Glenn Issues DIRE Warning: These Red States WILL Become California | Guests: Allie Beth Stuckey & Justin Haskins | 2⧸3⧸26
Episode Stats
Length
2 hours and 8 minutes
Words per Minute
158.64383
Summary
On today's show, Glenn Beck talks about the latest in the war in the Middle East, and what's going on in the U.S. economy. He also talks about why Utah is insane and what s going on with their governor.
Transcript
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Pass it on. Craig the game. Glenn Beck is on. Glenn Beck is on.
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Holy cow, do we have a lot to cover today. We've got the economy. We have more on the
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radicals in the streets. We have insanity coming from the state of Utah. Absolute insanity. What
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is wrong with you, Utah? Well, I can tell you what's wrong. One of the other things wrong with
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you is your governor, but that's a different story. Well, no, actually it's not. We'll get to
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that here in a second. And I want to tell you something remarkable was announced yesterday.
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And also, are we going to war? The Armada is now arriving in the Middle East. And there's a few
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signals that the United States is more powerful than ever before. We'll get into that here in just
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where do I start? Let me, let me start with some amazing news. Uh, first the Artemis looks
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like it's going to be pushed back to, um, uh, March was supposed to launch here soon, but
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you know, let's, uh, let's take a minute for anybody, any of us who are old enough to remember
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what happened to the Challenger. The Challenger blew up because it was sitting on the pad and
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the temperatures in Florida went below freezing. Well, that's exactly what has happened. Uh, these
00:04:57.340
are solid booster rockets, uh, that are strapped to the side of Artemis, the same kind that were
00:05:02.500
on the Challenger. I know we found the O-ring problem, et cetera, et cetera. We're supposed
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to solve that, but I'm hoping that they're going to put that thing back into, uh, in, you know,
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take them a day to roll that back into the shed, if you will, uh, and test it and make sure
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we can't afford to lose the Artemis. Um, but the other thing that happened yesterday is
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the largest company now in the history of the world, the most, uh, valued, uh, company
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in the entire world was created. SpaceX and, uh, XAI merged yesterday. That makes them the
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most, uh, profitable, most expensive company in the entire world. And I have to tell you when
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I heard that last night, I thought, gosh, I feel like it's 1910 and somebody said you
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should invest in the bell system. Uh, yeah, maybe, maybe, uh, this might be AT&T. It might
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be the railroads might be Pan Am, you know, when Pan Am was something, this, this is huge.
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And let me explain right now. Um, SpaceX has announced yesterday that they are going to launch
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a million satellites into space, a million satellites into space for the cloud and for AI
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processing, AI processing up in space. You can keep it cool and you don't have to have
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any of the water problems. You don't have any of the cooling problems, the energy problems,
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et cetera, et cetera. I mean, it's a perfect place to have processing done is up in space.
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He's going to launch a million satellites to give you some idea right now. Humanity has roughly
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14,000 active satellites operating and orbiting earth. Okay. That's every nation. That's every
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military. That's every weather system, every GPS signal, every communications platform humanity
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has ever put into space is 14,000. Okay. So now SpaceX has filed plans of a million satellites over time
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going up into space. Even if only a fraction of that number is ever launched, this is not an
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expansion of what exists today. This is a complete redesign of space around earth. This is a replacement
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of the scale itself. So to understand this, stop thinking in terms of technology and start thinking
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in terms of history. Okay. When I first heard this, a million satellites, and I know we have 14,000 in
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space, I thought to myself, wow. Uh, that's kind of like somebody saying, yeah, I know we're expanding
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and I know it's 1820, but everything West of the Missouri river is mine. Okay. I mean the 1800s power
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in America was not decided by the speeches. It was decided by who controlled the rivers and then later
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who controlled the railroads. When the railroads crossed the Missouri river, it wasn't just steel that
00:08:04.840
was moving West. It was law. It was commerce. It was time. It was settlement. So the cities lobbied for the
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railroads, please. But the railroad tracks by us cities died when the railroads bypassed them. Okay. No one
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announced everything West of the river is ours. They didn't have to, they built it first. And then everybody
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else had to adjust around that. And that is exactly what Elon Musk is doing right now, except the
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frontier is not land. It's the sky. Low earth orbit is not infinite. I think there's, I want to say 6,000
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in low earth orbit. There are only so many usable altitudes out there. Um, and you know, you start
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launching things up into space. There's only so many collision tolerant corridors. So there's so much
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junk up around that you, it's, it has to be very carefully coordinated at small numbers. Satellites
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coexist at massive numbers. They define everything. You place tens of thousands or hundreds of thousands
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of objects into those corridors. You're no longer participating in space. You're designing and
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structuring it. Think of it this way. This isn't somebody claiming land West of the Rockies. It's
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closer to one company building every road, every bridge, every highway and say, everybody else can
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use them, but we built them first. Control doesn't require ownership. It requires scale.
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And that is what Elon Musk is very good at scale. And this matters because for the first time in
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history, a private company is positioned to shape the planetary structure or infrastructure,
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a layer of infrastructure, faster than governments, cheaper than any nation with replacement cycles
00:10:04.020
measured in months, not decades. I mean, empires used to control land. Remember, I mean, this is exactly
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what the, this is what the Vanderbilts did with the railroads. You know, they controlled the
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railroads. Navies controlled the seas. Nations controlled airspace. This is completely different.
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This is the normalization now of something entirely new. The sky itself becoming managed
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infrastructure. Okay. And history tells us something really, really important when this kind
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of stuff happens. Really important. People who arrive first, they don't just win. They set the
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rules that everybody else spends decades trying to renegotiate. So this isn't a warning. This is just
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an observation here. Every great power shift in history looks small right up until the time it
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doesn't. And by the time most people look up, the frontier is already gone. The other thing you have
00:11:06.120
to understand, this is going to change our skies forever. You put a million, put half a million, put
00:11:14.040
a hundred thousand more satellites up into lower orbit space. It's going to change the look of the sky.
00:11:24.500
When you go out at night, you're going to see a different sky. This, this is a game changing
00:11:33.660
announcement yesterday. Game changing. I'm not sure I like it. I just want to point out it's massive.
00:11:39.960
Now let me come closer to earth, closer to what is happening in our world. Yesterday, I'm going to go
00:11:46.380
into this in a second. Yesterday, there was a judge in Texas who made this crazy, crazy ruling on habeas
00:11:53.760
corpus. And we're going to get into that because it ties into the, into the, into judges overreach,
00:11:59.480
but also what's happening with ice. Okay. Well, before I get there, let me tell you something else.
00:12:05.400
It's crazy that's going on and it's happening in Utah and Utah. Listen to me carefully. You are in
00:12:12.580
trouble. You are in trouble. I don't care what party you belong to. Every American should understand what
00:12:21.760
Utah did is trouble for the Republic and you're going to become California. So look out, Utah.
00:12:32.840
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Okay. Utah, what are you thinking? The Republicans in Utah, you want to talk about being hypocrites.
00:14:52.580
Here it is. When we talk about packing the court, what do we all say? Don't do that. That's the end
00:14:59.940
of the Republic. It's always the end of the Republic. When somebody starts packing courts,
00:15:05.080
the next people that get in, they're like, oh, well, you changed that number. So I can change
00:15:09.420
that number too. We're going to have 12. We're going to have 20. We're going to have 30. We're
00:15:12.320
going to have 55. You see Venezuela, you see Cuba, you see any country that has ever done this.
00:15:18.840
They fall into totalitarianism because they realize they can just change the referees.
00:15:23.640
They'll just add more referees and they'll add the referees they like.
00:15:28.000
Utah has had a real problem because you have all these judges that are legislating from
00:15:34.960
the court. That's not the job of a judge. That's not what a judge does.
00:15:41.620
They accepted, Utah accepted, I think it's the Missouri system or the Missouri reform. I don't
00:15:48.200
know what it is. Something to do with Missouri. And what it means is they're going to get together
00:15:52.620
with all of the legal experts and the legal experts are going to say to the governor, these
00:15:56.780
are the ones you should pick from. Oh, okay. No, no. Can we stop being a country,
00:16:04.740
run by experts? We see exactly what the experts have done in every category. Stop it.
00:16:13.380
So they decided because the court system is overwhelmed. No, not the Supreme Court. The
00:16:20.160
federal courts are the state, the state courts are, but not the state Supreme Court. There's
00:16:25.780
a massive backlog in the lower courts, you know, and people have been begging, Hey, help us,
00:16:31.240
help us. And they were ignored. So they decided to expand the Supreme Court. Why? That wasn't
00:16:38.620
overrun. It wasn't overwhelmed. This is not about efficiency. This is all about control. And I
00:16:45.740
understand you have bad judges and they've been legislating, but you don't do this, Utah.
00:16:52.000
You should hear history echoing here. Okay. Cause this is what happens all the time. When a uni
00:17:01.380
party takes hold, the Republicans, you know, the Republicans have had control of Utah forever.
00:17:08.240
And so they're doing exactly what's happening in Texas. They get soft, they get mushy, they get
00:17:13.160
embarrassed that they actually believe in the constitution. And when power moves as a single
00:17:19.440
organism, protecting itself, correcting its losses, punishing resistance, this is what they do.
00:17:26.840
They made all these mistakes, all these compromises. And then what happens after the
00:17:31.400
compromises are there, they see what the result is. And they're like, Oh, I shouldn't have done that.
00:17:35.060
Okay. Well, let's do something even more dumb. Let's pack the Supreme court of the state.
00:17:42.180
Republicans, you don't get a pass here because Democrats would do it too. That argument
00:17:47.340
damns the Republic. It doesn't save it. It damns it. A legislature that expands a court after losing
00:17:54.360
cases is not defending a Republic. It's announcing constitutional limits only apply, you know, unless
00:18:01.200
they're inconvenient. What kind of hypocrites are running the, the GOP. And here's the deeper problem
00:18:09.300
problem that nobody wants to say out loud. For decades, our universities have been captured by
00:18:14.760
ideologues who openly despise the constitution. I have a, I have a podcast coming, uh, with, uh,
00:18:22.680
oh gosh, what's his name? Constitutional scholar. Uh, yeah. Jonathan Turley. It's coming out this week.
00:18:29.740
And he was talking, he kept ringing the bell. You don't understand what's happening in the
00:18:33.200
universities, Glenn. It's Marxism. And they're all against the constitution. They're teaching
00:18:38.140
Marxism, not as theory, but as morality. And they're training our lawyers and our judges and our
00:18:43.520
journalists and the bureaucrats to see the problem as, as something to be managed, not framework to be
00:18:50.780
defended because the framework is just not good anymore. The media overwhelmingly drawn from the
00:18:57.780
same institutions doesn't, you know, it doesn't check this drift. It sanctifies it. And in a state
00:19:06.140
that was raised on the constitution, you know, better than this. Have you just grown timid?
00:19:18.160
Apologizing before you even stand up, square your shoulders and say, this is what the constitution
00:19:23.220
says. These are our founding principles. Why are you shrinking from conflict? As if defending
00:19:30.520
principles is somehow impolite, it is not impolite. It is required of you to stand.
00:19:36.980
A Republican can, cannot survive this kind of shyness. I know you're polite. I know you don't
00:19:44.160
want to, I know you want to get along with everybody. You must stand or you will lose everything. You're
00:19:50.920
going to become California. And then you think that, you think that state's going to last? Are you
00:19:56.120
kidding me? One side is ruthless and the other side is reserved and the ruthless always win. I know
00:20:04.580
that's why we pack the coat of the court. No, you don't violate your own principles or you become
00:20:10.740
everything that you despise. Utah once prided itself on being different, unusual, peculiar, grounded,
00:20:19.660
constitutionally serious. You're not. This, your road you're on. It's not leading you to any of that.
00:20:28.580
When courts become political tools, when legislatures punish judges for rulings, instead of fixing the
00:20:36.080
law, when every law is answered with structural manipulation, you don't get Utah, you get California.
00:20:44.140
Not all, not all at once, not overnight, but inevitably, inevitably you get it and you're
00:20:51.220
almost there. And once you cross this line, which you just crossed, there's no neutral ground left.
00:20:58.100
Every future majority is going to feel justified doing exactly the same thing, only faster and only
00:21:03.360
harsher. You think they're going to stop at seven? You had five. You increased it to seven because
00:21:09.220
it's overwhelmed. That was a lie. That's a lie. Numbers are numbers. Math is math.
00:21:14.140
Sorry, GOP. Math is universal. And some of us know the difference between an overwhelmed system
00:21:23.960
and one that's not. Math is just a number. This is how separation of power has become a memory
00:21:33.340
instead of a guardrail. I'm going to show you what just happened in Texas, okay? Utah and Texas.
00:21:38.840
This isn't just a bad bill. This isn't just a bad bill. This is a warning flare to the rest of the
00:21:43.980
country. Republics that ignore warning flares, you don't get a second chance on this one. When you
00:21:51.900
start screwing around with the balance of a state or national Supreme Court, your republic is destined
00:22:01.080
for disaster, okay? That's just the truth. I don't like saying it. I don't want to be the one saying it.
00:22:08.840
But if you're doing it, somebody's got to point it out and saying, what are you doing?
00:22:14.740
Do you want that to happen at the federal level? You just set a precedence.
00:22:19.880
It's not going to stop there. Oh yeah, but we're always going to control. Oh, are you? Are you? Have you seen the
00:22:27.600
numbers moving into your state? Have you seen what's happened to Fort Worth just this weekend?
00:22:35.300
That's not conservative anymore. Fort Worth, it's known as Cowtown.
00:22:43.020
That's not Dallas. That was the conservative part. Nope, not anymore. Not anymore because
00:22:50.520
Republicans were just like, we're Texas. We'll always be Texas. Have you seen the numbers of the
00:22:56.840
people moving in from California? Florida, I warn you, have you seen the numbers moving in
00:23:01.940
from New York? These people are not the ones that moved because they had a point.
00:23:06.540
They now moved because it's just too expensive. It's just too crazy up there with taxes.
00:23:12.100
They don't know they were the ones who built all of that system. Be careful. Be careful.
00:23:19.980
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All right. Glenn Beck Program from the East Coast of North America on the Space Coast. Where it's cold,
00:25:09.900
we still have iguanas falling from the trees. It's like some weird, I don't know, some weird sci-fi
00:25:15.200
movie here. I don't understand. But we're glad you're here. Thank you for listening. Let me give
00:25:21.600
you a little bit of history here on something. Something happened as I'm marking America's 250th,
00:25:29.580
and I'm looking at all the things that happened that are of importance. And today, in 1801,
00:25:36.520
the U.S. Supreme Court heard its very first case in Washington, D.C.
00:25:42.660
Court had existed on paper since 1789, but it really hadn't really begun to function as an
00:25:50.060
independent branch at all. It wasn't an arm of the Congress or the presidency. It was on itself. And
00:25:55.200
in fact, at the beginning, up until FDR, the court was not in a fancy building. It was actually in the
00:26:01.240
basement of the Capitol because the designers forgot, oh yeah, we got another branch. That's
00:26:06.860
how unimportant it was supposed to be. And judicial legitimacy in America was built slowly and quietly
00:26:14.040
and deliberately. And it wasn't based on force or anything else. It was built, the credibility of
00:26:21.300
the court came through restraint. Okay. The constitution is to restrain both, you know, all,
00:26:31.780
all three branches. Okay. That's what the constitution is. It's handcuffs. Something yesterday
00:26:38.980
happened that was very important in a federal courtroom. Okay. First of all, yesterday you have
00:26:44.640
Utah losing its mind and adding justices to their state Supreme Court. Thank you for that. Thank you.
00:26:53.240
We're not going to pay for that as a nation. No, no, no. But thank you for the precedent on that.
00:26:57.680
Then yesterday in Texas, something happened that has very little to do with immigration policy,
00:27:04.540
but everything to do with power. Uh, and it shows today on the anniversary of the first court cases,
00:27:12.040
how far the courts have fallen yesterday, a federal district judge, uh, Fred Byrie was presented with
00:27:23.220
habeas corpus petition filed on behalf of an, uh, of, uh, of a, um, asylum seeker and his five-year-old
00:27:30.700
son. That's routine. That happens all the time. Habeas corpus exists to ensure the government is not
00:27:38.300
holding somebody unlawfully. So if ICE had picked up somebody unlawfully, all you have to do, you file
00:27:45.520
the habeas corpus and the judge is meant to ask, answer one very narrow question. Is this detention
00:27:53.580
lawful under the existing laws and statutes and constitutional standards? Okay. That's, that's all
00:28:02.820
they're supposed to answer. Yes or no, but that's not what happened. That's not where this opinion
00:28:08.480
stopped. No, no, no. Instead of limiting the ruling to the legal facts of detention, the judge
00:28:14.620
launched into some sweeping tirade, some indictment of the executive branch, accusing the administration
00:28:23.840
of incompetence, authoritarianism, cruelty, um, ignorance of American history, which one of my
00:28:30.760
favorite, and then he's quoting the Bible, talking about moral indecency. He invoked the Magna Carta,
00:28:36.940
the declaration of independence, the fourth amendment, the Bible and Thomas Jefferson.
00:28:42.440
But here's the thing. It wasn't to interpret or even answer the habeas corpus thing. It had nothing
00:28:48.840
to do that. It was meant only to condemn policy choices. Okay. Okay. Might been a line that was
00:28:59.320
crossed their one, uh, you know, on that one, because judges are not philosophers. That's not why you're
00:29:04.540
there. You're not moral narrators. You're, you're not the ombudsman that just, you know, is there to
00:29:12.880
take care of all of the national policy disputes. Your authority derives from restraint, not speeches.
00:29:20.520
Yet in this opinion, the judge didn't just not merely rule that an administrative warrant failed
00:29:29.240
constitutional muster. Um, he asserted that all administrative immigration warrants were
00:29:34.820
illegitimate because they were issued by an executive branch that itself, uh, was inherently
00:29:41.220
unconstitutional, unconstitutional. I mean, because they are fascists. Oh, really? No, wait a minute.
00:29:48.320
I thought, cause I'm just looking at how this is supposed to work. I have it up on a chalkboard
00:29:51.920
today, uh, how this is supposed to work. That's not how this system is supposed to work. That that's,
00:29:57.220
that's not an interpretation. That's legislation from the bench. And we're still the, the opinion
00:30:05.820
openly attacks the motives claiming the government is pursuing, um, daily deportation quotas, which
00:30:13.620
traumatize, traumatize children, lust for power and abandon all decency. Where are those facts? I'm
00:30:22.360
sorry. Could you read those facts into the record? Your honor? I mean, that sounds like a nice opinion
00:30:26.840
and it might be your opinion, but where are the facts of that? Where, and what does it have to do with
00:30:34.160
deciding the habeas petition? Cause that's all that this is you're supposed to do. Is this arrest
00:30:42.600
legal or not? That's what you're supposed to do. You know, it's funny because I started with the
00:30:49.700
first cases of the judicial branch happening on this day, 1801 to show you how unimportant the
00:30:58.140
Supreme court was supposed to be. But more importantly, the Supreme court was designed to be the least
00:31:03.220
dangerous branch. Okay. The one that was to decide cases, if they were constitutional, not a crusade.
00:31:10.440
When, when judges start to go on a crusade and they begin issuing moral verdicts on policy,
00:31:18.520
you're not a referee anymore. You know, that's, that's like, that's like, uh, you know, a referee
00:31:24.140
down on the field saying, you know what, I'm not going to let that be a touchdown because have you
00:31:31.760
seen, I mean, the coaches are morally reprehensible. Well, that doesn't have anything to do with what's on
00:31:39.220
the field. You want to talk about that? Talk about that after the game and shout about that all you
00:31:44.660
want after the game. But we're asking you, was that a touchdown or not? Not whether the coach,
00:31:48.900
you know, or the owner or anybody else is immoral.
00:31:55.100
Constitution does not empower judges to correct policy outcomes. They dislike.
00:32:00.060
All it empowers them to do is to say whether a law was followed or not. And this really super matters
00:32:08.380
because when judges abandon neutrality, they weaken the rule of law they claim to defend.
00:32:15.700
If one judge can nullify executive enforcement priorities by editorial decree, which I've never
00:32:21.880
heard, you don't think everybody else is going to do it in the same or opposite direction?
00:32:27.400
This is how law becomes politics by another name.
00:32:36.840
A republic survives not because every branch agrees, but because every branch knows what it
00:32:42.240
is supposed to do and its limits. What is the problem? If you are against fascism, totalitarianism,
00:32:48.700
what are you actually saying? Don't give the presidential branch so much power. That's what you're
00:32:54.980
supposed to be saying, but nobody's saying that. They're just saying bad, orange man bad. What about
00:33:00.420
the president's power that was under Biden and Obama and George Bush? It's out of whack. That's
00:33:08.880
what you're saying. That's what you're feeling. When you say that it's authoritarian, they can come in
00:33:13.000
and sweep us up at night and put us in jail. That's because the administrative branch has too much
00:33:18.860
power. It's not balanced. You've got to balance the power. This didn't have anything to do with
00:33:27.960
immigration enforcement. And that's not where the danger of this got. The danger is the precedent
00:33:34.080
that he sent. Precedent once set, rarely cares what side you're on. So let me just take you quickly
00:33:40.120
to the chalkboard. I'll explain it if you happen to be listening to us. If you're watching us at
00:33:43.880
glennbeck.com, you're a member of the torch. By the way, thank you for becoming a member of the torch.
00:33:48.760
If you're not yet, go to glennbeck.com, sign up. It's $10 a month for this month. You get all kinds
00:33:54.300
of perks because you are a founding member this month if you sign up this month. But also, I'm
00:34:00.520
going to guarantee that I'm going to make it inflation-proof. Your price will never increase
00:34:04.540
for the life of your membership. Okay. So here's what I put up on the chalkboard today.
00:34:08.580
Okay. This is how it's supposed to work. Under the authority given by Congress, Congress makes
00:34:17.500
the law and then the president and the administration enforces the law and the justice is supposed to be
00:34:23.180
the referee. The executive goes out and arrests somebody because there's a law that says that
00:34:31.360
he's going to enforce. Okay. And he arrests. Well, if you think you've been wrongly arrested,
00:34:36.840
you file a habeas corpus petition. Okay. That's somebody saying, I shouldn't have been detained.
00:34:45.120
Is my detention even lawful? That's what the judge is supposed to answer. The case is very,
00:34:52.680
very narrow. It's really simple. Facts and narrow. You got to bind the facts. That's what you're
00:35:01.460
judging on. You're not judging on anything else. The facts, and it's a very narrow question.
00:35:05.660
Should I be detained? Is this legal? Okay. Not moral, legal. Then the judge does the legal review.
00:35:14.740
Did Congress authorize this law? Yep. Did the executive follow the statute? Yep. Was this a,
00:35:22.000
was the constitutional minimums followed? In other words, did I, did I read them the, you know,
00:35:27.660
did I read them their rights of the Miranda Act? Yep. Okay. You can't take into motive,
00:35:33.940
policy, moral judgment. That's not part of the case. That's your opinion, judge. We're not asking
00:35:40.420
for your opinion. We are asking you to review. Did Congress authorize this? Did the executive
00:35:46.480
follow the statute? Was the constitution minimums met? The answers to all of that, yes. Then the judge
00:35:53.540
decides on those narrow facts. If he feels the guy was unlawfully arrested, he releases him. If he was
00:36:01.140
lawfully arrested, then he remains in custody. That's what it's supposed, that's what's supposed
00:36:06.700
to happen. But what actually happened yesterday in Texas, executive orders were to go out and arrest
00:36:17.460
these guys. It is, they're enforcing the law aggressively. Yes. But let, remember that's up
00:36:24.840
to the administration. Because you'll remember some ministrations say, I'm not going to arrest
00:36:30.200
anybody for any of these laws. Okay. That's just as unconstitutional as, you know, any kind of thing
00:36:38.640
that he's doing. He's not, I mean, he's just saying, I'm going to, I'm going to aggressively enforce
00:36:43.900
the law. I am going to enforce it. Every jot and tittle, we're doing it. That's not, you may not like
00:36:50.380
it, but that's not unconstitutional. Then the habeas corpus is filed and the judge dislikes
00:36:58.000
Trump's policy choices. Strike one against the judge. They file the petition. The judge then
00:37:04.780
expands the role and, and, and, and looks at things that are not in question. He begins to say things
00:37:11.260
not, is it lawful, but is it moral? Is the administration authoritarian? Is the administrative
00:37:18.100
motives corrupt? Is enforcement historically dangerous? Is enforcement of this historically
00:37:24.160
dangerous? Who the hell are you to decide that? Who asked you to decide that? Who asked you to even
00:37:30.280
talk about that? Then he, he issued his opinion, his opinion and made broad declarations. The
00:37:39.180
administration warrants are wrong because they're immoral. Uh, the executive branch doesn't have
00:37:46.280
any legitimacy because it's authoritarian. He goes into historic tyranny, moral condemnation
00:37:51.860
of Donald Trump. Um, he attributes, uh, intent for that. Where did you get that fact? Your,
00:37:58.520
your honor. And then he reads scripture to appeals to scripture, which I, I love. And then he
00:38:04.620
issues this manifesto. You should read this manifesto. It is absolutely incredible. And he, he's not
00:38:10.680
doing it to decide the habeas petition. He's governing. He's not judging anymore. He's governing.
00:38:20.460
So, so he orders the release. Now, maybe that's proper. I don't know because I don't know what the
00:38:27.540
hell he was taking in his facts. The precedent has been blurred. The executive branch is now chilled.
00:38:34.880
The judiciary is politicized and prioritized. And what is that going to do? The same thing that
00:38:42.060
it's going to do in Utah. It invites copycat litigation. It invites copycats in every other
00:38:48.540
state going, well, they did it. It encourages forum shopping, undermines neutrality, you know,
00:38:56.740
and probably the most important difference is supposed to be, this is what the law allows in this case.
00:39:03.620
But instead it became, here's what I believe the government should be allowed to do.
00:39:08.980
That's a crossing. That's a crossing. When a judge answers questions that no one asked,
00:39:15.680
they're no longer interpreting. They're writing the law. That's not conservative. That's not
00:39:21.160
progressive. That's simply destabilizing and not the American way. More in a minute. Let me tell you
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You know, the host does have to pee every now and then. Glenn Beck will be right back.
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No one is illegal on stolen land. Billy Eilish. Grammys. Oh, that is so cute. She also wore a
00:42:42.400
ice out pen. Uh, but she was so brave, so very brave to walk into a move, a room of Hollywood
00:42:48.800
celebrities and say something like that. So brave. Oh, so very brave of you, Billy. Um, now she was
00:42:55.480
saying that, you know, you don't have a country. There is no such thing as a illegal or have a
00:43:00.260
country on the stolen land. You know, the problem is, um, her, her house, uh, her mansion in Los
00:43:07.820
Angeles, uh, lies on what was historically indigenous land. So I'm wondering if she's going to give that
00:43:15.580
up. I mean, do we have to give up all the land at once? Are you willing to just set the example? I
00:43:19.700
mean, walk the walk, Billy. Are you going to give your mansion away and walk away from it and say,
00:43:25.580
you know what? It belongs to the whoever. I mean, if you're Hispanic, span, Spain, Spain,
00:43:33.580
where did your people come from? From Spain. Who did they take the land from? The Aztecs.
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Who did the Aztecs take the land from? For the love of Pete. Don't be so stupid.
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Pass it on. Crank the game. Glenn Beck is on. Glenn Beck is on.
00:45:18.600
Hello America. Welcome to the Glenn Beck program. Well, day number two of the torch and
00:45:47.980
thousands of people have signed up. And I was just looking at the countries that are listening
00:45:53.520
to us now online. We have people in Canada, the UK, Brazil, the Philippines, Spain, Ireland,
00:45:59.920
Italy, Denmark, Netherlands, South Africa, Mexico, India, New Zealand, Barbados, Serbia,
00:46:06.360
one person in Serbia, Hungary, Albania, Bulgaria, Romania, Virgin Islands, France, Czech Republic,
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Norway, Nigeria, Switzerland, Israel, Vietnam, Bahamas, Colombia, Dominican Republic, Panama,
00:46:20.300
the UAE, and Argentina. Thank you so much for listening wherever you are and joining us
00:46:26.120
at glennbeck.com. Join the torch now. Become a founding member and your price will never go up.
00:46:33.280
And we have some really cool things. You get a special founders pin that you can have for a lapel
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month and lots of different things, including you are going to get a notice of how to join us on
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events before the audience. So you'll get first pick of everything. You can do that at glennbeck.com
00:47:03.120
slash torch. Make sure you join us now. Okay. Allie Best Stuckey is joining us in a second.
00:47:07.360
Hillary Clinton came after Allie Beth. Another badge of honor for her to wear. We're going to
00:47:14.980
talk to her about toxic empathy. I don't understand how they define empathy here because they don't
00:47:21.420
seem very empathetic, quite honestly. We're going to talk to Allie Beth about that in just a second.
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Hey, Allie, how are you? I'm doing well. How are you? I am great. Allie Bestucki, who is the
00:48:43.240
host of Relatable on Blaze TV and author of a great book, Toxic Empathy. So I found out this weekend
00:48:50.940
that I was in the Epstein files. And I first went, what? And then I realized it was him
00:48:59.220
and some other dirtbag writing about basically how much they hate me and my listeners. And I was like,
00:49:05.960
oh, I got to make a t-shirt. I was in the Epstein files because they hated me. I love that.
00:49:12.180
Yeah, that is a huge compliment. Yeah, it is, isn't it? You've got an even bigger one. You've got
00:49:19.540
Hillary Clinton writing an op-ed about how toxic your toxic empathy book is. I mean, that's got to
00:49:29.080
feel good. Yeah. You know, I was talking to my dad and husband, just having a nice afternoon chat. And
00:49:35.440
I looked out at my phone and it started buzzing. And I got a message that said, Hillary brought up
00:49:40.860
Clinton just wrote a hit piece on you, in all caps. And I couldn't believe it until I read it
00:49:47.500
myself. And what's interesting about this is that, you know, my book is not new. It came out
00:49:52.360
in October of 2024. So about 15 months later, we've got former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton
00:49:59.400
taking out 6,000 words in The Atlantic to talk about how terrible my book is. You know, it is a badge
00:50:06.820
of honor. It also helped book sales a little bit. But honestly, I'm just trying to figure out what
00:50:14.320
her strategy is. So explain toxic empathy, what it is. Yes. Yes. This is something that she didn't
00:50:22.620
distinguish in her op-ed to no surprise. You know, I think the left actually understands the
00:50:28.160
concept. They talk about things like toxic masculinity. And what they'll say is that not all masculinity is
00:50:33.580
toxic, but this form of masculinity is toxic. And yet, when I talk about toxic empathy, they pretend
00:50:39.860
that I'm saying that all compassion is toxic and bad. And that's not what I'm saying at all. I say
00:50:45.300
that empathy becomes toxic when it leads you to do three things, to affirm sin, to validate lies, or to
00:50:51.220
support destructive policies. So your empathy becomes toxic when you feel so deeply for one particular
00:50:57.920
person, a purported victim, that you are blinded to both reality and morality. You are so focused on
00:51:04.020
this person that you forget that there are other people on the other side of the moral equation.
00:51:08.460
So you feel so deeply for the man who says that he is born in the wrong body and is meant to be a
00:51:13.520
woman that you forget about biological reality and ignore the rights and the privacy and the fairness of
00:51:19.320
the girls on the other side of the equation. So I think that toxic empathy is really the explanation
00:51:25.060
for the support of all kinds of destructive policies when it comes to immigration, crime,
00:51:30.460
gender, abortion. And so it doesn't surprise me at all that progressives don't like that we're
00:51:35.700
giving that a name and calling it out. So, Allie, explain it. Go specific on
00:51:41.340
the use of toxic empathy or the demonstration of toxic empathy, for instance, in Minnesota.
00:51:50.220
Yeah. Yes, such a good question. So we see this decontextualized image of this young boy,
00:51:57.760
and he's standing with law enforcement officers. And immediately, and rightly, it evokes a sense of
00:52:03.880
sadness and outrage and pity for this boy who was put in this situation. And then a narrative is
00:52:09.840
attached to it. And instead of asking, hey, is this true? Or what's the alternative explanation?
00:52:15.380
Our hearts want to believe that it's true, because it seems right that this boy was kidnapped,
00:52:19.940
by these ICE agents, he was separated from his family. And this is the cruelty of the Trump
00:52:24.820
administration. There's some confirmation bias there. But really, we just feel so deeply for
00:52:30.660
this boy that we believe the victim narrative that has been attached to him. And then because of that,
00:52:36.840
you say riots are justified, the protests are justified, and abolishing ICE or defunding the police
00:52:44.060
are all justified in the name of helping little boys like Liam. The problem is your empathy for that
00:52:51.400
boy has actually blinded you to what is true. It has paralyzed your critical thinking. So you're not
00:52:56.700
asking the question that all of us need to ask. How do I know that's true? What's the greater context?
00:53:02.320
Can I believe this person? What are the sources being cited? And what is the other side of the story that
00:53:09.340
we are not being told? That is the danger of allowing your empathy to overtake or eclipse your
00:53:19.160
critical thinking skills. We have to have both compassion and this truth and love approach that is
00:53:25.880
you know, necessary in our critical thinking process as we decide on policy.
00:53:31.140
You know, when you look at the Democrats, I've got something I'm going to talk about
00:53:37.140
here in a little while about how the things that they're shouting at people, the things they're
00:53:43.380
saying about, you know, I hope you die. I hope your wife dies. I hope your children are killed.
00:53:48.780
All of these things. And they say, they claim they're doing it out of love. They claim they're
00:53:57.640
on the side of love. And those two things don't connect at all. I mean, that was the genius of
00:54:07.100
Martin Luther King and Gandhi and Jesus. He connected them. Your words and your actions must demonstrate
00:54:14.120
love and never cross into hatred or retaliation, revenge, any of that stuff. And they held the
00:54:21.960
line. These guys don't have a line. And so, and I think it's because of the loss of eternal
00:54:28.240
truth. They've, they've lost or maybe never had some of them, the understanding of what Jesus
00:54:34.620
was actually teaching or what Martin Luther King was actually teaching. And so they've become
00:54:39.960
the exact opposite of those. And yet they don't see it.
00:54:47.100
Yeah. Gosh, so many good points there. There was a book that came out before mine in 2016 that wrote
00:54:52.500
about the dangers of empathy from a secular psychological perspective by a Yale psychologist
00:54:57.720
named Paul Bloom. And he talks about this concept of being full of empathy, but mean as hell. And what
00:55:03.640
he measured was that in students that measured higher on empathy, that they are actually crueler to,
00:55:09.960
the out group. So what happens is you feel so deeply for one purported victim that anyone who
00:55:15.840
you see as in opposition to that victim. So in opposition to the illegal immigrant, in opposition
00:55:20.620
to the woman seeking abortion, you can justify cruelty and hatred against them because in your mind,
00:55:26.360
you are fighting against the oppressor. And so really what happens there is when you exchange
00:55:31.980
empathy for virtue, Christian virtue, what you're talking about, it actually doesn't make you more
00:55:37.940
loving on the whole. It actually can make you cruel towards the people that you now perceive as your
00:55:44.580
enemy. And that is why exchanging the truth in love, exchanging true virtue for empathy is actually a
00:55:53.680
So my, my concern, my, the thing I think of every day is how do we point this out? How do we save people?
00:56:06.420
Because I think this, this is why they emphasized on your feelings. They emphasized your feelings,
00:56:13.200
your feelings, your feelings, you know, and Ben Shapiro for years said, facts don't care about your feelings,
00:56:18.440
but that's why they emphasize feelings. Because if you concentrate on feelings, then reason shuts down
00:56:24.440
and, and then you get enraged and it shuts down even further. So you have all of these people that I
00:56:30.780
think they're actually thinking they're doing the right thing, but they've shut down the thinking
00:56:37.140
process so deeply that they're, they're not, I mean, they're just trapped. So how do you reverse this?
00:56:44.820
Yes, because feelings also don't care about your facts and that's exactly why they emphasize the
00:56:50.520
emotion. And so yes, facts and logic, all of those things are so important and do have the power. They
00:56:56.020
can have the power to be persuasive and pull people out of their delusion. However, I also think that
00:57:01.420
we need to tell the story on the other side of every issue. Something I do in my book, I tell the story
00:57:08.580
that the media is telling, for example, about a woman who wants an abortion, but has been forced by these
00:57:13.400
evil pro-life laws in Texas to keep her child. And of course the left sees that as something that is
00:57:19.420
draconian. But I tell the story from the baby's perspective. This is what would have happened to this
00:57:25.100
baby had there not been this pro-life law in Texas. She would have been poisoned. She would have been
00:57:29.880
dismembered. She would have been tossed aside like toxic waste. It was actually because of this pro-life
00:57:35.140
law that she was carried, that she was delivered, loved and named and buried like the dignified image
00:57:40.000
bearer of God that she was. Sometimes people need to see that there is another side of the story that
00:57:45.920
demands your heart too. There are Kate Steinleys, there are Lake and Rileys, there are Molly Tibbettses
00:57:53.200
who are also your neighbors that need your compassion and your eyes and your love. And when you allow people
00:57:59.080
to zoom out and show them, there are other people on the other side of this political issue that you're
00:58:04.600
talking about, sometimes that expands their understanding to the point that they can be
00:58:09.980
persuaded by facts. I'm just making a list here of, as I'm listening to you, I'm making a list of
00:58:16.600
the things that led to all this that you have to reverse. I mean, this is why feelings were so
00:58:22.940
important. This is why ends justify the means that was so important to them. Because you can do anything
00:58:29.760
if just what happens in the end is all that matters. You can justify anything. Why they kept
00:58:36.380
shouting, shut up, shut up, shut up, don't ask questions, just go along with it. I mean, all of
00:58:42.260
these things built this army of almost automatons that are just not thinking for themselves.
00:58:53.140
When you think about those agitators that infiltrated that church in St. Paul, one of the
00:58:58.680
refrains that they were repeating was, hands up, don't shoot. So still, however many years later,
00:59:03.880
is it 12 years later, maybe, they are still repeating that refrain from Michael Brown's
00:59:11.800
shooting that has been debunked by the Obama DOJ, by the Washington Post. To your point about the
00:59:18.960
is justify the means, like a lie is justified. Agitation, violence, cruelty is all justified if you
00:59:27.100
are defeating Nazis, which of course is why the local politicians rhetoric there is so dangerous,
00:59:33.420
because these people feel absolutely justified in traumatizing elderly women and children because
00:59:40.640
they're doing so in the name of defeating fascism. Real quick, how do you solve it?
00:59:46.300
Real quick. What a stupid thing to say. We all are doing our part to show people there's another
00:59:57.320
side of this story. I'm on the battleground of Instagram, trying to pull people out of this
01:00:03.200
propaganda that women are so easily sucked into and remind them God has given you a brain. There's
01:00:08.520
a lot of people that make a lot of money based on you being stupid, and you don't have to fall into
01:00:13.440
that trap. You are a smart person who's able to think and see the other side of this story, so
01:00:18.120
join me in the journey of seeking truth. Allie Best-Stuckey, the name of the book is Toxic
01:00:25.220
Empathy. The author of the op-ed Against That Theory and Against Allie is Hillary Clinton,
01:00:32.800
so there's a good endorsement, and she's also the host of Relatable on Blaze TV. Allie, always good to
01:00:38.400
talk to you. Thank you. Thank you so much. You bet. All right, Relief Factor is our sponsor.
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How will it feel to be out of pain? 10 seconds and back to the show.
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We check in with Jason, who is in charge of our Torch Insider feed,
01:02:00.880
which happens alongside this show, if you're watching it on glennbeck.com or on the Torch
01:02:05.320
and you're a member. What is the big topic among the Torch subscribers today? Jason, what
01:02:13.120
Hey, Glenn. A lot of people commenting in from Utah saying that there's a lot of craziness
01:02:20.080
going on with Utah politics. And not just Utah politics, but people in other states are saying
01:02:26.640
that, you know, don't forget a lot of these other states, a lot of shady stuff is happening.
01:02:31.120
It's almost like the left on a national level has doubled down on not only policies, like
01:02:37.340
progressive policies from the Republicans in states like Utah, but, you know, campaign financing,
01:02:42.980
stuff like what's happening in Texas. That's worrying a lot of people right now.
01:02:46.100
Uh, I will tell you the Republicans, the Senate now has the votes for the save act, but it's
01:02:55.620
going to require Thune to stand up and enforce the, uh, the vocal filibuster rule. In other
01:03:03.440
words, you can't just say filibuster and then go home. Um, you have to talk it out. You, you've
01:03:08.940
got, you know, 30 days where you can stand up there and filibuster all you want, but then
01:03:13.080
it goes to a vote. Uh, and I'm not sure Thune is going to do that. I mean, it's, we're going
01:03:17.260
to need to call him and ask politely, ask politely, be nice. Don't turn people, don't turn people
01:03:25.080
around who we need ask politely, please support the, uh, the spoken filibuster rule when it
01:03:33.460
comes to the save act. Cause that's going to come up to a vote. And I'm telling you, if we
01:03:37.460
don't get the save act, here's what the save act is. Okay. How Democrats can be against
01:03:42.060
this? Not a single one of them is going to vote for it. And this is like 80, 20 in favor
01:03:46.640
with the American people, maybe even 90, 10. It's the most popular policy. You have to have
01:03:52.240
ID when you go and vote and the Democrats are determined to defeat it because they know
01:03:59.440
once you have to have ID, the vote changes. And if that, I mean, we should have that, even
01:04:07.480
if it would be on our side against us, we should have voter ID. How hard is that? You
01:04:14.360
have to have voter ID to go to a hospital. You have to have ID. If you go pick up medicine
01:04:20.520
at CVS, you need to have ID everywhere. If you ever travel on a plane, what kind of people
01:04:26.760
don't have ID, some sort of ID? Well, well, you might have your, your Panamanian ID, but
01:04:35.200
you don't have an American. Well, then you don't vote. Then you don't vote. It's just
01:04:41.160
that easy. And there's all these crazy things that are happening. And the reason why he was
01:04:46.480
talking about Utah was because Utah just packed the courts. They just took their Supreme Court
01:04:52.500
and added justice. The Republicans did that. How stupid is that? Jason, I was listening to
01:04:59.760
you during the break before I went on with Allie and you said there, you were reading something
01:05:05.080
from a student that said they were glad I was talking about it today and use the chalkboard
01:05:10.800
because they understood it. And they were writing a paper for, for college class or something.
01:05:15.080
Yeah. Writing a paper. And a lot of people chimed in and said, they want all of your chalkboards
01:05:18.860
on like a database so they can take a lot of this stuff to schools to do this on a larger scale.
01:05:24.080
So it helps them explain their points. But they want to like a, like a big, you know, database
01:05:28.700
of all your chalkboards visually so they can check it out. It'll all be done. We, by the end of
01:05:33.420
February, we will have every single show I've ever done, every speech I've ever given, every chalkboard
01:05:39.360
I've ever done will be in the database. And the goal is to soon be able to have, you know,
01:05:47.660
the insiders have people who are Torch members be able to say, I need a chalkboard on this and it
01:05:52.580
will pull it up from whatever show it was, whatever I did. So you'll have that database.
01:05:56.760
That's one of the things we're working on. Um, and, and we invite you to join us as we help build a,
01:06:02.960
a powerful, powerful educational tool with the Torch. Uh, join us now, join us. It's 10 bucks a month.
01:06:10.680
If you join this month, your price will never go up for the lifetime of your membership.
01:06:13.960
All you have to do is go to glennbeck.com slash Torch glennbeck.com slash Torch. Join us, sign up,
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keyword, baby. The torch is live. Go to gledbeck.com slash torch today, become an insider and get in
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on the conversations with me right now. Let me just give you a few quick stories here. Uh, the
01:08:03.600
treasurer of a democratic organization in Arizona has resigned from the post and was fired from his
01:08:07.840
real estate job after he's caught on video shouting obscenities. The video was captured at a protest at
01:08:13.360
the zip sports grill, uh, after the chain was targeted by immigration officials. Uh, all of zip's
01:08:19.880
locations were shut down after search warrants were executed at 14 locations on the same day. Um, this
01:08:26.060
official said, I really regret the manner I expressed myself, blah, blah, blah. I bet you do, or do you
01:08:31.800
really? Um, he is on video yelling at women who were taking selfies in support of ice operations. And he said,
01:08:41.580
you little effing sees nasty girls who love ice and take photos with them. Um, and, uh, he was
01:08:50.560
berating them, yada, yada, yada. And I saw that and I thought, how is this a side of love? How is this
01:08:59.420
a side of love? I mean, the Fetterman came out and he said, this is not stop targeting ice and stop
01:09:07.180
targeting their families. This is, this is, this is beyond what reasonable people do. This is beyond
01:09:16.640
what people who want to reconcile and come together and build a better nation together do. There's no
01:09:22.720
coming together after this. This is why they're talking about rounding people up. You better watch
01:09:27.280
yourself because we're going to round you up. Really? How is that going to solve anything? How is that
01:09:33.200
going to help us come together in the end? You can't, you can't just have a country. And I say
01:09:39.140
this to both sides. We cannot have a country where one side wins and the other side loses. There has to
01:09:44.320
be a reckoning, a coming to the truth again, a reconciliation with the truth. And the, the
01:09:52.540
Democrats are on the losing side of this, you know, in, in, in, uh, the LAPD, the chief just came out
01:09:59.640
because they just passed a law. Um, governor Newsom said, uh, there's a new law and it restricts
01:10:07.860
ice from wearing any masks. And he said to the LAPD, you've got to do it. And the chief said,
01:10:13.760
that's not safe. That's not safe for them. That's not safe for us. Quote, the reality of one armed
01:10:19.320
agency approaching another armed agency to create conflict over something that would be a misdemeanor
01:10:24.380
either at best or an infraction doesn't make any sense. We're not going to do it. That's a pretty
01:10:30.700
big win. Uh, Katie Wilson, she said she wants the police to gather evidence and, and start, uh,
01:10:38.980
investigating and verifying and documented the activity of ice for potential prosecution.
01:10:46.260
Uh, the head of the police union in Seattle said toothless virtue signaling rhetoric like this has
01:10:52.760
already cost two people, their lives. The concept of pitting two armed law enforcement agencies
01:10:57.780
against each other is ludicrous and it will not happen. I will not allow the Seattle police members
01:11:04.300
to be used as political pawns in Portland. They've gone the other way in Portland. They now are awarding
01:11:10.840
grants, a public taxpayer dollar grants of $10,000 to anybody who will aid, uh, the, um, uh, the,
01:11:22.120
illegals in their County. Well, good for them. Uh, and we're talking to talking to, um, Ali about how
01:11:35.540
do you solve this? I just, I am just struck by how diametrically opposed to everything they say they
01:11:47.020
are. They actually are. You know, Martin Luther King was pretty genius. He, he felt that you just
01:11:58.760
have to hold a mirror up. You just, you know, somebody who is in invoking his name today, they're
01:12:09.260
no longer practicing this, but moral clarity works. If you can still see yourself in the mirror while
01:12:16.160
you're holding it. He didn't believe that love was a slogan or identity. He was not into identity
01:12:22.160
politics. He believed love was a discipline, a costly, deliberate and humiliating discipline
01:12:29.140
sometimes, but a discipline. And he said, now listen, I mean, the guy is so far ahead of his time. He said
01:12:35.760
when anger is untethered from moral restraint, it doesn't stay aimed at the system. It turns on people.
01:12:42.560
And once that happens, the cause begins to rot from the inside.
01:12:49.400
People are not refusing the lie that rage equals righteousness. Martin Luther King knew that.
01:12:57.300
How are these people who are claiming to be on the side of love missing this? You know, one of the
01:13:05.060
great deceptions, I guess, of our time is the belief that intensity proves virtue. If you're
01:13:11.240
so intense about it, then that's your virtue. No, it's not. The louder you scream, the more certain
01:13:17.700
the screamer often feels, the less they're listening. The more you're shouting, the less
01:13:23.680
you're listening, you know, and without, you know, that, that moral certainty, without a humility,
01:13:31.180
with, with just this moral certainty, without humility, you're engaging in self-worship.
01:13:36.840
You know, when somebody convinces themselves that they are on the right side of history,
01:13:41.780
you stop asking any questions about your own actions right now. Okay.
01:13:51.260
We have to become a country that doesn't, we have to understand we can't out, outrage them. Okay.
01:14:14.500
We hold, if we have to look at the behavior that degrades human dignity, even when it comes
01:14:26.420
from our side and withhold any moral endorsement of that, because that unsettles people more than
01:14:36.580
shouting back, you know, when you name the behavior and not the identity, because people
01:14:41.700
feel when you're labeled, how do you feel when people call you a racist? Okay. King didn't say
01:14:47.220
you evil people. He didn't say that. He said, your action is incompatible with justice.
01:14:53.100
Wow. There is a huge difference between hearing you're hateful, you're a racist. And, you know,
01:15:00.720
chasing and dehumanizing people contradicts everything you claim you stand for.
01:15:07.580
And that's what keeps going through my head. Last couple of weeks, I just keep feeling like
01:15:11.820
that's the kind of conversations we have to have this, you know, this, this action is just
01:15:16.160
incompatible with justice. It's not, it's everything you say you're for. I don't, I don't understand it.
01:15:27.680
Reconciliation doesn't mean silence. It means precision. So we have to put the mirror because
01:15:34.220
he really truly believed, I've talked about this for years. He believed when you put good against
01:15:39.300
evil on the same screen, left and right, Americans will still choose good over evil. But that starts to
01:15:47.680
fade. If you don't start, if everybody is engaging in the same behavior, then that, that morality that
01:15:55.520
lives inside of us goes to sleep. So you have to put the mirror next to the slogan because his genius
01:16:01.960
was not shaming. His genius was contrast. He'd place professed values right next to the observable
01:16:10.900
behavior and then let the contradiction speak for itself. And we have that in spades. You're saying
01:16:17.500
this is about compassion and love and you are calling these women, you know, effing C's. How is that
01:16:25.680
love? Love versus intimidation. Peace. How are you for peace if you're harassing? How are you for
01:16:35.560
dignity if, if you're obscene all the time? And if we can be seen always calmly and factually defending
01:16:46.500
ourselves and showing factually and calmly actions that betray stated ideals, people are left with only
01:16:55.100
two options. You have to, you have to choose, you have to repent. Or if you're part of that system, I
01:17:04.120
guess another choice you have is you abandon the moral language you've been using as a cover.
01:17:10.060
But, but any of those outcomes is clarifying and that's what we need. We need to see things
01:17:19.400
clearly on all sides. And the hardest truth is that not everybody wants reconciliation. They don't,
01:17:25.980
there, I was, I was on, recorded something with Piers Morgan. It's on today with Piers Morgan. I'm on
01:17:32.440
with him today. And we were talking about this and I said, you know, the problem is we can't hold two
01:17:37.940
thoughts at once that there are good people that disagree with the way the president is, you know,
01:17:42.960
conducting this. And then also there are a lot of people that are organized Marxists that believe
01:17:50.920
that this is stolen land, turtle Island, and America should be wiped off the face of the earth.
01:17:56.160
Those two things are true. And part, those people, the last group of people, they don't want peace.
01:18:03.660
They want moral permission to hate. King understood all of this. He didn't measure success by immediate
01:18:15.160
conversion, but, but whether or not the silent majority could still tell right from wrong,
01:18:21.100
can the silent majority still tell the difference between right and wrong? It's not our job to wake
01:18:28.560
everybody up. It's to keep the line between good and evil visible when others are trying to blur it.
01:18:35.560
That's the most important thing you can do today. Keep the line by the way you behave, the way you talk,
01:18:42.780
the way you move, everything that you do, make that line so visibly clear that you are good and
01:18:50.800
kind and gracious and loving. You are firm. You know, what you believe is true. You don't tolerate lies,
01:18:58.900
but you don't involve in yourself in hysteria or, or shouting slogans or anything else. If you can
01:19:07.400
help keep that line really clear, Americans will still choose decency. They will. Nothing exposes
01:19:18.940
irrational hatred faster than somebody who refuses to dehumanize, refuses to retaliate.
01:19:28.120
You know, our moms used to say, well, just, just ignore them. They'll go away. And you're like,
01:19:32.680
mom, they won't go away. But actually she was right. There's nothing more infuriating to people
01:19:38.020
than just going, yeah, I don't really think of you. I'm not going to play that game. I'm not afraid of
01:19:41.980
you. I'm not going to play that game. If you refuse to lie about what you're seeing,
01:19:49.600
calm courage is just infuriating to extremists because it can't be dismissed as evil. They
01:19:56.100
can't say you're a fascist Nazi. If you're not shouting like a fascist Nazi, they are.
01:20:01.900
Then everybody standing around goes, wait, which one's the fascist Nazi here? That's why you have to,
01:20:06.960
this is why King worked. King believed the greatest weapon against moral collapse was example.
01:20:14.540
Example. And that is not weakness. That is strength under restraint. What is Donald Trump doing right
01:20:21.560
now with, um, with Iran? He is sending an armada over there, but at the same time he is saying,
01:20:28.760
I'll negotiate with you. Let's negotiate. He's not, they're screaming all kinds of threats and
01:20:34.440
everything else. And he's like, I don't want to do any of this, but if that's the way you're going
01:20:38.140
to play, I'm prepared for that. But let's sit down on the table and negotiate. There's a difference.
01:20:45.920
One works when you have a Judeo-Christian world. Now that's slipping through our fingers. And again,
01:20:51.980
that's why you can't surrender the moral language to those who abuse the moral language. You have to be
01:20:59.380
super, super clear in your own life, in your own day-to-day actions and everything you do and say
01:21:04.920
online is the most important. Put good next to evil. Name the contradiction. Refuse to become
01:21:13.460
what you oppose. That's how awakenings have happened before. That's how they'll happen again. That's how
01:21:20.080
we will solve this issue. More in a minute. Let me tell you about real estate agents. I trust.com.
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Everybody's talking about weight loss injections because, you know, the results are
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So, I went into the Apple store last night. I said to my wife, I said, I need a new iPad.
01:25:15.100
We got there, and she said, you want an iPad or you want a phone? And I said, I am.
01:25:20.240
I'm tired of carrying around the big iPad. Maybe I'll get a phone. She's like, you know,
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that means you'll have a number now. And I'm like, I know. And I like that. I like not having
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a phone. That's the greatest thing ever. Not having a phone. It pisses everybody in your life
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off. I mean, everybody is like, you don't have a phone. I've been trying to get a hold
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of you. And I'm like, I know you have. And that suck. Wow. I've had a great time.
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I didn't take anybody's call. The only problem is my wife. I mean, you know, I carry my stupid
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iPad around. She's like, did you get my text? And I'm like, no, I was working, honey. Why didn't
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you answer your text? Because I'm on the air for three hours every morning. You text me during the
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show. How am I going to? Oh my gosh. Now a phone. And so I got the phone and then I thought,
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well, I got to block the number because I don't think I'm going to give it to anybody.
01:26:19.580
I don't want to give my number to anybody because I don't want anybody calling me.
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I don't, I mean, it's very freeing not having a phone. You should try it. I mean, I say to my
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wife all the time, she's like, I've got stuff to do. And I'm like, you know, we did that all before
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we had phones and we somehow or another made it. She just looks at me and gives me the evil eye.
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And I'm like, okay, well, so I don't know. I don't know. I got a, I got a phone. Just
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not sure I'm going to give anybody a number. And then what is the use of the phone? Because I,
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I don't want to use it. I don't have anybody to call and I don't necessarily want anybody calling
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me, you know, call me during business, except during business hours, I'm on the air usually. So
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it's tough. I'm tough to reach, tough to reach. You know, a lot of back discomfort comes from
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one big movement and it comes from repetition, sitting too long, standing too long, moving the
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same way every day. And over time that tension just settles in and starts to feel normal, even
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though it shouldn't. What chirp does is go straight to the source of that tension. Their wheel style
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back rollers are designed to target the muscles that run along your spine. The ones that really get
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itself. Just the muscle on either side. And with the multiple wheel sizes, you can control how deep
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the problems. A lot of people have been living with for a lot of years. If that's you,
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please go to gochirp.com slash back. That's geochirp.com slash back. Check out my picks for back pain
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The fusion of entertainment, enlightenment, and empowerment
01:29:09.500
And you are going to get an awful lot of knowledge today
01:29:16.200
One of my favorite people in the world is in, Justin Haskins
01:29:20.360
He's written a book on his own now called The Next Big Crash
01:29:25.060
And we want to talk about the economy, what Trump is really doing
01:29:28.740
And the things that you don't know, nobody's ever told you
01:29:32.200
I didn't even know these things until I read his book
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This kind of changes absolutely everything I ever thought
01:29:40.340
He's going to go into some of that in just a second
01:29:47.660
First, let me talk to you about American financing
01:29:53.020
And you still feel like you're treading water, right?
01:30:00.480
You know, between the interest rates and the credit cards
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It starts to feel like your money's working against you
01:30:16.860
That helps homeowners refi and consolidate high-interest debt
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And they take the time to walk you through every situation
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Help find a plan that actually makes sense for your life
01:32:03.740
Could be a crash that changes absolutely everything
01:32:35.660
We want the Trump administration to be successful
01:32:58.500
There's all kinds of crazy things that could happen
01:35:14.080
Because you no longer have your property rights