Gun Control Didn't Stop Another Senseless Shooting | 7⧸5⧸22
Episode Stats
Length
2 hours and 5 minutes
Words per Minute
178.42578
Summary
On this episode of the Glennebeck Program, Glennek and stew talk about the mass shooting that took place on the 4th of July in San Antonio, TX, and how we need to change our entire system of justice.
Transcript
00:00:00.000
if the summer heat is making you uncomfortable you know down there it's time to make sure you
00:00:05.540
stay frosty where it counts with the new brand new underwear from tommy john yes tommy john is
00:00:11.500
the best i love tommy john oh this is there's nothing better it's one of those products that
00:00:16.360
i've heard advertised a zillion times before i actually bought some and now i just don't want
00:00:21.840
to wear anything else it's like i you think there's hype to it and there's just not no it's
00:00:27.780
really true i mean the tommy john loungewear it's the first thing i get into when i go home
00:00:32.320
the first thing i do is change into tommy john loungewear and i stay that way yeah i mean my
00:00:39.080
wife loves it oh yeah because it's the only thing she ever sees me in yeah it's so comfortable i
00:00:44.960
don't know i don't even know how to explain it uh so let me tell you about how to get tommy john
00:00:48.440
because tommy john is the the it's the best that you can you can get uh it really is fantastic head
00:00:53.660
over uh to the website right now tommy john.com slash back right now you get 20 off your first
00:00:58.160
order 20 off right now at tommy john.com slash back tommy john.com slash back you're gonna love
00:01:28.880
what you are about to hear is the fusion of entertainment and enlightenment
00:01:57.420
pat and stew for glenn on the glenn back program this week
00:02:03.140
888-727-BECK of course another tragedy on the 4th of july yesterday uh we'll get into that
00:02:15.400
if you've just gone through the past couple of years you might think to yourself i want to get
00:02:24.820
out of this terrible blue state that i'm in and go somewhere where freedom is valued a little bit
00:02:29.700
maybe you're one of those people there's been hundreds of thousands of them that have moved
00:02:33.760
from places like california and new york to greener pastures in places that care about your rights a
00:02:39.800
little bit and if you are one of those people you're going to need a real estate agent when you
00:02:43.360
get there realestateagentsitrust.com is a company that glenn started several years ago to make sure
00:02:48.780
that he can find the best agent in your area these are people who are screened they are checked out
00:02:54.440
they have the best performance ratings in their area and a lot of times they're fans of the show
00:02:59.240
they're people that share your values as well so check it out realestateagentsitrust.com whether
00:03:04.100
you're buying a home or you're selling a home you're probably gonna have to do both of them if you're
00:03:07.100
moving across the country uh go with realestateagentsitrust.com have the best possible
00:03:11.580
experience with your biggest financial transaction it's real estate agents i trust
00:03:15.820
the name kind of says it all realestateagentsitrust.com realestateagentsitrust.com
00:03:21.160
it's pat and stew for uh glenn on the glenbeck program 888-727-BECK
00:03:29.780
uh again yesterday just more senseless killing it's just so hard to process this and really you can't
00:03:38.800
you just can't understand it why that why this happens people gather their families together
00:03:43.720
and show up at six or seven in the morning with their lawn chairs and just try to enjoy a fourth
00:03:49.880
of july parade and then somebody starts shooting at them from from a rooftop i i don't understand it
00:03:56.780
uh apparently this guy was known to law enforcement which we've heard multiple times with these
00:04:03.260
shootings lately uh if they're known and nothing happens i don't what kind of laws are we going to
00:04:12.220
enact that stop this other than reversing our entire system of justice right like we could go
00:04:18.420
with the chinese system where we arrest people when they look suspicious and i will say that you do the
00:04:22.660
future crime thing if you had that report you could do that i mean i will say if we had that law
00:04:28.100
implemented and i saw this guy i would have arrested him because he looks as if he was about to wear a
00:04:35.720
shirt that says i'm a future mass shooter yeah you look at a picture of this guy he looks the part but
00:04:42.360
that's not how our society operates wait you can't just arrest somebody if they look the part yeah
00:04:47.720
no that's not how this works pat yeah uh huh now i don't know if that's been challenged in the
00:04:52.680
supreme court we'll have to look into that i don't know but i will say that this system of justice is
00:05:00.520
better than the chinese one that is your other option though you can go more and more toward that
00:05:06.240
direction you can start arresting people when they write scary things online or when they purchase a
00:05:11.860
firearm you can prevent them from purchasing a firearm we can move toward that chinese system
00:05:16.260
if we wish now we're gonna have to amend the constitution a bunch of times to get there
00:05:20.180
so you know it's a lot of heavy lifting for the left but that seems to be what they want
00:05:24.540
here they seem to be able to want to charge people with crimes before they commit them
00:05:28.540
and unfortunately that's not that's not how this works now we may find out you said they were known to
00:05:33.660
police that that's that covers a wide range of things right like it it could mean that this person
00:05:41.680
you know bought the gun illegally because they were so well known to police they were barred from buying
00:05:45.720
one we we may find that out at some point it's hard i will say over the since you valde in
00:05:51.140
particularly uh in particularly i i have i have really i've really stopped jumping on the initial
00:05:57.780
details and sort of bandwagon wrong so often wrong so often and you know this is something that
00:06:04.480
people have complained about for a long time the media is terrible oftentimes especially when the
00:06:11.000
police have issues and again i'm a big supporter of the police i think generally speaking the
00:06:15.700
they do a very good job but occasionally they don't do a great job and when that happens they
00:06:20.680
tend to leak details to the media that backs up some other narrative that makes them look a little
00:06:25.540
bit better uvalde being a really prime example of that as they they were the heroes of the universe
00:06:32.140
the day after that and then not so much later on not so much the more we learned the less
00:06:37.880
hero of the universe they seem yeah it really did turn around they almost seemed like the opposite of
00:06:43.580
the heroes it did turn around quickly yeah it did so but i i i found myself fascinated watching the
00:06:49.580
coverage of this because every newspaper in america every big news website was talking about
00:06:56.300
this and at some level it's understandable right like as you mentioned it's a terrible tragedy
00:07:00.660
here you are every everybody in this audience probably went out to a fourth of july event
00:07:06.100
in the most innocent way and want to just have a nice time with their family for for a place like
00:07:10.860
this to have that disturbed with you know gunfire from the rooftop of a building from some psychopath
00:07:17.680
it's obviously incredibly notable right it is it's notable and tragic and awful and especially because
00:07:25.340
so many people were going through that same sort of event this weekend we should note that it didn't
00:07:30.480
seem to happen anywhere else this is one event and it was really really bad but the same time that
00:07:36.540
they're talking about six shot or six dead and 30 mid 30s i believe were the injury numbers
00:07:42.740
incredible unspeakable tragedy at the same time in chicago nine people were shot and killed and 57
00:07:53.240
shot overall yes this weekend in chicago and it happens the strictest gun laws in the country and it
00:07:59.780
happens in both every single weekend yeah every weekend this story comes out that nine dead eight
00:08:08.640
dead 12 dead six dead seven dead every weekend and they don't care about it at all they never mention
00:08:17.180
it they never mention it the only time they ever mention it is because you might bring it up and say
00:08:22.540
wait what about all this violence in chicago so that they can call you a racist right now who's the
00:08:26.940
racist here pat if you seem to care only about the white people at the parade being shot and not
00:08:33.360
about the black and hispanic people in chicago that get shot every weekend who's the racist here
00:08:37.520
i know i don't think it's us no it is not i actually do care about uh the people who get shot which is
00:08:44.120
why we bring it up we'd rather it not happen right all the time in chicago exactly that would be
00:08:49.480
anywhere else for that matter yes you know there's a lot of cities where they suffer this way
00:08:54.640
every week and every weekend baltimore philadelphia new orleans detroit all of these cities are suffering
00:09:04.980
with this same malady that chicago does to one degree or another and they don't care about any of it
00:09:11.480
they just keep doing the same democrat policies they just keep restricting guns and it doesn't help
00:09:19.880
at all if it doesn't help in these areas where we see them employed how is it going to help
00:09:26.020
nationwide it's so ridiculous they're going after hundreds of millions of guns that are legally owned
00:09:32.580
by law-abiding citizens trying to micromanage their use instead of going after you know a big a much
00:09:40.200
bigger problem and i think one of the issues here is the reason why we talk about chicago and baltimore
00:09:48.900
and these other big cities is not just because democrats run them into the ground constantly
00:09:53.620
although that i admittedly that's part of it you know part part of it is to highlight how bad these
00:09:58.820
policies are and how well they work in practice which is terrible um but it's not just that it's
00:10:04.500
also that like it's a much more sensible area to focus on like it's really hard to stop one 22 year
00:10:12.760
old to get from getting one gun and going on a rooftop and firing at unarmed people in a crowd
00:10:20.980
like it's really hard to stop that yeah and the only way you stop it is because thankfully most people
00:10:26.460
don't want to do it right you know that's it's just the truth and i mean he's known to law enforcement
00:10:32.940
yep and yet he still got away with doing that right in a state where they have very restrictive gun laws
00:10:39.760
and in an area that has very restrictive gun laws and it's just really really hard now that doesn't
00:10:45.740
mean you don't try to stop it obviously we've talked about the mental health aspects uh stopping
00:10:50.060
people with um with criminal histories and mental health uh factors from getting firearms is part of
00:10:57.320
this focus that the the left and the right kind of agree on right like we should we should stop those
00:11:02.020
people from getting guns but like it's really difficult to do that and it's one of those things where
00:11:08.040
you're talking about a an amount of people despite how much coverage it gets that die every year from
00:11:15.680
from these crimes it's almost impossible in a country of 330 million people to try to eliminate
00:11:24.940
that entirely and to make any difference on that number you'd have to eliminate it entirely right like
00:11:30.680
it's not like a crime where you shape if you if you shave 20 off the amount of people who die in mass
00:11:36.100
shootings every year that would be great and we want to do that but it would make no difference in the gun
00:11:41.840
violence total that we're talking about all the time the way you can make a difference on those numbers
00:11:48.360
are things like suicides right preventing suicides is a is a is a is a really big pool of people who die
00:11:57.760
from gun violence and it's much easier to try to do something about that crime in inner cities is
00:12:06.640
another one that's where almost all this stuff happens almost all of it yet it gets almost none
00:12:13.280
of the coverage and how do you how do you explain that you can if it was the left explaining i can
00:12:22.220
guarantee you what they would say they would say it's racism you only care about the white victims you
00:12:26.220
don't care about the black victims that's what they would say that's what they say about missing
00:12:28.660
kids all the time right yeah whenever there's a good-looking college girl that goes missing man
00:12:33.560
that gets coverage from all the cable news channels but if it's you know an inner city uh black male
00:12:38.840
they never get any coverage and you know they say that all the time that would be the explanation
00:12:45.620
for sure if this was the other way around so if the left was the one no question handling this
00:12:51.480
they would be critical of the media and say you don't care about the black victims you only care
00:12:55.820
about the white victims in the in the nice little suburbs who are going to their july 4th events
00:13:01.040
that's what you care about because of the color of their skin now i i don't i don't think that that's
00:13:05.060
the the reality here i think you know there is something to do with that sort of crime of spectacle and this
00:13:11.980
big flashy thing but the problem with this is the reason why a mass shooting gets a lot of coverage is
00:13:18.860
also the reason why they keep occurring because these psychopaths want this attention and so giving
00:13:25.820
it to them constantly and we have not mentioned this person's name nor will we giving them constant
00:13:31.760
attention every time one of these things goes down does not help the situation it makes it much worse
00:13:37.520
and it doesn't help our overall problem with gun violence it literally does everything it shouldn't
00:13:43.780
and none of the things it should yet this is the way it happens every time pat and that's why we're
00:13:48.160
not playing his uh diatribe you know the little video he he produced i don't want to give him that
00:13:54.840
satisfaction and that publicity but he does have a rambling weird video that he put out that kind of gave
00:14:02.900
hints to what he might be planning to do here and then he went out and did it but i don't know how
00:14:08.580
you stop it when you see even if you see the video even if law enforcement sees the video can you go
00:14:14.300
arrest the guy because of what he said he didn't clearly say i'm going to go kill people at the 4th of
00:14:19.460
july parade maybe you could get him on a terroristic threat at that point but that's not what he did so i
00:14:26.240
don't i don't know how you stop him uh even being known to law enforcement unless he's committed some sort
00:14:32.500
of crime right and really what you could do is try to again convert this country into one that
00:14:37.820
that does not have innocence until proven guilt right like that's what you can do right you can try
00:14:43.640
you can move that line now red flag laws attempt to move that line right that's what they are
00:14:47.520
and perhaps if you have some future crimes their future crimes and perhaps if you had you know like
00:14:52.220
they're going to say well i don't i don't know i don't remember off the top of my head the red flag
00:14:55.660
law situation in illinois uh and i don't know if you know we don't know the details of this anyway i mean
00:15:00.780
whether it was enacted or how it worked we'll know you know within weeks i'm sure but the bottom
00:15:05.620
line is if you have someone who's off kilter and you report them then maybe you could take their guns
00:15:10.620
was this but like again for how long are you delaying the inevitable here if you haven't committed a
00:15:19.100
crime all you're doing is delaying it which is good it's better than than you know it's better than
00:15:24.860
not delaying it but their trade-off here of getting rid of our system of justice to attempt
00:15:30.340
these things knowing that 99.5 percent of the people caught up in these red flag laws will not
00:15:36.340
have done anything i mean they're just going to be you're going to be essentially punishing people
00:15:40.400
for nothing in almost all cases that's how this works and you the farther you go down that line
00:15:47.080
the farther you go down the reversal of the relationship between innocence and guilt the
00:15:53.660
closer you get to places like china and you can do it lots of countries do it you can go live in one
00:16:00.440
of them they're they're wonderful flights are pretty expensive right now but you can get there
00:16:05.580
i wouldn't recommend it i have a friend who went overseas this past weekend and they're still doing
00:16:11.500
it was the first leg of this flight was eight hours and then there was another five hour and
00:16:16.860
another three hour i think after that it was you know they're going to like africa for some
00:16:19.960
something that i'll never do and uh i was thinking to myself oh my gosh that sounds terrible and then i
00:16:25.340
heard they have to wear a mask the whole time oh they're still masking on these international flights
00:16:30.240
really can you imagine i can't i can't imagine it was like 13 hours 15 hours no on a mask no
00:16:38.140
no i'm not doing it by the way an eight hour layover someplace in an airport where they also
00:16:43.900
have to be masked the whole time oh my god can you imagine no no i can't do it i can't no i can't do
00:16:49.560
i won't do it no i will i mean i wouldn't do it without the mask a massive price for that too oh my
00:16:55.940
gosh i can't even imagine so congratulations like mount kilimanjaro or something it's like
00:17:00.220
jeez that's probably an amazing experience to talk about when you come home and i gotta say i think
00:17:07.360
most of the questions are gonna be about the flights yeah not about the mountain all right
00:17:15.800
life is about being active whether it's about going on your daily tasks or exercising you know you're
00:17:25.920
well when you're regularly active but what happens when being active actually hurts by the end of the
00:17:31.380
day this is the position i found myself in a number of years ago everything i wanted to do in my daily
00:17:36.780
life all of the activity it called for was held captive to almost constant nagging pain when i
00:17:43.340
heard about relief factor i was skeptical but my wife said give it a chance not long after i took it
00:17:48.720
i could feel the pain begin to melt away and i've been taking it ever since and i can tell you that
00:17:53.900
relief factor has helped me get my life back i love that it's not a drug but it was developed by
00:17:59.000
doctors and about 70 of the people who try it go on to order more your first step to becoming
00:18:04.360
pain-free just might be ordering a three-week quick start for only 19.95 go to relieffactor.com
00:18:10.760
or call 800-4-relief 800-4-relief or relieffactor.com find out all about this offer and feel the difference
00:18:19.320
okay so your friends are going to mount kilimanjaro are they climbing mount kilimanjaro i don't know all
00:18:36.460
the details i mean they know there's helicopters now right you could take a helicopter even there
00:18:41.360
yes oh wow okay so that's so they did not know that land 19 000 feet yeah it's one of the highest
00:18:48.080
peaks in the world now i don't think they're like they're not expert mountain climbers i don't think
00:18:52.660
they're going to the top but i guess there's like a bunch of hikes and different levels of things you
00:18:56.220
can do there no and it's an amazing thing to do like the stories are going to be incredible
00:19:00.320
but here's the crazy detail about this so it's a it's a couple one of them is a friend of lisa's
00:19:08.800
who is in shape works out every day you know you know the the typical person you'd think would
00:19:15.760
think it would be desirable to go hike on a mountain okay go to africa and hike mount kilimanjaro right
00:19:22.800
okay you know those people exist i they seem completely foreign to me and there's another
00:19:27.600
species essentially but yeah okay it goes to the gym every day she did uh pinatubo i believe in the
00:19:34.420
in the past who hasn't right you know who among us pat and i uh how many times we used to have an
00:19:40.120
annual trip yeah to pinatubo pinatubo we would do a semi-annual actually yeah it was it was semi-annual
00:19:46.020
right yeah it was we used to take listeners it was great um but so she's done that before she can
00:19:51.160
handle it her her significant other in this situation is fascinating because he's like a normal
00:19:58.660
guy he's like like us if yeah like the first time we went to pinatubo think of that think of
00:20:04.640
your mindset that you know he's not like a gym rat he's not like a marathoner he's not he's just a
00:20:12.140
guy he's like a normal guy he's not in bad shape but he's just like a normal guy you just like he's
00:20:17.600
just going and he didn't train for this at all he didn't prepare he didn't train he didn't like run
00:20:24.100
you know a couple of miles a day to get ready for this he's just jumping from like office life
00:20:30.740
to kilimanjaro the words rude awakening come to mind it's funny because isn't there a part of you
00:20:38.740
that thinks i can get through anything for a couple of days you know what i mean yeah i can get through
00:20:42.800
any you know it's gonna suck and i'm probably gonna be miserable for a couple days but i'll get
00:20:46.800
through it it's not that big no you won't no this is a terrible idea yeah no uh what you
00:20:54.080
be hoping for is that your flight would be canceled right and that could happen this is
00:20:59.680
when it could happen like halfway there you inject yourself with covid and you just i can't you know
00:21:05.500
darn it i'm all oh yeah what a what a what a hassle oh well you go on your own honey like that's that's
00:21:13.900
what you don't let me stop you no but i'm gonna be hold up in the uh hotel or at the very least you
00:21:19.040
somehow acquire a positive covid test that someone else has taken and you just stuff it in your
00:21:23.620
luggage and then you just pull it oh my god i i just i decided i didn't feel great i decided to
00:21:28.320
take a test and look at this there it is i've tested positive speaking of the flights though did
00:21:33.200
you see that delta airlines was offering ten thousand dollars to people to give up their flight
00:21:39.240
really ten thousand dollars sold yeah i'm taking that yeah because i i've been in that situation where
00:21:48.600
it's escalated to levels that yeah they started at five thousand oh wow i think i would have been
00:21:53.640
tempted at five thousand i've never seen it that high i haven't either i've seen it like we'll give
00:21:58.240
you three hundred dollars or a discount on your next flight no no thank you they usually give you
00:22:04.020
that thing where they're like uh it gives you at least america i think it's american airlines that
00:22:07.600
does this and they give you like three options they're like you know we need someone to leave
00:22:10.600
how much would you take to leave and you could pick the highest one there's like a middle one and
00:22:15.600
low one so i every once in a while i'll click the highest one i'll be like you know if they're
00:22:19.900
gonna give me sixteen hundred dollars yeah i'm gonna change my flight but ten thousand i mean i'm
00:22:26.760
in i think i'm in on that because i'm flying for years yeah on this right like i'm flying i'm gonna be
00:22:33.960
like i'm gonna have the pilot deal where i get to just like hop in into the into the plane and go
00:22:38.880
wherever i want for years on that yeah it'd be awesome that would be worth ten thousand dollars
00:22:44.440
it's incredible i have a vacation coming up there's no way i'm getting to the location is
00:22:47.740
there no there's no way no it's not happening the glenn back program ever since he tried the
00:22:54.800
rough greens for the first time my dog uno has changed he's a completely different dog i hear from
00:23:00.160
people all the time in the audience i mean hundreds and hundreds of letters have come in who have had
00:23:05.620
the same experience with their dog they've heard me talk about rough greens on the show they get some
00:23:09.340
for themselves and as soon as they sprinkle it on the dog's food the dog literally wolfs it down
00:23:14.180
and it's really good for him it's not a dog food it's just chock full of vitamins and minerals and
00:23:18.580
probiotics and omega oils that you sprinkle your dog needs these things to be healthy my dog was easy
00:23:24.720
from the first time he tried rough greens uno was in love some dogs take a little bit to get used to
00:23:29.840
the new flavor though dr dennis black the inventor of rough greens was on the phone with me last week he
00:23:34.680
doesn't want that to be a reason for you not to try so right now he's got a special gift available
00:23:38.780
you can get a free bag of rough greens for your dog just to try out all you pay is shipping go to
00:23:44.800
roughgreens.com slash beck or call 833 glenn 33 put it on your dog's food and begin to watch your dog
00:23:52.740
become healthier your daily antidote to the socialism virus you're listening to the glenn beck program
00:24:03.520
pat gray stew bird gear pat and stew for glenn this week
00:24:27.580
888-727-BECK something that uh happened that can't happen because it doesn't happen anywhere but
00:24:34.880
here uh there was a mass shooting in copenhagen uh which is not in this country i don't know if
00:24:43.180
you're aware of that but copenhagen is not in the united states not copenhagen texas no it's not
00:24:48.360
copenhagen denmark and uh six uh three people were killed multiple people shot and wounded at a mall
00:24:56.380
in copenhagen so i i think somebody's lying there because it doesn't happen in other countries it
00:25:04.200
only happens here as it did again on the 4th of july of course uh and there was another shooting
00:25:12.740
interestingly but it involved police shooting a suspect yeah i just have to mention here on the
00:25:18.660
denmark thing because people will say well yeah one shooting one how many have you had
00:25:25.040
in the united states 264 this year alone oh and we have to get into that because that's really a
00:25:31.880
frustrating part of it is because now i'm getting sidetracked but like the chicago shooting right
00:25:37.400
what they love to do is ignore the fact that nine were killed and 57 shot in chicago uh separate from
00:25:45.260
the mass shooting that happened at the in the in the suburbs they want to ignore that and only talk
00:25:50.640
about the mass shooting but they get to have things both ways because then they will include
00:25:55.600
multiple incidents from chicago over the weekend and call them quote-unquote mass shootings and insert
00:26:01.440
them into this number they keep building which everybody who's looked at knows is ridiculous but they
00:26:07.220
keep doing it anyway because they so they get the best part of both worlds they get to blame
00:26:12.520
guns for the incident and build their mass shooting numbers while completely ignoring that their own
00:26:17.620
cities and their own policies are the places all these things are occurring yes it's fascinating
00:26:22.040
and in the places with the strictest gun control in the country yes like chicago fascinating um by the
00:26:27.860
way uh six million people in denmark okay there's six million we have 330 million so we have what 60
00:26:36.640
times almost as many people so in theory if all else was equal which it's not if all else were equal
00:26:44.820
you would expect to hear uh about a shooting in denmark approximately 160th of the amount of time
00:26:55.940
right so when you do this and they do this all the time they lean on things like for example new zealand's
00:27:02.160
per capita deaths from mass shootings are higher than ours because they've had like three or four
00:27:09.160
really bad ones i mean two really bad ones that they have taken guns from their citizens they have
00:27:14.800
not only did they ban them they took them from those who had guns and the thing you're talking
00:27:19.820
about is probably the after the christ church shooting which was this really terrible one that
00:27:23.980
happened a couple years ago but they did the same thing after the previous mass shooting
00:27:28.440
which christ church was after right they took away tons of guns the first time too right so you know
00:27:35.500
we went through all this if you go to uh stew sue does uh america on youtube that we did a gun special
00:27:41.140
we went through all the mass shooting numbers and and showed all this data just to show that like
00:27:45.360
because it these things i'll be honest do feel like they happen a lot here and it sucks it really
00:27:51.240
does it feels i mean i talk to people who are big second amendment supporters and aren't talking about
00:27:56.480
taking guns away but still we're just gosh i can't believe this is happening what do we do about it
00:27:59.880
and that is a legitimate conversation we should do something whatever we can within the balance of
00:28:05.340
the constitution and our law and our traditions we should we should do something um on the other
00:28:10.700
hand we do have to realize you do not need to be terrified every time you go to a fourth of july parade
00:28:16.640
like just statistically your chances your chances ever think of how many people yesterday went
00:28:23.000
to this parade i mean like this is a kind of a crazy probably had 20 parades just in the metroplex
00:28:29.240
right oh yeah at least and nothing happened at any of nothing happened in any of them right
00:28:32.740
uh you know your chance if you went to let's say there's i don't know i'm throwing up i did this
00:28:37.560
with schools because this is the real number for schools but there's 150 000 schools in the united
00:28:43.240
states 150 000 the fact that you can name three incidents from the past you know 10 years at
00:28:52.160
schools from sandy hook to parkland to uvalde are the three now obviously there have been other
00:28:57.680
incidents in between but they've you know smaller so it's really three massive scale incidents
00:29:02.200
over a decade with 150 000 schools it number one highlights how impossible it is uh to stop
00:29:12.120
right how do you stop three incidents over a decade in 150 000 schools where kids are going to these
00:29:19.420
schools 180 days a year it can happen on any at any of these schools on any of these days so
00:29:25.560
finding and stopping an incident like that is really really hard it's you know you can make it worse
00:29:32.100
by some of the actions that it looks like the police did not take in uvalde but like to actually stop
00:29:38.540
it is really difficult sometimes they do and they do stop some of them um but the same thing is with
00:29:43.220
these fourth of july parades then think about the actual parade how many people went to that parade
00:29:48.220
probably 5 000 10 000 we do have we have six people dead which is horrible and i can't it's hard to
00:29:55.160
overstate how terrible it is but it's also important to put in perspective even if you went to the parade
00:30:01.660
your chances of uh being shot were very low yeah and even if you got shot it seems like about 80 percent
00:30:09.260
of people survived so i mean like it's important to put that stuff in perspective it doesn't make it
00:30:15.520
any better for the families it doesn't make it any better it doesn't mean we shouldn't try to stop it
00:30:19.840
but it is important to to keep things in perspective and not live your life in constant terror which is
00:30:25.500
what the media seems to want you to do yeah you know like the chances of these things happening to
00:30:29.540
you are much lower than you getting into a terrible car accident like i there are other things to
00:30:35.240
worry about that are much more prominent um i went like three steps off of where we were going there
00:30:41.120
uh we were talking about the cope copenhagen are we are we have we settled on copenhagen now
00:30:45.780
because that's what i want i'm staying on i'm not going to copenhagen call it copenhagen all you
00:30:50.020
want in the mainstream media i'm not going there but it's true that like yes they have fewer events
00:30:55.600
in denmark than we do but that's also partially just because they don't have a lot of people they
00:31:01.480
also don't have a lot of racial strife in denmark because they're all they're all the same race yeah
00:31:09.900
they're they're all white people who have lived there for 75 centuries and honestly like it's so
00:31:16.520
cold at times you can understand why like people are just like look i don't want to go there going
00:31:21.900
outside let alone shooting anybody i'm not doing it exactly yeah so there's a lot of aspects that go
00:31:27.320
that go into that there was another shooting and again this is the same type of thing where the
00:31:32.000
media tries to convince all black people that they should be terrified of police because they are out
00:31:37.120
on the hunt for you all the time this is what police do they wake up in the morning they have
00:31:42.020
donuts this is the one thing we know about police officers they have to have donuts and after they
00:31:46.300
have donuts they walk around looking for black people to shoot at the streets for no particular
00:31:50.480
reason this is the narrative we get from the media all the time this is what they do so there's a
00:31:55.620
case in akron and they had a um the guy's name was uh javon jalen walker and jalen walker was uh was
00:32:06.940
going to be pulled over for a traffic stop and of course the narrative is to just give you the summary
00:32:10.940
in case you don't know the story if you wanted to read a media story guy um was unarmed black man
00:32:19.200
running from police was shot at about 60 times by police by police and you know what this should
00:32:27.160
not happen over a traffic stop pat no it should not happen that's right no it should not and it
00:32:33.020
shouldn't i would agree you in fact you are the king of traffic stops you've been pulled over 15,000
00:32:37.020
times since you moved to texas it's never happened to you why because you're white white that's the
00:32:41.240
only reason i'm white now i assume you did all the things that jalen walker did in this particular
00:32:46.960
story and you just they just at the end said oh gosh pat gray you're so silly i can't believe you
00:32:53.300
just drove away from us like this but like so what happened was let me tell you this sounds familiar
00:32:58.400
to you and the way you deal with police incidents yeah when you get pulled over okay known speeder
00:33:02.860
pat gray uh jalen walker gets pulled over for a traffic stop he then was he speeding uh i don't
00:33:09.900
know if he was speeding honestly on that part of the story but he decides he feels apparently for
00:33:14.460
some reason things might not go well now maybe he's guilty of a crime yeah maybe he's just
00:33:20.080
terrified of police officers i don't know yeah but he decides to uh leave and not pull over and run
00:33:28.220
from police in the car so he's driving away from police okay then he eventually gets surrounded by
00:33:34.300
police cars pulls over again and then leaves again somehow escapes the situation and once again
00:33:40.160
so far this is really familiar i've done this okay i don't know probably 15 20 times and never
00:33:45.080
been shot never been shot amazing that white skin really gets you out of those problems and so he
00:33:49.920
then escapes from cops uh while he's driving he fires his gun out the window now when it's logical
00:33:59.800
when you are being chased by police and you fire a gun out the window yeah you have escalated this
00:34:09.060
beyond just running from the police you have now fired a weapon out the window now we to give the
00:34:15.240
disclaimers here this is what we're told uh you know from the police this is their justification
00:34:21.720
right so we should be skeptical over these things as people are you know should be treated with
00:34:28.460
skepticism as we saw in uvalde right like at times you have to make sure sometimes they don't tell
00:34:32.400
the truth however in this particular case there's no indication that they know the driver is black
00:34:38.000
at this point and the officer says it while they're driving okay he just fired a gun out the
00:34:44.180
window uh we have shot we have a shot fired this is before they've even had an interaction with him
00:34:48.460
so it would be really hard to come up with a situation in which like they don't even know he's
00:34:54.780
black yet and they're planting this information before they even see him before they like it's just
00:35:00.220
it would be too much for any reasonable conspiracy theory but i'll allow for the possibility
00:35:06.340
anyway because you never know in these situations eventually he gets out of the car decides to run
00:35:10.340
from police he gets out of the car on foot runs from police then turns around back toward police
00:35:15.460
and they shoot him a bunch of times now for some reason the focus of this story is how many times
00:35:20.360
they shot him once dead does it really matter how many times you've been shot i know from watching
00:35:29.540
many many movies pat that you watch the movie and you they shoot the bad guy and then they all start
00:35:35.620
celebrating and hugging each other while the bad guy gets up slowly in the background
00:35:38.920
when when you use a firearm like that's what you're trying to disable the person who may be
00:35:45.340
trying to kill you and the police after seeing this guy already fire a weapon seemingly at them
00:35:50.120
kind of had an indication he may be violent right so when he turned to them they fired him they hit
00:35:55.900
him a bunch of times i mean look if they shot him and he was dead and then they walked up to him
00:36:00.040
and shot him a thousand more times there would be criticism to to be uh put on the police officers
00:36:06.640
though it wouldn't change the outcome it wouldn't make it more tragic he was already dead well but
00:36:11.960
then he was mega dead maybe then he was mega doppler dead mega doppler dead yeah wow that's that
00:36:17.840
sounds and that's that's bad that's bad yeah you don't want that but like there are times where
00:36:24.340
math comes into play here and let me walk people through the math they're not familiar with this
00:36:28.840
particular level calculus when they shot they did not they but that that's the argument from the
00:36:33.380
lawyer he was unarmed at least that's what they're saying he was unarmed well an unarmed guy firing a
00:36:39.020
weapon out the window i don't that doesn't compute to me okay here's the math of the situation though
00:36:45.240
this is advanced level calculus pat if you do x y in x and y z often occurs if you run from police
00:36:54.240
if you fire weapons at police if instead of falling down on the ground and putting your
00:37:00.680
hands behind your back you turn back toward police during a chase oftentimes you will get shot yeah the
00:37:07.560
color of your skin is not material to that equation and be well disproportionately look at the actual
00:37:13.680
numbers i'm not going to bother breaking them down for you that's a nonsensical argument that isn't true
00:37:19.120
about i mean this is you know from criminologists an african-american criminologist who went through
00:37:24.880
the numbers and said actually it looks like white people are more likely to get shot at these incidents
00:37:28.280
so don't don't even bother with that nonsense but the bottom line is you can't you should not do those
00:37:35.480
things the police may have acted improperly maybe we will find out they didn't fire a weapon and they
00:37:39.860
had some big conspiracy against this guy if that's true obviously none of this applies but either way you
00:37:45.380
don't run from police you don't turn back toward them when they are asking you to get down on your
00:37:50.740
knees you certainly do not fire weapons out them out of a speeding car was that a chris rock uh sketch
00:37:58.420
at one time i think you're right i think he talked about that i think you're right i'm not gonna use
00:38:02.720
the words he used yeah uh to recreate it oh but yes i think you're right yeah you know and you might
00:38:09.180
look into that and listen to that for pretty good safety tips you know he was being funny but it was
00:38:14.940
a good safety tip what he was trying to tell everybody um you know just don't act like that
00:38:21.800
don't run from police don't shoot at police and then chances are better that you're not gonna get
00:38:28.380
shot yeah you might not eliminate every single bad outcome because sometimes police do act terribly
00:38:34.080
sometimes they just act inappropriately and wrong i'm not based on race but just
00:38:38.860
yeah handle a situation terribly or poorly or maybe they're corrupt or maybe they're violent who knows
00:38:43.980
it does happen but you're going to eliminate 99.9 percent of the stuff you are if you just don't
00:38:49.820
act like that 888-727-BECK pat and stew for glenn on the glennbeck program
00:38:54.540
stay informed sign up for the free newsletter today at glennbeck.com
00:39:01.560
these days you use your personal information to do just about everything especially when you're
00:39:19.800
online but with all that information just floating out there it can make the internet a practical gold
00:39:26.080
mine for identity thieves actually that's not fair to gold miners mining is actually hard work
00:39:31.900
stealing your identity is dangerously easy it's also incredibly costly and terribly frustrating if
00:39:39.680
you get hacked now is an easy time to join up with lifelock and help protect yourself with lifelock by
00:39:47.460
norton lifelock monitors your information and alerts you to personal identity threats and if you are a
00:39:53.640
victim of identity theft a dedicated u.s based restoration specialist will work to fix it
00:39:58.980
lifelock they can't protect you from everything nobody can but they're the best in the business
00:40:03.820
in my book 800 lifelock 1-800-LIFELOCK or lifelock.com use the promo code beck and save 25 off your first
00:40:15.320
pat and stew for glenn this week uh brilliant brilliant jessica biel uh tweet over the weekend
00:40:33.600
um i guess they were in france at some point she and uh her man justin timberlake and uh she tweeted
00:40:42.640
out you have croissants and women's rights damn take me back yes please uh go oh yeah forever stay
00:40:53.620
stay in france that'd be great um by all means send us photos but stay sure and i don't think that
00:41:00.880
anybody mentioned to her that france has a 14 week limit on abortions uh which is a week less a week
00:41:08.760
more restrictions than the mississippi law that started all this right amazing so but don't worry
00:41:16.080
about that look a lot of people don't know the fact maybe we should go through this at some point
00:41:20.200
today that europe has tighter laws than the united states even before you know i mean before all this
00:41:26.500
went down uh europe's laws were more conservative than america's quite a bit more yeah because we
00:41:33.580
like had no restrictions uh in many places this is the glenn back program
00:41:40.240
let's talk about an uncomfortable statistic uh by the time men get into their 30s
00:41:56.380
two out of three of them have started losing their hair uh that's like two-thirds yeah that's
00:42:01.620
like 67 percent yeah uh-huh and that's not necessarily a positive that's not good that seems
00:42:05.780
early too i didn't realize yeah it does 30s but hey if you're in the percentage of people who are
00:42:11.020
having that issue you've seen a couple hairs in the sink if you have that problem here and there
00:42:15.760
you got to act early the quicker the better uh keeps is there they have clinically proven fda proven
00:42:21.300
uh uh hair treatments that are available online so basically you hop on with keeps you go with a
00:42:28.260
real doctor they go walk you through the process they you know ask you some questions you take a
00:42:33.040
quick couple pictures of your hair and then you get the stuff directly uh delivered right to your door
00:42:37.800
so you don't have to worry about going to pharmacy or multiple doctor's appointments all that they
00:42:42.740
keep it nice and simple for you at keeps keeps uh is available 24 7 you can message your doctor as
00:42:48.220
well go to keeps.com slash save k-e-e-p-s.com slash save get 50 off your first order now at keeps.com
00:43:18.220
what you are about to hear is the fusion of entertainment and enlightenment
00:43:46.260
is there any safe haven in american culture anymore looks like everything's changing
00:44:01.900
everywhere uh we'll tell you about two places where change is occurring coming up in 60 seconds
00:44:16.260
the sooner you switch to patriot mobile the sooner you can start paying less and i mean way less than
00:44:21.240
what you're paying right now with your major mobile company there's no reason to pay out the nose and
00:44:26.480
we always talk about how major mobile companies are donating a portion of your bill to leftist causes
00:44:31.300
do you want to be involved in that i i i know i don't especially what we've seen over the past couple
00:44:36.020
of weeks why are you going to be why are you going to be donating money to those causes you know you
00:44:40.800
don't agree with them why let your money go there uh they in fact patriot mobile does the opposite
00:44:45.020
they donate to conservative causes and their 100 u.s based customer support team gives amazing
00:44:50.720
personal service they give you great service on your phone too this is a big thing you'd ask you
00:44:56.120
to support a cause that's great and everything but if you don't get the great service you're not
00:45:00.800
going to want to stick with patriot mobile well they know that so they're going to give you the
00:45:03.680
great service they're going to give you the great prices and they're going to donate to
00:45:06.440
conservative causes go to patriot mobile.com slash back or call 972 patriot get free activation with
00:45:12.660
the offer code back veterans and first responders save even more so make the switch today between
00:45:17.360
the left the media and the rhinos we need to stick together it's patriot mobile.com slash back
00:45:21.860
patriot mobile.com slash back or 972 patriot it's 972 patriot for patriot mobile
00:45:28.680
pat and stew for glenn on the glenn beck program 888-727-BECK uh the sports world being turned upside down
00:45:40.040
in a couple of different places college football for one uh with usc and ucla leaving the pack 12
00:45:49.140
for the big 10 which means that the big 10 will have teams from maryland to california now
00:45:57.480
that's these these conferences like literally no sense at this point they're all named at all
00:46:03.460
the numbers don't mean anything anymore right none of it makes sense exactly i can't even follow it
00:46:08.720
anymore uh very difficult to follow um and so all of a sudden the pack 12 is like on the verge of
00:46:16.600
collapse and so what holds it together right now is oregon and washington are waiting on notre dame's
00:46:25.780
decision as to whether or not because they've been invited whether or not they're going to join
00:46:30.120
the big 10 if they do then i guess oregon and washington are out and would maybe go to the
00:46:35.780
to the big 12 at that point the big 12 seems to be in a little bit of a problem too because
00:46:42.300
they probably need to merge or just about merge with the pack 12 it's impossible to keep track of
00:46:48.920
it's incredible what's happening and so what's happening right now is they're forming two
00:46:54.620
super conferences the big 10 and the sec and they think that those two conferences might wind up with
00:47:02.340
30 teams each and then just split off from the from the ncaa and that changes everything
00:47:09.460
everything incredible isn't that something yeah i mean that's really an upending i hate it
00:47:13.940
american tradition right you know right where i need something to hold on to yeah everything else
00:47:21.240
is being uprooted don't take this from me too please please well at least you have golf you can
00:47:26.240
depend on the pga will be there forever and apparently not so much yeah i mean that's the
00:47:32.040
whole we've talked about this a little bit i think on the show but the live golf tour which has pulled
00:47:37.860
all these big golfers from the pga offering them nine figure checks is that the one supported by
00:47:43.660
the saudis yeah what does live stand for do you know i believe 50 uh 54 which is their tournaments
00:47:51.620
or whatever yeah i mean it's a it's a it's a you know clever way of live you're living golf live
00:47:58.500
golf also liv being 54 and they play 54 whole tournaments instead of the normal 72 uh um one of
00:48:06.300
their many tweaks of the format for normal pga tournaments is that favorable to the golfers
00:48:13.060
do they like that they play less yeah i mean the less work for more money i don't know is that
00:48:17.520
favorable how would you feel about that i would feel pretty good about this pat gray the pat gray
00:48:21.240
unleashed program available on blaze tv is now eight minutes long it'll pay you triple
00:48:24.700
okay how does that okay oh okay wait a minute well let me tell you this one of our stated allies is
00:48:31.580
behind the money uh-oh uh-oh are you going to know again we all know saudi arabia has a lot of shady
00:48:38.040
stuff going on we are aware of this we they are not angels but there are certain classifications of
00:48:44.360
countries right like north korea currently russia is in this area where we're like okay like known
00:48:52.640
adversary doing really terrible things we're not going to do any business with them we're cutting
00:48:57.080
them off entirely or as much as we can from the economy there's another level below that which is
00:49:03.160
like you know in some ways like china right we're like they are kind of a known adversary at this point
00:49:07.540
but we don't we don't we still have lots of economic activity we still buy all their stuff
00:49:13.300
at walmart but tons of it right yeah and we still have a major relationship with them we still have
00:49:19.120
a lot of american companies doing production over there a lot of that stuff goes on then there's
00:49:24.880
another layer of you know there's places like india where like india does a lot of stuff that we
00:49:30.300
wouldn't agree with but we have a generally at least we did until joe biden had a generally friendly
00:49:35.380
relationship with india i mean freaking you know the indian people love donald trump more than
00:49:40.700
melania loves donald trump i mean they they got like gold statues of the guy all over the country
00:49:45.580
they loved donald trump and they love in some ways love america that's sort of faded recently there's
00:49:51.980
been some differences there since biden has been in control but still like there are those are
00:49:56.980
countries that we would not agree with their policies we would not agree with how many of the
00:50:01.840
people in the country are treated but we have a generally warm relationship with them and do tons
00:50:08.540
and tons of trade with those countries saudi arabia is you know in many ways has been an ally of ours
00:50:16.400
like they have been they don't like terrorism either they've been victims of it many times now they
00:50:21.920
also like iran have been involved in yes it lets quite famously 9-11 is not exactly something to
00:50:30.000
overlook here but like they can't stand iran they they have a lot of our similar interests in that
00:50:36.560
region and they're sort of in that that area where we say they're an ally that's not exactly what they
00:50:43.080
are that's that's not i wouldn't say they're an ally but they do assist us on certain things and then
00:50:51.520
they do a lot of really terrible things that we don't like other than that what are the categories
00:50:57.340
of countries you have countries like you know europe where we generally have western values they
00:51:01.700
constantly say how terrible we are and everything that we do that they don't like constantly critical
00:51:06.500
of us our president goes overseas and criticizes our supreme court in front of overseas audiences in
00:51:12.020
these countries but like you know other than europe basically that's what you have in the world you have
00:51:17.500
countries that generally speaking are disagreeable to us and our values and if you're going to continue
00:51:24.660
having any form of international trade you're going to have to put up with a lot of stuff you don't
00:51:28.280
agree with you know you basically should you basically can only eliminate the most egregious
00:51:35.140
offenders and saudi arabia while they do a lot of things we don't like does not fall into that
00:51:40.980
category for the united states uh you know so right yeah so but they're still getting a lot of flack
00:51:48.780
right a lot yeah the players who are considering joining the tour has anybody officially joined it
00:51:54.540
yeah yeah that bunch now um you know phil nicholson was kind of the big first one to drop and but
00:52:00.160
they they're talking about he got paid 200 million dollars to go over there uh but 200 million dollars
00:52:06.120
yeah uh bryson de chambeau went over it's guaranteed just yeah for joining the tour i believe it's
00:52:12.160
wow technically appearance fees so like they have to actually show up at the tournaments you know
00:52:17.260
but uh yeah i'd go i think i'd go for 200 million dollars i think i would i would too yeah i hate
00:52:23.000
to admit that but i think i'd join the saudi tour and i'll say this to the saudi arabian government
00:52:27.240
right now if they're looking for a new show called studio saudi arabia and they got nine figures behind
00:52:31.540
that let's talk you know i mean no offense to glenn and the blaze right but uh you know if you might
00:52:37.120
consider that like okay you know sand storms every day how they're good how they're good yeah you should
00:52:44.320
like them you should thank you should thank the government for bringing you the saudi oil is oh i
00:52:50.060
love really quality oil oil the best oil and you should be buying it comes out of the ground
00:52:54.900
you know yeah and i look the other governments might not do that as well as saudi i and that's why i
00:53:02.380
support this you know 200 million would be hard to turn down it would be it would be almost impossible
00:53:08.980
would you turn it down for north korea there's a lot of people who would say no probably uh but i
00:53:16.240
think yes you're right you're going to turn it down if it's north korea yeah if it's saudi arabia i
00:53:20.600
mean like coca-cola sells a lot of coca-cola and nobody hassles them about it yeah why are we
00:53:26.760
hassling golfers about it that guy we haven't we have a good question we have a relationship with
00:53:31.860
this country like they're not uh there is a very limited amount of country we don't do it very often
00:53:36.460
we didn't do it to russia after they took crimea right like they had to really go all out for us
00:53:43.020
to get this this pissed off at russia like north korea has you know internment camps all over their
00:53:48.720
country and we don't have that relationship and they don't they don't want an outside relationship
00:53:52.320
obviously they're a very strange country but like china has internment camps all over their country
00:53:57.760
and we still have a relationship with them yeah we still do a lot of trade with them very few people
00:54:02.880
outside the right criticize the nba for the relationship they have with china yeah and if you
00:54:08.060
do it you're called a racist and banned off of social media and by the way britney greiner is still
00:54:14.120
still being held in russia is absolutely incredible still she's begging she wrote a letter
00:54:21.020
begging biden to get her out and she's still there it really is july 5th now what what was she
00:54:29.740
taken uh uh she was arrested in was it march it was after the it was like a month i feel like it
00:54:35.720
was like several weeks or a month after the war started which is like gosh the fact that she was
00:54:39.740
even there yeah um it's amazing she goes from what i understand she goes every year yeah because you
00:54:46.080
know there's money to be made in russia and so they have a women's professional league and she goes over
00:54:50.640
there to supplement the income because they don't make that much in the wnba yeah i mean they make
00:54:55.060
i mean they do fine yeah they do fine okay hundreds of thousands of dollars and based on the
00:55:00.780
you know based on the the audience size the fan size arguably they should make zero dollars i mean
00:55:07.180
like let's be honest to be honest about it arguably the numbers should be zero arguably yes and i will
00:55:13.400
say you know people like all women we've talked a lot about women's sports recently it's been a big
00:55:17.600
topic on talk radio oh i can't believe they're letting this you know this swimmer win these swim meets
00:55:22.720
and let's be honest about it i don't care who wins the swim meets frankly the literally the only
00:55:30.100
thing that i care about when it comes to women's sports i will give you the one time i'm interested
00:55:33.820
when my daughter is playing yeah literally the only time i will ever be interested in women's sports
00:55:39.620
although that's not fair women's tennis i like watching i think women's tennis is entertaining
00:55:43.720
even as it compares to men's tennis because at least it's not just a serve ace serve ace serve ace every
00:55:50.120
single point so like women's tennis to me is actually more entertaining there's a couple
00:55:53.580
things here and there but generally speaking like i'm not a huge passion guy when it comes to the
00:55:58.120
authenticity of women's sports but it's it's fascinating to kind of see this stuff happen i
00:56:03.540
mean britney griner is like one of the four names in the wmba i might be able to come up with like
00:56:07.940
she's pretty famous right like a big star i don't think i could come up with three others frankly
00:56:12.340
uh right now diana trusty she's still playing okay she's still on i think i think she still plays is
00:56:19.140
she i think she does plan i think i think she's gonna be like 63 years old but she's like the
00:56:24.620
kareem of the of the sport she's been around for a long time i could give you rebecca lobo but she
00:56:30.860
hasn't been playing for some time i mean it's true i i it's not something i care about generally
00:56:37.000
speaking yeah i think it highlights the issue um of of the trans stuff and how nuts it is to the
00:56:45.860
average american really well though and it's like i can tell you if my daughter you know gets a silver
00:56:51.720
instead of a gold someday because some dude decided to come over and kick her butt you'd be pissed in
00:56:56.860
women's sports i am going to be very very passionate about it and that i think that's how most most
00:57:01.460
americans can connect to that issue we have to be it's just it's just a way to highlight to the
00:57:06.180
american people how you know how this how ridiculous this is because everyone can quantify it there
00:57:11.500
it's hard to quantify it's hard to understand someone who's going through a transgender type
00:57:19.500
of issue to the average american who isn't trans now i know polling starting to show that maybe the
00:57:23.840
average american is trans so i don't know how much longer i can make this point i think about 80 percent
00:57:29.220
of us seems like about 80 percent right now but like the average person can't relate to what those
00:57:35.300
you know what those people are going through i mean it's it's you know i don't know i don't know how to
00:57:40.440
explain it i can't ever comprehend or contemplate that it could happen to me i don't you know so i
00:57:46.440
don't it's not part of my lived experience as they say pat but the average american can very much see
00:57:53.200
okay this is ridiculous here you know you might be like oh i don't want to be mean i don't want to
00:57:58.980
leave her behind like this yeah i i can't believe it's been this it's been months at least three months
00:58:05.380
and and maybe four and she should have been released if donald trump were in office first
00:58:11.120
of all i don't think it would have ever happened i don't think she would have been arrested in the
00:58:14.280
first place but if she had been i think he'd have her back in two days and yet she's languishing over
00:58:20.460
there in a russian jail and it just keeps going and going and going triple eight seven two seven
00:58:27.560
in life there are good and bad surprises finding 20 bucks good surprise car breaking down really bad
00:58:38.160
surprise when you have a car protection plan through car shield those bad surprises are a lot
00:58:43.880
easier to handle car shield offers protection plans for around 100 bucks a month that cover more
00:58:49.340
parts than ever before when you need a repair you don't have to deal with the paperwork or the
00:58:54.480
headaches just choose the mechanic you want to work with and car shield administrators will handle
00:58:59.300
the rest and here's a good surprise every protection plan includes coast-to-coast roadside
00:59:04.180
assistance rental car options and trip reimbursement at no extra cost so lock in your price by getting
00:59:09.840
coverage today and it'll never go up car shield helps make the surprise of your car breaking down
00:59:14.820
easier to handle get coverage like i did because i never worry about my trucks at the ranch i know
00:59:19.600
when i need them they'll be ready to roll carshield.com slash back 800-391-8888 save 10 on your plan now
00:59:47.920
you just know what's coming every time stinking romney
00:59:52.100
he wrote uh for the 4th of july uh this happy message to america even as we watch the reservoirs
00:59:59.440
and lakes of the west go dry we keep watering our lawns soaking our golf courses and growing water
01:00:07.560
thirsty crops as inflation mounts and the national debt balloons progressive politicians vote for ever
01:00:13.880
more spending as the ice caps melt and record temperatures make the evening news we figure that
01:00:22.720
buying a prius and recycling the boxes from our daily amazon deliveries will suffice when tv news
01:00:29.400
outlets broadcast video after video of people illegally crossing the nation's southern border
01:00:33.900
many of us changed the channel and when a renowned conservative former federal appellate judge
01:00:41.040
testifies that we're already in a war for our democracy and that january 6th
01:00:45.720
was a genuine constitutional crisis was it um mega loyalist snicker that he speaks slowly and
01:00:57.240
celebrate that most people weren't watching i just celebrate the fact that our democracy was
01:01:03.660
pretty solid regardless of what happened on january 6th i mean again had they accomplished their goal
01:01:11.560
which was i don't know was it hanging mike pence was that their goal was there it was holding up the
01:01:18.540
the vote which they couldn't do they there was no there was nothing really that would have stopped
01:01:25.360
the vote i mean they could have delayed it for a little a few hours which they did and then they
01:01:30.060
voted anyway and everything was fine well do you do remember of course the truth here pat which is
01:01:35.940
january 6th they were supposed to have this vote and then count the vote to to name who the president
01:01:41.380
was going to be right and then what happened was that on january 6th they they did counted the vote
01:01:46.560
yeah yeah they did exactly it was later though than initially planned right it didn't happen at the
01:01:51.360
exact minute they were gonna do it but it happened later that same day and and that's frightening and
01:01:58.080
by the way we should also note that like mike pence was a good part of the reason that did occur
01:02:03.640
right like he you know he decided you know he wanted to go he there look it's in the scope of
01:02:11.700
the american democracy this this of this day gets overstated quite a bit quite a bit it sure does it
01:02:18.060
is it was a bad day bad things happened it was a riot yeah it was a it was a riot and when riots
01:02:23.380
happen i say they're bad all the time i know that's not the position of the media who tends to tell me
01:02:28.900
that they're mostly peaceful fires but like i think they're all bad and but like i don't think
01:02:36.180
democracy was at risk it wasn't um i mean it's so overstated it's just it's nonsense that democracy
01:02:43.720
which we don't have was at risk right that's true too that's a good point i mean there are elements of
01:02:49.340
our democracy of democracy in our republic yes but they were not at risk they were not at risk
01:02:53.980
they were not at risk these were the worst insurrectionists in the history of insurrection
01:02:58.000
but romney goes on to describe that the left uh the left is thinks the right is at fault for
01:03:05.720
ignoring climate change and the attacks on our political system the right thinks the left is
01:03:10.360
the problem for ignoring illegal immigration and the national debt but it's only mitt romney who really
01:03:17.160
knows all that is wrong and needs to be righted i mean this guy who does who does he think he
01:03:23.960
is and he continues to just uh to just acquiesce to the left on a regular basis and accept their
01:03:33.820
premise like january 6th and climate change well i i don't accept the premise that man is causing
01:03:41.800
all the climate change i don't believe that i i think that the sun is very responsible for the
01:03:50.200
warming of our temperatures tell us more about this sun you refer to well there's a two million degree
01:03:56.120
burning orb in the sky and some people call it the sun now two million degrees i mean on the surface
01:04:04.420
it's only 11 000 but as it travels out with all the gases and things and they don't really know all the
01:04:09.880
reasons it gets much much warmer but then that sends warm air our way like in the mail uh no like
01:04:19.260
through space and these rays actually come to this planet and warm it at least that used to be the
01:04:27.180
theory but now i guess it's all co2 it's all co2 wow sun has nothing to do with it anymore i gotta look
01:04:33.880
can you is there a way to see it like in a telescope or something yes really yes you can't don't do that
01:04:39.760
though that'll hurt your eyes the glenn back program if you're living with aches and pains
01:04:48.040
especially if they're frequent and nagging and relentless i want you to take a moment and think
01:04:52.360
back to the last time you really felt good can you even remember what it felt like now here's even a
01:04:57.900
more important question what would you give to go back to feeling like that again maybe it would just
01:05:02.740
be nice to take a stroll with your loved one or play with your grandchildren i've suffered from
01:05:06.900
persistent crippling pain almost all the time for about five years when i started taking relief factor
01:05:12.860
i took it because my wife made me start taking it i didn't think it would work for me yet here i am
01:05:17.340
today virtually pain free doing the things i love to do all thanks to my wonderful wife and relief
01:05:23.280
factor i love that it's not a drug but it was developed by doctors and about 70 of the people who
01:05:28.060
try it go on to order more are you part of that 70 that can get your life back your first step to
01:05:33.400
becoming pain free just might be to order the three-week quick start for only 19.95 go to
01:05:38.660
relieffactor.com or call 800-4-RELIEF find out more about this offer feel the difference relieffactor.com
01:05:46.560
doing our part to keep free speech alive there's much more after the break on the glennbeck program
01:06:18.620
uh this is interesting a woke universal music group worker claims he was fired for speaking up
01:06:30.680
about abortion rights after he admitted he refused to work because he was in mourning
01:06:37.080
over the supreme court decision to overturn roe v wade well you can't be expected to work when you're in
01:06:43.280
mourning i mean that's just inhuman michael lopez a production coordinator at universal music
01:06:51.220
enterprises blasted the company as anti-gay for terminating a queer brown person unquote uh during
01:06:58.540
pride month for speaking up in defense of abortion rights
01:07:02.220
last friday he says like countless other folks i was devastated by the news of the supreme court's
01:07:10.420
attack on abortion rights paired with the flood of anti-queer and anti-trans legislation
01:07:15.740
uh it's been hard to process how companies expect us to be productive while our rights are being
01:07:22.800
stripped away and yet they did expect him to be productive what yeah productive what about his
01:07:31.060
processing time i know that's a big thing these days a lot of people take a long time to process
01:07:35.400
processing mourning all of those things need to occur and yet the universal music group said no we
01:07:42.660
want you to work he said no i'm in mourning so they fired him they fired him they expected him to work
01:07:48.920
on a work day wow so no wonder the fallout continues over that uh decision by the u.s supreme court
01:07:58.720
to take away women's rights as we've seen uh many people claim including uh we talked about jessica
01:08:08.460
beal already also katie perry oh my gosh thank god you brought this up yeah this is this is so sad
01:08:14.460
you know we live in in a country where women have no rights none i don't know if you know that none a lot
01:08:22.420
of people making this same point you know a lot of people uh made the point uh now guns have more
01:08:29.860
rights than women in this country is that what i'm hearing is it is what you're hearing that doesn't
01:08:36.860
mean it's true or real or significant in any way um it's just ridiculous nonsense and katie perry went
01:08:44.300
down that road a little bit she said um katie perry said uh hey uh she said uh something about
01:08:53.920
i guess a reference to one of her dumb songs about fireworks which unfortunately she made because now
01:08:58.120
i have to hear it over and over again every july 4th the word firework is in it quick put it on our
01:09:03.100
playlist it's like all right the song sucks can we all agree the song sucks it's it's her saying
01:09:08.220
life is like you and i definitely agree yeah really yes i'm that i'm surprised because i know
01:09:13.780
you're a katie perry fan oh big time we've got all her cds and stuff you do oh yeah all of them
01:09:21.660
oh every one of them so she said uh you know something some reference to her song which i
01:09:27.780
won't recount because it's too disturbing that people liked it at some point but she says something
01:09:32.900
about a sparkler and she says now women have less rights than a sparkler less rights than a sparkler
01:09:40.860
what is the right of a i don't know at least the gun one tied into the news yeah like the gun one
01:09:47.480
was like okay well they did say that the second amendment agrees and then you have a right to
01:09:52.300
carry a gun so therefore like at least guns are a reference point here like for her like i guess
01:09:59.460
because everyone plays her dumb song once a year she was thinking about the word sparkler and then
01:10:04.980
said women have less rights as sparkler now here's something interesting about the united states of
01:10:10.700
america pat women can and do own sparklers oh that's a lie that's not true it's true they can't
01:10:19.780
be true now the opposite wow very few sparklers own women that does almost never happens in this
01:10:28.380
country you know if you may have an incident here or there i don't want to discount it completely
01:10:31.800
okay but my understanding is very often it's it's the other way around it's the other way
01:10:37.940
women own the sparkler rather than the sparkler owning the woman right so i don't think that that's
01:10:43.900
you don't think it's accurate that's that that's accurate at all in any way and it's so weird because
01:10:48.800
like first of all we know in in this country you can have abortion at any point during the pregnancy
01:10:54.620
that is what the post row world allows you to have an abortion in this country at any point
01:11:01.020
in the pregnancy that is the reality here okay you may need to travel there was a uh a situation
01:11:08.680
that happened in ohio and this is a big point on the on the left yeah this is what they're going to
01:11:13.720
hammer home because this happens all the time 10 year olds get pregnant all the time super super
01:11:20.680
common uh now look this is a terrible i don't know what the backstory is fully on it but like
01:11:26.540
obviously a terrible incident this 10 year old wanted to have got pregnant somehow wanted to have
01:11:31.620
an abortion and had to travel out of ohio and there's no such thing as i don't know if people
01:11:35.620
know this and then this this may confuse the left who seemingly wants to drag sexual intercourse into
01:11:41.400
every aspect of a 10 year old's life but there is no such thing as consensual sex for a 10 year old
01:11:47.040
okay not a thing that occurs it's not it's not possible right so we know that it was obviously
01:11:52.840
bad things that led to this and so this kid you know they're they want to get an abortion now look
01:11:58.200
this is obviously the most the most extreme of extreme of extreme of extreme of extreme cases
01:12:02.620
and this is brought up uh over the over the weekend this shows like how crazy this is look at this
01:12:08.020
she can't get this abortion in ohio she has to go to indiana and this situation happens it occurs
01:12:14.960
at about 0.001 percent of the of cases for abortion yep i mean we just saw these stats last week it's
01:12:22.380
like 0.001 percent of the time it's incredibly rare and of course every single state that is
01:12:29.420
banning quote-unquote banning abortion has an exception for life of the mother and almost all
01:12:34.360
states have it for rape and incest it's most of them wind up doing now i guess most states would
01:12:39.240
have been able to right accommodate this 10 year old right but but what had to happen was she had to go
01:12:44.660
to indiana to get this abortion now take out the whole debate because it's like 9 000 miles away
01:12:49.540
no it's not that far 47 000 miles no it's not that far at all you know take out the whole debate on
01:12:54.380
what the right outcome would be here for this for this situation it's obviously extreme and terrible
01:12:58.820
and there's no reason to go into that at this moment but my point here is by the way indiana
01:13:02.760
another red state another red state so they go to another red from one red state to another red state
01:13:06.920
for her to get this abortion but like my guess is as this little girl grows up and i assume she was a
01:13:14.720
girl though obviously men can get pregnant obviously i don't even know why you why would you even bring
01:13:20.900
that up well i just wanted to make sure we were clear it was weird we want to make sure we were
01:13:23.860
clear uh no matter what happens my guess is as this little girl grows up and becomes a woman and
01:13:30.180
tell us a story the most consequential part will not be the travel that's right you know i guess is
01:13:39.200
probably the road trip is going to take a very small part of that story like it's going to be
01:13:44.540
the terrible thing that led to the pregnancy it may also be what happened with the abortion
01:13:50.260
itself i may affect her as well who knows what i mean you know you can't even speak about how
01:13:58.240
terrible the circumstance is here but like the travel is really a small part of that story and
01:14:03.360
yet it was the only thing the only thing that the left wanted to talk about and it's so bizarre we
01:14:09.560
talked about jessica beale as well going overseas and being like oh i want to embrace these overseas
01:14:14.200
laws that would make things uh that would make things much much better well i do you know what these uh
01:14:22.000
what these laws look like overseas because i don't think they do let me give you a few of them here
01:14:28.040
this is all from europe uh our favorite uh lichtenstein which everyone i mean how many times
01:14:34.660
have you gone there i know you have a lichtenstein yeah i've got a summer place didn't stein uh yes you've
01:14:40.000
got uh it's illegal abortion illegal accepting rape cases where a woman is under 14 years old
01:14:46.540
so if you're 15 and you're raped it's completely illegal but if you're 14 or under and raped
01:14:52.020
it is uh it is legal oh that's the only exception completely illegal in malta illegal in all cases
01:15:00.300
in all cases they have no exceptions in malta legal in all cases wow okay this is enlightened
01:15:07.480
europe now you're i haven't got to the big big name countries here so this is where you're gonna get
01:15:10.500
the good liberal stuff right uh right ireland now ireland we know has was famously had banned it until
01:15:16.420
very recently it was legal up to the now it's legal up to the 12th week with exemptions for life and
01:15:22.180
health risk to a woman or fetal abnormality in andorra illegal in all cases uh samantha's mother
01:15:29.640
and bewitched yes she will not why does she have her own laws that's really weird she's a witch
01:15:35.780
uh obviously yeah uh poland illegal accepting cases of rape fetal malformation or serious threat
01:15:42.620
to a woman's health portugal legal up to 10th week of pregnancy after a mandated mandated three
01:15:49.500
day waiting period imagine trying to implement that on women of the left no you have to wait three days
01:15:54.760
no way switzerland enlightened switzerland legal up to the 12th week of pregnancy if a woman files a
01:16:02.500
written request that she is in a situation of distress and doctors provide comprehensive
01:16:08.560
information and recommended counseling on moral and material help and adoption jeez can you imagine
01:16:15.420
implementing that system on california right now no that would they would look at that as as the
01:16:20.600
handmaid's tale yeah that's switzerland italy women has 90 days from the date of conception to request
01:16:28.320
request an abortion the termination must be must be due to health economic social or family reasons
01:16:36.960
it's fairly broad you can get one but still 90 days finland illegal up to the 12th week of pregnancy
01:16:43.920
but only if a woman can provide a social reason such as poverty extreme distress or already having at
01:16:50.620
least four children so if you're the fifth kid you're all you're automatic you're an auto distress to
01:16:56.320
this family yeah and pat would you have what 62 kids so you would know how that works yes uh in france
01:17:01.840
this is the country that she was actually talking about legal up to the 12th week of pregnancy
01:17:06.380
later stage abortions are allowed if two physicians certify that the abortion will
01:17:11.260
prevent grave permanent injury to physical or mental health life or of the woman or the child
01:17:17.060
if it will suffer from an incurable illness okay that's the that's the where the croissants are for
01:17:22.720
jessica biel uh belgium legal up to the 12th week of pregnancy with six days of counseling prior to
01:17:28.600
abortion six days of count imagine requiring counseling germany legal up to 12th week of pregnancy
01:17:34.540
exceptions made for serious threat to mother's physical or mental health first trimester abortions
01:17:39.900
are subject to a mandatory three-day waiting period and counseling these are all far far more stricter
01:17:46.260
than u.s laws were before uh roe v wade being overturned yeah i remember going through this
01:17:51.880
and listen initially at the time the most lenient states in russia or countries in russia had laws
01:17:59.080
roughly uh equal to but a little bit more conservative than utah utah wow denmark legal
01:18:07.020
up to the 12th week uh exceptions made for a rape and threats to the health or life um and or if a
01:18:13.260
woman can demonstrate the lack of financial resources to care for a child spain legal up to the 14th week
01:18:18.540
of pregnancy sweden 18th week of pregnancy it's illegal after the 22nd week abortions are granted
01:18:25.980
um between 18 and 22 if approved by the national board of health and welfare can you imagine requiring
01:18:34.420
women to go through that here uh netherlands up to 21 weeks legal up to the 24th week if medical reasons
01:18:39.880
dictate england up to the 24th week of pregnancy uh but again like these are all more restrictive
01:18:47.160
than what our country was just a few weeks ago yeah okay uh i oh now it's just some of the states
01:18:54.940
iowa was up to the 22nd week south carolina the 20th week virginia 25th week dc all these more liberal
01:19:01.480
than the european all of these more liberal so i mean wow you go through that list and you say wow
01:19:06.600
europe had much more conservative rules on abortion than america was had and they all came out and spoke
01:19:15.880
against us even though this country will still have laws far more liberal right you'll just have
01:19:21.180
to move a little bit for them and like that is i can understand people like well some women don't
01:19:25.540
have the money to do that well there's plenty of these charities that are going to step up and pay
01:19:29.100
for i mean the companies are doing it if you work at a lot of these companies but there's absolutely
01:19:33.680
tons of charitable organizations that will do it and you can get this stuff mailed to you you know from
01:19:39.400
india pharmacies in india very cheaply it's you know it's sad i mean i think that's a tragedy but
01:19:45.800
like to act as if this is some major change in our country it really it isn't if you want to get an
01:19:50.920
abortion it's a great step for people who are the pro-life cause because now it at least allows us to
01:19:56.020
have the argument before they acted as if this was some constitutional right you couldn't argue with
01:20:00.380
which was nonsense at least that's out of the way 888-727-BECK more coming up
01:20:09.900
you hear me talk about my love all the time for my pillow and my sheets and i've had the best sleep
01:20:27.580
of my life honestly and mike lindell has done it again with his my slippers he took over two years
01:20:33.720
to develop these he ensured that they weren't just any ordinary slipper these slippers are made
01:20:38.560
with three-tier cushioning system two layers my pillow foam and a layer of impact gel to prevent
01:20:44.540
fatigue and offer all-day comfort it's embarrassing for my children but i love them and i can wear them
01:20:51.280
indoors outdoors when i bring them places oh they love it and i love it too because they're comfortable
01:20:57.500
for a limited time you're going to save 90 on a pair of my slippers the blowout sale of the year
01:21:02.960
won't last so order right now it's even great to stock up for future gifts for family and friends
01:21:08.500
just log on to mypillow.com click on radio listener specials use the promo code back to receive this
01:21:13.400
incredible limited time offer call right now 800-966-3117 or go to mypillow.com promo code back
01:21:21.820
it's pat and stew for glenn on the glenn back program 888-727-BECK uh joey chestnut at the hot
01:21:39.660
dog eating contest at nathan's again yesterday for the fourth of july which they do every year
01:21:44.140
and he wins it every year well he's won 15 out of the last 16 remember there was like an a rivalry
01:21:49.180
at some point he just put that was put that away yeah i mean it's completely not a rivalry anymore
01:21:54.160
he wins by you know 15 20 hot dogs every year the guy's a world-class eater he just is oh yeah and uh
01:22:02.680
so he got attacked during the competition yesterday uh we i think we have the uh we have the video check
01:22:10.100
this out that guy comes up to him and either hits him or bumps into him somehow and then chestnut just
01:22:20.920
takes him in a headlock and throws him to the ground and starts eating again and what did the
01:22:27.900
sign say that he was holding up do you know it was something about how animals are treated it's okay
01:22:32.360
plant it was you know some environmental thing uh so he just ignored it went back to eating
01:22:37.520
and he won the competition put down 63 hot dogs that's amazing i think it messed him up a little
01:22:43.360
bit because last year was 70 i think 76 hot dogs he put he ate uh during the competition so he didn't
01:22:49.560
quite get there but he still won by uh a lot a lot like 16 i think he won by 16 hot dogs there are
01:22:57.260
those stories of like parents whose kid is trapped under a car they lift up the the car to save the kid
01:23:04.080
that is less fascinating to me than how you can eat 63 hot dogs in 20 minutes or 10 minutes whatever
01:23:10.280
it is i think it's 10 yeah how i can't even comprehend it's so gross what he does so gross i can't i can't
01:23:17.400
watch it oof i can't why i can't there's something about a wet roll that yeah that's i don't like it
01:23:21.880
no no i don't know why texture it's the texture it's the texture it's not good it's a texture thing
01:23:33.740
let me talk to you a little bit about rough greens now i love my dog i we have uh three it seems like
01:23:50.960
we have an entire house of animals but we have three dogs uh if you love yours as well we have
01:23:56.000
that in common and i will uh argue that when it comes to your dog you'll pretty much do whatever
01:24:01.080
it takes like you just want to give them the best life possible you love them they love you
01:24:04.880
unconditionally which is kind of nice everyone else in your life that she's you know they they come and
01:24:10.200
they go right pat they come and they go uh but uh when it comes to your animals like every time you
01:24:15.620
come home they're happy to see you which is kind of it really is cool i think that's one of the
01:24:19.460
main reasons we love our dogs so much it's selfish unconditional love it is they just freaking
01:24:24.260
love you yeah um now when you let's talk about how you can contribute to their overall health and
01:24:28.280
happiness uh a few years ago we talked about rough greens uh that i have a dog president miles at this
01:24:34.100
point he is uh you know he's giving joe biden a run for his money as far as age goes uh and honestly
01:24:39.620
intelligence um i mean miles is clearly smarter but that's a whole nother story uh he loves his rough
01:24:45.340
greens piper who's like uh seven or eight loves her rough greens uh even ivy who is uh our little
01:24:51.060
our youngest one is now six months old something like that loves the rough greens everybody does
01:24:55.220
every dog loves their rough greens and they get all the vitamins minerals and probiotics and
01:24:59.160
antioxidants all the things that they need uh check it out you sprinkle it on top of your dog food
01:25:04.160
check it out now uh all you gotta do is pay for free shipping go to roughgreens.com
01:25:33.880
what you are about to hear is the fusion of entertainment
01:25:57.760
uh gavin newsom starting to make some noise nationally what could that mean buying ads in
01:26:14.160
other states uh we'll get to that and lots more coming up in 60 seconds
01:26:19.140
well let me tell you about what samantha from california has to say about her transformative
01:26:30.380
results using the best in skincare genucell says i love genucell's plant stem cell therapy i've used
01:26:36.280
it over my face under my eyes and it cleared up my dry flakiness and even reduced my forehead lines
01:26:41.460
someone even asked me if i had surgery or procedures done no just genucell by chamonix thank you so much
01:26:47.680
genucell has over you know sold over a million products to women and men across this great
01:26:53.520
country and everyone always falls in love with the results fine lines forehead wrinkles dark spots
01:26:59.280
even those annoying bags and puffiness can all be gone right before your eyes and best of all you
01:27:03.800
get guaranteed results in as little as 12 hours or your money back so there's no risk whatsoever
01:27:08.580
now see the difference for yourself with 65 off their most popular packages at genucell.com
01:27:14.000
slash beck is 65 off all customer favorites including the classic under eyes uh under eye
01:27:20.440
bags and puffiness treatment is at genucell.com slash beck you can enter the code beck at checkout
01:27:24.720
for an extra 20 off order today and get their summer essential the dark spot corrector absolutely free
01:27:31.620
go to genucell.com slash beck genucell.com slash beck it's g-e-n-u-c-e-l.com slash beck
01:27:39.420
all right well gavin newsom apparently uh preparing himself to run for president of the united states he's
01:27:49.420
of course governor of california right now and it looks like he's got uh some ambition to maybe be
01:27:55.620
the president you know and it up until this point uh we asked many times like who do they have their
01:28:04.040
bench is so bad uh they've got nobody uh what are they going back to hillary al gore uh richard
01:28:13.040
gephardt maybe richard gephardt can be their nominee still it's still richard gephardt still
01:28:18.560
still richard probably their best guy on their bench but you know if if you're not gonna run
01:28:23.380
the president the incumbent if he's not gonna run uh kamala harris is not really appetizing to
01:28:32.340
democrats i don't think but gavin newsom maybe it might be uh he might be the one that they turn
01:28:39.220
to uh anyway he's starting to run ads in other states including florida here's what he uh ran in
01:28:46.820
florida it's independent state so let's talk about what's going on in america freedom it's under attack
01:28:53.040
in your state your republican leaders they're banning books making it harder to vote they're
01:28:57.840
restricting speech in classrooms even criminalizing women and doctors criminalizing women what the
01:29:04.080
hell is a lie it's a lie or join us in california but we still believe in freedom freedom of speech
01:29:09.300
freedom to choose freedom from hate and the freedom to love don't let them take your freedom
01:29:15.320
i can't take it this is fascinating take it as a tactic uh now gavin newsom is terrible
01:29:24.420
yeah he is a he's been a terrible governor for the state of california and has done an awful job
01:29:29.760
there and what's fascinating about it is he you know this is a he's not good at really i don't
01:29:35.160
think he's good at anything i guess he's good at you know sleeping with his friends wives other than
01:29:41.140
that i don't know what he's good at i mean he's famously disobeying his own orders during a pandemic
01:29:46.800
oh yeah he's good at that he is good at that he's good at that he's good at that good again some good
01:29:50.520
restaurant reservations uh when when no one else is allowed to have them but he's able to do that
01:29:55.460
books what the what books did they ban in florida they didn't ban any books they made it so that you
01:30:02.900
couldn't discuss uh alternative sex or any sex or any sex for that matter to first graders in first
01:30:11.680
grade in first grade through third i think it was yeah kindergarten through third i think it was
01:30:15.580
jeez come on i mean it's so ridiculous banning books restricting speech making it harder to vote
01:30:22.140
really no they're not let's go to delaware and find out how hard it is to vote where they don't
01:30:26.580
even have early voting they don't even have it you can vote on one day one so so ridiculous and
01:30:34.860
then criminalizing women and doctors nobody is talking about criminalizing women no one well wait a
01:30:40.300
minute i am i am talking about it i am talking about it pat i'm gonna be honest with you i am
01:30:46.240
talking about criminalizing women when women commit crimes they're criminals what do you mean criminal
01:30:51.200
they're not criminalized because they're women they're criminalized because they commit crimes now
01:30:55.580
supposedly an abortion he's trying to refer to abortion and they're you're as you point out pat
01:31:00.040
there's really there was a big article in the new york times this weekend about the four people who
01:31:03.660
are pushing for uh uh you know uh locking away women yeah locking away women who want to have
01:31:09.900
abortions are there four i i don't know that's what they claim that seems like too many look you
01:31:15.320
know that wow i guess and it's true it's been like because roe versus wade was this big barrier
01:31:20.420
right this big this big thousand foot wall that essentially while we could have these conversations
01:31:26.900
about the nuances of abortion policy you weren't able to implement any of it so it was kind of a
01:31:31.340
non-starter now that wall's gone and so now the pro-life movement which has always had many many
01:31:38.100
shades people who were very very restrictive some people who were just like hey we need to
01:31:41.660
limit it at 15 weeks whatever like the pro-life movement has always encompassed a really wide
01:31:47.160
variety of people and opinions on that side of the argument well you're going to see some i think
01:31:53.100
separation there they're going to see some people who are really restrictive and some people who are
01:31:56.820
i think that's going too far and that's going to have to shake itself out in the movement it's why
01:32:01.880
you have different states and different laws again i don't think that's the this particular issue is a
01:32:06.720
good application of our federalism uh and our our tradition of federalism in that i think protecting
01:32:14.700
life is more important than that and i do believe it should be i you know i believe i support and would
01:32:20.200
support and think republicans should pursue a constitutional amendment outlawing abortion
01:32:24.960
i mean it's they're not going to get it through but that doesn't make a difference to me should
01:32:30.320
be proposed every single year every single year keep proposing it until somebody does something about
01:32:34.480
it but that being said uh you know you have a a situation here where someone like gavin newsom is
01:32:42.020
going to try to to present this information like it's some terrible thing that's going on in florida
01:32:49.320
when half of his residents moved there yeah you know like the state is emptied out to go to florida
01:32:56.100
and texas and other places last year alone they lost a net 367 000 people yeah to florida to idaho
01:33:05.160
and to texas and the person who should be most excited about that is gavin newsom because those
01:33:09.980
people weren't there to vote against him in his recall right right like if those people had stayed he
01:33:14.900
might not be in office yeah so and it's fascinating what has happened with gavin newsom because of the
01:33:21.140
recall which is a typical dumb tactic by the media and a lot of people are falling for it which is like
01:33:28.180
basically like they are saying gavin newsom strong he he won this his recall election easily
01:33:35.280
is it all that impressive guys that a democrat in california could survive a recall by what is
01:33:45.940
essentially eight percentage points i think it was i think he won 58 42 if i'm remembering right it was
01:33:51.320
somewhere around there and they're like well i won by 16 points yeah but if eight there's only two ways
01:33:55.760
to go so if eight percent of the people change their mind it would have been tied or you know it would
01:34:01.780
have maybe tipped over to the recall side now we know the dynamics of that election and that like
01:34:07.260
larry elder is a guy that we like and he's a good conservative not exactly the flavor of of republican
01:34:13.400
that would necessarily win a statewide election no easily arnold schwarzenegger is a guy who's
01:34:18.320
essentially a democrat and look i think those guys suck yeah i think arnold schwarzenegger sucks but
01:34:23.660
he still like that's the type of candidate that may have been able to win there well when he says
01:34:28.640
screw your freedom yeah that sucks that that's gavin newsom that's a guy who sucks yeah that guy
01:34:34.260
sucks but like is it all that impressive no like you shouldn't the fact that they were able to come
01:34:40.860
up with the with the amount of energy against gavin newsom to get the recall done in the first place
01:34:47.920
it's only the second time in recent history it's happened then you have a situation where that was
01:34:53.160
pretty amazing to start with then he was pushed to the brink yeah by larry elder right who i
01:34:58.560
again is a guy i like but it's a talk show host right and he's you know and is uh has never served
01:35:04.740
in electric elected office and is also very conservative something that i think would be a
01:35:09.140
real great thing for california but the california voter typically does not agree with and remember
01:35:14.020
just a few weeks before this election it looked as if larry elder really had a chance to win
01:35:20.280
like it was very close polls were showing it only a couple points now he extended that lead by a
01:35:24.760
couple points he did what he had to do in a bad situation you can give him that but like it's not
01:35:30.740
like this was some great achievement here no yeah he won in california a state that had already voted
01:35:36.840
for him he was able to hold on to the election and not get removed from office it's like saying like
01:35:44.620
god donald trump survived that uh that impeachment vote that's a great you know like that shows he's
01:35:50.220
super strong well i mean it shows he did what he had to do against the impeachment vote but like
01:35:54.220
none of the media was saying oh this shows the strength of donald trump like that's not what
01:35:58.800
happens and what's great in california is they have the freedom to pay seven dollars a gallon for gasoline
01:36:06.040
and about a million dollars for a thousand square feet of home space yeah you know i i've got a 1200
01:36:15.220
square foot home and i have the freedom to pay one and a half million dollars for that i mean it's
01:36:21.920
outrageous what's happening in california you can't afford to live there if you're any kind of if you
01:36:27.760
have any sort of normal salary you're making 50 or 60 thousand dollars there's no way you could buy a
01:36:32.820
home in california yeah you can maybe get a shack you could maybe rent a shed uh but you're not gonna
01:36:40.160
you're not gonna buy a home when you're making 50 000 in california no that's not uh i mean i
01:36:47.340
remember there was a time i don't remember uh this is a while ago but it was if you were making the
01:36:52.920
minimum salary as a player for the san francisco giants you couldn't afford the average home
01:36:57.660
i remember that and i don't know in san francisco it was yeah too expensive too expensive to afford
01:37:04.360
that you would not qualify for and that was mortgage wasn't it a seven or eight hundred thousand
01:37:09.440
dollar salary they were talking about yeah yeah i mean maybe at the time it was six hundred thousand
01:37:13.220
something like that for a minimum it's incredible and we should also point out that gavin newsom
01:37:17.920
when he was mayor of san francisco i referenced it briefly here but it's important to remember
01:37:23.260
how crazy this was he slept with like his best friend's wife oh that's right it wasn't like just
01:37:29.660
some some affair it was like his best friend's wife who he hired under him as a staffer that's
01:37:36.900
right and then slept with the staffer he's a douchebag oh he's a terrible human being in so many
01:37:42.740
ways and this is probably the smallest of them who am i to judge i'm just saying he's gonna burn in
01:37:46.860
the fires of hell right yeah you're not judging i'm not judging you're just saying one little thing
01:37:50.360
about his future one thing he's going to burn in the fires exactly but like what happened to the
01:37:56.480
me too movement here yeah you know she has come out and said well it's not really me too
01:38:01.480
i was 33 years old i knew what i was doing and like that's an acceptable thing for a republican to say
01:38:09.360
right like a republican the republican side of the argument is you know women actually have agency
01:38:14.700
and can make decisions of their of their own yeah but democrats have that power dynamic thing yeah
01:38:20.320
that's what they say yeah they say like when you know a celebrity sleeps with some underling
01:38:26.160
uh they say it it can't be consensual because there's a power dynamic there i remember they
01:38:33.020
said that with louis ck when he when he had his situation going on and he you know he was so
01:38:36.960
powerful you couldn't this is not go against his will right couldn't this was their argument like
01:38:42.100
there was some comedian that came out and said like you know his thing was i don't want to get
01:38:46.060
into the details here but his thing was basically uh pleasuring himself while while others watched
01:38:51.820
right yeah again i think he asked for permission and they said yes they didn't leave they said oh
01:38:59.040
yeah sure which they could have left which they could have except for the power dynamic right so
01:39:04.820
they said yes and they sat there and endured the spectacle yeah and the reason why it was a me too
01:39:11.560
violation was because he was a powerful comedian and i guess would control their comedy careers
01:39:18.980
if they didn't say yes which is complete nonsense and wasn't one of them on the phone
01:39:23.480
there was one of those cases it was on the phone there's one hang up yes where the the me too
01:39:30.520
complaint against louis ck was that he was on the phone with her with a woman yeah and she believed
01:39:36.680
that he was uh touching himself while they were on the phone he didn't say he was or
01:39:42.460
or like require like i don't know hey do you mind i don't know i i don't know how to explain this
01:39:50.040
i don't think he did i don't think he got permission on that one no he if he was doing it which we don't
01:39:55.040
know if he was and she didn't know but she see i guess it sounded like he was just again i don't
01:40:00.580
want to think about the details the point being here that their entire complaint for eradicating this
01:40:05.500
guy's career was the power dynamic yeah okay now gavin newsom who is the mayor of san francisco
01:40:12.400
it takes a direct staffer and sleeps with her which also happens to be the her best friend's
01:40:19.800
wife was his best friend's wife excuse me kimberly guilfoyle was he married to her at the time no no
01:40:26.480
this was uh i mean i mean you know i don't remember i think he was married at the time too i don't
01:40:30.800
remember i don't i don't remember because he was at one point married to fox well former fox uh anchor
01:40:36.920
kimberly guilfoyle okay but which is again strange i people tell me that he's a very good
01:40:43.660
looking man yeah and you know he looks to me like american psycho if you've you know and i guess
01:40:49.420
i guess he was a good looking guy in that movie he did murder a bunch of people too
01:40:54.520
but in part of the charm what are you perfect are you perfect stew
01:40:59.220
you know i'm not i've made my share of mistakes okay well then now none of them happen to be you
01:41:05.880
know putting tarps down in my apartment and brutally slaughtering people while listening to who you
01:41:10.300
lose in the news really you haven't done that that wasn't my particular mistake but we all have our
01:41:14.360
struggles that's right exactly what i'm saying that's exactly what and gavin newsom has his that
01:41:21.280
may or may not be the same as the character in american psycho we don't know we don't know we're not
01:41:26.620
with him at all times i wouldn't have predicted he'd sleep with his best friend's wife i wouldn't
01:41:30.800
either you know i would not either i would now i certainly wouldn't bring my wife around him now
01:41:36.020
right but back then it would be probably surprising probably was surprising to his best friend who's by
01:41:42.120
the way i don't know if i mentioned he slept with his best friend's wife and who was a direct
01:41:47.600
staffer of his but we should overlook that yeah because of the great job he did on covid question mark
01:41:54.220
well look it doesn't have anything to do with the presidency it doesn't mean he can't be a good
01:41:58.280
president that's right it's his personal life all right it's his personal life the the dining out
01:42:04.120
in the middle of the covid restrictions not really his personal life no no but the girlfriend thing
01:42:12.280
american financing nmls 182334 www.nmlsconsumeraccess.org
01:42:22.460
a new report shows that almost 71 percent of americans feel their paychecks are not going to be
01:42:27.300
able to keep up with inflation not just to be able to get ahead but to just keep up we all know where
01:42:32.560
this is coming from the people supposedly fighting inflation are the same ones giving it to us in the
01:42:37.300
first place you have a responsibility to yourself and your family to do what you can to get ahead
01:42:42.980
while it's still possible to get ahead swear american financing comes in this time the american
01:42:48.800
financing is there with power to maybe help you unlike some of the banks flexible mortgage returns
01:42:55.660
uh and terms cash out refinancing even debt consolidation please call them they don't work
01:43:03.260
for the banks they work for you american financing at 800-906-2440 800-906-2440 it's americanfinancing.net
01:43:14.060
patent stew for glenn 888-727-BECK it is confirmed uh at the time gavin newsom
01:43:33.240
slept with his best friend's wife he was in fact married to kimberly guilfoyle yes although i i does
01:43:39.820
seem like they were uh separated when uh when it happened yeah okay yeah so they were separate when
01:43:48.720
it happened but i think the affair was happening don't worry about it no i think the affair was
01:43:52.360
happening before they were separated so i oh i just think maybe what caused the separation
01:43:56.980
possibly possibly and now she's with donald trump jr is that right is that weird i mean from one
01:44:03.280
extreme to the other yeah i mean as far as ideological you know significant others because
01:44:09.440
she seems to be she was not like one of their straight news people right like she seems to be
01:44:12.780
conservative conservative yeah and like you know look you can overcome a certain amount of political
01:44:17.660
difference in a marriage but it's that's i couldn't do it not that much yeah no i i it'd be really
01:44:24.100
tough unless you just i don't know if you don't talk about it because otherwise you'd be at odds all
01:44:30.960
the time wouldn't you especially in this environment when you know so many things are coming up and
01:44:36.220
that's what people talk about around the dinner table and you certainly talk about it when you gather
01:44:40.940
on the fourth of july i talked about those kinds of things yesterday that would make me crazy
01:44:45.600
yeah my wife was super liberal and i've been seeing you know friends and relatives and everybody
01:44:50.420
you know i have obviously friends and relatives that are very left-wing not so appreciative of
01:44:55.200
the roe versus wade situation as maybe as i was and you see them getting in brawls man like and i just
01:45:01.920
stay out of it like i don't i do this for a living last thing i want to come home and like post i know
01:45:07.500
right a post on facebook my i just don't feel like it i understand why people get into that stuff
01:45:13.000
and i do though at some point you have to recognize the the just
01:45:19.960
lack of ability that you're going to have and changing someone's mind and that's crazy right
01:45:27.180
like some people are just nuts and they just they're they're going and it might not be they
01:45:31.400
might be completely sane in every other aspect of their life and wonderful people but they have this
01:45:35.600
thing that they're hung up on and they're never going to listen to your opinion and you have to be
01:45:40.680
able to leave that behind to maintain a relationship with a loved one if they're truly a loved one
01:45:45.740
right if you really love your brother your sister your cousin your aunt your uncle your friends you
01:45:52.420
know you figure out a way to say okay they're nuts on that and you throw up your hands and you just
01:45:56.780
move on with your life their support of abortion or opposition to abortion is not going to change
01:46:03.160
the actual situation as it as it relates to abortion it's just i think it's hard for people to let go
01:46:09.800
of because if you believe it's life it's like gosh man this is really important how can you not see this
01:46:15.640
as life it's like that louis ck routine about abortion that we played last week yeah yeah if you
01:46:22.380
really believe it's life what are you going to say well okay never mind go ahead and kill a baby
01:46:26.860
right the ink i always think the incons the really truly inconsistent position is the one we're like
01:46:32.500
yeah at four months eight days three hours and nine seconds it's not a baby but 10 seconds it is
01:46:40.180
then like i feel like that middle ground is actually the more insane position when it comes to
01:46:45.200
abortion isn't it yeah it's where everybody is or most people but like the middle ground is the one
01:46:50.780
that seems very strange to me the glenn back program independence day is all about celebrating
01:47:01.900
freedom like the freedom to completely customize your window treatments at blinds.com right now save
01:47:07.640
up to 50 off everything site-wide for their fourth of july sale ordering window coverings online it
01:47:13.640
doesn't have to mean sacrificing on style or service shop the latest styles at blinds.com they even have
01:47:20.380
outdoor shades that make your deck or patio the coolest place to be during the summer backyard
01:47:25.340
barbecues tanya and i love their design experts we have used them we've used live consultations
01:47:30.880
you need help measuring or installing they got you covered there too never any hidden fees or
01:47:36.500
misleading quotes no showrooms or retail markups and shipping is always free see for yourself why
01:47:42.620
blinds.com is the number one online retailer of custom window treatments save up to 50 site-wide
01:47:49.420
at blinds.com during their fourth of july sale now through july 5th only up to 50 off at blinds.com
01:47:57.260
rules and restrictions may apply doing our part to keep free speech alive
01:48:02.520
there's much more after the break on the glenn back program
01:48:06.880
it's pat and stew for glenn this week uh join me on pat gray unleashed live immediately
01:48:36.720
immediately immediately before this broadcast it's a seven and nine eastern six to eight central
01:48:43.040
then stew has a show in prime time stew does america that's true i do it every single night every
01:48:50.960
night every against its will wow it's really sad and it's kind of rude yeah it is you know really
01:48:57.280
rude so yeah that's uh that's on 8 p.m eastern on blaze tv can subscribe to both podcasts as well
01:49:01.860
also uh pat to we have our uh 500th anniversary power hour coming up on friday which is uh if you've
01:49:11.140
never seen one of these things before some of the biggest shows that we've done on youtube
01:49:14.120
basically the idea is we have a panel we attempt to talk about issues it goes awry as
01:49:20.420
one we have one shot of beer per minute for an hour okay it starts off somewhat coherent and then
01:49:27.820
turns into chaos so your 500th episode is thursday it was is that what you're saying it's we announced
01:49:34.680
the five we announced the power hour on the 500th episode so that was a few weeks ago okay uh so we
01:49:39.760
are a little bit past that now but we do uh would love you to check it out youtube.com slash stew
01:49:44.260
does america subscribe there and we'll it's it's gonna be fun we have chad prather on uh alex stein
01:49:48.900
is joining us uh andrew heaton is going to be on with us uh sarah gonzalez is going to be on with us
01:49:54.440
my invitation to the show must have been lost i would love for you to come in the you are always
01:49:59.480
welcome um no but i i we do have a designated driver slot oh okay because we'd like to have
01:50:05.460
one sober person on the panel probably that we'd love to have you sometime for one of those because
01:50:09.700
it would be absolutely because it is a drinking fest right it is a drinking fest um but it's
01:50:15.460
nonsensical and and it is quite a bit of fun uh even though it usually does go horribly awry by the
01:50:21.000
end well that's the fun of it that's the fun i suppose uh all right we were talking about the
01:50:25.860
situation with uh the overturning of roe v wade and how that's just really affecting our our country
01:50:32.360
right now and it is such a it's probably to me it's the most contentious issue in america since
01:50:41.440
slavery probably would you think that's accurate i i can't think of a more contentious
01:50:47.140
that's a good question is it the most it's probably up there i mean i you know you think
01:50:54.160
of like guns but i don't think that's not i mean you look at the statistics on gun polling it's not
01:50:59.060
really right it's not nearly as divided as you'd think yeah i think that's probably a good good one
01:51:06.420
it's so contentious uh vice president kamala harris just likened the end of roe v wade to slavery by
01:51:14.760
saying that the supreme court's ruling was an example of the united states government
01:51:18.380
trying to claim ownership over human bodies hmm okay that's uh that's fascinating um isn't it i mean
01:51:27.020
it's similar to the emancipation proclamation yes if that's what she's going for because i do think
01:51:32.120
there are real parallels here don't think she was going for that exactly no i don't think that's
01:51:36.760
what she was going for but that is i think a really realistic parallel it's the type of thing
01:51:43.640
that a society looks back at in horror and says how did we allow this to happen 63 million
01:51:50.900
and by the way it's going to go up by millions and millions and millions from that number but 63
01:51:55.340
million babies lost yeah how can we possibly have allowed this future generations will not look
01:52:01.880
favorably on us for allowing that for so long just like we look back at slavery as a horror show
01:52:07.080
right we all look back at it as terrible and there were people democrats especially very pissed off
01:52:12.300
about that ruling as well and argued about it for a very long time you know this is this first of
01:52:18.760
all shows the real central failure of roe and casey because both of them basically bragged about their
01:52:28.400
power to end the debate it's a contentious issue we will provide this solution and therefore it won't
01:52:35.100
be contentious anymore that was essentially the thesis of both roe and casey didn't really work
01:52:39.680
not failed miserably which is one of the things that even even uh uh ruth bader ginsburg
01:52:46.860
would talk about is it was just bad law yeah yeah it was bad law like even now she was if she was
01:52:52.900
alive to vote on it you know she would have vote voted to uphold roe very reliable but still uh she
01:52:59.240
did not think that was good law no one does i mean like anybody in that field like it's it's a
01:53:04.680
different thing you know there's this idea that the left well they see the constitution they see
01:53:09.380
the supreme court what they they see rights are things that they want right like we've talked about
01:53:13.900
the right to internet right some right to internet what are you talking about there's no right to
01:53:18.840
internet where was that right at any point before 1990 right like they all that right didn't exist if
01:53:27.300
you created it after 1995 but you have to actually put it in the constitution right you don't just it
01:53:33.300
doesn't just magically appear could happen by the way it's not in the constitution but you could put
01:53:38.620
it in the constitution with the 28th amendment but they won't go through that process because they
01:53:43.640
know it wouldn't it never happened yeah and you know it'll never happen honestly i bet you it's not
01:53:49.380
incomprehensible it could happen if people wanted it to yeah i wouldn't i would guess the polling on
01:53:54.460
something like that would not even be bad i bet you they could get positive polling on that on that
01:53:59.160
question depending on the parameters yeah should the internet a constitutional amendment to uh to
01:54:04.400
make internet available to everybody i bet would be something that people would like because that's
01:54:09.840
they would like that's how people most people think yeah is it is it something that i want
01:54:13.640
is it great is it wonderful do i like it yes if yes then constitution right right then it's my
01:54:21.440
right health care i really like it i really want it it's my right therefore i shall have it it's in
01:54:27.700
the constitution i swear and i of course we've had people argue for a constitutional right essentially
01:54:33.540
to high-speed internet we've had that in the past i'm from pembroke how do you have access to this
01:54:40.740
member of the lumbey tribe of north carolina sure yeah okay yeah i have two children and like any
01:54:46.520
mother i want the best for my boys of course you want the best for you jacob my oldest is a
01:54:52.460
transferring student to unc pembroke okay and isaac is in the eighth grade at pembroke middle school
01:54:58.960
wow all right thank you for the most families right who across the state and who either don't have
01:55:04.940
access to high-speed internet couldn't afford it or who can't afford it sure we were stuck with dial
01:55:10.320
up service in our home don't say that until two months ago oh my goodness now this is how long
01:55:15.020
nine years and two months ago no it was actually 13 years and uh two months ago i i mean we've played
01:55:23.060
this clip so so many times how do you still have it in your machine this is incredible that you have
01:55:28.160
access to this at a finger at the press of a button yes uh because it's so good and this so this is
01:55:34.780
this is a clip from the uh lumbey tribe yeah uh was it north carolina if i remember right she's
01:55:40.600
testifying before somebody like any mother like any mother i think it's the legislature in north
01:55:47.060
carolina she really wants access to internet bad well she has it and she got it two months ago but
01:55:51.900
she well but she didn't have well she had dial up yes before that so she had internet the whole time
01:55:56.580
but she didn't have high speed until two months ago yes she's very upset about this and wants the
01:56:01.200
government to pay for her exactly i feel that this has put my family uh-huh my sons in particular
01:56:06.900
sure at a severe disadvantage well it has it has isaac depends on the internet oh boy to complete his
01:56:14.820
assignments for school right yeah sure he often uses the internet to work on reports uh-huh projects
01:56:21.220
and or often at times to just do research like you know on porn right i watch him struggle he's true
01:56:29.100
dial-up service and observed him get frustrated oh no because he could not move around on the web
01:56:35.000
like he likes he lacks he could hate to see that he could not move around on the web like he likes
01:56:40.420
see that's constitution yeah that means it's in the constitution if you want something like that
01:56:45.080
really and you want it really bad yeah and you can't afford it well of course it's in the
01:56:50.260
constitution that you you can have it and needed to do seemingly easy assignments took him hours to
01:56:58.620
complete oh no how stupid is this kid no i don't think that's what she's saying oh she's saying the
01:57:03.940
internet is bad so he's very disheartened to watch isaac got very upset discouraged and frustrated
01:57:12.560
because he could not do what he needed to do or what he lacked as a mother it breaks my heart
01:57:19.800
and causes me to feel yeah that i have failed him well you have some way yeah until two months ago
01:57:26.960
she had she had failed him miserably yeah not by a little bit but miserably failed him yes now they
01:57:34.040
to be clear they had internet yeah this time it was a slower internet than they preferred and now they
01:57:41.380
have the faster internet yeah but but she's she's arguing on behalf for others to get it i think and
01:57:47.160
and by the way of course they got it of course it worked they got 20 million dollars in federal
01:57:52.780
money of course to get high speed internet like a tribe like they like yeah which is fascinating and
01:57:59.020
so i do could you come up with an uh a constitutional amendment for internet access i bet you could you
01:58:05.500
probably could i bet you could now that constitutional amendment will not mean that you get to keep your
01:58:09.160
accounts no obviously they could still ban you uh from uh that might be why the democrats would
01:58:15.380
oppose it if it was a constitutional right for you to access the internet they might oppose it
01:58:19.380
but again the constitution can be amended it's okay you can try to do we should try to do it more often
01:58:26.620
is it hard most of them would fail and they they should fail and and it is hard because it's supposed to
01:58:31.900
be hard it is supposed to be a difficult process because the founders knew that they'd done a pretty
01:58:38.600
good job i think and they didn't want people just willy-nilly changing the constitution on a whim
01:58:46.580
right it had to be something that people agreed on had to be something that you were passionate about
01:58:52.020
be logical and enough states decided that you know this new amendment was the right thing to do that
01:58:58.900
they got it passed through yeah that's not easy the story of the 27th amendment is one of my favorite
01:59:03.660
stories of all time which is it was an amendment that was around at the time of the founders
01:59:07.820
and it's an amendment to basically limit congressional pay so they can't vote themselves
01:59:13.280
pay raises yeah if they vote for themselves if they say hey congress should make a million dollars a
01:59:17.680
year they have to go through an election before that kicks in so they can't vote themselves
01:59:23.260
a huge increase right they have to be at least in front of the voters to vote them out if they get
01:59:27.740
angry about that pay raise so it was around at the time of the founders it kind of got halfway
01:59:32.140
through the process of ratification and then sort of died on the vine but it had no expiration date
01:59:40.100
and sort of just sort of just sat around and some college student i think it was in texas started
01:59:46.440
looking around and noticed it and had to write his thesis and wrote some like thesis about hey like
01:59:51.380
there's this constitutional amendment this would be cool to do started like trying to revive it got it
01:59:56.080
all the way to these states they finished the ratification process and it became an amendment
01:59:59.640
in the 1990s incredible i mean it's a fascinating story of just some guy who was doing some research
02:00:06.380
and actually amended the constitution as a result of it really amazing really cool but like it can
02:00:13.340
happen you know like the left obviously just wants to get rid of guns and they obviously want to raise
02:00:19.240
money off of this they want power they want all these things to happen we know their motivations are not
02:00:23.480
pure but if their motivations really were to get rid of automatic weapons which they seem to think
02:00:29.380
are on every street corner they could go for a constitutional amendment just for that
02:00:35.360
no automatic weapons basically in the united states now we treat this country is treating
02:00:41.160
the second amendment as if it prohibits the automatic weapons which by the way it does not
02:00:47.200
you can you first of all can get an automatic weapon in this country it's very difficult to do so
02:00:52.100
secondarily there's a lot of constitutional um gymnastics that went into allowing those weapons
02:00:59.400
to be banned the way they are in the first place right but in theory you could go and get that done
02:01:05.580
i mean certainly it would be supported by the american people i mean look a lot of people in this audience
02:01:10.040
would disagree with it but like what what's the polling on no automatic weapons 90 it's probably it
02:01:16.360
probably is a real 90 with automatic weapons unlike you know their universal background check polling
02:01:21.040
uh you know and and so maybe they could they they can try that try it be honest about your
02:01:27.280
motivations their motivations clearly are to get rid of you know weapons overall and when you reverse
02:01:32.500
engineer their goals you can see how they keep getting to the way they cover these crimes they
02:01:37.400
don't care about the inner city crime they don't care they don't care about gun violence that's why
02:01:42.940
they never talk about it yeah 888-727-BECK more patents do for glenn coming up stay informed
02:01:49.600
sign up for the free newsletter today at glennbeck.com
02:01:53.900
these days you use your personal information to do just about everything especially when you're online
02:02:10.880
but with all that information just floating out there it can make the internet a practical gold
02:02:16.740
mine for identity thieves actually that's not fair to gold miners mining is actually hard work
02:02:22.560
stealing your identity is dangerously easy it's also incredibly costly and terribly frustrating if
02:02:30.340
you get hacked now is an easy time to join up with lifelock and help protect yourself with lifelock by
02:02:38.120
norton lifelock monitors your information and alerts you to personal identity threats and if you are a
02:02:44.300
victim of identity theft a dedicated u.s based restoration specialist will work to fix it lifelock
02:02:50.480
they can't protect you from everything nobody can but they're the best in the business in my book
02:02:55.080
800 lifelock 1-800-lifelock or lifelock.com use the promo code beck and save 25 off your first year
02:03:05.800
it's pat and stew for glenn uh joe biden's approval ratings continue to plummet yeah we've we've
02:03:24.780
started a new segment on studios america called today the president hit a new low in his approval
02:03:31.920
rating that's not the official title but i feel like i do this segment every week yeah and it's
02:03:38.080
pretty much true monmouth poll out now 36 approval rating for joe biden oh wow 58 disapproval this is
02:03:46.240
down from uh he went so he went 38 to 36 in the last month he started up in the mid 50s back in the day
02:03:52.660
and has dropped pretty much every month consistently since he got into office he now has the lowest
02:03:58.140
average approval rating according to 538 of any president ever measured at this point in his
02:04:03.600
presidency listen to this right track wrong track for you january 2021 comes in comes into office
02:04:10.160
42 percent right direction okay i mean you know we still kind of low we can we tend to be a little
02:04:16.740
frustrated about things january 2021 a lot was going on in that month yeah we're in the covid situation
02:04:21.920
yeah okay you go you know it's around the mid 40s and into april and then uh june 2021 is 37 percent
02:04:30.500
ticks up to 38 down to 29 in september right around 30 in december 24 in january 2022
02:04:39.140
24 march 2022 may 2022 18 june 2022 10 10 10 10 right track 88
02:04:51.660
eight percent wrong track i've i've never seen numbers that bad and two percent saying i don't
02:04:56.640
know yeah two percent say like jeffy what i don't know one percent says i don't know the one percent
02:05:02.600
says it depends on what i don't know it depends it always depends right i mean it depends it got to
02:05:10.320
depend on something but one percent yeah ten percent 88 ten percent right track and only 74 percent of
02:05:19.120
democrats approve of this president's performance that might be an even more stunning number i bet
02:05:24.360
people notice that on their july 4th gatherings because it's it's not you know a lot of a lot of
02:05:29.740
democrats are expressing their disapproval for the president and saying stuff like you know it seems
02:05:33.720
like he's not quite all there you know they're noticing that cognitive area but it's policy as well