How Boeing’s Air Force One Delay Exposes America's Decline | Guest: Justin Haskins | 5⧸13⧸25
Episode Stats
Length
2 hours and 12 minutes
Summary
On this episode of the Glenn Beck Program, host Glenn Beck talks about the White House trying to get President Obama in a wheelchair, and why he should be able to stand up again. Glenn Beck is a conservative commentator, radio host, bestselling author, and podcaster. He's also the host of the radio show "The Glenn Beck Show" on SiriusXM Radio and hosts the popular conservative podcast "The 700 Club" on the airwaves.
Transcript
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Down a road where shadows hide, deal the dark on every side.
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embrace the fire the fusion of entertainment and enlightenment this is the glenbeck program
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hello america welcome to the glenbeck program a lot on our plate today
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you're gonna there's gonna you're right you're gonna find this hard to believe i know it but
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apparently people in the white house were talking about when joe biden wins a second term we got to
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put him in a wheelchair because he should be in a wheelchair now but the optics will look bad so
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we're gonna make him special shoes that will actually help him stand up
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okay um this is a problem this is a problem and i've uh i thought a lot about that qatari gift
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uh to the president of you know air force one uh i think we should say a big no thank you on that
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one and i'll talk tell you why i'm saying that coming up in just a second first let me tell you
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number four relief hi stew glenn oh how are you oh man i'm so great for a tuesday yes things are
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wonderful in every in every way and it's going to be interesting to see how all this wondrous
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stuff works out yeah i'm going to be watching i'm going to be watching i'm on the edge of my seat
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uh and not pissed off that's the key no i'm tuned in but not pissed off because i don't know what
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we're gonna do about it anyway except make the best of it all right so uh there's a couple of
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things um now this is this was shocking to me stew but apparently joe biden needed a wheelchair
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and somebody to push him around in it that was that's the report today yeah from the new book
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yeah new book the it's the jake tapper alex thompson book yeah um who jake was completely surprised by
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all of this was he he was completely surprised he was like whoa wait a minute i should write a book
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real quick you know so uh he is just very he was completely uh caught off guard nobody in the media
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or writing these books had any idea that joe biden wasn't the sharpest tool in the shed
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uh wasn't playing basketball every afternoon they had no idea you know the last time they saw him
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he was sharper than the sharpest guy they've ever seen i know the thing that was devastating to me was
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i was convinced he was just running circles around his 25 year old uh staffers yeah and then to learn
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that actually he wasn't running around anything because they needed to put him on a chair with
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wheels uh was a disappointing uh awakening you know here's the thing i don't have a problem with
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somebody in a wheelchair i i own fdr's wheelchair and i think i bought it for the museum because i think
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it is it should be the symbol of us winning world war ii now he hid it i mean the reason why the
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resolute desk has that little door in the front you know that john john was you know opening up
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and that picture with john f kennedy and his son opening up the door underneath the desk that was
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never there that was not part of the resolute desk fdr had that installed because that desk was in the map
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room where he used to do his fire side chats and he didn't want anybody taking pictures of him in the
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wheelchair or his legs and so you you could see it until they put the door there and they they
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finish the door you know just in time for him to die so he never he never used it but he was
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embarrassed by the wheelchair i think that was his greatest strength the guy couldn't walk and yet he
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did the guy i mean he worked so hard with his son every day imagine the strength that it took in his
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upper upper body and his son's upper body he would hold on to his son's arm his son would just put his
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arm out straight and they rehearsed every day they worked out so they could do this so the son could
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look like he wasn't putting any effort into it he was just helping his dad you know here grab onto my
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arm dad and all of the son's strength of that one forearm and fdr grabbing onto his arm that's that's what
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held him upright and then his son had to look like it was no big deal as fdr took all of his upper body
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strength to swing his legs out so he could walk because he had no power below the waist
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uh that is incredible as they were gassing people that were undesirable or had no quality of life
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because they had a wooden leg or they had crutches let alone a wheelchair the guy who was in the wheelchair
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beat fdr i mean beat hitler that's fantastic so i think it's a sign of strength at times and i and
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if you you know need to be in a wheelchair you need to be in a wheelchair and i think it would be
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embarrassing you know as you get older you'd be like i don't want to use this chair you know you
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become that grumpy old man but the problem here is is that no one in the white house said anything
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about it they made him literally made special shoes so he could stand uh okay all right and
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then they were talking about after the election he's got to go in a wheelchair because he just
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can't he can't walk anymore again a lie again them lying to get themselves through this election
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that's the theme here and why it's really important it's not important that a guy has
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going in a wheelchair in his 80s like hey like every you know right i hope i'm not but i might
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be in a wheelchair i'm 80 you might i might be in a coffin good god if you see 80 i'll be stunned
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you won't even you won't even be able to see 80 from like a peak near where you are in the distance
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i don't we need to revel in this you seem to be like you seem to be like counting the salary right
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now and then i take over his show um i what what's fascinating about this not that he's going
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into wheelchair again like that's a normal human development and like it the fact that we live
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long enough to get to a point where we need a wheelchair for for lifelong wear and tear hey great
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it's that they lied to us over and over and over again uh in fact the the book talks about one of
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the lies and and it's it's hard to see how um how they could have been any more blatant about what
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was happening here i love this throughout 2024 biden aides told reporters that the president's
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halting walk was partly the result of him fracturing his foot in november 2020 and then refusing to
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consistently wear his walking boot in short they said biden was being undone by his own vigor
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oh my gosh that's an awesome paragraph oh my i want that framed i want that framed that is if
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that's not the press in a nutshell if that's not our political parties in a nutshell you're so stupid
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but there is a line here i i don't know i'm struggling with it a little bit it's incredible
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first of all how did you believe that you didn't you didn't you didn't but there's a line here
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to me because the the media always is going to have this pathetic excuse of just well we were
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told this by the aides in the white house and we reported it and they're going to be able to say
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that and probably with some accuracy it's probably what happened right the aides probably did just tell
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them that and they just wrote it and that's pathetic and we should criticize their job performance
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right that's okay one part of this let me just say in defense of the of some of the reporters that
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didn't have you know eyewitness you were on the edges and you couldn't see in sure if that's all
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that you're given you could speculate but you can't print that as a news story that he can't walk he
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should be in a wheelchair you could right you could speculate you can comment on it you know but you'd
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have no evidence you could theoretically yeah follow up and be persistent if you wanted a real answer
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you could do your job better by the way as i've noted multiple times alex thompson the co-author
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of the book with jake tapper was one of those reporters who was doing that in the actual at the
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actual time why would he pick jake tapper i guess because jake tapper is the only one with any credibility
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to that's left on you know for cnn for for those who are still watching cnn yeah i mean i think that
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it's probably a big name i don't think everyone knows alex um which they should um so they think they
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you know and and look i think that helps nobody knew michael schellenberger no it's true i know
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now michael is a big name because i mean and he didn't go hey jake no i know you were part of the
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problem but i don't know i mean the jake thing is is a separate part of this because i think it's
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it's interesting what happens with a book like this and this is what i i don't want to necessarily
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focus only on the media and the story because with tapper he he comes out and he he was not the
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worst offender of this by the way when we went when we went through that period i mean people
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like joe scarborough they don't write this book right he lied every day as a central part of his
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show about this topic and he doesn't come out and write the book and everyone kind of just like
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forgets about it where tapper does write the book and now he's going to be hit over the head over and
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over and over again because of the one or two clips that are out there which i would say are
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somewhat offensive i you know i wouldn't mind having jay you know because they asked you want
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to have jake tapper on i'm like no um but maybe i maybe i would i i would like to take that approach
00:14:02.540
and and and just talk to him about that yeah because it is one thing you know most people just
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never admit it and i i don't think i mean has jake tapper admitted that you know we really did a
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lousy job i i mean i i don't know i mean this yeah i would say this book kind of says that i'm gonna
00:14:18.600
have to you know when it comes to reading that i'm gonna have to have grok read that book for me
00:14:22.560
yeah i want to read the book i do i i actually think i'm hopeful especially with alex's reporting
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through this period i mean like again we're learning about this wheelchair story from this
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book yes like i mean i do i actually have some hope that there will be something in there and
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you know but again i want to know about the press i want to know i want to know who actually
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did know but was keeping it quiet because we can't let trump win i want to know that too
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however it's my second priority my first priority is i want to know every little bit
00:14:57.980
of the people about the people in the white house who are our employees true lying to the press about
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this the press yeah you're right you're right you're right you're right that is a bigger priority i
00:15:08.960
think so i think that is there is legitimate protect and defend the constitution criminal activity yes
00:15:14.780
done by them bad reporting is bad reporting and those people should be punished for their job
00:15:19.740
performance when they have bad reporting but that's different from what they did in the white
00:15:23.540
house they were we went through a period where we basically had no president for a couple of years
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and we were constantly being lied to by government employees which every one of their text messages
00:15:35.460
is part of the government record this is what really makes me so angry this this is i'm telling
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you if if pam bondy and and it's i don't think it's her fault i think it's that the the doj is so
00:15:49.080
riddled with leftists that they can't they just can't do anything right now you know they're still
00:15:56.100
waiting for some more people to be appointed by uh congress or the senate um and i don't know if she
00:16:02.700
has the people around her this is what i'm hearing that she just doesn't have the people around her yet
00:16:07.540
to really make any big progress because it is so bogged down with statists and leftists well we're
00:16:14.600
hearing that from and we're hearing that from high levels uh in the government like this is that in
00:16:18.680
you know the trump administration yes like people who are saying hey this is not pam's issue right
00:16:23.380
um so that might be true but if they don't fix that and and the president doesn't come out and start
00:16:29.620
to say here's why no progress is being made on these things because this should be investigated i don't
00:16:36.320
know if anybody could go to jail over this i mean i would like it if they've broken a law
00:16:41.140
and i don't know what law that would be right but they hid this stuff and more importantly than
00:16:48.240
hiding it are the who was it that used the auto pin if you look at the site if you look at all of
00:16:54.900
the things that were signed by auto pin as he started to decline the last year and a half the auto
00:17:00.740
pin was almost exclusively used well who was feeding those in what was that's what i'm talking about
00:17:07.160
yeah he he's he said to jake tapper in one interview i didn't do that yes you did to today sir no i didn't
00:17:15.820
do that you did today sir you just signed it and he had no idea no idea well who was doing it that's
00:17:25.160
what i want to know and that person should go to jail right because you know how many times gone
00:17:29.240
have you done shows about what happened with woodrow wilson back in the day i mean first of
00:17:33.700
all that the number is too high you can't even calculate but i mean specifically on the fact
00:17:38.300
that he wasn't even president for a while his wife was running the show he had a stroke and and he was
00:17:42.960
incapacitated stroke he was giving a speech in california he had a stroke in the middle of just
00:17:47.200
stop talking and everybody's like what is going on uh kind of like mitch mcconnell mitch mcconnell just
00:17:52.280
stop talking and so they put him on a train they bring him back to washington they put him up in the
00:17:57.580
white house because he's had a massive stroke he can't communicate he can't do anything um they're
00:18:03.140
not even sure he could understand anything his wife hid it and left him up in the bedroom and she
00:18:09.760
just kind of took over for a while and she would take she would attend all of the meetings and say
00:18:14.460
my husband is just in bed he's sick but he wanted me to attend and take notes she would take notes and
00:18:19.780
then take and go up talk to a man who really wasn't there and then say uh he okay so here's what he
00:18:26.820
wants to do and then take the bills up to him put his hand on the pen and then she would sign it
00:18:33.480
the original auto pen yeah the original auto pen that's how that's how woodrow wilson worked in the
00:18:38.100
last year but it was his own party that ratted him out yeah it was his own party because he was going
00:18:44.120
to run for uh another term a third term and his party was like we haven't even seen the president
00:18:50.420
we need to see the president minor issue yeah and she they would keep coming over and she's like
00:18:55.440
god no he's just having a bad day and finally they said we're exposing this whatever is going on
00:19:01.900
you're going to be in trouble and so she brought him down and he he did fairly well but they knew
00:19:09.340
he wasn't really in charge of his faculties uh and she said he's going to run for another term and
00:19:15.580
she and they said no no he's no he's not he's not gonna run yeah but it was them it was the democrats
00:19:21.000
that did it yeah and that's huge right but what i think here when you think about this is like
00:19:25.600
that's 100 years ago right this just happened just happened this this is not a historical can you
00:19:31.880
believe this could happen in our country no this just occurred right here right and if we do not
00:19:36.360
do something about it now it will occur over and over and over god only knows what could happen
00:19:41.020
this is not a figurehead position the president is the one who is the commander in chief makes the
00:19:47.160
decision the buck stops with him if you don't know who is at the end of that actually making
00:19:53.360
the decisions you don't have a country you really do have an oligarchy where powerful people behind
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the scenes are the ones pulling all of the strings and levers all right back in just a minute
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so theory here glenn on what's going on here tell me if you think this is accurate
00:21:35.100
they have one shot at this reconciliation bill um that's coming up the big beautiful bill yes that's
00:21:42.400
right around the corner they're working very hard on that right now that is the priority quite clearly
00:21:46.420
of what they're you know doing outside of the day-to-day uh they think they want to get that
00:21:50.880
to the president's desk by july 4th which is a super heavy lift but i think they're also aware enough to
00:21:56.600
know that there is a good chance that the uh you know that they lose some form of of the uh you know
00:22:05.460
whether it's the house or whatever and i think they're trying to prioritize this thinking that uh you
00:22:11.620
know they they can jam in a an investigation or something in year two when it is when the
00:22:19.200
reconciliation bill isn't the priority essentially like they're they're putting that as essentially
00:22:23.660
the next step that's good to know that um our congress and senate can really only focus on one
00:22:30.520
thing i'm not saying it's a good thing we wouldn't accept that from any other branch of government also
00:22:36.680
i'm concerned you could get it done in time and if you lose the house then the investigation is
00:22:40.660
going to go away yeah um so i i think like again these are government employees largely some of them
00:22:47.180
are campaign people too but like these are people that you can get these records you can get these
00:22:52.460
emails you can get these text messages you can get their signal chats everyone loves looking at signal
00:22:57.320
chats these days going after those which are are we own them like national archives they're national
00:23:06.320
archives these are this is information we own yep they obviously were talking about this they've
00:23:11.460
shown no ability to restrain themselves when in when in private we have to know what what how far
00:23:17.720
this went if it may just have been hey gosh he doesn't look good i don't know should we put the
00:23:22.380
guy should be in a wheelchair and it's just a conversation that they don't talk about that's not
00:23:25.940
a crime not from the people who say don't ever let a crisis go to waste i don't justify the means i
00:23:32.200
don't believe that's all it was i don't either if that's what it was that's what it was and we look
00:23:36.460
at this and wow wow that's a crazy time i can't believe that happened and we move on after an
00:23:40.240
investigation after an investigation we have this has to be taken a little bit more seriously right
00:23:44.840
now it's kind of like gosh can you believe what they did with joe biden it's like that's this is a
00:23:49.180
much more serious issue literally lost your republic we were not a republic represented by people that
00:23:58.800
people voted for that's what you that's that's how you have to understand this story can't happen
00:24:04.620
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welcome to the glennbeck program we are so glad that you're here thank you so much uh yesterday i
00:25:57.000
don't know if you've been watching these baby videos that are coming out i could watch them
00:26:01.620
forever i don't i can't tell you how many times my wife and i have watched the one with the baby
00:26:06.820
interviewing the dog oh it's so funny it's just hysterical um but uh yesterday uh somebody on our
00:26:17.240
staff uh took something that stew and i were talking about when it came to the pope and stew said and
00:26:26.380
this is his real name he wanted to have pope what's pizza balla pizza balla pizza balla and uh they took
00:26:32.600
and they put it in baby form if you're listening to the radio you're going to miss out on this but
00:26:36.880
if you're watching us on x or youtube or or blaze or wherever you're watching us um you're going to
00:26:42.280
enjoy this watch but some now information that is coming from us and we don't know our butt from
00:26:47.560
our elbow on the conclave um but uh we're going to talk about it anyway can we at least discuss how
00:26:53.080
awesome the names are yeah my favorite right now i don't know anything about his politics
00:26:57.040
pizza balla the guy's last name is pizza balla p-i-z-z-a-b-a-l-l-a pizza balla he's a baller i love
00:27:05.720
that that's incredible i just love it we're so serious i know i know hey i mean it is it is so
00:27:15.060
incredible that imagine that couldn't have been done six months ago no i mean it looks completely
00:27:20.620
it looks like real i mean it would it looks like as if it's like hollywood quality right you know
00:27:27.860
like like the new version of what was it uh was it three men and a baby or what was the one yeah
00:27:33.280
look who's talking who's talking yeah and there was a do you remember there was some uh there was
00:27:39.420
some uh super bowl commercial where the baby was talking oh yeah uh yeah but in trade yeah e-trade
00:27:47.160
yeah e-trade and remember the e-trade baby yeah and it it was really good but it didn't look like
00:27:51.660
this no this looks exactly like these babies are real and they're actually talking it's incredible
00:27:58.780
it really is uh have you seen the debate between joe biden and double trump hold on just a second
00:28:05.080
can you put that picture back up of of me as the baby because i have to bring in a picture of me
00:28:10.400
about that age it's it's almost exactly what i looked like yeah yeah it's almost exactly what i
00:28:16.180
looked like all right anyway the one between trump and joe biden yeah they've been debating for a long
00:28:20.840
time a lot longer than people would imagine really yeah okay yeah go ahead roll that
00:28:25.240
there are 40 percent fewer people coming across the border illegally that's better than when he
00:28:31.520
left office and i'm going to continue to move until we get the total this is 80 years ago
00:28:36.080
the total initiative relative to what we're going to do with more border patrol and more
00:28:42.540
asylum officers i really don't know what he said at the end of this i don't think he knows what he
00:28:48.580
said either look we had the safest border in the history of our country that two trillion dollar
00:28:53.580
tax cuts benefited the very wealthy now what i'm going to do is fix the taxes and for example
00:28:58.760
we have a thousand trillionaires in america i mean billionaires in america and what's happening
00:29:04.280
they're in a situation where they in fact pay 8.2 percent in taxes if they just paid 24 percent
00:29:10.880
25 percent either one of those numbers they've raised 500 million dollars billion dollars i should
00:29:16.820
say in a 10-year period we'd be able to wipe out his debt we'd be able to help make sure that all
00:29:22.220
those things we need to do it is it's remarkable and notice it's because you're done you just feed
00:29:29.260
it in and it produces this did you notice that it's it had joe biden's eyes yeah facial expression
00:29:37.520
how do you get it to take on the appearance of the person you're i think it's just taking their face
00:29:43.260
digitizing it and then de-aging to a baby state i will say wow biden even looks old as a baby
00:29:50.020
which is incredible yeah i mean there are babies that look a little like winston churchill you know
00:29:55.960
what i mean like okay he needs to burp um it's uh it's amazing i just love it um anyway let's let's
00:30:04.980
talk a little bit about uh the plane that donald trump has been offered by the qataris yeah
00:30:13.780
i'd have to say a big no on that yeah me too me too i mean the president's not gonna care what i
00:30:21.200
think about this but i it's just not a good idea i mean i understand why he's doing it i i don't get
00:30:27.340
what's going on at boeing how is it possible that it takes 17 years to build a plane i was in the oval
00:30:33.740
and the the um the plane the boeing plane yeah model of it is on the coffee table okay and when
00:30:41.940
he walked in i have the new one yeah and i was sitting on the couch and uh he comes in i stand
00:30:47.120
up and the and he comes over to me and uh we were talking for a second and i said by the way this
00:30:52.760
really pisses me off what joe biden did to re refigure that whole deal uh and then how boeing
00:31:00.660
has just blown this off yeah it's really frustrating it is i i thought about five minutes
00:31:07.900
into it i thought i shouldn't have brought that one up uh that one's hitting a little close to
00:31:11.520
home because he was smoked oh really he was smoked bet he was i mean he's like what what does the
00:31:17.620
united states of america do you got boeing what do we right what am i gonna get by an airbus i can't
00:31:22.420
buy an airbus and he's like if this was a private company if you know if i wasn't the president of the
00:31:27.820
united states he's like i think i would be suing them right now but the president can't sue boeing
00:31:34.100
yeah so what what honestly this is your money what do you do nothing like that you know what
00:31:39.920
the contract was 3.9 billion dollars and they say that's not enough i know they can't finish it for
00:31:46.740
that i know are you kidding me and trump said to me he said it may be 20 27 28 he said they're saying
00:31:56.100
20 35 yeah they're saying maybe 10 years that's what he said it'll be 10 years glenn before we see
00:32:02.000
that plane the plane we have real the plane we have right now is uh is from 1990 it was the plane that
00:32:10.500
ronald reagan ordered okay george w bush or i'm sorry george hw bush was the first president to fly in
00:32:18.100
it and it's because reagan ordered it what do you mean it's going to take until 2035 they ordered it
00:32:26.700
in 2018 right right that is a company that is completely out of control radically radically wrong
00:32:35.220
at boeing yeah radically wrong so no wonder you know he's open now i wouldn't mind if you know if a
00:32:42.600
country had you know a plane like that if qatar had a plane and we decided you know what boeing
00:32:47.720
we're cutting the contract yeah uh and then yeah buying that plane from any country as long as we
00:32:54.800
could make sure that it was sound and everything else but buying that plane and then bringing it over
00:32:59.120
here and saying okay make this air force one and putting everything into it if it was great britain
00:33:03.660
i'd be fine with that i don't mind if we bought it from them i wouldn't i wouldn't necessarily have a
00:33:10.300
problem with that i mean we buy things from qatar qatar buys things from us i don't agree with
00:33:16.040
qatar is not a friend of ours sorry they're not a friend fun terrorists has hamas hezbollah the
00:33:22.600
muslim brotherhood is largely from qatar uh and under the direction of qatar we we are not friends with
00:33:29.140
qatar we shouldn't be trump is close with the qataris i mean every president seems to end up being close to
00:33:35.180
the qataris but they are whitewashing their hamas um you know they're largely responsible for a lot
00:33:43.260
of the really bad stuff that goes on and they never get credit for it yeah uh and they need to but i
00:33:49.320
mean if you're gonna buy something from them that's fine buy it by the way did you see the
00:33:53.920
go ahead buying a plane that is going to carry our president around and so that's what i said as long
00:33:59.760
as it can be fully vetted i don't know i don't know what you know they could hide or what could
00:34:05.360
happen i know i don't know that we would either i know i know i know but that that would be my
00:34:10.600
concern i mean this like the appearance of it especially because again it's not just going to
00:34:15.040
the to the presidency it's going to presidency until the day that trump leaves and then it goes to trump's
00:34:20.840
library that just looks bad you know politically for a million different reasons it really does really
00:34:25.640
but like this is not a good look my real concern over it even more than that would be this whether
00:34:30.080
it's secure that it's built out of 95 percent listening devices right now with even more listening
00:34:37.880
devices yeah that's a you know i but i don't know if this listening device is made out of listening
00:34:43.140
devices i'm not even sure that that is possible because they would have to go in they would have
00:34:47.720
to strip that thing just don't trust them yeah you know just don't trust them going back to your
00:34:53.260
oval office conversation though is this just something where he's he is overton windowing
00:34:58.840
all of us again which is what he does he's saying like hey we need to wake up maybe we need to cancel
00:35:04.140
this with boeing yeah i wonder honestly because he he just left it at that he just ranted for a while
00:35:09.380
about how incompetent this is how bad this is how you know much trouble boeing must be in to
00:35:17.780
treat the united states of america like this um and uh and and so maybe the most important plane we
00:35:24.920
have it's going to take you 17 years to finish and four billion dollars plus come on it's just wrong
00:35:33.660
it's just so wrong so wrong i mean if boeing i don't know what you're doing boeing i don't know
00:35:41.200
whose plane you're working on that takes priority but i don't know i think you would want to move
00:35:46.520
the president's plane to the top of the list seeing that you know you know what that you know
00:35:52.840
what air force one costs us just to maintain it is let's see if i can find the stats on this it is
00:36:00.800
stunning because it's 19 it's 1980 um and uh and so out of date they if they're if a part goes down
00:36:09.500
they have to have it specifically made there's no parts drawer anymore yeah because these are old
00:36:14.580
yeah parts yeah and so wow when when they fly it it is like i think it's ah shoot i have it someplace
00:36:22.360
i think it's like uh three or four hundred thousand dollars an hour like 299 an hour an hour or to
00:36:31.660
to fly it that includes the uh the fuel the crew and hourly maintenance okay so 299 thousand dollars
00:36:43.460
an hour and they say in additional stuff because this is all classified they have to estimate but
00:36:50.900
they estimate that just the repairs on these because we have two of them just the repairs to keep them
00:36:57.360
flying now is anywhere between 40 and 60 million dollars every year i mean wow i don't know boeing
00:37:07.940
you might want to pick it up a little bit you know until well i mean wait a minute hang on just a
00:37:12.800
second we do have the enola gay and the wright brothers playing in the smithsonian maybe we can
00:37:17.240
use those for the president thanks pat gray from pat gray unleashed uh ever notice how calm it feels
00:37:24.640
right before everything changes housing market was fine in 2007 take tech stops stocks were booming in
00:37:30.940
2000 and everybody's like oh it's all under control all right up until the point they weren't
00:37:36.040
same thing is happening now the debt inflation the global instability i'm going to talk about what's
00:37:41.620
happening in europe and uh uh and what's happening in england it is really not good the news that is
00:37:48.600
coming out of there today um but i'm telling you it might feel calm and safe right now but it's it's it
00:37:56.660
could go away quickly that's why there's this huge rush on gold right now and nobody knows who's
00:38:04.380
buying it and it has to be that we're actually speculating that it might be us thank god i hope
00:38:10.640
it is that's buying up uh you know bundles and bundles of gold pounds of gold because china already
00:38:16.840
did it russia already did it the rest of the world their central banks already did it maybe we did it as
00:38:21.900
well if you're looking for a sign uh you might want to look at the price of gold it's insane
00:38:28.160
right now and it's only going up call 800-957-GOLD gold or silver you can buy it at any level that
00:38:35.700
you're at please call 800-957-GOLD look at gold or silver now with lear capital 800-957-GOLD
00:38:50.040
one of the first things glenn taught me when i was writing a comedy was uh don't use the word
00:39:02.780
underwear use the word underpants because it's a funnier word it's a funnier word it's a funnier
00:39:07.180
it is underpants is funnier than underwear a company now has improved on it gunderpants yes
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gunderpants this is brand new gunderpants this is incredible it's an innovation born from
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battlefield wisdom yet perfect for civilian life imagine carrying your firearm within the comfort
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of your favorite undergarments yes so it is that is a pistol in your pocket it is a pistol in your
00:39:29.260
pocket uh transforms this concept into reality through tactical leisure design created by army
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rangers who understood that everyday carry should never compromise comfort or security the genius lies
00:39:40.140
in the proprietary waistband system that cradles your weapon uh careful against your body like a
00:39:47.860
protective embrace traditional holsters dig into your flesh and they telegraph your preparedness to
00:39:52.460
the world gunderpants eliminates these telltale signs by distributing weight across your waistline
00:39:57.300
while the retention system keeps your firearm stable whether you're you know sprinting through a park or
00:40:01.440
or sitting through a lengthy meeting i want one i want a pair they are cool they are really cool
00:40:05.980
many americans leave their protection at home because you know sometimes it can be unbearable
00:40:09.860
after hours with the old school ways the rangers who develop gunderpants face the same challenge
00:40:15.220
uh well i'll tell you about that it's gunderpants.com use the promo code blaze
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00:40:25.380
that plane the qatari aircraft been sitting in san antonio for a while apparently i don't know why
00:40:43.980
but i want to go to san antonio i want to go on it yeah we we can make use of that right glenn i mean
00:40:48.840
i think a lot of times people just they'll just park their old cars around or whatever they think
00:40:53.140
that you know and if they sit there too long right they don't run so we will make sure to
00:40:57.980
it runs to that over the next few weeks yeah it would be cheap to do that too i i just love to
00:41:02.380
see it but it's sitting there here's the president talking about it let me tell you you should be
00:41:07.860
embarrassed asking that question uh they're giving us a free jet i could say no no no don't give us i
00:41:13.860
want to pay you a billion or 400 million or whatever it is or i could say thank you very much
00:41:20.160
you know there was an old golfer named sam sneed did you ever hear him he won 82 tournaments he was a
00:41:26.420
great golfer and he had a motto when they give you a putt you say thank you very much you pick up your
00:41:32.740
ball and you walk to the next hole a lot of people are stupid they say no no i insist on putting it
00:41:37.880
then they put it they miss it and their partner gets angry at him you know what remember that sam
00:41:44.300
sneed when they give you a putt you pick it up and you walk to the next hole and you say thank you
00:41:49.300
very much okay you know i don't i actually like that and i don't think that he could be bought
00:41:55.620
you know i don't think he's going to be bought for you know he's just not going he's not that kind of
00:42:00.080
guy um however i just don't like the optics of it uh but there is part of me that goes yeah they're
00:42:07.400
going to give it to us as long as it's secure as long take it right you get nothing in exchange
00:42:13.080
take it yeah i you know obviously we've accepted you know presidents have accepted presence before
00:42:20.520
the issue is they usually go into the the archives or whatever right so this this the thing i don't
00:42:26.920
like about it is if he takes it it's not going to him it's going to the defense department first
00:42:32.520
okay because the the air force runs air force one so go to the defense department and that's
00:42:37.180
who's getting the gift but then when he leaves office i think it would be much better if if he
00:42:42.540
would take it to say no not when i leave office when boeing delivers air force one right when they
00:42:50.060
are done and it might be 10 years then that jet can be retired but until that time it belongs to the
00:42:57.540
united states and the people of the united states that would be the thing for him to say
00:43:02.000
and and and do that would soften it but i think there's it's you know if you really don't think
00:43:08.240
he should have it or take it um a you really need to look up what the cost of these two planes are that
00:43:14.160
we are getting from boeing and the cost of what the two old planes are costing us to keep it in the
00:43:20.620
air and it's it's not good if the president i don't think is safe in the i mean he's safe but it this
00:43:27.120
is 1990s this plane is from the 19th from 1990 okay um so it's way out of date with that being said
00:43:37.120
it's fine president can go in an old plane um but if you really don't want him to take it then you
00:43:43.420
should put the heat on boeing shouldn't be on the president should be on boeing and i feel the hell are
00:43:48.020
you doing boeing i and i don't know i could be wrong on this but that's what it feels like
00:43:51.880
to me is that he's this is his way of turning up the heat on boeing that would you know you act like
00:43:58.020
he's such a good negotiator you're acting like he always moves the overton window he certainly does he
00:44:03.620
does yeah well what are you doing boeing i mean the outrage really should be on boeing today let's
00:44:12.960
save your outrage on see if he actually takes it or if this is a ploy but everyone should be paying
00:44:19.420
attention to boeing you've taken our money where's the plane this is glenn beck by the time today is
00:44:31.040
over another american farm will shut down and tomorrow it will happen again not because they
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did anything wrong but because it's getting harder and harder to compete foreign meat imports have seen
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toronto there's another great city that starts with a t
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I know a lot of people want to talk about Air Force One and Qatar.
00:47:28.780
But I would just, if I may quote the Federalist,
00:47:32.780
it took America less time to win and fight World War II
00:47:44.460
What does that say about the America that you grew up in?
00:47:48.380
What does that say about American companies, American ingenuity?
00:47:52.520
We fought and won World War II in less time than Boeing now can deliver two planes.
00:48:03.740
I want to talk about what's happening to us as a culture and as the West.
00:48:11.780
First, let me tell you about my Patriot Supply.
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There's a $200 discount only available for a limited time right now at mypatriotsupply.com.
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So, you know, I've been watching Europe for a while now.
00:49:25.060
We've talked about Europe and the race to death that they seem to be in.
00:49:32.400
And right now, you have the Prime Minister of England, Starmer.
00:49:39.900
You have the President of France, and you have the Chancellor of Germany all meeting,
00:49:56.740
A new treaty aimed at resetting British relations with the European Union.
00:50:01.880
Okay, I mean, I guess that's, I guess that's, you know, great.
00:50:09.940
But did they hear what the Swedish Prime Minister has just come out and said?
00:50:16.740
We do not have control over the wave of violence, and that is quite obvious.
00:50:27.820
They've got, they've been overrun with refugees that are not assimilating.
00:50:48.480
You know, they say history doesn't repeat itself.
00:50:53.160
And as you watch Europe, not as a tourist watches a cathedral crumble, but as a man on shore watches a wave growing on the horizon going,
00:51:03.020
I think that's coming towards us, and it's getting bigger.
00:51:10.220
It's not just about England or France or Sweden.
00:51:14.180
It's not about immigration or economics or even culture.
00:51:20.360
It's about a civilization that has forgotten what made it strong in the first place, what made it free.
00:51:39.260
And they're living in this dream world that we can have it all, that America can just keep going on the way it's been going on.
00:51:46.560
And if they don't believe that, there's another category of people, and that category is the people who are like, it's just going to be civil war.
00:52:00.260
That's what happens with countries that go into civil war.
00:52:03.860
Now, Ayaan Hirsi Ali, somebody I really, really respect.
00:52:08.640
She's a woman who stood against actual darkness, against radicalism, censorship, the silencing of truth.
00:52:18.520
She just said recently, an answer to the question, what is your biggest fear that keeps you up at night?
00:52:32.040
Not that it will decay, not that it will decline, but it will collapse into violence.
00:52:46.340
Because America was born out of its legacy, of Athens, of Rome, of Jerusalem, and even London.
00:52:54.520
If Europe falls into chaos, it's not some far-off event.
00:52:59.420
It is a warning shot across the Atlantic, and we are no longer insulated because of this global nightmare.
00:53:07.100
Remember when they said, the banks are too big to fail.
00:53:11.580
Because all of the banks were connected to one another.
00:53:14.480
So when one fails, it's catastrophic failure across the entire system.
00:53:25.120
Western Europe is going through massive internal pressure.
00:53:31.120
And the people know it, but their leaders are on a train talking about how can we bring Brexit to its knees?
00:53:40.140
The real problem here is our problems are spiritual.
00:53:47.460
The old guard that actually believed in liberty and faith and sovereignty,
00:53:52.080
they've been replaced by technocrats and bureaucrats,
00:53:56.300
and a generation that has been raised to believe that nothing is sacred,
00:54:02.960
that the past is shameful and the future belongs to anyone but them.
00:54:10.160
You don't have a civilization if that's what the next generation believes.
00:54:15.560
Now you layer in all of the stuff that makes us fragile, a fragile economy, aging populations,
00:54:22.040
dependency on foreign energy, millions of migrants,
00:54:29.080
and certainly most of them have not assimilated.
00:54:38.780
and they see the host country not as refuge, but as weak, ripe, ready.
00:54:45.880
You know, when I say the host countries for these refugees,
00:54:48.860
you know, there's another way to use the word host,
00:55:03.220
until it kills it, and then it'll find another host.
00:55:22.180
whole neighborhoods where police dare not enter,
00:55:25.080
all of the things that you were told were just rumors,
00:55:32.640
political leaders afraid to even name the threat
00:55:43.580
So what happens when the pressure becomes too much
00:56:06.240
What happens when you're not sending out checks?
00:56:25.460
not with peaceful elections and orderly debates.
00:56:28.020
Now it usually ends up with some short little guy.
00:56:56.080
and then they crashed in the field in Pennsylvania
00:57:05.520
how fragile our freedom in our country really was,
00:57:32.360
because there will be millions of desperate people
00:58:00.500
Don't think they haven't been thinking about this.
01:30:57.480
I have one of my favorite people, Justin Haskins.
01:30:59.600
He's the president of Our Republic and editor-in-chief of StoppingSocialism.com.
01:31:05.320
He's the guy who we co-wrote The Great Reset, Dark Future, and Propaganda Wars.
01:31:10.520
And he's on with some really fascinating polls, some good news, some bad news about what is happening with AI and how people are responding to this.
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I know you've been doing some research on polling.
01:33:03.180
And there's some good news and, I guess, some inevitable news as well.
01:33:08.200
But let me ask you, how are you feeling generally about the state of where we are in AI?
01:33:15.060
This is something in Dark Future we really talked about.
01:33:19.000
We even talked about it in The Great Reset and Propaganda Wars.
01:33:21.200
But this is something I have been talking about for 30 years.
01:33:29.480
How are you feeling about where things are going?
01:33:38.540
Stu's going to, you know, he's the odd man out of this conversation.
01:33:52.440
I mean, I definitely am concerned of the impacts it's going to have.
01:33:56.140
I mean, you guys can hit levels of being terrified over things that I can't physically achieve.
01:34:04.300
It's because when I'm like, we're all going to die, it's like, relax.
01:34:14.140
And the reason why is because the things that we've been talking about for a long time,
01:34:21.000
They are no longer, oh, in, you know, maybe 10 years, this could, no, it's happening now.
01:34:33.120
Look at what AI has done in the last 12 months.
01:34:38.580
Can you even imagine what life is going to be like in 2028?
01:34:42.240
The answer is no, because it's going to be radically different by 2028, by 2030, radically different.
01:34:51.200
And so the polling that, that I recently conducted partnered with the Heartland Institute and Rasmussen
01:34:57.740
It illustrates, I think for the first time that people really are genuinely starting to get how
01:35:06.220
So we asked if people were concerned about AI, and essentially a little over 70% of likely
01:35:17.620
I really haven't seen too many polls that show that.
01:35:22.580
You know, the learning curve on this is almost straight up with the American people.
01:35:26.600
We also asked, we said, do you believe that over the next decade, AI will be used more
01:35:52.460
Because I think in the next, would you say next five years?
01:36:00.900
No, I would actually say for the first three years in power, like crazy.
01:36:07.160
And then as you get further away from that, control like nuts.
01:36:12.820
Now I have even better news before I get to the bad news.
01:36:25.840
Will you support a law at the state or federal level that would require developers and technology
01:36:34.080
companies to design AI so that it protects human rights contained in the constitution, such
01:36:41.580
as freedom of speech and freedom of religious expression?
01:36:44.800
So in other words, AI companies have to design AI with Bill of Rights in mind.
01:36:49.500
I mean, the Bill of Rights is already the law of the land, right?
01:37:01.620
Well, the private companies have to live by the law.
01:37:07.140
They would have to design it to allow free speech, you're saying?
01:37:09.700
I don't know, it would have to be designed to make sure it helps enforce or can never violate
01:37:17.240
It could never say, nope, we're just going to shut all of you people down.
01:37:20.960
It has to be trained on the Bill of Rights as one of its, I don't even know...
01:37:31.540
Conceptually, obviously, I like the idea of that happening.
01:37:43.580
Try to actually carefully consider your question instead of just jumping to a conclusion.
01:37:50.020
78% of likely voters, Democrats, Republicans, all age groups, 78% say yes.
01:38:13.740
There are things that at least I'm concerned about.
01:38:16.440
So we asked, would you support allowing AI systems to have access to health records,
01:38:28.720
If it meant that AI would have a better chance at curing diseases...
01:38:33.980
...and solving other social and economic problems.
01:38:40.600
Underline no capital letters, exclamation points, no.
01:38:48.760
Well, I mean, how are they getting access to this?
01:38:55.740
Would you support allowing AI systems to have access to it?
01:39:16.520
I mean, because there would be benefits to this, right?
01:39:20.480
Massive ones if enough people gave them health data, right?
01:39:24.500
So I would hope enough people did that weren't me.
01:39:27.980
But if enough people do it, then they have all of it.
01:39:35.400
Like what happens with that when it comes to your insurance rates?
01:39:47.800
Though we could acknowledge here, because like this is what...
01:39:51.120
Was it Denmark that does this with health data?
01:39:53.560
They have the best studies that come out of Denmark.
01:39:56.160
They're incredible because the government forces all of their data to go into the studies.
01:40:00.520
So like there's part of me that likes the fact that we learn about that.
01:40:03.580
If you take it and erase all of the information so it's not tracked to you, it's never...
01:40:15.120
I would hope that Justin would be nice enough to give his data so we can research on him.
01:40:26.500
And then 34% said either somewhat opposed or strongly opposed.
01:40:39.340
I was talking to somebody yesterday and they said, what is happening to Utah?
01:40:43.100
I mean, the reddest red counties are in Utah and they're just going crazy.
01:40:50.640
And I said, it's because too many people just think, oh, well, you know, it's always fine
01:40:56.240
because it's always been fine here and it's going to be great.
01:41:03.740
The other thing is, why do you think the NSA built the entire, you know, listening compound
01:41:16.020
They said they did because it takes enormous amounts of water to cool those systems.
01:41:35.760
I think they did it because people in Utah are compliant.
01:41:55.500
So then another thing, kind of more bad news, worse news in some ways.
01:42:00.920
The last question we asked was, many economists believe that AI will eliminate millions of
01:42:08.720
If that happens, would you support a government program that taxes big tech companies and then
01:42:16.140
uses the funds to provide every American with an income large enough to pay for basic
01:42:24.580
So we're talking universal basic income, essentially, paid for by big tech because AI took a lot
01:42:47.740
And in our books, we have talked about universal basic income for decades now.
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And we're now at this place where, again, I say, what's the alternative?
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I'd love to hear another alternative to this because AI is going to put the vast majority
01:44:57.160
That's why I just did a monologue and didn't mention this, but I mentioned you've got to
01:45:02.660
find meaning in life because when your job goes away, most men, at least, find meaning
01:45:10.040
So what happens to just our mental state of mind when there's no meaning in work anymore
01:45:22.140
Second thing is, you know, you said in that poll, taxed by the corporation or taxed on the
01:45:30.760
big tech companies, they have been raping us of our information.
01:45:37.980
We've, they didn't tell us at first or we were too stupid enough to recognize it, but
01:45:42.720
they, they built Google and everything else on your information, all of the information
01:45:52.260
All the billions that they've made is off of your back.
01:45:55.620
So now that they're going to be so big and, and AI is going to take away our jobs, you
01:46:05.040
I don't want it to go to the government and us.
01:46:10.300
I don't need the middleman taking their share of it.
01:46:13.320
I mean, this is basically Andrew Yang's position.
01:46:16.060
I know Andrew Yang, who has been taking this position for a decade or something like that.
01:46:21.000
I think the challenge with it is obviously we don't want government, we don't want people
01:46:26.960
And this is, this is one of those situations where they would be.
01:46:30.300
What are you going to do when, I mean, here's the thing.
01:46:38.040
There's going to be five guys with all of the money on planet earth.
01:46:49.920
They will have almost all of the money in the West will go to five or six people and
01:47:00.840
I mean, I don't, I don't, you know, say congratulations on your success.
01:47:07.660
However, if you've just destroyed all other ways for people to work, I don't know.
01:47:15.920
Um, maybe you should pay me for helping build it for the information I gave you.
01:47:21.160
And I, you know, I guess part of my distinction here is I don't disagree that directionally
01:47:29.460
I don't think at least in all of human history, there's there, we usually find a way to, to
01:47:35.640
come to a different medium than, than, than the extreme.
01:47:38.860
Nobody has a job and all money goes to five companies answer.
01:47:42.500
Like, I think there's a real solution and we're seeing this already come out, um, that
01:47:47.420
where we're used to working 40 hour weeks might be a lot different.
01:47:52.060
I think in the future from this, where instead of maybe all of the 80% of the jobs going away,
01:48:00.320
If we could get to a place to where you were working two days a week and you could make
01:48:04.700
the money that could, you could live, that's great.
01:48:08.620
I mean, you don't have, you know, you don't have the trucking jobs.
01:48:12.820
You don't, you just don't have all of the, the jobs that are the hard labor stuff.
01:48:20.900
And I think there's a, so just before I make those comments, I should give the, what the
01:48:27.960
Hold on, let's talk for 45 more minutes on this.
01:48:30.040
So we asked the, we asked the question, uh, 62% of likely voters say they either strongly
01:48:38.140
62% compared to only 22% who say that they are opposed in some way.
01:48:44.820
And who even knew about this when we started talking about it?
01:48:50.240
Nobody, the, the, I'm going to be in the minority again there, by the way.
01:48:55.260
Uh, so the, uh, I would love to join you in that, but I have not heard another, I mean,
01:49:06.860
I am against that idea because it just creates even more dependency in slaves.
01:49:12.220
However, millions, hundreds of millions, if not a billion people plus are going to be
01:49:23.220
I mean, I, you know, again, to push down this road a little bit more than maybe we need
01:49:26.620
to, uh, in this one question, but it's like, we get that way.
01:49:31.060
I think the left gets the way that you're, you're thinking about this with global warming
01:49:34.380
sometimes where they're just like, this horrible thing's going to happen.
01:49:38.060
Well, we don't know every twist and turn of how this happens and we can't make all of these
01:49:43.100
I think if we try to, we're going to be like the environmentalists of 1910 who are worried
01:49:47.700
about the dung from the, from the horses piling up in Manhattan and not really be able
01:49:53.700
I think the principles that we, we fall back on, uh, the constitution and, and our, in our,
01:50:00.180
our system will oftentimes provide answers to these things, even if we don't know the
01:50:05.420
So, so one of the really interesting things about this conversation is that put aside
01:50:11.420
whether it's the right thing to do or the wrong thing to do.
01:50:16.980
And just ask yourself the question in the moment when you have the rapid disruption of
01:50:24.180
millions of jobs going away, um, politically, is it even possible to say, you know what the
01:50:34.640
And so like, that's the thing I'm most concerned about is even if you're right, and I think
01:50:40.600
I don't know how you escape that part of the problem.
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Yesterday I was filming with Prager university and, um, we were talking about the great depression
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and one of the guys was standing there and I was like, Oh yeah, let me show you something
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I'll tell you why we have all of the social security and everything else.
01:50:55.240
And I pulled out that book from the economic committee for FDR, uh, all these hand drawn
01:51:01.700
and colored charts about how, if you don't do these things, there'll be such chaos on
01:51:07.600
the streets that you'll have communism because radicals will take charge because too many
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Too many people need something to give them hope in some job.
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Even if the government creates them, that's kind of the situation that we would find ourselves
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Subscribe to Glenn Beck's email newsletter for bold takes, breaking stories, and behind-the-scenes
01:52:53.420
All right, we're with Justin Haskins, the president of our republic and the editor-in-chief
01:53:11.200
He's also my co-author on The Great Reset, Dark Future, and Propaganda Wars.
01:53:14.940
I just, before we get back into this, I just have to say I've seen the weirdest thing I
01:53:19.700
Donald Trump was just announced at this big meeting in the Saudi Investment Forum.
01:53:28.240
And they introduce him, and he walks out to Lee Greenwood, God Bless the USA, which is
01:53:32.460
like a three-minute and 37-second song, I believe.
01:53:36.300
And he does, you know, when he does that here in America, he walks out and everybody's singing
01:53:47.100
And he just walked out to that, and he let the entire song play, and everybody is just
01:53:55.920
They're all standing there like, I don't know what's going on here.
01:54:00.460
Because they're not crying or singing or waving at an American player.
01:54:03.080
And he just stood there and looked out into the audience like, you're going to listen
01:54:09.440
Man, he's just got a pair of set on him that just does not ever, ever stop.
01:54:15.440
Well, getting shot in the head might do that to someone.
01:54:22.480
So, Justin, we were talking about AI, what we've just learned from polling, which is both
01:54:30.860
People are at least really starting to understand this, which is good.
01:54:36.660
If they don't understand this, or they only understand it like we understood social media
01:54:51.580
Because by the time you figure it out, everything will be different.
01:54:55.300
And so, it looks like people are starting to pay attention to it before we get there.
01:54:59.760
And they want rights and protections embedded in it.
01:55:04.520
Now, talk to me about the EU, because the EU has decided, we're not playing this game.
01:55:18.360
We're just going to be the ones that set all of the rules.
01:55:22.420
The expansion of power in the European Union during the Biden administration into today
01:55:31.840
And this is just another example of what we've talked about, the EU ESG law before, where
01:55:35.600
they're trying to impose ESG on all of America and the whole world.
01:55:46.520
A lot of the law, some of the law has already gone into effect earlier this year.
01:55:52.460
Penalties and things like that for noncompliance go into effect over the next couple of years.
01:55:56.860
Is this part of the stuff where you can't say anything that the society or the governments
01:56:04.860
Or is this basically all these laws for the high-tech companies?
01:56:13.940
The idea behind these is to force AI developers, no matter where they are in the world, they
01:56:18.500
could be in America, they could be in Canada, or they could be in the EU or someplace else.
01:56:26.800
To adopt all of these EU sort of like ESG rules and to embed them into their AI systems.
01:56:35.600
And if you, if, and their way of determining whether this might apply to you is not whether
01:56:42.600
you have an EU or not whether you have an AI system offered in the EU.
01:56:47.500
It's not even whether someone in the EU uses your AI system from the EU.
01:56:52.720
It's based on the use of an output from an AI system.
01:56:57.860
So, in other words, if you have ChatGPT produce a offensive transphobic meme and that is used
01:57:08.460
by somebody in the EU because you send it to somebody in the EU and then some influencer
01:57:14.580
That's enough to bring your AI system under their law, under the AI Act.
01:57:20.780
Now, it's a super complicated, absurdly ridiculous law.
01:57:24.900
I got to tell you, if this doesn't fall, you know what, because what I would do, if that
01:57:29.420
were the case and we had a president here that was going to allow those punishments to
01:57:35.180
stand, I would just, I'd find a way to embed some sort of code that would not allow it to
01:57:44.320
I don't even know if that's possible, but you would just say, cut them off.
01:57:49.140
Well, you almost, what's crazy about this is even if you didn't offer your service in
01:57:53.580
the EU, just the output alone, it's like you have to force big tech companies not to
01:58:02.880
That's the genius of what the EU, so what's amazing about this is, so, well, before we
01:58:07.960
get into that, the requirements, what are the things that you have to do if you're a
01:58:12.040
There's all these obligations that you have to do.
01:58:16.160
You have to build in human oversight, maintain logs, testing protocols, submit extensive
01:58:23.120
But the worst of it all is that you have to build a risk mitigation system to avoid actions
01:58:29.160
considered harmful by the EU into your EU, into your AI systems, okay?
01:58:40.540
Well, risk is so broadly defined that almost anything could be considered.
01:58:47.380
It's essentially whatever the EU regulators want to ask you to stop doing, they can ask
01:58:53.340
you to stop doing it, or else you pay these massive fines.
01:59:00.860
But for most of the violations that I think we would be concerned about, it would be 3% of
01:59:16.240
I mean, it's usually a good return is, like, 6% to 8% on your dollar.
01:59:28.340
If you're taking straight revenue, your profit could be gone.
01:59:35.040
It's very similar to the EU ESG law that we had talked about before, except it's focused
01:59:40.220
on AI, so they're requiring these companies to adhere to these absurd rules.
01:59:46.440
They're going to do it, because they're going to make money off of it.
01:59:49.640
So I want to give you some specific examples from the law.
01:59:53.440
So in the law, there's this section where they basically lay out their intent.
01:59:57.200
And in their intent, which is pages and pages and pages long, they talk about risks.
02:00:02.580
Now, some of the risks that they're concerned about, and they're trying to stop with this
02:00:08.020
This is how courts are going to interpret it in the EU.
02:00:11.760
It says when they're talking about general purpose AI models, they're talking about the
02:00:18.760
So we're talking about, like, chat GPT or something like that, okay?
02:00:22.320
It says that could pose systemic risks, which include, but are not limited to, any actual
02:00:29.420
or reasonably foreseeable negative effects in relation to major accidents, disruptions
02:00:36.500
of critical sectors and serious consequences to public health and safety, any actual or reasonably
02:00:42.000
foreseeable negative effects on democratic processes, public and economic security, the
02:00:48.440
dissemination of illegal, false, or discriminatory content.
02:00:53.260
Then there's a whole bunch of other things I'm going to skip down.
02:00:56.160
Risks from models making copies of themselves or self-replicating, in which models can give
02:01:03.080
rise to harmful bias and discrimination with risks to individuals, communities, or societies,
02:01:09.020
the facilitation of disinformation or harming privacy with threats to democratic values and
02:01:13.360
human rights, a risk that a particular event could lead to a chain reaction with considerable
02:01:21.480
negative effects that could affect up to an entire city, an entire domain activity, or an entire
02:01:39.400
Like, the whole thing could be summarized as whatever we want, okay?
02:01:42.800
So, so we, I asked ChatGPT, are you, are you concerned, you know, is this something that
02:01:51.360
If you are, it's already supposed to go into effect.
02:01:54.120
And it's very clearly, ChatGPT says, yes, we've already been changing, OpenAI already
02:02:00.000
has been changing its algorithms to conform to this and other laws like it.
02:02:06.940
So, so AI, so we've been sitting here talking about why is AI doing all this crazy woke stuff?
02:02:11.860
And why is it only promoting certain views of various issues or things like that?
02:02:16.660
Well, because it's being forced to do that in part, at least, because of the European
02:02:23.540
So, while China and America are in a race to, you know, the AI race to see who's going to
02:02:28.900
develop it first, Europe's just like, we don't really care who develops it first as long
02:02:34.240
Okay, so that's a really cute idea, but may I take it to the last big possible destructive
02:02:44.620
Europe could be sitting there and going, well, you know, Russia might develop their own
02:02:49.300
nuclear weapons and America, but we're going to make the rules.
02:02:52.280
Well, maybe if Russia and America were like, okay, you can make the rules.
02:02:59.200
I mean, if China and the United States are like, I don't really care, we're not, we're
02:03:05.620
And so one of the things in here that's good, so we're going to talk about some of the, one
02:03:09.740
of the, some of the good stuff that's in it, is there are direct prohibitions on the
02:03:15.040
AI, so it's banned, not a penalty, like you can't do it, that deals with AI that exploits
02:03:21.920
human vulnerabilities, like age or disability, certain social scoring.
02:03:28.000
And that's, that's always the problem with these things.
02:03:30.140
There's stuff in there about the use of AI for subliminal mind altering apps and things
02:03:40.320
You know, like, I mean, there's like stuff in there that you look at and you're like, oh,
02:03:44.620
yeah, I mean, I don't want, I don't want to be subliminally like.
02:03:49.960
How are you going to, how are you going to prove that?
02:03:57.800
It is show me the person, I'll show you the crime.
02:04:00.880
And so what you need, by the way, there is a minority report type thing in here that
02:04:05.540
says you can't use this to predict crime and then arrest people for it.
02:04:15.860
But I think that the main part of all this is why would America allow the EU to dictate
02:04:26.780
If you have the progressive counterpart to the EU, then you can't get things through
02:04:38.700
And then we'll just go, well, we're going to where we are, you know, one with the EU and
02:04:43.060
we're just going to follow their rules and we'll just do that.
02:04:45.700
So it allows you to destroy all of American rights just by blaming it on them.
02:04:55.540
I think at some point this became the actual strategy.
02:04:59.620
For whoever was running the Biden administration, you know, that was the strategy.
02:05:06.080
We're just going to let Europe do whatever it wants.
02:05:09.760
And we'll allow them to impose ESG on us and all these other things.
02:05:15.260
I know because the guy who was running the administration was Mike.
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But then the moment he touched the doorknob or he touched the window, ding, it was Simply
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All of a sudden, a two-way speaker says, hey, Mike, you might want to reconsider your life
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Replaced by very real fear of going to jail in sweatpants.
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And they're going to take a picture of you, Mike, looking like that.
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It's a fully integrated, professionally monitored, crime-ending, bad-guy-repelling force field
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You can order a pizza and be done before the thing even arrives.
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So, every 30 seconds, somebody's home is broken into in this country.
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Maybe it won't be yours in 30 seconds from now, if you're lucky.
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Have you ever seen a liberal's hands smoother than a snake on oil?
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Guess they're more worried about the meaning of the word retarded than the word work.
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The modern coffee industry has kind of become a place where your daily purchase often funds
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corporate values contrary to what you believe in, what traditional American beliefs are.
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As 2025 unfolds, the gap between your principles and where your dollars go can widen with each
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This used to be the way kind of we did things, and it's no longer that way.
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02:09:25.380
Justin, let me ask you, what is the one thing that you think that nobody is talking about
02:09:31.880
that you think is the next big thing that we should be talking about at this point?
02:09:38.780
You mean other than all the other stuff that I just talked about?
02:09:43.460
You know, this is not a popular opinion among people on the right, but I think if you just
02:09:50.780
look at the historical numbers of how things have gone with the stock market, where things
02:09:56.280
are at with housing prices, we are so due for a gigantic crash, it is unbelievable.
02:10:04.100
Just if you're looking at all the historical metrics measuring that, that would be my major
02:10:09.420
And I think if we don't get spending under control, that could happen really fast.
02:10:14.160
And we're talking collapse of the dollar, and then you get CBDCs after that, and we can
02:10:23.800
I'm kind of on the same board with an economic situation.
02:10:26.320
And if you look back at the Case-Shiller Index, which we've talked about for years, where
02:10:31.600
it hit, before the housing collapse, right, the Great Recession, it hit a number of 184.
02:10:41.160
Now, that collapse fell all the way down to 134.
02:11:01.380
That number should be about 100, if I'm not mistaken.
02:11:13.660
I mean, again, this is not, this is adjusted for inflation.
02:11:17.760
So it's not like a number that you would expect to go up like that.
02:11:20.740
Based on that, there's data that shows that the average sales price of a home is now higher
02:11:28.320
It's more than seven times the average income price of a home.
02:11:32.040
If you are young and starting over, you probably don't think there's a way to buy a house or own
02:11:41.740
Now, can we hold society together while it changes and resets?
02:11:48.140
But I know the socialists are counting on being there.
02:11:56.880
And we will see you back on the radio tomorrow.