The Glenn Beck Program - February 07, 2025


Gay Bulls, Bikini Burgers, and 'Big Balls' | 2⧸7⧸25


Episode Stats

Length

2 hours and 5 minutes

Words per Minute

153.6054

Word Count

19,287

Sentence Count

1,888

Misogynist Sentences

36

Hate Speech Sentences

22


Summary

Pat Craig fills in for Stu Bagheer, who is taking the week off to attend the Super Bowl with his family. Glenn and Pat discuss the latest in the use of pepper spray and tasers by police, and the best way to defend yourself with a stun gun.


Transcript

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00:00:30.000 Let me talk to you a little bit about Berna.
00:00:31.520 I'm a gun owner.
00:00:32.860 I understand that sometimes you need to pull the trigger and you don't ever point a gun at somebody unless you intend on killing them.
00:00:39.140 But sometimes it doesn't call for killing somebody.
00:00:42.340 I mean, you know, that moment of hesitation is critical in both directions.
00:00:51.580 You need to be prepared for 99% of situations where it doesn't call for lethal force.
00:00:57.100 And the best way to defend yourself is with a Berna launcher.
00:01:01.420 This is, you know, the police have stopped using tasers and, you know, pepper spray.
00:01:07.700 They're using tear gas.
00:01:09.120 They're using Berna launchers to do it.
00:01:12.000 It's happening all over the country.
00:01:13.460 These should be in every school because you're not killing anybody with it, but you are stopping them for about 45 minutes.
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00:02:02.060 Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh.
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00:02:08.360 Down the road where shadows hide.
00:02:12.460 Feel the dark on every side.
00:02:15.120 Stand your ground when times get dark.
00:02:17.560 Got to face the dark and embrace the fire.
00:02:22.000 The fusion of entertainment and enlightenment.
00:02:25.440 And this is the Glenn Beck Program.
00:02:31.760 Well, hello, you sick, twisted freak.
00:02:34.120 It is Friday.
00:02:35.980 We get right to the top of the news in just a minute.
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00:03:36.400 Well, let's say hello to Mr. Pat Craig,
00:03:40.000 who is joining us and filling in for Stu Bagheer,
00:03:43.020 who is living the life of, well, I don't know,
00:03:46.980 a millionaire life.
00:03:47.900 I mean, I'm not going to the Super Bowl.
00:03:50.540 Are you?
00:03:51.280 No, no, I'm not.
00:03:52.740 No, that's why I'm here.
00:03:54.720 Yeah.
00:03:55.220 But yeah, every year about this time, he does that.
00:03:57.880 I know.
00:03:58.420 He does it.
00:03:59.140 He does it.
00:03:59.880 You know, the wealthy 1%.
00:04:01.380 My son asks me every year,
00:04:02.900 Dad, can we go to the Super Bowl?
00:04:03.960 No, we're not going to the Super Bowl.
00:04:05.660 I don't know.
00:04:06.360 At times, I have no problem spending money.
00:04:10.400 Other times, it really bothers me.
00:04:12.620 That trip to the Super Bowl seems like such a colossal waste of money.
00:04:18.720 Yeah.
00:04:19.440 Is it just me?
00:04:20.540 It's a lot.
00:04:21.220 No, it's a lot.
00:04:22.180 It's a lot.
00:04:23.100 Yeah.
00:04:24.000 I mean, it's beyond reasonable.
00:04:25.940 Beyond reasonable.
00:04:26.960 It is.
00:04:27.880 Yeah, it is.
00:04:28.860 And I think the amazing thing with Stu is he never has tickets
00:04:32.600 before he gets there.
00:04:34.380 I know he buys them.
00:04:35.500 Yeah, he buys them there.
00:04:37.520 I don't know.
00:04:37.540 Buys them there.
00:04:38.580 Books' hotel stay at the last second,
00:04:41.420 finds the tickets at the last second,
00:04:43.840 and it's pretty amazing.
00:04:46.040 I'd rather just watch it from the comfort and privacy of my own home.
00:04:49.660 Yeah, especially because there's going to be so many tears shed on his part,
00:04:53.880 you know, with the Eagles.
00:04:54.980 Yeah.
00:04:55.820 I mean, you know, what I really like,
00:04:57.640 what I like about Patrick Mahomes is he's going to give Stu hope
00:05:01.980 up until about the last 90 seconds.
00:05:04.260 And then he'll just be crying.
00:05:07.000 He'll just be crying the rest of the night.
00:05:08.560 Yeah.
00:05:08.840 That's certainly been the Chiefs MO all year long.
00:05:12.440 I mean, it really has.
00:05:13.680 I don't like it.
00:05:14.600 I don't like it.
00:05:15.620 You know, I don't like it.
00:05:17.880 I don't like waiting for that last minute and a half.
00:05:20.780 Have you become a Chiefs fan over the?
00:05:23.420 Oh, yeah.
00:05:24.620 Yeah?
00:05:24.960 Really?
00:05:25.380 I'm a big Chiefs fan.
00:05:26.040 Yeah, I am.
00:05:27.100 Why is that?
00:05:27.780 Because I really like, I like watching Mahomes.
00:05:32.940 I like Andy Reid.
00:05:35.000 Okay.
00:05:35.720 Yes, I do too.
00:05:36.740 Mahomes is, I mean, Mahomes is just, he does things,
00:05:40.820 not as much this season as last season,
00:05:42.600 but he just does things that you just don't ever see.
00:05:45.240 Yeah.
00:05:45.600 You know what I mean?
00:05:46.140 Yeah.
00:05:46.380 He's just, I think he's remarkable.
00:05:48.140 Pretty incredible.
00:05:48.560 He is.
00:05:49.060 Yeah.
00:05:49.320 Yeah.
00:05:49.680 And I like the attitude of the team.
00:05:51.560 You know, it's like, I hate the Ravens because I think they're just thugs.
00:05:55.240 But, you know, it's just me.
00:05:56.920 All right.
00:05:57.440 Let me just go through some good news here on the Doge Cuts and the money saved.
00:06:03.200 Just this week, I got an update for you.
00:06:06.620 36 contracts have been terminated across six agencies,
00:06:10.740 including a DHS contract for People and Cultural Survey and Climate Support Services.
00:06:17.600 I know that is $165 million saved on that.
00:06:21.960 $44 million, up from $1.6 million last week.
00:06:27.160 22 lease terminations of underutilized buildings.
00:06:31.100 These are the buildings that are sitting empty in Washington, D.C.
00:06:35.380 We have these buildings all over the country.
00:06:38.760 We should get rid of them, sell them.
00:06:41.500 Why are we holding on to them?
00:06:43.000 22 lease terminations.
00:06:44.840 We didn't even own these.
00:06:46.020 We just leased them.
00:06:47.600 And we saved $44 million this week.
00:06:51.740 Money saved $1 billion, 85 DEIA-related contracts.
00:06:58.860 Now, what's a DEIA?
00:07:00.240 Could you look that up for me, Pat?
00:07:01.480 What is a DEIA?
00:07:04.560 I love how they create these terms and then they just keep adding letters.
00:07:08.200 The 85 DEIA-related contracts been terminated, Department of Ed, GSA, OPM, EPA, DOL, Treasury Department, DOD, USDA, Commerce, DHS, VA, HHS, State Department, NSF, NRC, NLRB, PBGC.
00:07:33.020 We have, what is this?
00:07:34.620 Wow.
00:07:34.960 Anyway, we saved a billion dollars.
00:07:39.500 The DEIA is for diversity, equity, inclusion, and accessibility.
00:07:45.600 Ah, okay.
00:07:48.480 So maybe that's a billion dollars because we were building ramps for transgender wheelchair people.
00:07:57.300 We saved $45 million on DEI scholarships in Burma.
00:08:03.880 1.6 million, cut three leases, mostly of empty office space, and the tenants are all relocating to nearby buildings in the GSA.
00:08:13.560 We saved $145 million, 16 DEIA contracts, Department of Labor, Transportation, Agriculture, Commerce, HHS, and Treasury.
00:08:23.300 That's a whole separate list.
00:08:26.580 And $420 million, almost half a billion dollars, current and impending contracts, and canceled two leases, initially focused mainly on DEI contracts and unoccupied buildings.
00:08:39.800 So we saved some money this week.
00:08:41.860 And, you know, I put out a tweet last night, and so far I haven't anybody respond.
00:08:48.720 Let me just read the tweet.
00:08:49.960 I invite any Democrat or rhino to come on my show and defend spending taxpayer money on sex changes and LGBT activism in Guatemala,
00:09:00.880 helping the BBC value the diversity of the Libyan society, promoting inclusion in Vietnam through two separate groups, how inclusive,
00:09:09.800 rebuilding the Cuban media ecosystem, rebuilding the Cuban media ecosystem, and men who have sex with men in South Africa.
00:09:16.940 If you're a Democrat or a rhino who thinks American tax dollars should be spent on any of this, call me, call me, 9 to noon Eastern Time, 888-727-2325.
00:09:32.860 We're waiting for your call right now.
00:09:36.720 Operators are standing by.
00:09:40.720 Watch those lines explode.
00:09:43.640 Yeah, let me go to the phone bank there with Pat.
00:09:46.240 Pat, who do you have on the phone?
00:09:47.900 Yeah, I got no one, of course.
00:09:51.400 No one.
00:09:52.360 No.
00:09:52.740 I would love to see somebody take you up on that, though.
00:09:56.460 That would be awesome.
00:09:57.160 Oh, please, please.
00:09:58.760 And I'll let you speak.
00:09:59.820 I'm not going to argue with you.
00:10:01.060 I just want to hear your defense.
00:10:03.340 I just want to hear your defense.
00:10:06.900 By the way, Donald Trump, he did it again.
00:10:13.520 He just did it again.
00:10:14.820 He went out, and he said, yeah, we're going to fire everybody at USAID.
00:10:24.040 Oh, a phone.
00:10:25.580 Wait a minute.
00:10:26.140 He's at a phone bank.
00:10:27.380 Is that for me, Pat?
00:10:28.620 Is that a DEI supporter?
00:10:30.540 Not a spam risk.
00:10:31.720 Sorry, spam.
00:10:32.680 Spam risk.
00:10:33.300 Oh, okay.
00:10:34.380 Okay.
00:10:34.860 Okay, so he went in to USAID, and he said they were going to reorganize it
00:10:44.060 in the State Department, but they decided that the pushback on USAID
00:10:48.880 from the employees was so great, he cut all 10,000 employees,
00:10:54.080 and I think he saved 300 people in there.
00:10:57.540 So out of 10,000, 300 were worth saving.
00:11:03.020 Okay.
00:11:03.460 Okay, so we got that going for us.
00:11:07.400 He also has nuked all government contracts with the mainstream media.
00:11:14.060 So everybody's very upset about this on the left.
00:11:20.700 Oh, my gosh.
00:11:22.340 Defend, please, please.
00:11:23.840 You could also come on and defend why Politico and everybody else should be
00:11:29.420 getting, you know, Politico, what was it, 34.5 or 32.5 million dollars
00:11:37.060 during the Biden administration.
00:11:38.920 Just defend that.
00:11:40.100 Go ahead.
00:11:40.500 Defend that.
00:11:41.000 Did you see the CEO at Politico make the statement about where that money is
00:11:48.840 coming from?
00:11:49.980 Fantastic.
00:11:51.640 Do you have it?
00:11:52.800 Let's see.
00:11:53.700 I think so.
00:11:55.460 What he said was that Politico itself, Politico.com receives zero dollars,
00:12:06.840 and for 18 years, they've gotten not one penny from any government agency.
00:12:13.220 Now, Politico Pro is a different matter.
00:12:21.680 Now, that, sure, yes, some government agencies have contributed there.
00:12:27.980 Yeah.
00:12:28.620 At their $10,000 subscription level, yeah, some governments are involved.
00:12:35.080 But that's just, that's because we help update them on legislative maneuvers.
00:12:41.480 Oh.
00:12:42.100 That they couldn't, I'm sure they couldn't find that out anywhere but Politico.
00:12:46.280 No.
00:12:46.620 Right?
00:12:47.460 No.
00:12:47.760 The government can do everything better than the private sector except for letting
00:12:53.420 them know what the government is doing.
00:12:55.540 Right.
00:12:57.400 Right.
00:12:57.880 He also said, look, this is just transactional.
00:13:03.840 This is, that's all this is.
00:13:05.080 We're providing a service.
00:13:06.660 Yeah, I'd like to know what that service is.
00:13:09.760 We're in behind the paywall now, and we're just working with our attorneys to make sure
00:13:16.740 that we're not violating anybody's IP.
00:13:18.980 But it's very impressive, Pat.
00:13:20.960 It's very, very impressive.
00:13:22.080 Oh, I'm sure it is.
00:13:22.780 Yeah.
00:13:23.520 When you see it, you'll be like, oh, I'd spend $10,000 on that.
00:13:25.820 In fact, I'd spend $10,000, you know.
00:13:29.400 Can not everybody just use the same password?
00:13:32.020 Because that's what everybody else does.
00:13:33.480 You subscribe, and then you're like, ah, Biden, one, two, three, exclamation point.
00:13:38.140 And everybody's on that.
00:13:39.380 Apparently, they don't do that at the government.
00:13:41.920 So they have $34 million of subscriptions that are being paid.
00:13:46.700 Now, as somebody who, well, started the prescription or the prescription, the subscription platform, let me just say, if somebody was paying $34 million, and they were just buying subscriptions, and I knew they were all in the government, and it was just transactional, I have nothing to do with them.
00:14:13.400 Nothing.
00:14:13.720 I don't talk to them, nothing.
00:14:16.420 But they're giving me, over a four-year period, $34 million.
00:14:22.540 When we start to produce things that I know the Biden administration is not going to like, or somebody from the Biden administration, completely separately, just phones us up and says, hey, you might want to run this about Hunter Biden.
00:14:40.100 I, in an editorial meeting, just because of my fiduciary responsibility, I do say, you know, if we don't run that story, we're putting at risk $34 million.
00:14:53.360 You know that if we write this story that goes against them, that that's putting this, I'm fine with doing it.
00:15:01.720 That's what I would say.
00:15:02.440 I'm fine with doing it.
00:15:03.740 I just want you to know the cost of everything you're doing.
00:15:07.720 Okay?
00:15:08.060 You don't think that those conversations happen?
00:15:11.920 That's the most innocent, is that they, somebody in that building knows there's $34 million coming from the United States government.
00:15:21.400 Now, they say that this doesn't, you know, this isn't going to affect them.
00:15:26.820 Most of their people are, you know, they're, you know, just people in the private sector.
00:15:32.540 Oh, then why are you bitching so much?
00:15:35.580 I mean, and your business, I'd like to invest in your business.
00:15:39.060 Can you just open up your books?
00:15:40.160 Because I'd like to invest in your business.
00:15:42.000 If you can lose $34 million and be like, that's not that big of a deal.
00:15:47.720 Our business isn't really focused on that.
00:15:49.680 Wow, can I invest in you?
00:15:53.020 Yeah, pretty good.
00:15:53.880 That's really good.
00:15:55.360 Really, really pretty good.
00:15:57.820 So, now, Axios, another company that probably should be looked into.
00:16:06.440 Axios is defending Politico.
00:16:10.820 And they say the story appears to have started when Politico missed payroll on Tuesday because of a technical snag.
00:16:17.140 MAGA media dug into the public records on USAspending.gov and uncovered that the government had paid Politico $8.2 million in the last 12 months.
00:16:28.760 And people linked these two facts and wrongly assumed that Politico missed payroll because those millions came from USAID.
00:16:34.920 No, that's not the story.
00:16:37.880 Is that the story to you?
00:16:39.200 No, not at all.
00:16:40.760 No.
00:16:41.520 I don't care how they missed payroll.
00:16:44.140 I'm sure their employees do.
00:16:46.520 But the point is, you know, why is all that money coming from the federal government?
00:16:51.880 And that's the point here.
00:16:54.100 The $34 million over four years is the point, not how they missed payroll.
00:16:59.560 But that's what they're trying to make it about because that's not why they missed payroll.
00:17:03.260 Because that way they can say it's a conspiracy theory that they missed payroll.
00:17:08.740 That is called a red herring.
00:17:12.180 You would have learned that if you ever took a single English class.
00:17:17.420 You would know what a red herring is.
00:17:19.640 And that's exactly a red herring.
00:17:23.260 Now, Elon Musk is in trouble.
00:17:26.480 And again, the phone lines are way open.
00:17:28.740 And we go to the phone bank and Pat Gray, who is there with the people answering the phones.
00:17:34.280 Pat, who are you talking to right now that wants to defend all of this?
00:17:39.140 Yeah, them.
00:17:40.360 No one.
00:17:41.480 Okay.
00:17:42.100 Nobody.
00:17:42.700 All right.
00:17:42.980 Well, when you get somebody on the phone, you just ring that bell.
00:17:47.960 Okay.
00:17:48.380 You come right to me.
00:17:49.260 All right.
00:17:50.760 888-727-BECK.
00:17:52.840 I'm going to let you speak.
00:17:54.440 I'm not going to argue with you.
00:17:55.740 I just want to understand how you're defending any of this.
00:18:01.340 Now, the Doge is feeding information.
00:18:05.840 Now, this is going to come as a shock to you.
00:18:08.960 They're feeding federal data into an AI system.
00:18:14.880 So the AI can sort through and find certain things.
00:18:19.480 And that just, that shouldn't be done.
00:18:21.280 That shouldn't be done.
00:18:22.180 That should have been done the first day we had AI.
00:18:26.120 That's what AI is for, to take complex things and boil them down and be able to track what we're looking for.
00:18:34.340 The government says, oh, we don't track that.
00:18:36.840 We don't know how to track that.
00:18:38.220 We can't.
00:18:38.500 Well, AI does.
00:18:39.440 It's like, you know, these agencies, you know, they just think they can just get things, you know, to some other place overnight by using something called Federal Express.
00:18:55.520 Well, we're still using Pony Express, and that's the way it's supposed to be.
00:19:01.200 It's ridiculous.
00:19:02.460 Now, they also are going after some Doge staffers.
00:19:08.420 Apparently, Marco Alez.
00:19:11.840 Pat, Marco Alez.
00:19:14.420 Marco Alez.
00:19:15.720 Marco Alez.
00:19:17.160 He sounds white, doesn't he?
00:19:20.700 Yes.
00:19:21.740 Just, yes.
00:19:22.340 Yeah, okay.
00:19:23.420 Yeah.
00:19:23.740 Yes, okay.
00:19:24.300 I mean, just without even, I mean, I hate to judge somebody on their name, but Marco Alez sounds to me like John Smith, you know what I mean?
00:19:33.620 Or Adolf Hitler.
00:19:36.220 Okay, so Marco Alez, he's a 25-year-old, part of a cadre of Elon Musk's lieutenants, deployed by the Department of Government Efficiency to scrutinize federal spending, resigned after the Wall Street Journal asked the White House about his connection to an account that advocated racism and eugenics.
00:19:52.740 Okay, nobody's defending that.
00:19:57.160 Nobody is defending that.
00:19:59.560 Well, maybe Adolf Hitler.
00:20:01.080 And that guy who's, you know, the fighter last week, he's probably defending, but nobody else is.
00:20:08.780 But there is something to be said here on this in just 60 seconds.
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00:21:33.020 Stay should I be.
00:21:43.440 Okay, so this guy, and I don't know who he is other than Marco Ales.
00:21:48.780 I know nothing about him.
00:21:49.800 He apparently had a deleted account when he was 16 years old, and he was saying really racist things like, I would never marry out of my own race.
00:22:00.540 Well, he's Spanish.
00:22:03.760 I mean, he's Hispanic, so I mean, I guess you would call that La Raza, right?
00:22:08.800 Anyway, so they're trying to make him look like a Nazi, and I just want to point out, I'm not sure if they've changed their rules, but Nazis don't like Hispanics either.
00:22:18.120 So, I don't know what's going on here.
00:22:22.260 You should ask people at La Raza, because they know all about the race.
00:22:25.380 Anyway, so he's out, and good.
00:22:28.600 I'm glad that he's out.
00:22:29.840 However, they're also trying to get somebody else out, because CNN, and we have the audio, if we have time later, we'll play it.
00:22:40.440 CNN was disgusted that this guy's online name is Big Balls.
00:22:46.300 And to hear Jake Tapper and the crew over at CNN discuss this is really worth, on a Friday, really worth a couple of minutes.
00:22:55.660 We'll get to that coming up.
00:23:03.880 This is Glenn Beck.
00:23:08.760 All right.
00:23:10.160 Thank God that Donald Trump is standing behind Benjamin Netanyahu and the Israeli people.
00:23:16.300 I don't know if you saw what he did yesterday.
00:23:18.580 I mean, it's hard to keep up.
00:23:20.040 He took on the International Criminal Court and sanctioned them.
00:23:25.260 Good.
00:23:26.220 A lot of Jews in Israel are still suffering every day.
00:23:29.380 Thankfully, the International Fellowship of Christians and Jews is still there, still on the ground, still doing God's work, and helping out in any way and every way they possibly can.
00:23:39.640 But they're only able to do that because of support from people like you and me.
00:23:43.600 I can't stress enough how important your help is.
00:23:47.180 You're literally helping save the lives in Israel every day, every single day.
00:23:51.740 Your gift will provide critically needed aid to communities in North and South devastated by the ongoing war.
00:23:57.920 And your generous donation will help deliver what the people need, including evacuees and refugees from the war-torn areas, first responders, volunteers, wounded soldiers, elderly people, families who have lost absolutely everything, and so much more.
00:24:14.560 Give the gift of hope right now.
00:24:16.640 I want you to go to supportifcj.org.
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00:24:25.080 Don't forget to use the promo code GLENN for $20 off your subscription at blazetv.com slash GLENN.
00:24:30.820 So Donald Trump signed this week the no-men-in-women sports executive order,
00:24:50.080 and J.K. Rowling just posted a picture of him holding up the executive order surrounded by the girls.
00:24:57.400 And J.K. Rowling wrote,
00:24:59.020 Congratulations to every single person on the left who's been campaigning to destroy women and girls' rights.
00:25:03.980 Without you, there'd be no images like this.
00:25:07.380 And I think that's kind of a dig at Donald Trump because she's not a fan of Donald Trump.
00:25:12.180 But she's like, you know, thanks to you, now Donald Trump is, like, doing the right thing and the common sense thing.
00:25:20.680 I think that's what she's saying.
00:25:22.060 Is that the way you read that?
00:25:22.880 That's how I interpret it, yeah.
00:25:24.400 Because she's pretty liberal.
00:25:25.780 So, yeah, she just hates how stupid the left has become on the women's issue.
00:25:31.640 And she's a woman who promotes witchcraft.
00:25:33.900 I mean, how do you lose her?
00:25:36.500 Right.
00:25:36.780 She said,
00:25:38.820 This is why you care about a tiny fraction of the population.
00:25:43.080 Gender ideology has undermined freedom of speech, scientific truth, gay rights, women and girls' safety, privacy, and dignity.
00:25:50.100 It's caused irreparable physical damage to vulnerable kids.
00:25:53.620 Nobody voted for it.
00:25:54.760 The vast majority of people disagree with it.
00:25:56.680 Yet it has been imposed top-down by politicians, health care bodies, academia, sections of the media, celebrities, and even the police.
00:26:04.560 Its activists have threatened and enacted violence on those who dared oppose it.
00:26:09.260 The actual victims in this mess have been women and children.
00:26:12.320 This movement has impacted society in disastrous ways.
00:26:15.920 And if you had any sense, you'd quietly be deleting every trace of activist mantras, ad hominem attacks, false equivalents, and circular arguments from your ex-feeds.
00:26:26.340 Because the day is fast approaching when you'll want to pretend you always saw through the craziness and never believed it for a second.
00:26:35.200 That is a powerful statement.
00:26:37.760 Powerful statement from J.K. Rowling.
00:26:40.040 And it's true.
00:26:40.800 I read a story in The Atlantic this morning that is hysterical.
00:26:45.860 Pat, when you think of Nova Scotia, what do you think?
00:26:49.020 What do you think of?
00:26:50.420 Clubbing baby seals.
00:26:52.500 Okay.
00:26:52.760 Okay, so that's my vacation activity.
00:26:57.320 Right.
00:26:57.660 Because I go to Nova Scotia or Newfoundland to club baby seals.
00:27:00.580 Yeah.
00:27:00.980 On a regular basis.
00:27:02.060 All right.
00:27:02.460 Yeah.
00:27:02.780 All right.
00:27:03.060 Not exactly what I was looking for.
00:27:05.040 No?
00:27:05.260 But I think you're in the same family.
00:27:08.680 I immediately think cold.
00:27:10.780 Okay.
00:27:11.320 Yes, it is ice.
00:27:12.840 Cold.
00:27:13.420 Yes.
00:27:13.800 Yes.
00:27:13.980 Okay.
00:27:14.140 That's why the baby seals are there.
00:27:15.540 You have to club.
00:27:16.180 Anyway.
00:27:17.340 So, and you have to be on ice when you do it because then you get to see the blood
00:27:22.000 stains on the ice.
00:27:23.000 Exactly.
00:27:24.220 So, I'm reading The Atlantic and there's a story about the people who actually moved
00:27:29.640 to Canada because of Donald Trump.
00:27:31.640 Because of the cheese.
00:27:32.980 Oh, my gosh.
00:27:34.220 And it's so funny.
00:27:35.920 It is so funny.
00:27:37.140 These people are so stupid.
00:27:38.700 One lady was like, you know, I moved up to Nova Scotia.
00:27:41.960 She's from California.
00:27:42.860 I moved up to Nova Scotia.
00:27:45.360 I just didn't realize how cold it would be.
00:27:50.380 Wow.
00:27:50.940 You did your homework.
00:27:52.060 Wow.
00:27:53.580 Oh, my gosh.
00:27:54.500 That's literally the first thing I think of when I think of Nova Scotia.
00:27:57.840 I think it's like, oh, it's cold.
00:27:59.700 It's cold.
00:28:00.020 And my wife would not be happy there.
00:28:02.360 No matter.
00:28:03.020 They could have the great...
00:28:04.340 Jesus could appear on Earth.
00:28:06.180 But if he's in Nova Scotia, my wife is like, it's too cold.
00:28:09.940 I'm not going.
00:28:10.500 Okay, so now on the gender stuff, the NCAA has backed down now.
00:28:19.040 They've changed the transgender athletic policy.
00:28:23.320 And they said, you know, look, you can't compete unless you were assigned that sex at birth.
00:28:31.640 Oh, you were assigned that.
00:28:34.000 Oh, my gosh.
00:28:35.440 From now on, women's only sports will be only for women.
00:28:39.080 And they said the, quote, President Trump's order provides a clear national standard.
00:28:45.940 So now they're getting out of it.
00:28:48.180 Now, why are they doing that, Pat?
00:28:50.360 Why is the NCAA getting out of this?
00:28:54.120 I think because that's the way the flow is going.
00:29:00.380 Oh, no.
00:29:02.960 Money.
00:29:04.440 Money.
00:29:05.780 Government money for the NCAA.
00:29:09.200 They'll lose.
00:29:10.500 Yeah.
00:29:10.980 Their colleges will lose government money.
00:29:13.120 It's all about the money.
00:29:14.500 Okay?
00:29:14.680 So they don't really care.
00:29:15.740 And you know that because of the other two that are not getting government money, which I find amazing.
00:29:26.660 Major League Baseball, the values on diversity remain unchanged.
00:29:31.920 Oh, that is great.
00:29:35.280 Oh, I love the commissioner of Major League Baseball.
00:29:38.140 Well, you know, our values on diversity remain unchanged.
00:29:42.380 But another value that's pretty important to us is, well, we always try to comply with what the law is.
00:29:51.620 That's a value?
00:29:53.000 That you always try?
00:29:54.680 Try.
00:29:55.040 They try.
00:29:55.760 To obey the law.
00:29:56.700 You try.
00:29:57.320 You can't always succeed, but we're trying.
00:29:59.660 Yeah.
00:30:00.180 We've tried.
00:30:01.100 I mean, clearly, you have to rule not guilty.
00:30:05.400 We were trying not to break the law.
00:30:09.200 That's not a value, man.
00:30:11.240 Not breaking the law.
00:30:12.540 That's not a value.
00:30:13.800 If it is, that's something like you say when you're in prison.
00:30:16.840 You're like, you know what?
00:30:18.020 When I get out, damn it, I'm going to try not to break the law this time.
00:30:22.680 Okay.
00:30:23.460 Good.
00:30:24.040 Good for you.
00:30:24.540 Now, the other one that is a little disappointing is the NFL.
00:30:30.000 Well, they're continuing their diversity initiatives, all the DEI stuff, including forcing interviews
00:30:37.120 with minority candidates, and the NFL says, we're just doing the right thing.
00:30:41.840 We're doing the right thing.
00:30:43.120 Are you?
00:30:43.700 Can you get any more diverse than the NFL already is?
00:30:48.180 You're 75% black in the NFL.
00:30:51.780 I mean, your diversity initiative would probably be to get more white people in the NFL, wouldn't
00:30:59.200 it?
00:30:59.420 Isn't that your diversity?
00:31:01.660 I don't see any transgender players.
00:31:03.880 No, that's true.
00:31:04.880 They're, yeah.
00:31:05.720 They're, well.
00:31:06.160 I don't see any.
00:31:07.240 Yeah.
00:31:08.640 I don't see any.
00:31:09.600 Not a lot of women either.
00:31:10.580 And notice, not a lot of women.
00:31:13.140 No.
00:31:13.500 Not a lot of women.
00:31:14.420 And I think that is, I mean, it's only fair when it's fair, Pat.
00:31:18.460 And, you know, the other thing that really kind of bothers me about the NFL is notice, you
00:31:25.300 know, you say, can't you get more diverse?
00:31:27.020 Well, not in the front office and not with the quarterbacks.
00:31:29.280 Look how many white quarterbacks there are.
00:31:30.840 Where are all the black quarterbacks?
00:31:32.300 Have you turned on the NFL on Sunday lately?
00:31:37.200 There might be three white quarterbacks.
00:31:42.760 I mean, you know, gosh, what a group of dopes.
00:31:48.040 What a group of dopes.
00:31:49.940 By the way, did you see, do we have the Carl's Jr. ad?
00:31:56.260 Okay, we got to play this.
00:31:57.880 New ad for the Super Bowl this weekend.
00:32:02.000 Or is it Carl's Jr.?
00:32:05.320 Let's be real.
00:32:06.320 Everyone's going to be a hot mess after the big game.
00:32:09.400 Been there.
00:32:11.300 Done that.
00:32:12.320 And I've got just what you need to cure that post-party bug.
00:32:15.560 The Carl's Jr. hangover burger.
00:32:17.120 Egg, double bacon.
00:32:18.140 Yeah, you need that double bacon.
00:32:20.220 Char-boiled beef, hash-arounds, cheese, and sauce.
00:32:22.760 Just the way I like it.
00:32:34.700 And guess what?
00:32:35.620 It's free the day after the big game.
00:32:37.480 You just have to download the Carl's Jr. app
00:32:39.120 and sign up for my rewards.
00:32:43.240 So get your free hangover burger on Monday, February 10th.
00:32:48.140 Men are back.
00:32:52.760 Yeah, you haven't seen an ad like that for a while.
00:32:57.540 No, two years ago, Stu and I were on the air talking about the Carl's Jr.'s ad
00:33:02.240 and saying how far we have come from, you know, in advertising,
00:33:09.780 how that stuff just, you could not put the Carl's Jr. ad on two years ago.
00:33:15.020 No, not that one.
00:33:15.860 Two years ago.
00:33:16.200 No way.
00:33:16.860 No.
00:33:17.420 No way.
00:33:17.740 And that's what we were talking about.
00:33:18.700 And here we are.
00:33:19.700 Two years later, Donald Trump wins and Carl's Jr. has the,
00:33:22.540 yeah, I'm going to say it, CNN, the big balls to play it.
00:33:26.560 Good.
00:33:28.260 Good.
00:33:30.060 Congratulations.
00:33:31.000 Common sense is coming back just a little bit.
00:33:34.940 But, let's see.
00:33:38.400 Oh, Samantha Power is out at USAID.
00:33:41.400 Oh, don't say that.
00:33:42.540 Don't say that.
00:33:43.320 Yeah, that's.
00:33:44.140 Oh, no.
00:33:44.740 We lost her.
00:33:45.860 We lost her.
00:33:46.380 We lost her.
00:33:47.240 Too soon.
00:33:47.480 She's one of the, like, 9,700 employees that have lost their gig.
00:33:53.580 Yeah.
00:33:54.120 Yeah.
00:33:54.940 She's one of them.
00:33:55.880 She's going to have to live on that teacher's salary.
00:33:57.980 Her husband, Cass Sunstein.
00:33:59.400 No.
00:34:00.120 You know, at Harvard.
00:34:01.400 Yeah, they're going to have to try to make ends meet.
00:34:03.200 It is heartbreaking.
00:34:05.080 She said it was jarring.
00:34:06.740 Very jarring.
00:34:07.540 Here she is.
00:34:08.100 Cut four.
00:34:10.120 Well, you can imagine when you suddenly in your inbox find a termination notice
00:34:16.520 or a leave of absence notice that you didn't expect to get on a flawed predicate
00:34:23.100 that you're doing radical leftist insubordination.
00:34:26.860 That's a flawed predicate.
00:34:27.740 It's pretty jarring.
00:34:28.260 Is it?
00:34:28.520 And because there's so many lies and falsehoods circulating.
00:34:32.680 Okay.
00:34:33.200 And so many claims that people are sort of not with the program,
00:34:38.020 I think people are just completely dislocated.
00:34:40.300 There's no stable ground on which to walk.
00:34:43.560 You're right.
00:34:43.960 And, of course, most of them have been laid off,
00:34:46.420 so they're worried about how they're going to pay the bills
00:34:48.440 and how they're going to make rent.
00:34:49.680 Oh, no.
00:34:50.360 No.
00:34:50.940 Man.
00:34:51.620 Don't say that.
00:34:52.380 Yeah.
00:34:53.240 Sweetheart.
00:34:53.940 That just hurts.
00:34:55.640 That just hurts.
00:34:56.960 She was caught completely off guard, just out of the blue, Donald Trump.
00:35:04.420 I mean, I could see where on November 4th she might not have had any inkling.
00:35:08.860 But November 5th, about 10 o'clock at night, you should have had a pretty good idea of what
00:35:18.260 was about to happen.
00:35:18.800 You might have been saying, I think I should send out a resume.
00:35:22.560 Yeah.
00:35:22.800 I don't think he's going to keep me on.
00:35:25.920 Wow.
00:35:27.160 You know, that is crazy.
00:35:29.980 And look at what she's saying, all the lies, all the misinformation.
00:35:35.220 Again, phone lines are wide open.
00:35:39.140 I'll take anybody, anybody that can defend what USAID was doing,
00:35:46.380 what they were spending their money on.
00:35:48.040 Go ahead.
00:35:48.920 Call me now.
00:35:49.620 I'll give you, I'll give it, I will duct tape my mouth shut for you to try to make a
00:35:57.520 case to the American people that these programs that we have exposed over the last five days
00:36:04.080 were in our national interest.
00:36:07.300 Go ahead.
00:36:07.940 Call me.
00:36:08.500 And what do you bet?
00:36:08.920 888-727-BECK.
00:36:10.820 Call me.
00:36:11.200 She wouldn't, Samantha Powers wouldn't even come on the show to explain, to tell you what
00:36:16.460 the lies are and what the information is that we're getting and we're spreading.
00:36:21.060 No.
00:36:21.480 Tell me, tell me, where, where's the mistake here?
00:36:23.740 Okay.
00:36:24.020 Other than, other than the fact that you were funding Politico to the extent where, when you
00:36:30.660 got shut down, it messed up their payroll.
00:36:34.060 Other than that, where are the lies?
00:36:37.660 Where is the misinformation?
00:36:39.420 What do we have wrong here?
00:36:40.660 Are you saying you didn't do any of these expenditures in these other countries for
00:36:44.740 transgender plays and programs and to make LGBTQ people feel better about themselves?
00:36:51.540 Yeah.
00:36:52.320 Well, you know, where's the argument?
00:36:55.520 Well, let me have CNN.
00:36:56.860 I said that I was going to, I threatened this.
00:37:00.480 But here's CNN.
00:37:01.560 They've uncovered something horrible about these people on the right.
00:37:05.680 Cut three.
00:37:06.200 So this is a 19-year-old high school graduate who has used the unfortunate nickname Big Balls
00:37:13.580 online.
00:37:14.260 So that would be one way that we could refer to him.
00:37:16.360 He is now working at Musk's behest inside Doge.
00:37:20.440 And we looked into his background.
00:37:22.920 And so we found, you know, several notable things, Aaron.
00:37:26.480 One of which is that this individual has founded multiple companies, including one with another
00:37:32.560 unfortunate name, Tesla.Sexy LLC, which he established in 2021.
00:37:38.200 He would have been around 16 years old.
00:37:39.340 That is unfortunate.
00:37:39.920 Now, this LLC controls dozens of web domains.
00:37:42.680 I'm curious, though, Kara, how well does even Musk know these young men, do you think?
00:37:47.720 I have no idea.
00:37:48.800 I think there is no betting whatsoever, as you can see, that's taken place.
00:37:51.700 It took Katie and the really great team.
00:37:53.500 Wired has done an astonishing job here.
00:37:55.320 Astonishing.
00:37:55.800 That was astonishing information.
00:37:57.400 That's probably why he was hired, for all this ridiculous nonsense and other nefarious
00:38:01.700 things.
00:38:02.340 But, you know, there's an expression in technology.
00:38:04.640 And other nefarious things.
00:38:05.860 It's not a feature.
00:38:06.720 Stop.
00:38:06.860 Stop.
00:38:07.580 If they had other nefarious things, they would have led with that and not.
00:38:11.780 He calls himself online Big Balls and started a company with this unfortunate name, Tesla.Sexy.
00:38:22.340 Oh, my gosh.
00:38:22.980 Whoa.
00:38:23.480 Oh, my gosh.
00:38:23.900 Next, we'll be airing Carl's Jr.'s ads on the Super Bowl with women in them that are
00:38:31.080 actually born women.
00:38:34.160 All right.
00:38:34.620 Let me tell you about Lear Capital.
00:38:36.520 The things that Donald Trump and his incoming administration are already doing for this
00:38:41.300 country, I love it.
00:38:44.760 I've never seen a president do this.
00:38:46.720 Never.
00:38:47.160 I mean, he told me he was going to do this, and I just didn't even see it.
00:38:51.520 I mean, that's some vision.
00:38:54.340 That's some vision.
00:38:55.460 Well, the problem is, is the left is starting to mount their defense.
00:39:01.020 And, you know, one of the things to stop all this is collapse the system.
00:39:07.120 And I wouldn't put it past some of these people as we start to dig in and find the billions
00:39:11.340 of dollars that have been laundered through our government.
00:39:13.940 So our dollar is at risk, and we don't know how things are going to go.
00:39:20.040 Hopefully, they're going to be fine.
00:39:21.320 But may I suggest you pour some precious metals into whatever it is you've saved for your
00:39:28.000 retirement.
00:39:28.920 Own some gold or silver.
00:39:30.800 You'll find out why it might be your best-performing asset in 2025.
00:39:34.120 Call Lear Capital today at 800-957-GOLD and get a free $4,200 gold report.
00:39:40.000 If that happens, the world's on fire.
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00:39:50.180 Also ask how you can receive up to $15,000 in free gold or silver with qualifying purchases.
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00:40:01.760 Back.
00:40:02.680 We'll be right back.
00:40:04.000 You know, so I'm just thinking about the excuses of what that conversation was on CNN
00:40:29.900 just a few minutes ago where they're blaming these kids that are uncovering everything in
00:40:35.860 Doge.
00:40:36.860 And, you know, one of them actually had, when he was younger, he went by the name Big Balls
00:40:45.820 online.
00:40:48.700 That was his handle.
00:40:50.360 And then he also started a company when he was 16 called Tesla.Sexy, which is unfortunate.
00:40:57.220 Now, that's the worst they have on him.
00:41:00.200 And then they go on and say, and well, they were probably also doing other various nefarious
00:41:07.040 things.
00:41:07.620 Oh, but you don't have any of that.
00:41:09.700 And then I'm thinking about this and I think, you know, I've seen this somewhere before.
00:41:15.160 And I think I saw this every Saturday morning on Scooby-Doo when they unmask the villain
00:41:23.060 and the villain says, and we would have gotten away with it too if it wasn't for these pesky
00:41:28.160 kids.
00:41:29.080 I mean, that's exactly what it is.
00:41:31.980 You know, then Scooby comes in.
00:41:34.280 We did it.
00:41:35.980 I think we're watching a Scooby-Doo episode.
00:41:40.660 Art imitates life or is life imitating art?
00:41:53.060 This is Glenn Beck.
00:41:55.660 Constitution Wealth is a registered investment advisor.
00:41:57.420 Registration does not imply a certain level of skill or training.
00:41:59.340 Before considering their services, you should carefully review Constitution Wealth disclosures
00:42:02.120 at constitutionwealth.com to understand all material risks, conflicts, expense, risk, and fees.
00:42:05.600 All investing involves risk, including the risk of loss.
00:42:07.500 This is a paid endorsement and Glenn is not a client of the firm.
00:42:09.220 Wow, okay.
00:42:11.220 Let me tell you about constitutional wealth.
00:42:13.060 Thank you, federal government, for that handy disclaimer.
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00:44:02.120 This is the Glenn Beck Program.
00:44:08.780 Hello, America.
00:44:10.800 It's Friday.
00:44:12.480 We get right to the news in 60 seconds.
00:44:14.360 First, let me ask you something.
00:44:15.980 Do you want to fix the problem of school shootings in this country?
00:44:20.600 I'm sure you do.
00:44:21.320 I know I do.
00:44:22.640 How about this?
00:44:23.640 What if you give teachers, if you could give teachers and administrators in every office,
00:44:28.840 every classroom in a school, a weapon that won't kill anyone, including student bystanders,
00:44:34.680 but would ensure the attacker was incapacitated for about 45 minutes?
00:44:40.220 Would you do it?
00:44:41.060 The Berna Launcher is a non-lethal alternative to safeguarding your home.
00:44:46.780 I have them in my cars.
00:44:48.520 Everyone should have one.
00:44:50.160 Legal in all 50 states.
00:44:51.640 No permits.
00:44:52.360 No background checks required.
00:44:54.100 It can be used by all age groups over 18.
00:44:57.340 The Berna Launcher, powerful deterrent.
00:44:59.860 Tear gas, kinetic rounds.
00:45:01.980 60-foot range.
00:45:03.300 One shot can incapacitate an attacker with tear gas for up to 40 minutes.
00:45:09.000 Why wouldn't we have these in all of our schools?
00:45:11.580 Honestly, why wouldn't we put these in our schools?
00:45:15.640 Because somebody doesn't want to stop the problem.
00:45:18.380 That's why.
00:45:20.160 I want you to go and check this out from Berna.
00:45:23.600 Especially if you're in a school district, you should have these in every classroom.
00:45:28.020 Honestly, it's foolish not to do this.
00:45:30.840 Berna, B-Y-R-N-A dot com slash Glenn.
00:45:33.980 Get one for yourself.
00:45:35.760 Protect yourself and your family.
00:45:37.120 Get 10% off your purchase now.
00:45:39.100 B-Y-R-N-A dot com slash Glenn.
00:45:41.080 Berna dot com slash Glenn.
00:45:43.420 All right.
00:45:44.600 Pat Gray, welcome to the program.
00:45:47.080 Great to be here.
00:45:47.920 Thank you.
00:45:48.760 Yeah.
00:45:48.920 I was reading this great article this morning about these kids that everybody's attacking
00:45:56.140 because they can't say really anything about the information that they've come up with.
00:46:02.560 You mean the Doge kids?
00:46:04.060 The Doge kids.
00:46:04.980 Yeah.
00:46:05.380 The four young coders who were in the basement of the treasury beginning at two in the morning
00:46:13.340 on January 21st.
00:46:14.600 So this started right away and within a few minutes, one of them sent out a message.
00:46:20.500 We're in.
00:46:21.380 We got all of it.
00:46:22.780 They'd already mapped three subsystems.
00:46:25.940 They were tracing payment flows across agencies.
00:46:29.160 Uh, they had revealed patterns that career officials didn't even know existed by dawn of the 21st.
00:46:38.980 This was already going on.
00:46:41.320 Uh, this is, this is going to, people are going to prison.
00:46:45.340 There is so much here.
00:46:47.800 Yeah.
00:46:48.100 Yeah.
00:46:48.520 They're going to go to prison.
00:46:49.860 They're just going to go to prison.
00:46:51.520 Uh, and it makes me happy.
00:46:52.940 You know, I, I can look at all of this, uh, this corruption and, and for the first time
00:46:58.880 in my life, not be pissed because I know something's going to happen.
00:47:04.040 Because they're doing something about it.
00:47:05.000 Yeah.
00:47:05.480 Yeah.
00:47:05.660 They're doing something about it.
00:47:06.740 They're stopping it.
00:47:08.020 And the, these people will go to jail.
00:47:10.260 There's, there's no way they're not going to go to jail.
00:47:12.120 Where there is illegal activity.
00:47:14.000 Yeah.
00:47:14.480 I think people are going to jail this time.
00:47:16.600 I think they will be held accountable.
00:47:19.280 They will.
00:47:20.040 They will.
00:47:20.560 They will at least lose their jobs and this will be sealed up and shut up.
00:47:24.200 Uh, and I hope there are, you know, if there are Republicans that are involved in any of
00:47:29.020 this, I hope they go to jail too.
00:47:30.420 Right.
00:47:30.760 Yeah.
00:47:31.200 Absolutely.
00:47:31.840 Uh, if you broke the law, if you're, if you're money laundering, and that's really what this
00:47:36.100 is, there, there, I can tell you right now, there are billions of dollars that have been
00:47:41.260 laundered through NGOs and, and, and, and whatever else.
00:47:46.160 Ukraine.
00:47:47.700 Yeah.
00:47:48.540 Big time.
00:47:49.860 I mean.
00:47:50.160 Big time.
00:47:50.680 Zelensky himself said they were missing a hundred billion dollars that they were supposed
00:47:55.800 to receive from the United States.
00:47:57.180 You know, thank you for, thank you for saying that.
00:47:59.280 I said that the other day, somebody challenged me on it and, uh, I have looked for that story.
00:48:04.720 I saw the video of him saying.
00:48:06.560 Yeah, no, I got to, we can find that, um, because he absolutely said, yeah, there's a hundred
00:48:10.980 billion missing.
00:48:11.800 We don't know where it is.
00:48:13.540 Right.
00:48:14.160 Huh.
00:48:14.720 And it was in a press conference, right?
00:48:16.460 Yeah.
00:48:16.940 Mm-hmm.
00:48:17.260 Yeah.
00:48:17.980 I saw him say that and I can't find it anywhere.
00:48:21.600 I've, I've even gone to chat GPT.
00:48:24.180 I've gone to grok.
00:48:25.460 Can you find this?
00:48:27.260 And I can't find it.
00:48:28.960 I can't find it.
00:48:30.840 Uh, but you know, a hundred billion dollars.
00:48:33.600 He said we never got, well, where did that go?
00:48:37.380 A hundred billion dollars.
00:48:40.740 That changes the world.
00:48:42.420 That's, that's money for revolutions everywhere.
00:48:46.840 Do you know what a hundred billion dollars could do in the wrong hands?
00:48:52.440 You know how many people a hundred billion dollars could kill if you're a terrorist?
00:48:58.060 I mean, man, this is insane.
00:49:00.840 It's insane.
00:49:01.620 And, and anybody who is trying to, uh, you know, say this is good, you know, or, you
00:49:07.920 know, that, uh, you know, USAID shouldn't have been shot, you know, shut down or these
00:49:13.720 kids, I swear to you, play, play the big balls thing this, excuse that expression, like
00:49:19.680 you're clutch my pearls.
00:49:22.120 I just never heard big balls before.
00:49:23.840 Um, the CNN people were very, very offended by big balls.
00:49:29.640 Uh, it's a, it's an online name of one of these guys who's working with Doge.
00:49:35.780 Listen to how they try to smear him and, and really, uh, create something that's not a problem.
00:49:46.640 Listen to this.
00:49:47.160 So this is a 19 year old high school graduate, uh, who has used, uh, the unfortunate nickname,
00:49:52.980 uh, big balls online.
00:49:54.880 So that would be one way that we could refer to him.
00:49:56.920 Uh, he is now working at Musk's behest, uh, inside Doge.
00:50:00.940 Uh, and we looked into his background.
00:50:03.500 Um, and so we found, you know, several notable things, Aaron.
00:50:07.240 Uh, one of which, uh, is that this individual has founded multiple companies, including one,
00:50:12.340 uh, with another unfortunate name, uh, Tesla dot sexy LLC.
00:50:16.600 Uh, which he established in 2021, he would have been around 16 years old.
00:50:20.440 Now this LLC controls dozens of web domains.
00:50:23.480 I'm curious though, Kara, how well does even Musk know these young men?
00:50:27.180 Do you think?
00:50:28.500 I have no idea.
00:50:29.620 I think there was no vetting whatsoever.
00:50:31.160 As you can see, it's taking place.
00:50:32.660 It took Katie and the really great team.
00:50:34.260 Wired has done an astonishing job here.
00:50:36.500 Um, you know, I could make a joke.
00:50:38.160 That's probably why he was hired for all this ridiculous nonsense and, and other nefarious
00:50:42.500 things, but you know, there's an expression in, in technology.
00:50:46.600 It's not, it's, it's a feature, not a bug.
00:50:50.340 Yeah.
00:50:51.180 So a kid, I just want you America.
00:50:55.100 We've seen that billions of dollars of your tax dollars have just been wasted and spent
00:51:02.320 on things you didn't know about.
00:51:04.340 Uh, we're going against the national interest.
00:51:07.200 We're going into the hands.
00:51:08.660 You just paid one for $1.4 billion that we know of in the first two weeks, $1.4 billion
00:51:16.240 went to NGOs to transport people from their homes in South America to the border.
00:51:24.660 $1.4 billion, $1.4 billion, your tax dollars.
00:51:30.500 But you should know that one of the kids that found that when he was 16, he started his own
00:51:37.540 company called Tesla.sexy LLC.
00:51:41.420 I mean, what, he was probably raping children in the back seats of those Teslas.
00:51:48.760 We don't know, but it's probably nefarious.
00:51:52.800 He's 16.
00:51:54.880 And what they can find on him was he started an LLC, Tesla.sexy.
00:52:03.760 Wow.
00:52:04.640 They got the goods on these guys.
00:52:05.980 Now that was three years ago because he's 19 now and he only has a high school education.
00:52:13.400 I mean, does, does Elon Musk even know that his online screen name was big balls?
00:52:21.940 Probably why they hired him.
00:52:24.480 This is, these are adults having this conversation.
00:52:29.140 And as I said, just a few minutes ago, we've seen this every Saturday morning.
00:52:35.280 It's called Scooby-Doo.
00:52:37.120 Okay.
00:52:38.560 Every Sunday morning, what, or every Saturday morning when we were growing up, what happened?
00:52:44.460 They unmasked the villain and they said, this is who it is.
00:52:47.880 And then the villain looks and says, and I would have gotten away with it if it wasn't
00:52:51.080 for those pesky kids.
00:52:53.440 Right?
00:52:54.880 That CNN just reenacted an episode, every episode of Scooby-Doo.
00:53:02.380 Every episode.
00:53:03.180 I, I mean, I think when we start talking about Doge, could you record this for me, Sarah,
00:53:07.620 real quick?
00:53:08.080 I just, we need to do, we need to start playing things like, uh, uh, hang on just a sec, like
00:53:13.880 this.
00:53:15.800 Talking about Doge.
00:53:24.880 I think we need that.
00:53:25.940 Every time we talk about a Doge story, we need to start, it's crazy.
00:53:39.340 It's embarrassing.
00:53:40.420 It's embarrassing for a supposed actual news network to, uh, spew that kind of nonsense.
00:53:48.040 It's embarrassing.
00:53:48.840 They don't know what to do.
00:53:51.640 They don't know what to do.
00:53:53.640 It's so sad and pathetic.
00:53:56.160 Um, I mean, these are adults.
00:53:58.100 These are Americans.
00:53:59.320 These are educated people.
00:54:02.000 Uh, and I would, I contend over educated people.
00:54:06.120 Um, and they are, they cannot see the forest.
00:54:11.560 They just keep looking at the tree and you're like, dude, our country is being robbed blind.
00:54:19.560 It is corrupt.
00:54:21.400 What are you talking about?
00:54:23.320 It's, you know, you know, they are the president of Mexico.
00:54:25.960 How dare you say our drug cartels run our country?
00:54:30.720 Yeah.
00:54:31.900 Are you?
00:54:32.840 What?
00:54:33.520 Everybody knows that.
00:54:35.340 Everybody knows that.
00:54:36.640 Otherwise you wouldn't have all those politicians killed by the drug cartels.
00:54:41.700 The minute they say they're going to stop the drug cartels.
00:54:45.340 How are you not run by the drug cartels?
00:54:48.640 I mean, if you come out against them, you're dead.
00:54:52.160 And it's, it's just self-imposed blindness and stupidity.
00:54:58.560 I mean, stupidity comes in lots of forms.
00:55:01.000 Nancy Pelosi says that this is her latest.
00:55:04.120 Democrats likely would have had more significant losses if Biden didn't drop out of the race.
00:55:09.940 What the hell is that story about?
00:55:11.660 Okay.
00:55:12.020 You know what that story is about?
00:55:13.320 That's that story is about Nancy Pelosi because they're having an internal squabble.
00:55:18.260 And she's defending herself because she's the one who decided he couldn't be president.
00:55:23.500 She's the one that orchestrated all that.
00:55:26.120 And so, you know, there are some reasonable Democrats who are like, you know, who orchestrated
00:55:30.220 all that?
00:55:30.680 How did that happen?
00:55:32.420 And so she's defending herself and she's, she's talking about, they would have had more significant
00:55:37.840 losses.
00:55:39.880 Sweetheart.
00:55:41.720 Sweetheart.
00:55:43.640 You're living in a dream world.
00:55:46.280 All of this stuff is over.
00:55:49.220 It doesn't matter.
00:55:51.280 You're trying to hold on to power.
00:55:53.260 How old are you?
00:55:55.700 970 years old.
00:55:57.740 You should be in a retirement home or surrounded by your grandchildren at your home.
00:56:03.080 You shouldn't be doing this anymore, but you know, you've got to stay in because you have
00:56:08.420 to protect all of the lies and the corruption that you were involved in.
00:56:13.980 Fetterman is starting to make sense.
00:56:15.900 The more the brain damage wears off, the more conservative this guy becomes.
00:56:21.600 Fetterman says Democrats haven't learned the lesson.
00:56:25.020 He said, we've lost white men, I think forever.
00:56:28.220 There's no way to get them back.
00:56:30.280 He says, anybody who is calling Republicans fascist and trying to shame people who voted
00:56:35.500 for the GOP.
00:56:36.960 He said, when you're in a state like Pennsylvania, I know and I love people that voted for Trump.
00:56:42.280 They're not fascists.
00:56:43.580 They don't support insurrection and those kinds of things.
00:56:46.680 It's that the Democrats have become too, quote, extreme and fringe.
00:56:51.580 Well, amen, brother.
00:56:54.640 Yeah.
00:56:55.160 Wow.
00:56:55.860 You have James Carville, the space alien that James Carville is, saying this is a level
00:57:03.680 of jackassery.
00:57:05.140 Listen to this.
00:57:06.760 For my outrage, these are two things that Democrats have done that are so unmoored to what anyone
00:57:12.880 in the country thinks or feels like.
00:57:15.120 It's almost impossible.
00:57:17.040 The first one is Democrats and progressives in New York are advocating for bereavement
00:57:21.520 pet leave.
00:57:23.600 Okay.
00:57:23.960 So in other words, if your cat dies, you get three days of paid leave.
00:57:27.760 Does anyone even know, like in rural America, like where I grew up, how many dead animals
00:57:34.180 are in your life?
00:57:35.880 In the entire history of the United States, let me tell you something.
00:57:39.320 A sentence that never, ever, ever has been uttered.
00:57:43.660 Well, Martha, Fido died.
00:57:45.540 I can't bale hay today.
00:57:47.900 I mean, come on.
00:57:49.440 I mean, please think out.
00:57:51.560 And fortunately, no one's going to overtly publicize this, although the right's using it
00:57:57.380 in some places.
00:57:58.580 Just how clueless you sound to people who live in the middle of the country.
00:58:03.800 It's like you're living a different thing.
00:58:06.300 Life and death on a farm is something that happens every six hours.
00:58:10.140 I mean, my God, stop.
00:58:12.920 End quote.
00:58:14.280 That's James Carville.
00:58:16.080 Wow.
00:58:17.020 Wow.
00:58:21.260 It is.
00:58:22.560 And it's so satisfying to know that.
00:58:26.820 I mean, well, let me go.
00:58:27.820 Let me let me take you through something that Trump did just yesterday.
00:58:33.580 Um, uh, let's see.
00:58:38.220 He, uh, took on the, uh, shoot.
00:58:41.580 Where is it?
00:58:42.580 Um, he, he took on the mayor of Chicago.
00:58:47.320 They're, they're actually going after, uh, these guys who are, um, trying to thwart ice.
00:58:55.760 Did you hear what happened in, I think it was Denver yesterday.
00:58:59.040 No, everybody was tipped off that ice and the FBI and DEA were coming in.
00:59:05.320 Right.
00:59:05.780 Yeah.
00:59:06.260 They were tipped off.
00:59:07.180 So they only got one of those gang members from.
00:59:10.060 Yeah.
00:59:11.000 Uh, Venezuela.
00:59:12.760 You don't think Pam Bondi and ice and Donald Trump are going to track that person down.
00:59:20.320 Whoever leaked all of that information.
00:59:22.680 Sure.
00:59:23.020 He will find them.
00:59:24.440 Yeah.
00:59:24.700 He will find them and you will go to jail.
00:59:27.800 You guys think that they're playing a game.
00:59:30.320 It's, it's like we've said about the Republicans forever.
00:59:33.800 Republicans have been playing this same game.
00:59:36.320 Like it was 1961.
00:59:37.720 And they didn't realize for years, the game has changed the game.
00:59:43.720 Donald Trump has completely changed the game.
00:59:47.180 One hundred percent.
00:59:49.200 He has changed it to radical transparency and it's not going back.
00:59:55.440 And people are going under this guy.
00:59:58.120 People are going to pay a price if you've broken the law.
01:00:01.460 And if you are obstructing ice, you're breaking the law and, and, uh, cities like Chicago are
01:00:08.060 now coming out and saying, you know what?
01:00:09.480 We don't care.
01:00:10.240 We'll fight him.
01:00:10.940 We'll fight him in the courts.
01:00:12.340 That's fine.
01:00:13.200 You'll fight him in the courts, but you know what you're also going to do?
01:00:15.640 He's going to stop giving your city any federal funding.
01:00:18.460 And amen, amen.
01:00:21.440 You shouldn't get a dime from the rest of us.
01:00:24.100 If you are, if you are supporting things that are destroying our country, making it unsafe
01:00:30.040 and driving up all of our costs for housing and everything else.
01:00:34.720 Look what you're doing to your own people, your own homeless people in Chicago.
01:00:40.060 You're defending those guys, criminals, not a, not a dime from the federal government.
01:00:47.620 And people will cheer.
01:00:50.680 All right, back in just a second.
01:00:53.320 What you eat can have a huge effect on your health.
01:00:56.040 We know that you are what you eat.
01:00:58.000 Okay.
01:00:58.420 Well, you're not going to feed your child food that could sit on a shelf for two years as
01:01:02.880 the only source of nutrition, right?
01:01:05.140 I mean, you might go to McDonald's once, you know, but you're not feeding three meals a day.
01:01:10.900 That's what we're doing with our kibble food, with our pets.
01:01:13.820 I want you to try the green, a rough greens, 90 day challenge.
01:01:17.180 It means for 90 days, all you have to do is sprinkle rough greens on top of your dog's
01:01:22.160 food.
01:01:22.460 Then just watch the results.
01:01:24.200 Within 30 days, you're going to see a shinier coat and an increase in energy.
01:01:27.700 You're going to see that, I think, on day one or two.
01:01:30.040 By 60 days, your dog is going to have a stronger immune system, less shedding and improve joint
01:01:35.820 function.
01:01:36.600 All thanks to the live nutrients that you've added back into his or her diet.
01:01:41.400 And by 90 days, you're going to see better digestion, reduced inflammation, improved heart
01:01:46.000 health.
01:01:46.320 You might have even reduced his or her risk for cancer.
01:01:49.220 So I want you to take this 90 day jumpstart trial bag challenge.
01:01:53.600 Do it now.
01:01:54.240 This is normally a $20 bag of rough greens, but you can get it for free if you just pay
01:01:58.620 for the shipping.
01:01:59.620 Go to roughgreens.com.
01:02:00.900 Use the promo code Beck.
01:02:01.980 R-U-F-F-Greens.com.
01:02:03.880 Promo code Beck.
01:02:05.320 Just cover the cost of shipping.
01:02:07.260 You don't have to change your dog's food to improve his health.
01:02:10.520 Just add a scoop of rough greens.
01:02:13.400 10 seconds.
01:02:14.460 Station ID.
01:02:26.580 So, Glenn, we do have somebody who is willing to defend, I guess, the expenditures from USAID.
01:02:35.240 We actually have somebody.
01:02:39.000 Maybe we should wait until after we get through this break.
01:02:43.860 Yeah, we could start.
01:02:44.460 Why don't we start?
01:02:45.280 I just want to hear.
01:02:46.620 Okay.
01:02:47.220 Brian.
01:02:48.260 Brian, how are you?
01:02:50.000 Hey, Glenn.
01:02:50.600 Pretty good.
01:02:51.200 Boy, oh, boy.
01:02:51.760 I'm thrilled to finally get through to you.
01:02:54.060 Well, great.
01:02:54.620 I'm glad to have you on.
01:02:55.900 Are you a long-time listener?
01:02:57.520 Tell me about yourself.
01:02:58.980 Oh, sure.
01:02:59.540 I would say that I'm a long-time listener.
01:03:01.080 I mean, I obviously listened to Rush Limburg there for decades.
01:03:07.040 Good.
01:03:07.540 We start with ad hominem tax.
01:03:09.400 Good.
01:03:09.840 All right.
01:03:10.300 Go ahead.
01:03:11.300 That's right.
01:03:12.280 Well, I'm trying to learn from you, Glenn.
01:03:14.460 I really try.
01:03:15.220 I try to mimic you, and I appreciate that.
01:03:17.700 Anyway, the reason for my call is to try to defend some of the spending that we're talking about.
01:03:25.960 Well, first off, you need to understand that I would love to see waste and corruption eliminated across the planet.
01:03:33.900 Okay?
01:03:34.360 Just eliminated completely.
01:03:36.280 But I don't see that happening at this time.
01:03:39.380 So what I'd like to think about is—
01:03:40.780 Well, you are seeing it to some degree.
01:03:45.300 You're seeing the beginnings of it.
01:03:47.260 Okay.
01:03:48.100 Well, that's good.
01:03:48.920 I'm glad you informed me of that, because I'm not—
01:03:51.740 Well, no, no, wait.
01:03:52.320 Hang on just a second.
01:03:52.960 That's what I—
01:03:53.960 No, no, please.
01:03:54.880 You know, I'm trying to have a reasonable conversation with you, Brian.
01:03:58.120 If you want to be a smartass the whole time, waste somebody else's time.
01:04:03.100 I'd like to have a real conversation—
01:04:04.900 Remember saying that you weren't going to interrupt anybody who called?
01:04:07.680 Do you remember that?
01:04:08.440 Yeah, well, you're being a smartass.
01:04:11.220 Now, I'm going to take a break, and we'll just cool down here a little bit, Brian,
01:04:16.520 and maybe try to treat each other with some respect.
01:04:19.640 And then you can defend the cuts that they have made at USAID.
01:04:25.660 Love to hear it, Brian.
01:04:27.540 Back in just a minute.
01:04:28.560 This is Glenn Beck.
01:04:43.400 This is going to be a learning experience.
01:04:45.960 All right.
01:04:46.300 It is sad to recognize the abortion pill has, you know,
01:04:50.680 has been the pro-abortion left's response to overturning Roe versus Wade.
01:04:54.780 Hey, let's just send pills out to kids so they can have abortions in their bathroom
01:04:59.700 and then flush the baby's body down the toilet.
01:05:04.680 Oh, that doesn't cause any problems.
01:05:06.900 Thank God there is a miraculous abortion reversal pill that is now available.
01:05:11.860 As long as a woman takes it in a certain amount of time after taking the abortion pill,
01:05:16.560 it can reverse the effects.
01:05:18.980 And the Ministry of Preborn is leading the charge with that,
01:05:23.460 working to save as many babies' lives as they can.
01:05:26.860 I am proud to be partnering with Preborn every day.
01:05:29.620 They sponsor free ultrasounds for women as well as providing abortion reversal pill in the cases where they can.
01:05:36.140 Plus, they can help the mother for up to two years after the baby is born.
01:05:40.260 So, we care about the mom and the baby.
01:05:43.720 This is the way to have compassion.
01:05:46.340 And we should do it ourselves if we'd like the government to do less.
01:05:50.360 Dial pound 250, say the keyword baby.
01:05:52.420 Pound 250, keyword baby.
01:05:54.300 Or donate now at preborn.com slash beg.
01:05:57.580 Check out my show, Pat Gray Unleashed, every weekday, 7 to 9 live.
01:06:01.020 Or you can check it out anytime and anywhere you get your podcasts.
01:06:04.060 Yesterday, I made the statement on the air several times and several times today that no one,
01:06:27.000 no one can, in their right mind, defend the things that USAID was spending money on.
01:06:35.160 Some of these cuts, I mean, first of all, I'd like the defense of USAID that is a CIA operative
01:06:42.900 that has overthrown government after government after government.
01:06:46.400 They've overthrown the Ukrainian government twice in the last 20 years.
01:06:51.740 You know, do you want your tax dollars going for shadow ops from the CIA that are not run
01:06:59.940 by the president or have any oversight whatsoever?
01:07:04.000 Also, can you defend $1.5 million in rebuilding the Cuban media ecosystem?
01:07:13.540 $1.3 million from USAID for Arab and Jewish photographers.
01:07:18.600 $2.9 million to teach Sri Lankan journalists how to avoid binary gender language.
01:07:26.780 $4.5 million to stop disinformation in Khakistan.
01:07:32.240 $2.1 million to the BBC to teach them the value of diversity in Libyan society.
01:07:42.240 Now, there is one brave gentleman who can defend these things and tell us, you know,
01:07:50.700 why we should, you know, stop paying attention to it, I guess.
01:07:54.560 His name is Brian, to his credit.
01:07:56.840 He was on a few minutes ago.
01:07:58.300 He hopefully will stop with the name-calling and everything else and just get to the facts,
01:08:05.600 because I would like to have a real understanding of somebody who says they can defend USAID and the way this spending has been going.
01:08:15.260 Brian, you have the floor, sir.
01:08:17.900 Hi, my name is Brian Bennett.
01:08:19.780 I'm calling from Bittersweet Farm in Hewleton, New York.
01:08:23.500 My wife and I have farmed together for over 40 years.
01:08:26.960 I've seen a tremendous amount of graft and corruption in our government over those decades and more.
01:08:34.040 The reason for my call is to attempt to defend the spending of money on things that I think are of value.
01:08:44.760 Specifically, there was a quote that said something in the fact that,
01:08:50.160 do unto others as you would have them do unto you.
01:08:54.020 So, helping the least amongst us is not a horrible idea.
01:08:59.220 I believe that mercy and compassion have a tremendous value long-term.
01:09:06.540 I'm not too keen on this idea of short-term pain, suffering, and deprivation and cruelty.
01:09:13.700 So, as a taxpayer, if I have the opportunity to have the first Trump administration spend $83 million with JBS,
01:09:23.660 that's Jose, Bautista, Savino and Sons out of Brazil, or to spend the figures you just listed, $1.9 million, $1.3 million,
01:09:33.520 in assisting in some other nation, my taxpayer dollars are better spent on assisting gay men in Africa, like you said before.
01:09:42.800 It's better spent on birth control, reproductive rights, women's rights.
01:09:51.660 It's better spent on a lot of the things that USAID spends their money on,
01:09:57.480 as opposed to spending the same amount or more money with Brazil, a BRICS nation, correct,
01:10:06.080 and Spain, which is not a BRICS nation.
01:10:09.940 The money should be spent on investing in the future.
01:10:14.280 The future is only going to be a future if it has humans and humanity.
01:10:22.060 The more dangerous weapons we produce, the more money we spend on other things other than mercy and compassion,
01:10:30.000 the more we're feeding into the end times, the more we're feeding into the violence,
01:10:37.620 the more we're feeding into the pain, suffering, and deprivation of billions of people.
01:10:46.420 I believe the money spent at USAID has alleviated some pain, suffering, and deprivation.
01:10:52.340 I don't believe the money given by the Biden administration to Elon Musk or given to JBS by Donald Trump
01:11:00.660 is in any way, shape, or form alleviating pain, suffering, and deprivation for anyone who's already not a billionaire.
01:11:08.740 So taxpayer dollars, if they're going to go to a billionaire or go to an impoverished country,
01:11:13.720 send my taxpayer dollars to an impoverished country.
01:11:18.000 I'm not talking about CIA overthrows, FBI overthrows.
01:11:20.920 We've known of that type of problem since well before 1776.
01:11:28.520 We've seen it.
01:11:29.480 We don't need to continue it.
01:11:31.200 You want to eliminate spending?
01:11:32.800 Let's target the military-industrial complex.
01:11:36.260 Let's target the agricultural-industrial complex, the pharmaceutical-industrial complex.
01:11:41.120 Let's not target those people who sometimes you say you want to win the hearts and minds of,
01:11:46.840 because you're not winning my heart or mind.
01:11:49.060 Thank you.
01:11:50.920 Well, thank you, Brian.
01:11:53.000 I appreciate that.
01:11:54.140 That's not the question I asked, because I agree with you with JBS.
01:11:59.440 JBS, the meat industry, the meatpacking companies, it's a mafia.
01:12:04.560 It's an absolute mafia.
01:12:05.760 It's a gang of thugs, and it needs to be broken up.
01:12:10.600 So I'm not defending spending to JBS.
01:12:14.020 I'm not aware of it, but I can look it up, and I would probably join you on that fight,
01:12:17.820 because I'm a rancher myself.
01:12:19.980 I live in a town of about 400 people that are all farmers.
01:12:24.160 I know what it's like to work hard, and I know what they're going through.
01:12:27.820 And big pharmaceutical, big agriculture is destroying our health and our ability to feed ourselves.
01:12:36.800 So I'm with you on that.
01:12:39.860 That wasn't the question.
01:12:41.200 The question is not, would you rather spend it on this or that?
01:12:46.280 I think we could all agree there are things that we think would be really good to spend it on.
01:12:51.780 And I'm with you on compassion.
01:12:55.140 I'm not with you on government compassion.
01:12:57.860 If you want to have a real intellectual conversation about that, we can.
01:13:01.880 About 40 cents of your dollar, if it goes to government, about 40 cents, if that, goes to the actual need,
01:13:09.920 where if you are in a charity and you're under 80 cents a dollar, you don't get money anymore because people won't –
01:13:18.300 you're required to show where that money is going.
01:13:22.940 And if you're spending it on limousines and everything else, you're not going to get money.
01:13:27.200 You're going to get a really bad rating.
01:13:28.880 The government would have an F rating on charity.
01:13:32.080 So we can talk about that, but that's not, again, the question I asked.
01:13:37.540 I asked you to defend, not compare, to defend all of these things.
01:13:44.740 You say we've known about the CIA overthrowing.
01:13:48.580 Yes, we have.
01:13:49.620 But the Church Commission was supposed to stop that.
01:13:53.740 And USAID, for 10 years, as I have been exposing them overturning in the Middle East, overturning in Ukraine,
01:14:03.300 overturning in Europe, overturning governments in South America,
01:14:09.100 and spending money to overturn our government in a color revolution,
01:14:13.460 as I've been saying that, everyone has said that's a conspiracy.
01:14:17.600 That's not what USAID does.
01:14:19.920 That is exactly what they do.
01:14:22.040 And if you are comfortable with paying the BBC to somehow or another teach them the value of diversity in Libyan society,
01:14:35.740 if you are truly okay with teaching Sri Lankan journalists to avoid binary gender language,
01:14:44.120 I'd like to hear your defense of that.
01:14:47.340 What you said about compassion is accurate.
01:14:51.100 We're talking about government corruption in a fashion being exposed like we've never seen before.
01:15:00.180 And you and I both know, Brian, this is just the beginning of it.
01:15:04.480 And I, for one, as a taxpayer, want every effing Republican and Democrat and independent
01:15:13.100 that has been using this as a system, as a cash drawer for themselves, their friends, or their petty little interests,
01:15:23.200 I want it to stop, and I'd like all of them to go to jail if they broke a law.
01:15:28.220 Do you have a response now on the actual question that I wanted an answer for?
01:15:35.040 I'll do the best I can then, because I agree with you that every problem that has been created by the United States government
01:15:44.420 needs to be resolved.
01:15:47.160 What I believe is, yes, I would rather spend, was it $1.9 billion? $1.9 million.
01:15:54.860 We already went through this. We already went through this.
01:15:57.460 Please do not compare. We could do that all day. That's not the question.
01:16:02.200 If you want to talk about those items, defend them.
01:16:06.700 Yes. Sending the money to any of those programs is an investment in the future and winning the hearts and minds.
01:16:12.420 It's the corrupt money that is going along the way.
01:16:14.880 Wait, wait, wait. Tell me what you know about Sri Lankan journalists and their use of binary gender language.
01:16:24.040 Can you tell me about that and what this program is actually trying to accomplish?
01:16:28.940 No, I cannot.
01:16:30.600 Okay. Okay. So you're just giving it a pass, and I want to know why.
01:16:36.980 Why are you just giving it a pass?
01:16:38.700 The reason I'm giving it a pass is because I believe it to be that type of aid is an investment in the future of life on this planet.
01:16:48.360 Okay? The corrupt part, the people that steal the money along the way, real problem.
01:16:53.440 Yeah. Right. Okay.
01:16:55.800 Well, you keep saying that you believe in investing in life on the planet.
01:17:01.560 I just want you to know, scientifically, if you start to deny there's a difference between men and women and you are promoting sex with women and women and men and men, you are going to hurt the future of mankind because you won't have babies.
01:17:23.620 Wow. Boy, that's insightful. That is enlightening, Glenn. I was not aware of that.
01:17:29.160 I know. You're a farmer. You're a farmer. I would think that you would know that.
01:17:32.760 No, probably.
01:17:32.900 When you buy a bull, if your bull was just having sex with another bull, would you sell that bull, or would you say, for diversity's sake, I want to keep feeding that bull?
01:17:43.960 I would say, for diversity's sake, I'd keep feeding that bull, and I'd put other cows in with the bull, because my bulls have sex with bulls, and my bulls have sex with cows.
01:17:53.860 That's what I witnessed this morning.
01:17:55.360 What I'm asking is, if one of your bulls was like, I'm only going to have sex, and Brian, I want you to respect the fact that I'm only having sex with bulls.
01:18:06.580 You could put me around women and cows, but I'm not interested in them.
01:18:11.620 Why are you being so hateful?
01:18:14.000 Why would you sell me?
01:18:16.100 Why won't you just keep me alive?
01:18:19.280 Yeah, why would you?
01:18:20.860 Why wouldn't I keep you?
01:18:21.780 Why would you?
01:18:23.440 Yeah, why wouldn't you?
01:18:26.200 Why would you, Brian?
01:18:27.960 Why would you?
01:18:28.500 I do.
01:18:29.060 You're telling me, as a businessman, we're not talking about human beings here.
01:18:33.080 We're talking about business.
01:18:34.280 You, as a businessman, you'd make that decision.
01:18:39.860 No, not as a businessman.
01:18:41.180 I'm not a businessman.
01:18:42.200 Oh.
01:18:42.680 I'm a farmer.
01:18:43.680 You're a farmer.
01:18:45.000 Right.
01:18:45.880 Yes, I know.
01:18:46.800 But you, to produce food, you have to make money.
01:18:50.660 No, you really have.
01:18:51.200 And I know in my...
01:18:53.100 Oh, you don't?
01:18:54.320 No, think about this for a minute, Glenn.
01:18:56.560 You don't have to make all sorts of money beyond your expenses.
01:19:01.680 That's making money, right?
01:19:02.900 Right, but if I'm keeping bulls that are not having sex and producing more cattle, then
01:19:08.720 I'm losing money.
01:19:10.920 And I know how razor thin it is.
01:19:14.820 As a rancher, I'll have a good year, and I'll have three bad years in a row.
01:19:19.040 And if I didn't have another job, I wouldn't be able to keep my ranch.
01:19:23.100 So, I'm making sure I'm as efficient...
01:19:27.880 Oh, is it another ballgame?
01:19:29.620 Yeah.
01:19:29.880 I mean, if you want to talk about food and food prices and the agricultural subsidies,
01:19:34.200 if you want to talk about keeping a bull...
01:19:35.100 No, no.
01:19:35.560 No, because I'm...
01:19:37.460 No.
01:19:37.880 That's fine.
01:19:38.060 Yeah, I just want you to know...
01:19:40.440 Go ahead.
01:19:42.580 Go ahead.
01:19:42.920 The reason that food is being produced is to feed people.
01:19:48.480 That's the reason...
01:19:49.060 Yes.
01:19:49.620 Think it through.
01:19:50.580 And the reason...
01:19:51.840 I know.
01:19:52.760 I know.
01:19:53.780 And that is great.
01:19:54.880 And if we lived in a communist country, the country would support you, and there would
01:19:59.880 be no death, and everybody would be eating.
01:20:01.940 What you have to do to feed people is actually make money so you can buy seed and fertilizer
01:20:11.100 and everything else, so you can produce more food.
01:20:14.320 It is the way the world works, Brian.
01:20:17.960 I agree.
01:20:18.400 So, humankind works by procreation.
01:20:23.800 And so, I'm only bringing this up because that was such a big deal in your argument.
01:20:28.580 You brought it up three or four times about you care about the future of humanity.
01:20:34.420 Well, you can't make that point as hard as you have and also deny that there is a difference
01:20:43.060 between a man and a woman.
01:20:44.760 Brian, I thank you for the conversation.
01:20:46.300 Back in just a minute.
01:20:47.220 First, let me tell you about realestateagentsitrust.com.
01:20:50.200 There are some people out there who just don't believe in half measures, like, at all.
01:20:55.020 Well, everything they do, they give 100% of themselves doing it.
01:21:01.500 They do it happily, and then they do it in a timely fashion, and they do it right the
01:21:05.060 first time.
01:21:06.020 And when one of those people becomes a real estate agent, my company, Real Estate Agents
01:21:10.820 I Trust, seeks them out so they can pair you up with them when it's time to buy or sell
01:21:16.140 a home.
01:21:17.960 Now, do I do that as charity work?
01:21:22.820 No, I don't.
01:21:23.680 No, I don't.
01:21:24.700 Would I like everybody to have a great real estate?
01:21:26.880 Yes.
01:21:27.600 But for me to take the time to do that, I also have to have my company make money.
01:21:32.360 It's a crazy idea that Brian didn't understand.
01:21:35.300 But we'll pair you up, and I'm not charging you for the recommendation.
01:21:38.940 We do our homework, we find them, and then we pair them up with you.
01:21:44.320 Realestateagentsitrust.com.
01:21:45.400 Go there now.
01:21:46.980 Realestateagentsitrust.com.
01:21:48.120 This is Glenn Beck.
01:21:53.360 Brian and his farm of mercy collecting all of the animals, the milk, the cows that don't
01:22:21.380 give milk, and the strictly homosexual bulls that will not have sex with a cow.
01:22:30.060 Because Jesus loves all the little children and all the little animals, too.
01:22:35.600 So that's great.
01:22:37.480 And I'd love to get his recipe for success.
01:22:40.560 I'm sure a lot of farmers out there would like, wow, how does Brian do it?
01:22:43.840 How is he doing it?
01:22:44.840 Just keep your useless bulls and your useless cows.
01:22:49.340 Just keep them.
01:22:49.800 Just the cows.
01:22:50.340 Just keep feeding them.
01:22:51.200 Just keep them.
01:22:51.540 Yeah.
01:22:52.000 You know?
01:22:52.300 And maybe you could even become a refuge for those milkless cows as a dairy farm.
01:23:00.560 That'd probably work out really well.
01:23:02.320 Hey, it's a safe place for them because I don't care about money.
01:23:08.120 I care about feeding people.
01:23:11.120 Uh-huh.
01:23:12.740 Uh-huh.
01:23:13.500 I do, too, Brian.
01:23:14.780 But you need money to do that.
01:23:19.620 Oh, my gosh.
01:23:22.400 Next, now serving caller number two who wants to defend all of, you know, the programs.
01:23:30.560 In the past, I've talked a lot about Jace Medical, but if you want a little refresher,
01:23:40.140 Jace provides different cases full of emergency medications, so you have them, you know, the
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01:23:48.880 Let me tell you about Heather, who got a Jace case and immediately knew this was something
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01:23:55.020 She said, the process is really easy.
01:23:56.740 All it takes to get a Jace case is to fill out a simple online form for her lifestyle.
01:24:00.840 Having one at home was really essential.
01:24:02.260 She has eight active and busy children, so in her mind, it wasn't really a question of,
01:24:07.000 if I'm going to need this medication, she just knew it was going to happen.
01:24:12.300 And so she has one that has the emergency kit that contains essential antibiotics and medications
01:24:17.260 that treat the most common and deadly bacterial infections.
01:24:21.320 Even have ivermectin as an add-on if you want it.
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01:24:30.080 That's promo code J-A-S-E.com, Jace.com, promo code BECC10.
01:24:35.860 Hey Richard, great to speak to you.
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01:24:48.200 That's what it feels like to step inside a soundproof office booth.
01:24:51.280 Like putting on noise-canceling headphones, except you can still take a call, run a meeting,
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01:25:02.480 Search Bureau Office Booths or head to withbureau.com.
01:25:05.580 See you in the next video.
01:25:10.620 See you soon.
01:25:33.580 Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh
01:25:44.040 Down the road where shadows hide, feel the dark on every side, stand your ground when times get dire, gotta face the dark and embrace the fire
01:25:55.440 The Fusion of Entertainment and Enlightenment, this is the Glenn Beck Program.
01:26:08.160 Welcome to the Glenn Beck Program. We're glad you're here. It's Friday and we got a lot to
01:26:14.360 discuss. We're going to get right to it in 60 seconds. First, when bad things go down in the
01:26:19.160 world, a lot of time they go down very, very rapidly. And then what do you do? Then what do
01:26:25.360 you do? They go down and usually the first thing that will happen is you're sitting there without
01:26:32.560 food. My Patriot Supply is there. Storing emergency food in your home is the right thing to do.
01:26:40.620 We still live in crazy times. Your family could need it if something bad goes down.
01:26:44.540 But that could just be a loss of a job. That could be, you know, like poor Samantha Powers
01:26:49.880 from USAID, you know, Cass Sunstein's wife. She said yesterday she was shocked that she was fired
01:26:56.400 and it just came down so fast. Now she's going to have to live, you know, off of a Harvard professor's
01:27:02.360 salary and whatever the left will give her. So gosh darn it, maybe she should have had My Patriot
01:27:08.640 Supply. 2,000 calories per day, 100% of your daily value of 12 essential vitamins and minerals. The
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01:27:25.440 off. Get your food kit today. MyPatriotSupply.com. All right. I am so excited to talk to this guy
01:27:32.480 because I saw a movie last week or the week before and I kind of saw it against my will. I gotta be
01:27:39.160 honest with you. My wife was like, oh, let's go see this movie. It looks really good. And there was that
01:27:43.280 the other movie that I just saw last week, which was the Wahlberg movie in the plane, you know,
01:27:50.440 and they're anyway, I'm glad I saw this one first. My wife was right again. But anyway, I went and I
01:27:56.600 saw Brave the Dark. And the reason why I kind of was like, I don't know, it's because, you know,
01:28:01.520 it just looked like a feel-good movie. And I am still so Pavlov with the reaction on, oh, it's a
01:28:13.080 movie made with values. And you're like, okay, it's going to be preachy. This is so good. So good.
01:28:21.260 I can't recommend this movie highly enough. It's called Brave the Dark. And it, one of my favorite
01:28:28.580 actors, uh, is, uh, is in it, uh, Jared Harris, he was in Chernobyl. He played Queen Elizabeth's
01:28:36.340 husband in the crown. He was in Sherlock Holmes. He's, he's really, really great. And this is a
01:28:43.360 great job of acting, uh, on his part. And the guy who also was played the lead role, um, of, of, uh,
01:28:52.820 Nathaniel Dean. Now the real Nathan, Nathaniel Dean was the producer and he's on the phone with
01:28:59.440 me now. And I, I want to be really careful because I don't want to, I don't want to tell
01:29:04.380 the whole story because part of the brilliance of this movie is you don't know how it's going
01:29:09.660 to end. You don't know the full story. So Nathaniel, let's, let's be careful on how we
01:29:15.020 tell the story. Thank you for coming on.
01:29:17.300 Uh, I appreciate you having me on Glenn. I'm excited to share this movie and the story,
01:29:23.180 um, and the incredible impact I think it's going to have on audiences.
01:29:27.020 Oh my gosh. And the fact that it's true, not based on a true story, but it's true. This
01:29:33.200 is your life. What an amazing turnaround, uh, on, on you as an individual and the impact that
01:29:44.700 this has had for so many years on so many people. Um, talk to me a little bit about, uh, the guy
01:29:51.580 who is, you took his name and now your father, you were, uh, given up for adoption. You grew up
01:29:59.000 in a, um, uh, uh, uh, an orphanage, uh, and you know, by the time you were in high school,
01:30:07.640 you were living in your car, right? Yeah. Um, I had a pretty rough childhood, uh, filled with,
01:30:14.140 um, probably some of the worst, um, childhood trauma that a child can experience. Um, and so
01:30:21.300 I grew up angry. I grew up very distrusting of adults, um, went through the foster care system
01:30:27.060 too. And kind of at 16, I decided to run away. Uh, and sadly no one came looking for me. Um,
01:30:34.200 and, uh, ended up living in my car on the streets of a small town in New Holland, Pennsylvania.
01:30:40.220 So can we, can, can you tell, I just said given up for adoption and cause I, I don't know how to
01:30:45.900 address this without giving anything away. Can, do you want to go into that a little bit
01:30:50.440 of, uh, of what, what, what do we know at the beginning of the movie?
01:30:56.140 Yeah. Uh, I mean, you, you know that something very horrible happens to my mother. Um, and, uh,
01:31:03.100 I'm a witness to it. Um, and that's all I want to give away on that. Um, but there's so much more,
01:31:09.240 there's so much more that happens, um, that you don't find out until the end.
01:31:14.920 Right. And can I ask you just, uh, without giving anything away,
01:31:18.360 is that part of the movie true? Is that really how it happened?
01:31:23.660 Uh, to be honest with you, it actually happened a lot worse than what we portray.
01:31:27.120 Oh my gosh. Um, we had to, we actually had to soften it quite a bit. Um, I think it was too much
01:31:33.100 for people to take. I, I mean, I'm, I'm surprised I'm even talking to you today, uh, surviving what
01:31:42.740 you went through. Um, and so you're living in your car and, uh, the teachers, you know, nobody,
01:31:49.880 everybody thinks, you know, you're not a good kid and, uh, and you fall in with the wrong crowd and
01:31:56.560 you do, uh, knock over a, I don't know, a stereo store or something at the time. And, uh, now you're,
01:32:04.140 now you're in juvie and away from school, but one teacher takes notice. Tell me about this.
01:32:11.980 Yep. Yeah. Um, so I, you know, just to explain quickly, um, I still wanted to go to school. And so
01:32:18.260 I lied to my teachers, my coaches, my girlfriends, my friends, um, they all just thought I was living
01:32:23.320 at my uncle's house or, you know, somewhere else. Um, but I basically ran track in the morning so I
01:32:29.340 could get a shower every day. Um, and that's how I was able to go to school because I wanted to go
01:32:33.400 because I was on the track team and it was very good. Um, and, um, one day I hadn't eaten for three
01:32:39.200 days and I was really, really hungry. And I walked into this classroom of the teacher. His name was Mr.
01:32:44.520 Dean. Uh, and he offers me something. I'm, I guess I can give it away. Um, yeah, you can. Uh,
01:32:53.360 yeah, he, he offers me a candy bar because that's all he had. He had a giant Hershey's candy bar.
01:32:58.640 Um, but he was going to eat later. Did he know you were hadn't eaten in three days? Cause in the
01:33:05.200 movie it, it, he didn't know. No, he didn't know, but he saw me, um, trying to get some money and
01:33:12.020 shake the candy machine to get something to fall out. Um, plus I was really skinny. I was super
01:33:16.800 skinny. Uh, and we, we try to portray that a couple of times in the film is, you know,
01:33:21.560 Nate takes his shirt off. He's in the shower and you see how skinny this kid is. Um, and, um, yeah,
01:33:27.840 so, uh, he offers me this candy bar and can I tell you it was the best candy bar I ever ate. It was so
01:33:34.380 good. Um, and that was that small planting of the seed of hope in my life. You know, I didn't know
01:33:41.100 it at the time, but really that was when I kind of knew like, all right, this guy gave
01:33:47.140 me something. He didn't want anything in return. Uh, you know, um, but sadly I ended up in juvian
01:33:52.760 a couple of days, uh, after that. And why did he get involved? Um, I, I think he saw Stan
01:34:02.440 loved the underdog. Stan loved the kid that sat in the back row and didn't talk, uh, that
01:34:08.020 the other teachers may not have paid attention to called the bad kid. He just, he just gravitated
01:34:13.420 towards those that were hurting. And he could see that he had empathy for people. He saw, he saw me
01:34:19.840 in that classroom sitting in the back, not talking, not participating. And he so badly wanted me to
01:34:25.180 participate. Um, and I, I think, you know, he, he loses his mother not too long before this. Uh,
01:34:33.500 and so there's a void in his life. Um, and I think it was just timing too. I think it was,
01:34:40.420 it was like, he's in my classroom. We, we, we kind of bonded in the classroom, uh, which I'd never had
01:34:46.780 with a teacher before. Um, because every morning he said, um, you know, uh, Hey, good morning, Nate.
01:34:53.240 And, and when he graded my papers, when I probably deserved a D or an F, he would give me a C and say,
01:34:58.760 Hey, keep trying, keep trying. And so I saw that there was something, and I think he saw that there
01:35:03.720 was something in me. Uh, and then for him to come to the, uh, to the, to, to the jail cell, um, and to
01:35:11.180 say, Hey, I want to help you. Like you need help. I'm here to help you. Uh, and that was probably one
01:35:17.100 of the most incredible days of my life, really. You know, as I'm watching the movie and I, I'm sorry
01:35:22.100 to, if you're listening to us, I'm, I'm so sorry that I'm being cryptic on all of this, but I just,
01:35:27.060 this is such a good movie and I don't want to wreck, uh, the experience because the way I experienced
01:35:33.280 it, it just all unfolds in front of you. Don't read anything about this movie. Just go see it.
01:35:37.940 Um, and so I'm, I, I'm sorry that you're not going to get the full experience of this. You come back
01:35:43.700 and listen to this podcast after you've seen the movie. But, um, I, I was so afraid as I was watching
01:35:49.480 him in the teacher's, uh, lounge and he was saying, this is a good kid, you know, aren't
01:35:56.420 we supposed to, and all the teachers were turning on you. Um, I, I, I thought to myself, God help
01:36:04.780 me, which one of the teachers would I be? I, I, it would be so easy to be not him, you know?
01:36:13.060 And, and, uh, I wondered, I wondered why he was like that. I mean, what, was it just the
01:36:22.880 way he was? Was it, he was actually living his faith or what was it about him that made
01:36:30.440 him? Yeah. Go ahead. No, sorry. Stan, uh, was a man of faith. Uh, and, um, you know, he always
01:36:41.860 believed in helping others. Uh, and he got that from his mom. His mom was such an incredible
01:36:46.560 woman. Um, and she doted on him as a child. She told him all the time that she loved him,
01:36:53.360 that she was proud of him. Um, she heard all of the things that I think a child should hear
01:36:57.920 growing up, uh, even the discipline parts, um, very giving, very unconditional love. Like
01:37:04.580 that, that was who he was. He wasn't just that way towards me. He loved his students. He loved
01:37:11.280 teaching. He loved teaching so much that he didn't even get married because he knew that
01:37:15.940 that would take away from teaching and, and, and, and directing plays, uh, you know, at the
01:37:22.020 school. So, um, he was just very, that's just who he was. He was such a man of integrity and
01:37:28.420 a man of faith and a man who, who lived, you know, uh, the way I think we're supposed to
01:37:35.160 live, helping others. Um, and he never wanted anything in return. Uh, and that's why he's the
01:37:40.380 hero of the story and I'm absolutely okay with that. Can I, can I ask you, I wrote a book years
01:37:46.940 ago called the Christmas sweater and it was about my childhood. I didn't have your childhood, but
01:37:52.860 my mom committed suicide when I was young and it, I spiraled out of control and, uh, you know,
01:37:59.000 and so I write a book and it was, it was a fictionalized, it wasn't the true story. It was
01:38:04.560 based on it. You know what I mean? But I fictionalized some of it. Um, I don't think
01:38:10.200 you fictionalized much of this. And I know when I went on tour and I did a one man play
01:38:16.120 called the Christmas sweater, I played all the roles and it was the hardest thing I've ever done
01:38:22.940 because I had to relive some of my worst things that I had ever done. And when I'm seeing you
01:38:31.600 betray him in a way towards the end, uh, I, what was that like to relive for you?
01:38:40.280 Um, yeah, that was really hard. Um, it's actually the hardest moment of the film isn't some of the
01:38:48.440 hard childhood stuff. It's, it's when I make a decision that, um, really sets the movie forward
01:38:57.020 in a very fast paced, high energy, like, Oh my word, what's about to happen. Um, you know, he,
01:39:03.780 he, but he didn't give up on me. That's what's amazing. I kept making bad choices. Um, it didn't
01:39:09.980 mean that he had to give in to me. Um, but I pushed his buttons as much as I could because I wanted to
01:39:16.060 know if he cared for me. Um, but again, I made bad decisions one after another and he just kept
01:39:21.680 reminding me of who I was, that I could make better decisions. Uh, and I think that's hard for
01:39:26.480 people. I think people just get frustrated with people very quickly and can, can leave a child
01:39:30.680 behind very, very quickly. So, um, I, I, I want to take a one minute break and then I want to come
01:39:37.100 back and, and ask you, cause there's a couple of things that, uh, came to mind. We're almost to the
01:39:43.880 very beginning of the movie, uh, for me was, uh, it never judged somebody. You have no idea what's
01:39:52.660 going on in their life. Um, and, uh, that, that I got right from the very beginning, but boy, at the
01:39:59.260 end, you're like, wow, is that true? Um, and how the kindness of one person, small, a candy bar can be
01:40:08.960 the pivot point in somebody's life. I want you to talk about those two things. If you can, uh, when
01:40:15.640 we come back, uh, Nathaniel Dean, the movie is brave, the dark. It's one of my favorite movies.
01:40:22.460 Um, it's so good and such a great uplifting message. I hate to say it that way. Cause that's
01:40:28.760 what made me not want to go to it. I'm like, I don't want to see a message, but it's not,
01:40:33.540 it's just a great movie. Uh, Nathaniel Dean will join us back here in 60 seconds. First,
01:40:39.160 what if I told you the investment, uh, of, you know, a little time today, you could actually
01:40:44.880 get it paid off significantly. Um, and by paying significantly less for your phone service,
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01:40:57.880 know, they're not sending money to Planned Parenthood. God, I hate that. If you're with Verizon,
01:41:02.400 why are you doing that? Why, why are you doing that? You're yourself. Don't betray your own
01:41:07.440 values. There's a choice and you're going to save money and you're going to get exactly the same
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01:41:16.360 service. You're going to get it for less. Um, they're going to give you a free month of, uh,
01:41:22.660 service and it's, it's helping prop up the values that you care about. It's Patriot Mobile. I want you
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01:41:39.200 and text you make. Visit PatriotMobile.com slash Beck. 972 Patriot. 972 Patriot. PatriotMobile.com
01:41:45.580 slash Beck. 10 seconds. Station ID.
01:42:00.180 My father was an angry man.
01:42:01.820 I'm not a bad person. I'm just like him.
01:42:14.920 Nathan Williams, you're under arrest.
01:42:21.060 I'm here to see Nathan Williams.
01:42:23.100 Are you family?
01:42:23.980 No, I'm, I'm his teacher.
01:42:27.340 You don't belong here and we're going to get you out. Do you have any family I can call?
01:42:31.820 No one.
01:42:36.640 You got to get back in school.
01:42:38.980 You have a convicted felon living with you.
01:42:42.160 You know, poor little homeless boy in a charity case. It would make you feel good? What?
01:42:45.840 You do realize that this is your only chance.
01:42:49.140 Screw you, dude.
01:42:49.720 Screw me, really? You're not a social worker.
01:42:52.280 There's a good kid there.
01:42:54.360 Is that a friend?
01:42:55.000 You have brought him back here.
01:42:57.400 What exactly do you know about this kid?
01:42:59.680 Hey, uh.
01:43:00.000 I know. He was living out of his car for two years.
01:43:05.640 Going hungry.
01:43:07.820 You've got to be careful.
01:43:09.220 This is not the same as being their teacher.
01:43:11.460 Now it's there.
01:43:12.700 Take a deep breath.
01:43:13.900 Your first priority is to this school.
01:43:16.180 Isn't my first priority to my students?
01:43:18.000 What?
01:43:20.080 All of them?
01:43:23.020 Failure to graduate guarantees you serve the sentence in full.
01:43:27.480 You're going to try to fix me?
01:43:28.760 You know how many people have tried?
01:43:29.900 Maybe we're getting somewhere.
01:43:30.800 Come on, what else you got?
01:43:31.680 Come on.
01:43:32.200 A liar.
01:43:32.780 A loser.
01:43:33.300 I've heard it all before.
01:43:35.100 You know, whether it's something your dad did to you or your mom didn't do, you have got to deal with it.
01:43:39.220 You weren't there.
01:43:40.720 Stop!
01:43:41.840 Why are you here if I don't care?
01:43:44.420 I care that you don't go to prison.
01:43:48.640 Some kids are born behind the eight ball.
01:43:51.480 I can't do this.
01:43:53.000 And I'm cursed.
01:43:54.260 We're lying to them when they say everything's going to work out just fine.
01:43:56.880 But don't those kids deserve the same chance as the others?
01:44:08.360 So good.
01:44:09.400 Brave the Dark is the name of the movie.
01:44:11.280 Can't recommend it highly enough.
01:44:12.940 It is so good.
01:44:14.480 Nathaniel, talk to me about what you walk away with and how important it is.
01:44:22.840 Yeah, I really, I think the powerful message of the importance of human connection and selfless acts of kindness just shine in the film.
01:44:34.040 You know, that candy bar that Stan gave me, that teacher gave me, was so important in beginning our relationship moving forward.
01:44:44.040 Because he didn't know at the time, and neither did I, that that small act of kindness really brought hope to my life.
01:44:51.460 And I think, you know, when you leave this theater, you'll feel uplifted, even though it has lots of dark content and trauma in it.
01:45:02.460 Man, I think you'll leave the theater feeling like you want to be a better person, that you want to be like Stan Dean in your own community.
01:45:09.820 And that's what I hope, and that they'll be inspired by the message of hope and redemption, and be like Stan where they live, to those around them.
01:45:22.340 Did you go through a period, I know each one of my sisters and I, when we hit the age, my mother killed herself.
01:45:35.060 We all thought, okay, I didn't do that.
01:45:38.840 We all thought we were born with this.
01:45:42.140 Did you go through much of your life worrying that you would be your dad?
01:45:49.040 I did, early on.
01:45:53.500 You know, we even hint at that in the film.
01:45:56.280 Yeah, you do.
01:45:57.880 Yeah.
01:45:58.580 And, but there were moments that I really felt like a bad person.
01:46:04.760 And I felt the curse of generational, you know, I don't know what the word is, but just felt worse.
01:46:13.160 Yeah, I was cursed.
01:46:14.040 I wasn't going to ever be somebody, even though I wanted to be, I just felt like everything was holding me back.
01:46:20.460 And a lot of it was myself, and blaming myself for something my, you know, body.
01:46:26.000 It always, it always is.
01:46:28.340 Nathaniel, could you hold on just a second?
01:46:29.820 I want to talk to you during the break.
01:46:31.300 The name of the movie is Brave the Dark.
01:46:33.940 It's about this man's life, and it is five stars.
01:46:38.780 Go see it.
01:46:39.440 This is Glenn Beck.
01:46:41.900 Sometimes the cost of doing one's duty comes at a very, very high price.
01:46:48.360 And there are heroes in this country and abroad, service members and first responders alike who have given everything, given everything.
01:46:56.980 And they've done it for us to serve us.
01:47:01.880 Who's there to help them and serve their families?
01:47:04.540 Who exactly is on the front lines for those who are on the front line?
01:47:08.100 Well, I'll tell you, it is an amazing organization called the Tunnel to Towers Foundation.
01:47:13.500 Their Gold Star Fallen First Responder, their Smart Home and Homeless Veteran Program comprise their In the Line of Duty programs.
01:47:20.840 They're dedicated to honoring our nation's heroes and their families, engaging people also all across the country in 9-11 remembrance all across the country.
01:47:28.400 They host over 80 walks, runs, climbs, dozens of golf outings.
01:47:33.700 They do everything they can to raise money and awareness for our heroes.
01:47:38.080 The Tunnel to Towers 9-11 Institute educates kids so they'll never forget either.
01:47:43.360 More than 95 cents of every dollar you donate to Tunnel to Towers goes to its programs and right to our nation's heroes and their families.
01:47:51.360 Please, would you donate $11 a month to Tunnel to Towers at T2T.org.
01:47:56.760 That's T, the number 2T, dot org.
01:47:59.480 Glenn, Stu, Steve Dace, Jason Whitlock, and me, Pat Gray.
01:48:03.420 Listen to all your favorite conservative voices at blazetv.com, promo code Glenn.
01:48:07.900 Hello, America, and welcome to the Glenn Beck Program.
01:48:24.080 We're glad you're here.
01:48:25.000 We've got a great podcast for you today.
01:48:27.720 It's really one of my favorite podcasts that we've done.
01:48:30.640 This one is just fun.
01:48:33.200 It was the Diesel Brothers.
01:48:35.500 Do you know who the Diesel Brothers are, Pat?
01:48:38.560 I'm not familiar with them, no.
01:48:40.640 So the Diesel Brothers are these guys, they're these YouTube guys.
01:48:43.420 They were on, I think, Discovery or one of those channels.
01:48:49.020 They had a show on there for a long time, and they were doing diesel engines and just making incredible trucks.
01:48:57.980 And then the pandemic hit, and they weren't happy because they were kind of doing the same thing over and over again.
01:49:06.380 And they, you know, they're so much like me in a way.
01:49:10.840 You know how everybody always complains about me that works for me.
01:49:15.100 They're like, Glenn, what are we, we're changing again?
01:49:17.360 What are we, what?
01:49:18.260 Yeah.
01:49:18.460 And it's like, it's because they're evolving as people, and I evolve as a person.
01:49:24.280 And so they started getting into rescues and doing things that no one else could do.
01:49:32.840 Like, you know, you can go to their YouTube page, and you'll see them, this, you know, million-dollar mobile home.
01:49:39.060 You know, they took it out.
01:49:39.900 Somebody took it out to the desert, and it sank.
01:49:42.140 And so then they had to tow that thing out, but to get it out, I mean, they destroyed, you know, so many things trying to get this thing out.
01:49:53.180 And it's kind of fun to watch.
01:49:54.460 But then they got into serious rescues, and, you know, living by the mountains, they're doing air rescues.
01:50:00.800 One of them owns a Black Hawk helicopter and can fly it and is an expert at flying it.
01:50:07.220 And they had just, when I talked to them, I think I talked to them last week, and they had just gotten off of a rescue.
01:50:15.940 I think it was in New Mexico or Nevada.
01:50:19.660 Do we have that cut where they're talking about coming off the rescue?
01:50:24.740 Here it is.
01:50:26.020 January 2nd, a guy named Michael Martin leaves Las Vegas in his little plane.
01:50:30.560 His wife and he, he and his wife had had like a little dispute the night before.
01:50:34.160 Nothing crazy.
01:50:34.640 He, they believe he left to maybe go blow off some steam.
01:50:37.340 Well, he didn't tell the family where he was going.
01:50:39.400 He didn't tell them that he was going even for a flight.
01:50:41.100 They didn't know until the 4th or 5th of January when they found the plane missing.
01:50:45.540 From then, they started tracking the flight and the transponder and his iPad and his watch and everything.
01:50:50.300 And his last known location was around Mount Jefferson, which is basically central Nevada, just a little bit north of Tonopah.
01:50:56.080 Very rugged, very desolate terrain.
01:50:58.860 The mountain, about 12,000 foot elevation, big, crazy mountain.
01:51:02.680 And so they thought, well, he's got to be around here.
01:51:04.900 Snow, I imagine.
01:51:05.860 Snow, lots of blowing snow, crazy weather.
01:51:08.360 So this became like a national phenomenon.
01:51:10.520 Every news outlet in the country picked it up.
01:51:12.380 And anytime somebody goes missing or something happens, our phone starts ringing and our inbox just gets full.
01:51:18.060 Hey, you got to help.
01:51:18.920 You got to get involved.
01:51:19.900 Well, we were off-grid filming some other, you know, winter content series for the last couple weeks.
01:51:23.940 So we didn't have the ability to jump into the search.
01:51:25.740 Around January 18th, a fish and game warden that was determined.
01:51:31.900 Awesome kid.
01:51:32.820 Awesome kid.
01:51:33.420 He was bound and determined to figure out what happened to this plane.
01:51:35.700 He hikes four hours into the most treacherous backcountry you can see and doesn't make it all the way to the top, but he's able to get to the base of a cliff.
01:51:41.880 And with binoculars, glasses, the whole hillside, and he finds the plane crash.
01:51:46.580 So at that point, there's no way he could have gotten to the wreck site.
01:51:50.920 It was another 3,000 foot elevation through four feet of drifted snow.
01:51:55.480 It was impossible to access.
01:51:56.380 So goes back, calls the authorities, every state agency that had a helicopter or an aircraft got in the air.
01:52:02.660 They started searching and it got to the point where they just said, we cannot access this crash site.
01:52:08.020 It's not safe.
01:52:09.180 We don't know what to do.
01:52:10.560 Meanwhile, the family thinks that there's a chance that dad, husband, maybe still is alive.
01:52:16.540 The footage or the pictures they got of the wreckage were pretty rough, so it didn't look survivable.
01:52:21.780 So there's a lot of drama between local law enforcement, state authorities, the family, because the family's like, hey, go rescue our dad.
01:52:31.320 And the state's saying, we can't.
01:52:33.220 We don't have the capabilities.
01:52:34.200 We don't have the aircraft.
01:52:35.000 We don't have the manpower.
01:52:35.780 Nobody is willing or capable to do this job because our resources are limited.
01:52:41.260 They called the National Guard.
01:52:42.180 National Guard said, nope, we can't do it.
01:52:43.480 Can't touch it.
01:52:44.360 It's out of our wheelhouse.
01:52:46.560 The terrain is just too nasty.
01:52:47.840 So finally, that's when, you know, our emails, we'd probably received a thousand emails at that point.
01:52:53.820 So we got home from filming.
01:52:55.340 I called the family and said, hey, I understand what you're up against.
01:52:59.060 Will you accept our help?
01:53:00.000 We'd like to, you know, go get your dad.
01:53:02.760 And, you know, just broke down in tears.
01:53:04.460 Said your answer to our prayers.
01:53:05.740 You know, nobody could help us.
01:53:06.840 No, nothing.
01:53:07.860 Nobody was going to be able to solve this problem for us.
01:53:10.280 Had you seen the terrain?
01:53:11.840 You knew what you were flying into?
01:53:13.900 A little bit.
01:53:14.480 So after that, I asked for the contact information for whoever was in charge of the case.
01:53:20.320 Chief Scott Lewis of Nye County Emergency Management out in Nevada.
01:53:24.500 Called him up, said who I was, what I wanted to do.
01:53:27.200 And he's like, don't call me again.
01:53:29.540 Like, this is way out of your, you know, range.
01:53:33.600 We don't need your help.
01:53:34.560 We've got all the resources.
01:53:35.520 Everything's covered.
01:53:36.460 And I thought, there's a chance this guy doesn't quite understand who we are and what we do.
01:53:41.880 And he said, look, if anything changes, I'll give you a call back.
01:53:44.700 But as of right now, stand down.
01:53:51.440 Well, he goes on to tell the story and how they rescued or actually found and recovered the body of this guy.
01:54:00.260 And it is an amazing story.
01:54:02.380 They didn't stand down, in other words, right?
01:54:03.440 They did not stand down.
01:54:04.720 No, they did not stand down.
01:54:05.880 And they are now training some of the people in that state on how to do rescue missions because it was beyond their ability and beyond most people's ability.
01:54:17.920 It's not that this state was bad at it.
01:54:20.080 These guys just have a real knack for it.
01:54:23.340 But we talked about how it is so important for individuals to do and use your skill to be able to help others.
01:54:36.440 You know, we talked about, you know, all the stuff Mercury One's doing and what he's doing.
01:54:40.660 And we're going to start working together on some projects, which are great.
01:54:43.800 He also, you know, I saw those guys, what, maybe in June I was at a Trump rally and I was backstage with President Trump and they were there.
01:54:59.080 And we were talking and they had some observations on Donald Trump that I thought were really good.
01:55:06.360 Things that I had never even noticed and people around Donald Trump and how they act.
01:55:13.780 And it's, these guys are very insightful, very insightful.
01:55:18.520 But we also, I took him to my house afterwards and because I've, you know, I have an old race car, a 1934 race car from Le Mans.
01:55:27.980 And it has spoke wheels.
01:55:31.480 And I made a promise to Jay Leno that I would drive it at least once a week to work.
01:55:36.360 And, and I can't because the wheels are so out of alignment.
01:55:41.220 And I've been, for a year, I've been trying to find somebody that would, you know, could tune the spokes.
01:55:46.140 You know, remember, you know, back in the 60s, MGs and everybody, they had those spoke wheels.
01:55:51.340 Well, you, you, you can't get anybody to balance them anymore.
01:55:54.480 Nobody knows how to do it.
01:55:56.140 So they were over there and they saw some of the car collection and they were like, have you ever raced any of these?
01:56:02.700 And I said, no.
01:56:04.140 You know, and I said, I've wanted to.
01:56:06.600 And they said, well, why don't you ship us this car and we'll fix this one.
01:56:12.820 But will you ship a couple of the others too?
01:56:16.760 And, and let's go race them.
01:56:19.520 So we're going to, this summer, uh, we're going to go to some track, I think in Utah, uh, and, uh, and put them all up.
01:56:28.360 I have a friend who, uh, uh, runs a dealership, a Lamborghini, uh, dealership.
01:56:34.080 And he's got, he drives one of the top of the line Lamborghinis.
01:56:37.860 He was telling me about it the other day.
01:56:39.080 And I'm like, have you really stepped on it yet?
01:56:41.780 And he's like, oh, it'll curl your hair.
01:56:43.940 Uh, so we're, I just want to put them all in a row, you know, from, from that to a 1934 race car and just put them all in a row, line them up and just see the difference on what each of them could do.
01:56:57.140 So, uh, maybe we'll invite people to come, but I'd have a really hard time deciding whether to race my Ferrari, my Lamborghini or my McLaren.
01:57:06.660 It would be a really, be a difficult choice for me.
01:57:09.140 I don't have any of those.
01:57:10.520 I don't, I don't have any of those.
01:57:12.380 So I said I had a friend who had one.
01:57:14.580 I don't have one.
01:57:15.220 Yeah.
01:57:15.780 Yeah.
01:57:16.440 Yeah.
01:57:17.240 So, uh, you know, anyway, uh, it's, uh, it's Friday.
01:57:23.120 I want to thank Pat for sitting in, or you were in again on Monday, aren't you?
01:57:26.240 Yes.
01:57:26.720 Mm-hmm.
01:57:27.640 Because, uh, Stu is just some uppity snob that, uh, you know, goes to the Super Bowl.
01:57:33.000 And it seems like the Super Bowl ends on Sunday, doesn't it?
01:57:36.360 Yeah, it does.
01:57:37.060 Monday would seem to be open, but no, he's not back yet on Monday.
01:57:41.260 So what are the, what are the odds?
01:57:42.480 Tell me, I don't follow any of the odds or anything like that.
01:57:45.920 What are the odds the Chiefs are going to win?
01:57:47.640 I think they're pretty good.
01:57:48.660 Yeah.
01:57:48.820 I think most people think the Chiefs will win.
01:57:51.840 Uh, but.
01:57:52.600 Well, I think they will just because of the homes in the last 90 seconds.
01:57:56.280 They could be behind 21 points, and I think in 90 seconds he could probably pull it off.
01:58:01.200 But, uh, uh, but I hope it's not that kind of game.
01:58:04.380 But Eagles, the Eagles are really good.
01:58:06.560 Yeah, they are.
01:58:07.280 They beat my Packers.
01:58:08.600 And, uh, they've, yeah, they played really well in the playoffs, especially.
01:58:11.860 They're just, they are good this year.
01:58:13.440 And, uh, just played something on my show this morning from the, I don't remember what the seal's name is.
01:58:21.500 Uh, but I think it's a.
01:58:22.600 Navy seal?
01:58:23.160 No, he's a, like an actual animal seal.
01:58:27.100 Oh, club seal.
01:58:28.360 At SeaWorld.
01:58:29.420 And he predicted the Eagles were going to win.
01:58:32.140 They throw out two balls, and whichever one, one is an eagle ball, and one is, uh, Chiefs.
01:58:38.540 And he brought back the eagle ball, which means, uh, the Eagles.
01:58:41.700 Oh, wow.
01:58:42.300 So this is very scientific.
01:58:43.880 Very scientific.
01:58:45.160 He's been pretty accurate.
01:58:46.640 I guess he's three for three.
01:58:48.020 Yeah.
01:58:48.300 He's three for three.
01:58:49.300 Wow.
01:58:49.840 Yeah.
01:58:50.260 Wow.
01:58:50.820 So you can take that to the bank.
01:58:53.180 And it's weird.
01:58:54.280 I mean, is it a coincidence that's what Mahomes is going for?
01:58:57.840 Three of three.
01:58:59.000 No, it's not a coincidence.
01:59:00.920 It's not a coincidence.
01:59:02.020 Yeah, it's fate.
01:59:02.640 I think it's fate.
01:59:03.240 Yeah, yeah.
01:59:04.800 So when does, when does Mahomes, excuse me for my ignorance again, when does Mahomes
01:59:10.160 become, uh, better than Brady?
01:59:14.260 Technically.
01:59:15.480 He's got a few years for that because Brady was so good for so long.
01:59:19.260 And Brady has, I think, seven Super Bowl rings.
01:59:23.260 This will be Mahomes' fourth, right?
01:59:28.020 Three in a row and fourth overall.
01:59:29.800 This would be, yeah.
01:59:30.980 Right.
01:59:31.380 So he's got a ways to go.
01:59:32.680 But he's well on that track.
01:59:34.260 So he has three rings so far.
01:59:35.440 He didn't win.
01:59:36.760 He's won the last two.
01:59:38.040 Did he win the...
01:59:38.760 And he won one a couple of years before that.
01:59:40.640 Okay, before that?
01:59:41.420 Yeah.
01:59:41.700 Yeah.
01:59:42.360 So he's amazing.
01:59:43.640 I'm surprised you actually know as much as you do.
01:59:45.880 I mean, you have...
01:59:46.780 I know.
01:59:47.300 Do you remember?
01:59:47.880 You boned up a little bit.
01:59:49.380 I know.
01:59:49.820 I was the guy on my block.
01:59:51.340 And this is absolutely true.
01:59:53.460 I came over to a friend's house and it was a, you know, a bunch of guys getting together.
01:59:57.740 And Mahomes had just signed that huge contract.
02:00:00.640 I didn't...
02:00:01.640 And Mahomes was a neighbor of mine at the time.
02:00:03.780 I didn't know.
02:00:05.420 I didn't care.
02:00:06.280 And I'm going there and my friend said, did you see the contract that our neighbor just signed?
02:00:13.280 And I said, oh, Mahomey?
02:00:16.360 Mahomey?
02:00:16.700 And he said, hang on just a second.
02:00:20.140 He quieted everybody down and he said, Glenn, tell them about the new contract.
02:00:23.340 And I said, I don't know anything about it.
02:00:24.580 I don't know Mahomey.
02:00:26.620 So I'm known in the neighborhood as the guy who calls Patrick Mahomes Mahomey.
02:00:32.660 And he is my homie.
02:00:34.060 He is my homie.
02:00:35.100 So I boned up a little bit since then.
02:00:38.880 Yeah, to the point where you're having a Super Bowl get together this weekend, right?
02:00:43.100 Have you ever done this before?
02:00:44.200 Yeah.
02:00:45.140 Yeah, but only for the commercials.
02:00:46.760 The first time my son played football, he went to try out and he, you know, went out to, I don't know, catch the ball, retrieve the ball, whatever you do.
02:00:58.040 And he went out.
02:00:59.560 There's the Glenn we all know and love.
02:01:01.260 So he went and the coach called him after a couple of, you know, attempts and he calls him in and he says, hey, Rafe, come on in for a second.
02:01:12.400 And so he comes in and he literally said this.
02:01:15.660 So, Rafe, have you ever seen this game played?
02:01:24.240 And Rafe's response was, well, we watch the Super Bowl every year, but mainly for the commercials.
02:01:31.260 So, he fell in love with the game and so we've, you know, I've been watching it with him and, you know, I have him to explain it to me.
02:01:41.360 So, I understand it now.
02:01:43.800 He's kind of like, the role of dad and son are reversed on Sundays.
02:01:51.080 He's more like the father explaining it to his son on how it's played.
02:01:55.880 But anyway, go Kansas City.
02:01:58.500 All right, let me tell you about Relief Factor.
02:02:01.260 Uh, if you have pain every day, I know what it's like.
02:02:06.000 I used to wake up every day and think, I can't do it.
02:02:09.360 I used to have so much respect for Pat.
02:02:11.300 I don't anymore.
02:02:12.480 But I used to have so much respect for Pat because he lives, ever since I've known him, you know, 35 years, he's lived in just excruciating pain that nothing can touch.
02:02:23.920 Um, you know, and then I had my little baby pain and I was like, wow, I'm just like Pat and I really respect him.
02:02:31.400 My wife didn't think that.
02:02:32.840 She was like, stop the whining and, uh, try this.
02:02:36.320 And so she gave me Relief Factor and I tried it and it took my pain away.
02:02:40.520 It's the only thing that I could take that would actually break the back of this pain that I had.
02:02:45.900 I went to doctors, everybody, nobody could stop it.
02:02:49.100 I don't know how this works.
02:02:51.900 I mean, I know technically how Relief Factor works.
02:02:54.380 It, you know, works with your body to fight inflammation as for all natural ingredients, blah, blah, blah.
02:02:59.240 You take it every day.
02:03:00.300 Uh, but I don't know how it worked, what it did, but it broke the back of my pain and, uh, I highly recommend you try it.
02:03:08.860 Get the three-week quick start.
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02:03:11.320 Take it exactly as directed.
02:03:12.700 See if it doesn't work for you.
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02:03:23.640 There you have it.
02:03:25.260 The truth stripped down like a fence post in a prairie storm.
02:03:31.100 Glenn Beck returns after this.
02:03:54.220 Welcome to the Glenn Beck program.
02:03:55.920 We're glad you're here.
02:03:57.100 Uh, Pat is back on Monday.
02:03:59.100 Yes.
02:03:59.280 Uh, I will be gone on Tuesday.
02:04:02.000 I am going to be with Patrick Bet-David.
02:04:04.180 Uh, I'm going to be doing his show and then he's going to be doing mine.
02:04:08.000 Uh, and so I will be in Florida on, um, Tuesday and Wednesday.
02:04:13.540 And then I've got a speech to give in San Antonio and back in Dallas on Thursday.
02:04:19.740 But are you doing the show Wednesday and Thursday?
02:04:21.920 You're doing the show though.
02:04:22.860 I'm doing it Wednesday and Thursday.
02:04:24.140 I'm just missing Tuesday now because of scheduling.
02:04:26.920 So, uh, I know you were going to miss me, Pat.
02:04:29.500 I know you were going to miss me.
02:04:30.260 Oh, big time.
02:04:30.720 Yes.
02:04:31.220 Very much so.
02:04:31.900 You don't have to worry about that now.
02:04:33.080 Okay, good.
02:04:33.600 So you got that going for you.
02:04:34.900 Good.
02:04:35.360 Yeah.
02:04:35.920 Is there anything that we have, uh, missed?
02:04:38.700 Yeah, we didn't talk about the stolen eggs.
02:04:41.820 A hundred thousand stolen eggs.
02:04:45.020 How do you steal them?
02:04:47.680 Without breaking them all?
02:04:49.320 I don't know.
02:04:49.960 Because you know they must be stolen to sell, I would think.
02:04:54.640 Since they're so expensive now.
02:04:56.400 I mean, is that what it is?
02:04:58.940 I mean, I have no idea how there's an egg ring.
02:05:02.020 And I love all of the media reports that they, they say, they hope police crack the case.
02:05:09.480 Oh, man.
02:05:13.440 Oh, that's rich.
02:05:14.440 That is rich.
02:05:16.080 That's funny.
02:05:16.760 So funny.
02:05:19.500 Oh, golly.
02:05:20.680 Uh, on Monday, we're going to talk a little bit about how Microsoft hasn't scaled any of
02:05:25.940 its programs on DEI back.
02:05:28.200 There are a few companies taking a stand.
02:05:32.020 Oh, golly.