.700Glertner argues that if there is or was an intelligent designer, then why is the design not the most efficient, rather than prone to all sorts of problems, including mental and emotional.
00:39:56.940Darwinism is no longer just a scientific theory, but a basis of a worldview and an emergency religion for those many troubled souls who need one.
00:40:09.260Glertner further adds that it is fantastically challenging problem that Darwin chose to address.
00:40:14.680How difficult will it be for scientists to move on from Darwin's theory of evolution?
00:40:19.640Will each scientist need to examine the evidence for his or herself?
00:40:23.540These are some of the most important questions facing science in the 21st century.
00:40:27.660This is I'm going to post this at Glenn Beck dot com.
00:41:48.720And you'll understand we're going to do every second hour of this broadcast, at least over the next three days, maybe the next four days will cover a different part of the economy.
00:42:01.520So you really know what's going on and what is coming.
00:42:04.240Do not get yourself into massive debt.
00:42:06.920In fact, have American financing help you get out of debt, help them.
00:43:27.960It's probably something you don't even remember because it didn't seem important at the time.
00:43:32.140But now with the economy and the trade dispute, it is something you must be aware of this hour.
00:43:40.080And we'll do it tomorrow, the next day and probably maybe all week.
00:43:45.040I'm going to explain the economy and and really try to show you where we're at, what the president needs to do, what you need to prepare for and why it could all happen, both the good and the bad.
00:44:07.340Somewhere in America, within the sound of my voice, there is a man that taps the sustain pedal of an old piano with the toe of a Tachovas boot.
00:44:20.160The honky tonk joint that still carries the ghosts of old cigarettes and stale beer.
00:44:26.980The brightness of the nostalgia reflects in the polish.
00:44:29.740Once upon a time, his frontier was fame and fortune, but he found that to be fake and meaningless.
00:44:40.220You don't get character from fame and fortune.
00:44:43.440Perhaps you get it from pursuing it and then getting rid of it.
00:44:49.360Today, he performs for thousands at Carnegie Hall, or at least that's what his smile says as he plays the piano to the delight of the patrons around him.
00:44:59.740There's something about the boots on his feet that have anchored him between the two worlds, and he's just fine with that.
00:45:06.020A pair of Tachovas boots, it's for people who are trying to find their frontier or remember what their frontier really is.
00:47:49.660More than 20 American cities, virtually all of them, Democratic strongholds, have a homeless crisis that have reached epidemic proportions.
00:47:57.580While at the CDC, they are now having to dust the textbooks to figure out how to deal with outbreaks of typhus and cholera, tuberculosis, measles, polio, and the bubonic plague.
00:48:12.820Progressivism has taken us to the Stone Age.
00:48:16.760Since 2012, 95% of the wage and income growth is concentrated at the top 5% wealthiest households.