How the Media SHOULD Be Covering the Biden Scandals | 7⧸6⧸23
Episode Stats
Length
2 hours and 5 minutes
Words per Minute
179.82417
Summary
Glenn Beck is joined by Pat and Stu to talk about the latest drug bust at the White House and why it could have come from someone in the Biden family. Glenn also talks about a woman named Natalie who is a great mom and a great wife.
Transcript
00:00:00.000
All right. So Pat and Stu in here for Glenn. We're going to get to this here in just a second.
00:00:03.100
Let me tell you about Grip6. You work hard for the money you earn. And if you're like me,
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it's a patriotism thing. Maybe it's a quality thing. Maybe it's a sanity thing. But traditionally,
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00:01:29.980
What you're about to hear is the fusion of entertainment and enlightenment.
00:02:26.720
But I want to tell you about a woman named Natalie.
00:02:36.420
They made these children a part of their family,
00:02:43.080
It sounds like she's doing a pretty good job at life.
00:28:57.660
Does not hold any weight, but weight is an important thing to watch.
00:29:26.420
Well, this, this, that is the type of thing that really needs the Adam Sandler, Billy Madison
00:29:31.940
treatment of, you know, we've, everyone who's heard this has become dumber for listening
00:29:41.780
Like that is the type of reaction that deserves.
00:29:53.680
Go find one to go die in in another place where you'll probably die 25 years earlier because
00:29:58.060
they don't have any medicine or you're murdered in the streets by some horrible riot because
00:30:05.980
Go, go experience the, the wonders of the, uh, the Uyghur death camps.
00:30:14.580
And there, if you sing that song, it will not be long until you have to wait for that,
00:30:21.060
Cause there they will not respect your right to be a complete idiot.
00:30:24.180
It's not that the really most salient point about this, any other nation on earth, practically,
00:30:36.260
Many other, uh, not any other, but many other nations.
00:30:42.560
She's got the kind of oppression where she's worth $12 million.
00:30:53.200
You know, maybe her memory was erased about what slavery was.
00:31:01.980
I just, this idea that you just, this is just like the, the tough guy attitude, right?
00:31:06.880
Like I need to come out and I'm going to say these things and I'll show them.
00:31:20.160
Uh, and it's, it is, it's, it's an embarrassment.
00:31:27.240
And I said that to the other people in my luxury box.
00:31:29.740
I was like, look, I don't think this is the right thing to cheer.
00:31:32.300
Even though we happen to be facing the other way, you know, look, our luxury box is not
00:31:38.040
actually pointed at the stage, but you heard that that was, those were not the lyrics to
00:31:42.160
And I tried to make that clear to everyone in my luxury box.
00:31:45.600
Did the people in your luxury box understand that?
00:31:49.820
They didn't seem to be as big a Jill Scott fans as I was, as I am, you know, uh, which
00:31:55.100
It's like, if you're going to come to the essence festival and stay in my luxury box, I expect
00:31:59.220
you to be a bigger Jill Scott fan for sure, you know, and have heard of her, for example.
00:32:03.640
You know, but a lot of them hadn't, even though she's worth $12 million.
00:32:08.740
I look, it's one of the great things about this country is people who are as idiotic as
00:32:16.360
I mean, I guess that's an, that's something you can say, you know, because there was a
00:32:22.500
Maybe a couple of Kings, you know, and now we're at a point where complete morons, complete
00:32:29.140
and utter morons who know nothing about their own country's history can rise to those levels
00:32:34.480
because of a little bit of an ability to sing with a very deep at times voice.
00:32:40.020
That's a great, what a great sign that our country is achieving wonderful things.
00:32:44.660
In a time when we have the vice president of the United States, who is a black woman,
00:32:49.640
we're what, six, seven years away from a black president of the United States of America.
00:32:58.840
That kind of oppression doesn't usually happen.
00:33:05.700
It's a, it's a, it's a twist on a traditional oppression story.
00:33:08.600
Where you can hold the highest offices in the land with the kind of oppression that we have
00:33:16.820
That's an interesting form of oppression and slavery.
00:33:19.600
It's a remix of the story from years past, isn't it?
00:33:23.860
You know, just not normally the way things go in a place where people are highly oppressed.
00:33:31.020
Like, for instance, is there a Uyghur premiere of China right now?
00:33:36.140
Do you think, do you think it would be notable if there was?
00:33:43.340
It'd be a massive change in China if that were the case, where there was a premier or
00:33:48.880
a vice premier of, uh, of the nation of China and they happen to be a Uyghur, people who
00:33:59.760
That's, uh, that's overcoming that oppression, uh, but you're, you don't see that.
00:34:08.760
If you hate this country that much, where you're going to stand up at a major festival
00:34:12.200
like that in New Orleans, Louisiana, United States of America.
00:34:16.060
No, I'm sure they weren't, especially not in the luxury box.
00:34:19.020
Um, but where, where you can stand up and sing a song like that and, you know, you're
00:34:29.580
Um, I think that, that kind of says a lot about the country in which you live, but why
00:34:35.460
If you hate it that much, you're, you're going to stand there and you're going to spit in
00:34:40.020
the face of the vast majority of Americans who aren't going to appreciate this.
00:34:43.740
And you obviously don't care because that such as your hatred for this country, that
00:34:54.260
There's, you know, you're not that far from Mexico.
00:35:11.040
I mean, uh, it seems like there's a bunch of complaints about everything, right?
00:35:16.000
Um, and I don't know how many black presidents have there been of Canada?
00:35:21.920
Let me see if I can find an answer here real quickly here.
00:35:24.600
I'm just doing some calculations, you know, cause we got the spreadsheet open.
00:35:32.440
How many black presidents have there been, uh, of Mexico?
00:35:37.820
Yeah, cause you're going to have to count them once they all come up there on the screen.
00:35:49.460
One of Mexican or African descent, Vincente Guerrero from 1829 and April, from April 1st, 1829
00:36:00.320
Uh, he's, I guess, celebrated as a national hero in Mexico.
00:36:04.220
So he has an African, yeah, and I guess this, would this be better than the, than Barack
00:36:11.220
Um, but yeah, so we do have one, uh, in France, France, black presidents of France.
00:36:18.640
England, England certainly has had black presidents, uh, right.
00:36:22.860
Cause you know, uh, prime ministers, um, yeah, prime ministers, um, right.
00:36:27.420
Now, of course, what's interesting is they finally do have a person of color, uh, who is
00:36:32.360
the prime minister of the country and they hate his guts.
00:36:41.800
Uh, so anyway, uh, that's, uh, this is sort of the story in a lot of places, uh, you'll
00:36:47.260
And, uh, that's, you know, uh, and that's just one part of the story, of course, but it
00:36:53.260
is amazing to see that this supposed oppression, which also often leads these celebrities to
00:36:58.980
multi-million dollar fortunes, uh, is it, how can it occur?
00:37:07.660
Shouldn't we be better at it now after multiple hundreds of years, supposedly of doing it?
00:37:12.740
We're almost as bad at oppression as we are at insurrections.
00:37:28.620
As compared to some bizarre utopia you've created or as compared to reality, America
00:37:38.580
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Uh, Stu just asked, uh, chat GPT to name, you know, the European leaders who are black,
00:41:02.480
who are African-American because, you know, Jill Scott hates it here so much, uh, and made
00:41:07.080
up those lyrics that, uh, bashed America, uh, quite severely.
00:41:10.740
So we're looking for a better country on this planet where, you know, things are much less
00:41:16.860
And that would be how many nations in Europe, because like all of them, right, have had black
00:41:24.740
You know, Finland, we're hearing about Finland and Sweden and Norway all the time, all the
00:41:30.100
And they, they, they love their black leaders there.
00:41:32.840
I know that France and England, you know, certainly Germany, you know, they, since world
00:41:40.840
They've been fairly more enlightened than they once were, but, but how many European nations,
00:41:48.600
How much time do we have to, we don't have time to get into all this?
00:41:51.740
Uh, as of the, uh, September, 2021, which is the knowledge cutoff date of chat GBT.
00:41:56.680
We have a number one is Marcelo Rabello de Souza.
00:41:59.940
The current president of Portugal is of partial African descent.
00:42:09.980
And then in Russia, Sergei Bakhash was the president of Abkhazia, an autonomous reason for a region
00:42:22.520
And then, and then, um, also then, uh, there's no more in all of the history of the continent.
00:42:31.660
Neither one, both are partially of African descent.
00:42:38.160
It just proves what a hideous nation we have, doesn't it?
00:42:41.580
And so many other countries are more enlightened than we are.
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It's Pat and Stu, also in for Glenn on the Glenn Beck Program.
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Christina Bayakova, 28-year-old vice president of a bank in Russia, fell from her window,
00:46:34.680
her 11th story apartment window, to her death on June 23rd.
00:46:41.540
Now, I've tried to put out warnings multiple times to Russians to stay away from windows.
00:46:48.280
They're just too clumsy to be near them, and they keep falling out their windows.
00:46:53.460
She was with a 34-year-old male at the time named Andrei.
00:46:58.780
The man said he was invited by her to have some drinks at the apartment,
00:47:02.540
and then she walked out to the window, close to the window, and suddenly fell and died
00:47:14.140
They get, I guess, really clumsy after that happens?
00:47:22.140
There was also Dan Rapoport, a well-known critic of Vladimir Putin, who was exiled from Russia.
00:47:28.320
He was found dead after plunging from his Washington, D.C. luxury apartment building last August.
00:47:41.580
Weeks later, Russian oil giant, Luke Oil chairman, Ravil Maganov, fell from a sixth-floor window at a hospital in Moscow.
00:47:52.760
He fell out of a window at a hospital and died.
00:47:55.740
Before his death, he had been surprisingly vocal in his criticism of Putin and the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
00:48:04.480
Then in December, the creative director of an IT company, Grigory Kochenov,
00:48:09.540
plunged from his apartment balcony and fell to his death while Russian authorities searched his apartment.
00:48:17.340
There's Russian authorities there in his apartment looking for things,
00:48:20.800
and then he's over at the window tumbling out of it.
00:48:24.980
I wonder if one of them tried to stop and help him, grab him, before he weirdly fell out of his window.
00:48:34.600
The same month, the Russian sausage tycoon fell to his death from a hotel window in India,
00:48:41.420
just two days after his friend, also from Russia, died at the same hotel in the same way.
00:48:49.340
A Russian real estate tycoon also took a fatal tumble down a flight of stairs while in the French Riviera back in December.
00:48:57.460
Earlier this month, a federal judge, Artur M. Bartonev, fell 12 stories from his apartment building and was pronounced dead at the scene.
00:49:06.480
And it's strange because some two dozen Russians, in addition to the nine I just mentioned,
00:49:12.760
two dozen Russian officials and oligarchs have died under mysterious circumstances,
00:49:19.160
and it has been named, the trend has been named sudden Russian death syndrome.
00:49:31.080
You know, gravity tends to win a lot of these battles.
00:49:33.660
When you get too close to those windows, and you've also combined that with some criticism of the war in Ukraine,
00:49:46.680
I think you get lightheaded because of your criticism.
00:49:50.740
It could be that you get lightheaded and that's when you start the criticism.
00:49:59.160
You know, of course, it's something to keep in mind as we talk about the Ukraine war and appropriately criticize our role in it at times.
00:50:07.700
It is important to understand that Russia still is a disaster.
00:50:17.340
In the Russian leadership that do a lot of terrible things.
00:50:20.260
And I think that we get caught up a lot in, and understandably so, by the way, that, you know, our role in this is highly suspect at times.
00:50:32.900
There's a lot of things going on there that are not good.
00:50:34.900
We're spending a lot of money that we don't have in places all around the world that we shouldn't be spending.
00:50:40.420
You know, you can certainly make arguments that there are benefits to America from some of these things, but also there are a lot of criticisms to be made on our role and how expansive it's become.
00:50:54.260
And I honestly, like, my major criticism is maybe different, I don't know, from your take on this, Pat, but, like, my biggest concern with this whole war is the people we have at the top actually making this situation not turn into World War III.
00:51:09.440
I mean, Medvedev, the former president of Russia, was out in the media yesterday saying, it is likely this ends in nuclear war.
00:51:20.120
Not like it's an outlier possibility, but it's likely that's how this ends.
00:51:36.680
I should get you the exact quote because it was, you know, there, the, uh, this is not, uh, he said, uh, it could use nuclear...
00:51:47.280
You know, we, we had some fireworks over the past few days, Pat.
00:51:51.840
Medvedev says Russia could use nuclear weapon, uh, to end war in a matter of days.
00:52:01.600
In general, any war, even a world war can be promptly concluded either by signing a peace treaty or by adopting measures similar to what Americans did in 1945 when they deployed nuclear weapons and bombed two Japanese cities, Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
00:52:13.680
They undeniably, uh, altered the course of military campaign then at the cost of nearly 300,000 innocent civilian lives.
00:52:20.380
Of course, this very pro, uh, Russia or pro-American view from Russia.
00:52:28.540
Um, the ex-Russian president, Dmitry Medvedev, also, um, said a nuclear apocalypse involving Russia and what Western nations is not just possible, but also, quote, quite probable.
00:52:43.980
That's even, I guess, going even further than likely.
00:52:46.980
It's probably going to happen, according to Medvedev.
00:52:51.940
It doesn't mean this is going to happen, obviously.
00:52:54.460
But, like, what I keep coming back to, the scariest outcome here, is not us spending so much money even in Ukraine.
00:53:00.820
It's not the corruption in Ukraine that is a huge problem.
00:53:04.240
It's not the Russians and how they act in this war.
00:53:10.560
Those are all really terrible things and stuff we need to talk about.
00:53:13.860
But the idea that the only thing between us and this quite probable nuclear annihilation is the competence of the Biden administration and the restraint of Vladimir Putin.
00:53:28.760
Those are the two factors deciphering our fate at this point.
00:53:34.280
Like, honestly, I have more confidence in the restraint of Vladimir Putin.
00:53:37.560
Only because he seems to be able to go so far to really, really horrible, horrible places, but not, he hasn't crossed this line yet.
00:53:47.060
The competence line has been crossed 100 million times.
00:53:50.760
We obviously know the people in the Biden administration are not competent.
00:53:55.240
And then they turned around and told us it was the best job they could do.
00:54:05.240
They're saying they're proud of what happened in Afghanistan.
00:54:10.020
That is their take on that situation, which we all know was an utter catastrophe.
00:54:14.860
The most embarrassing foreign affairs debacle in my lifetime by a president.
00:54:23.800
So the fact that they could, I mean, the fact that we are currently sending multiple billions of dollars of weapons that are targeting Russian troops in Ukraine.
00:54:34.320
And we have this sort of, kind of, proxy war line, kind of.
00:54:39.380
We're announcing every dollar we send over there.
00:54:54.780
There are weapons going off in Russian-controlled areas, across the lines into Russia.
00:55:00.220
All this is, in my mind, and I know there's some that would disagree with this, completely appropriate for Ukrainians to do.
00:55:06.800
They can absolutely defend themselves after this country invaded their territory.
00:55:11.200
They should do everything they can, just as we would, by the way, if someone invaded us like this.
00:55:16.080
But we would not demand that every other country on earth pay for it.
00:55:22.420
And so I have a real problem with a lot of that.
00:55:27.300
But the fact that we are depending on the competence of Antony Blinken, Kamala Harris, and Joe Biden to hold the line to make sure we are able to keep Vladimir Putin from doing these things and turning this into World War III in his desperation.
00:55:51.480
I mean, it is terrifying to think of a—that is where our entire civilization rests right now.
00:55:59.320
At any moment, Vladimir Putin would be like, all right, you guys have been saying you're not at war with us.
00:56:08.120
But if they act as if we are actually at war with them, our entire civilization is turned upside down overnight.
00:56:13.940
I mean, literally everything we have goes into a state of flux immediately the second that happens.
00:56:21.120
And all the stuff that we rely on on a day-to-day basis goes into question.
00:56:24.560
So much of it is produced in countries that are now friendly—thank you again, Joe Biden—with Russia instead of America?
00:56:33.860
Or China, which is also friendly with Russia instead of America.
00:56:36.340
So you have a situation where what happens to our supply chains, what happens to the future of the country?
00:56:51.600
One of the supply chain items, by the way, that could be cut off are prescription drugs.
00:57:01.760
I mean, you are kept alive only by prescription drugs.
00:57:04.960
Your body is made up of 84% prescription drugs.
00:57:09.320
There's bone, there's some muscle density, and then mostly pills.
00:57:18.440
And, you know, these are often medications people take on a day-to-day basis.
00:57:24.100
Almost all of the painkillers are produced in China.
00:57:29.320
Almost all of things like insulin and just every other life-saving medicine that you can think of.
00:57:44.240
And this is why, I think, the number one priority—this is—I don't know that this is the most widely held take, but I have this.
00:57:53.500
This is a legitimate stew take, which is our number one foreign affairs priority should be improving relations with India.
00:58:04.100
They are now the most populous country on Earth.
00:58:07.040
They are actually somewhat friendly to Western values as far as capitalism goes.
00:58:12.080
They're supposedly the world's biggest democracy.
00:58:15.800
It has been transformed from a country that had hatred at times for Western values to one that appreciated them.
00:58:26.500
The president of India and the Indian people liked Donald Trump more than Melania likes Donald Trump.
00:58:34.200
I mean, they—and now we—they've sided with Russia and China.
00:58:39.620
Like, this should be our—now, luckily, they showed some familiarity with this idea.
00:58:46.400
They had a big, you know, state dinner, and Modi was in town, and they've—it seems like they're putting some efforts into this, though I don't, of course, believe they're capable of maintaining this relationship.
00:59:00.380
And we obviously know we're adversaries with them.
00:59:05.720
You have a country with the manufacturing capabilities of India, a country that's actually somewhat friendly to our value system, at least at some level.
00:59:20.800
This should be our number one foreign affairs priority.
00:59:23.940
Other than also, you know, standing up to what China is trying to do.
00:59:35.940
I mean, the Joseph Robinette Biden administration has done nothing more than take that relationship, which was dirt strong under Trump.
00:59:47.640
And would be again if he were to be elected next year.
00:59:51.280
Again, that's not to say that I approve of every one of India's policies.
00:59:54.520
There's all sorts of, well, you go through that for days and days and days.
01:00:07.560
All right, call me crazy, but I, you know, look, we all know that occasionally people on this program, maybe that whose name is at the top of the program, are called crazy all the time.
01:00:17.240
But his love for comfortable footwear, not so crazy.
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And right now, MyPillow is still having their massive closeout sale on their famous slippers.
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I, you know, like sometimes you'll find me in the 7-Eleven next door.
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And I will say, yes, you will see Glenn also walking around town in his MySlippers.
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In Britain, they got the Wimbledon Tennis Tournament going on.
01:01:38.360
And of course, that had to be interrupted by boneheads again.
01:01:44.460
Any big event now, especially in Britain, is going to be interrupted by these morons.
01:02:03.900
I'm not sure what it is he dropped there on the court.
01:02:09.820
But they cut away and just went to a shot of the stadium so that they didn't show this douchebag.
01:02:34.060
So he then went out to the net and just sat down at the net.
01:02:41.500
I would prefer them going back to the idiots gluing themselves to things.
01:02:45.920
Patterns they had for a while where they would just glue themselves to stuff and then it would embarrassingly fail.
01:02:57.140
Have the professional tennis player serve the ball right into his face.
01:03:08.000
How long will he sit there if a couple of balls hit him directly in the face like that?
01:03:17.400
Did you see they did this at the Hurdles recently too?
01:03:20.400
But they were in the middle of a big Hurdles race and a bunch of protesters ran out onto this track.
01:03:27.260
While they're running and put up like a fake finish line that had like some dumb message.
01:03:33.040
Again, does anyone ever know what the message is?
01:03:43.200
Because they had to like pull up and like hurt their knee over this stuff.
01:03:53.480
It is the one time where unmitigated violence is accepted.
01:04:03.860
A guy decided to propose to his girlfriend at, I think, Wrigley Field and ran out, got
01:04:14.200
And this guy leveled him under no other circumstance.
01:04:21.740
It's that or you're protesting a sporting event.
01:04:24.840
You run out of the field and they just have free will to be able to absolutely obliterate
01:04:31.640
And you deserve every bit of it if you go out there.
01:04:35.520
Especially when it's some stupid climate protest.
01:04:39.940
And again, you're not gaining any friends or followers doing this.
01:04:44.880
Nobody at Wimbledon is like, hey, that was great.
01:04:47.320
I loved it when you ran out and disturbed the match that I paid, you know, $850 to attend.
01:04:56.520
And I will say you probably there make some paint dust onto a grass court.
01:05:02.740
They probably, I don't know what they would even do to make that okay.
01:05:10.460
And it's like, no one wants to support your cause because of what you've done.
01:05:20.740
I think they should continue to glue themselves to stuff.
01:05:26.780
Eventually, enough people just sit there with their hands glued to a floor and wind up being
01:05:37.280
It's also kind of funny when the police remove them and it tears the skin right off their
01:05:47.960
I'm going to go out on a limb here and make a bold statement.
01:05:50.420
It shouldn't cost you an arm and a leg every time you want to throw some steaks on the
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When you do, you should be grilling with meat that was sourced in the United States.
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Our farmers, our ranchers, they work hard for your business.
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By the way, Glenn's new book, available Tuesday, coming up this Tuesday.
01:07:33.060
And if you haven't read this, the first book in the series, I think you can pick this
01:07:38.180
one up here and still know what you're talking about.
01:07:40.420
But you've seen so many people talking about ESG scores and all of these sort of concepts,
01:07:46.060
the World Economic Forum, all of these things that maybe you've heard Glenn talk about.
01:07:56.120
And even if you do have a really good background behind it, this is uncovering a whole new layer
01:08:04.180
You can pre-order now and, of course, get the book on Tuesday in bookstores everywhere.
01:08:13.280
We were talking about you being 84% prescription drugs a moment ago.
01:08:17.380
And I wanted to point out to the audience who might be listening on radio, you're listening
01:08:24.640
Alex, I mean, you want to talk about, I mean, can I just say, you're looking hot.
01:08:33.580
I mean, I'm a little worried that Jackie could be listening.
01:08:36.380
You know, I'm hoping, there we go, like a little romantic.
01:08:53.040
Now, this came after a pretty serious health scare.
01:08:56.000
It came mostly from, uh, changing my diet completely.
01:09:00.620
And, but then also, I think about the last 10 pounds have probably been helped along by
01:09:06.280
Mongero, which is a miracle drug to me, by the way.
01:09:12.220
It's, it's like Ozempic, if you don't know what it is, Ozempic, Mongero, and there's a
01:09:20.940
That is, uh, that one's particularly for weight, specifically for weight loss.
01:09:27.480
But I think they're about to be, at least Mongero, I think, is about to be approved
01:09:34.160
Believe me, the people over at Eli Lilly and Novo Nordisk do realize that people are
01:09:38.560
losing weight and are very excited about the possibilities of this beyond the diabetes
01:09:43.160
It's probably going to be even a much bigger moneymaker for them just for weight loss.
01:09:50.640
I mean, if, you know, if you can just prescribe this for weight loss, it works.
01:10:01.600
It, it, I think it slows down the digestive system so you're less hungry.
01:10:07.900
Um, and man, it does make, at least it makes me less hungry.
01:10:17.660
I mean, there, there's a little bit of a side effect of nausea sometimes.
01:10:21.160
Um, especially if you eat, uh, if you eat too much, too much, then you overdo it.
01:10:31.120
Um, but what, the thing it has done for me, uh, I was on four injections per day of insulin
01:10:37.820
four per day, uh, since February, I'm on no injections of insulin a day and just one injection
01:11:05.820
And the fact that it has these benefits, you know, we've talked about this a couple of
01:11:10.420
times because I thought was following these studies as they were coming through.
01:11:14.460
Um, and they did these studies and they were super long-term for a new drug.
01:11:18.880
I mean, it was like something like 68 weeks, I think was the week OV study.
01:11:29.100
I mean, that's what, five years, more than five years.
01:11:41.720
Um, and it, you know, shows you don't have the, obviously like you can never, anything
01:11:47.560
People get into those worlds where they worry about every long-term reaction, but you know,
01:11:51.840
you can never know unless you just want to never have a new drug.
01:11:56.200
Maybe it'll rot out my intestines a year from now.
01:12:01.860
I mean, like the, the, the profile is very, and it's been available for diabetes for longer
01:12:08.460
It's been around for, for a long time for diabetes.
01:12:10.680
So it's, people have been on this for years and years and years now and have not had,
01:12:15.940
But what's interesting about it is the first study they did, uh, was 68 weeks and people
01:12:27.640
The placebo, which was like, you know, 1% or something.
01:12:31.220
And then they ran, um, the Manjaro studies, it came out as 22% of body weight.
01:12:43.780
There's a lot of weight for someone who is overweight.
01:12:45.240
Well, if you're 200 pounds, you know, you're going to lose 44 pounds.
01:12:52.180
And for people who are obese, you know, a lot of that ties into, uh, diabetes.
01:13:00.620
So curing this stuff, I mean, we are nearing the point here where we have essentially that
01:13:08.620
That is how impactful these drugs are to the point of like, where, you know, the one thing
01:13:13.520
that makes you, tell me if this has been an experience, Pat, but the one thing that they
01:13:16.160
talk about where it, the one thing that makes you stop eating.
01:13:20.000
Think about like when you're out there and it's Thanksgiving and you're just going to
01:13:27.220
There's only one thing that stops you, which is you hit that moment where you're like,
01:13:34.500
It's not because you don't want to stuff more good tasting food into your mouth.
01:13:41.560
This, this series of drugs, and there's several, several of them, um, make that feeling come
01:14:00.280
It's not like something that's a big difference.
01:14:03.860
And they talk about it, how there, there is a, uh, you know, the Ozempic and Wegovi are
01:14:10.840
And then the Manjaro, which is from Eli Lilly, that's like a 2.0.
01:14:14.180
And there's another batch of these coming soon that it's like a 3.0 that they say is even
01:14:19.900
And they're coming in pills too, not just injections.
01:14:22.360
Like this stuff is going to, that's incredible.
01:14:25.140
They, they did a recent poll that said 47% of Americans would like, would, would like
01:14:31.960
This is, you want to talk about a big new market.
01:14:34.720
And this is what we've all talked about, right?
01:14:36.260
We've all talked about that, like idea of, wouldn't it be great if they just had this
01:14:42.320
I mean, I, you know, because you, you don't want to eat all the time.
01:14:45.820
It's not like, it's not like a magic pill, but it does control your animal instincts a
01:14:52.820
And they're saying now that these drugs are showing effects in other categories of, of
01:15:00.880
Like if you have other addictions, it seems to help other addictions as well.
01:15:07.300
Like, like, um, you know, smoking, for example.
01:15:12.680
I would, they would not say that it's going to cure your smoking habit, but like things
01:15:15.840
like where you have habits that you want to turn around.
01:15:18.660
I think I've heard this and, and, uh, uh, obsession, compulsion, addictive behaviors.
01:15:24.680
They're saying it just what, cause that's what everyone talks about is how it calms the way
01:15:34.320
There are people here that have lost 90 pounds on it, 80 pounds, 70 pounds.
01:15:39.400
I mean, now yours was a little bit different because you, you also had a big change in
01:15:43.960
But like, uh, that's not even the case with a lot of these people.
01:15:46.460
I know a guy who lost, who's lost 95 pounds on this stuff.
01:15:49.920
And, you know, it's a person who, uh, travels a lot, who does not, who, you know, he'll have
01:15:59.500
Like it's, it's living a lifestyle that you actually would want to live and still able
01:16:07.440
For all the beating that the pharmaceutical companies in many times, uh, deservedly so
01:16:16.960
And this is, and this is apparently made in America, right?
01:16:23.500
At least they, they pumped $450 million into a plant in North Carolina.
01:16:28.920
No, they have, they're trying to, because they've had all sorts of supply chain issues.
01:16:37.920
I look, people don't want to be fatties if they can help it.
01:16:46.620
I, you, you just think that like eventually this stuff is going to come, right?
01:16:51.040
Like where American ingenuity eventually will solve a problem like this.
01:16:56.180
It doesn't seem like the type of problem that's not solvable.
01:17:01.120
I mean, you see how much money we throw at things like cancer and everything else.
01:17:04.900
And look, these people want to cure cancer too.
01:17:07.980
I know a lot of people are like, oh, well, they don't care.
01:17:11.860
I feel like there's a big economic incentive to cure cancer.
01:17:18.360
If you came up with something to cure cancer, I think you'd make a few dollars.
01:17:22.940
And it's, it's, and cancer is like, they treat it like it's one thing.
01:17:28.840
And when you're talking about something like obesity, it should be something we should
01:17:33.080
And now it seems like it might be, which is kind of, kind of amazing that we're on that
01:17:38.460
precipice of something, of curing something like that.
01:17:44.760
If I'm elect the president, you're going to see the single most important thing that changes
01:17:58.080
And that's why, of course, we built hasjoebidencuredcancer.com because I wanted to keep tabs on this particular
01:18:08.360
If you go to hasjoebidencuredcancer.com right now, you will see the question asked, has Joe
01:18:15.900
The answer right now is live because there's a live counter on that to keep track of.
01:18:22.380
The answer right now, has Joe Biden cured cancer?
01:18:37.020
I mean, maybe that's what the cocaine was there for.
01:18:44.700
Maybe he's just trying all the substances he has around the house.
01:18:50.500
It's a more legitimate possibility than Hunter didn't do it.
01:19:02.840
Let's talk about our financial future because that's always fun.
01:19:05.740
By the way, they came out with the new job numbers today.
01:19:08.100
And I think they said it was going to be like $220,000 and it was like $500,000.
01:19:15.020
And it shows that what they are trying to do to stop all of this inflation is not working.
01:19:21.520
I was listening to a New York Times report, Pat, where they're talking about the inflation numbers.
01:19:25.400
And they're like, you know, inflation's coming down.
01:19:28.920
And even the New York Times was saying, well, here's the thing.
01:19:32.220
There were a couple of big factors built into that, which were gas prices and like certain things like eggs and everything else that had weird disruptions that really jacked up those rates.
01:19:41.340
And the lowering of these rates seem to have nothing to do with actual policy.
01:19:45.820
It's just a few of these little factors that have come down at the same time, which show improvement, but have not really been driven by any of the stuff they've done.
01:19:54.880
And they don't seem to have any control of this whatsoever.
01:19:57.980
If that scares you, which it does me, think about the way they're spending and think about where we are right now.
01:20:05.160
Do you want to look at your financial future a little bit differently and think about gold and silver?
01:20:09.360
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01:20:22.940
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01:21:10.380
I'm currently wearing my Repeal the 16th Amendment shirt.
01:21:19.640
It is the income tax one, in case you didn't know that.
01:21:21.860
Our founders put into effect a system to make sure when we really screw something up, we can get rid of it.
01:21:32.620
We could talk about, hey, let's lower federal income tax rates by 4%, and that'll be a really interesting discussion.
01:21:43.080
Let's replace it with something that is not taking your money anymore in this way.
01:21:48.400
We do not need to be spending all this money, and we need to learn from the left a little bit.
01:21:55.020
We're like, what if we could get the rate from 39.6% to 37%?
01:22:07.180
The founders planned this as a nation where it would be illegal to have a federal income tax.
01:22:13.620
Now, they didn't get everything right at the beginning, but they got a lot of stuff right, and that one they got right.
01:22:18.420
And we should not have something that incentivizes you not to work, not to earn, that punishes you for being productive.
01:22:46.620
We do not have a revenue problem in this country.
01:22:53.200
If you want your state to be able to give you all sorts of crazy benefits on top of the basic things the federal government is supposed to provide, basic, then you can have a state that has a state tax that does that.
01:23:05.800
And then you can vote those people in and out as you please.
01:23:11.900
You can run a socialist country completely over there.
01:23:15.320
You want to have a state that runs as a socialist country?
01:23:19.440
It's interesting how socialist countries in several cases have lower tax rates than we do.
01:23:25.660
Which is frightening and ridiculous and insane.
01:23:29.660
Russia, I think, the last I heard of their flat tax was 13%.
01:23:35.220
That's incredible when we're paying what we're paying.
01:23:39.660
And then you're hit with double and triple taxes.
01:23:43.520
And then at the end of your life, once you've accumulated wealth and paid taxes on it your entire life, then you get to give half of your estate to the government after you die instead of to your children.
01:24:00.300
They just keep hitting you over and over and over again, brutalizing you financially your entire life.
01:24:15.520
Right now, of course, you're listening to this program.
01:24:18.300
And you might be asking yourself, what makes Stu sound so confident?
01:24:25.320
Is it his membership in the Radio Hall of Fame?
01:24:28.440
And I'd point out, no, actually, I'm not in it.
01:24:30.600
Somehow, the guy who hosts this show is in the Radio Hall of Fame.
01:24:42.840
Here's this big, sweaty mass of a man who is somehow in the Radio Hall of Fame.
01:24:47.900
And now, you might say, well, wait, he doesn't look that sweaty.
01:24:56.720
Because sweat block is the best sweat protection that you can get.
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I don't know if they're actually called magic wipes.
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But the way Glenn describes them, they do seem like magic.
01:25:07.340
Which, basically, you don't even have to use them every day.
01:25:09.340
It's like, what is it, once a week or something?
01:25:13.540
I mean, Jeffy was a ball of sweat all the time.
01:25:19.520
That's the biggest testimonial you could ever have.
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Right now, use the code BECK at sweatblock.com.
01:25:53.520
We've got to stand together, it's the course of life.
01:26:12.860
What you're about to hear is the fusion of entertainment and enlightenment.
01:26:26.540
With Pat and Stu today and tomorrow, Glenn will be back on Monday.
01:26:31.500
Then, of course, his book, Dark Future, debuts on Tuesday.
01:26:40.420
And if you'd like to get a copy, you can go to glensnewbook.com.
01:26:47.300
We've got some touching, really beautiful information from New York City Mayor Eric Adams.
01:26:57.140
And some incorrect information from Supreme Court justices who are writing dissents to some of these new rulings that have come up.
01:27:17.660
Talking about long-term, difficult-to-get-out-of type of debt.
01:27:20.920
The type that has, you know, credit cards that are always producing that type.
01:27:28.180
A low-interest mortgage refinance might be the thing for you to get out of underneath something like that.
01:27:34.520
You can get burned if you're not with the right loan company.
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This is something, this is a company I've worked with a couple times and had great experiences with.
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01:28:29.900
So, Eric Adams, been carrying around a photo of a police officer in his wallet with him wherever he goes for years, right?
01:28:41.600
This is something that is crucial to his story is his soul.
01:28:45.960
He bared his soul to the New York, I think it was the New York Times.
01:28:50.640
He is a former police captain, campaigned as a Democratic crime fighter.
01:28:55.160
Quickly sought to humanize killings that happened back in the day.
01:29:01.020
Two New York police officers were killed during a domestic disturbance in Harlem.
01:29:09.220
The loss of the officers reminded him of the 1987 line of death duty of a friend, Officer Robert Venable.
01:29:17.960
I still think about Robert, Mr. Adams said at a news conference at City Hall.
01:29:41.140
A week later, after this incident, Mr. Adams posed for a portrait in his office holding a wallet-sized photo of the officer after the New York Times had requested to see it.
01:29:50.880
Mr. Adams has since repeated the moving anecdote in media interviews and at a police academy ceremony last June where he displayed Officer Venable's picture.
01:30:01.000
This is an incredible story of an honorable man who's running the city of New York.
01:30:09.520
Well, I should, just to be fair, just to point out the fairness here, I should probably tell a little bit more detail on this.
01:30:17.940
I'm sure it deepens the appreciation that we'll have for Eric Adams.
01:30:25.440
Like, if you're Hunter Biden, you probably think this is a really good element.
01:30:29.980
The weathered photo of Officer Venable had not actually spent decades in the mayor's wallet.
01:30:39.280
It had been created by employees in the mayor's office in the days after Mr. Adams claimed to have been carrying it in his wallet.
01:30:48.960
The employees were instructed to create a photo of Officer Venable, according to a person familiar with the request.
01:31:01.160
It was printed in black and white to make it look worn and as if the mayor had been carrying it around for some time, including by splashing some coffee on it.
01:31:13.860
Said the person who spoke on the condition of anonymity for fear of retribution.
01:31:18.480
Two former City Hall aides who asked not to be identified said they were informed about the manipulated photo last year, not long after it was created.
01:31:26.560
A spokesman for the mayor did not dispute that Mr. Adams had shown the photo to the Times and at the police ceremony that had been recently created by a City Hall aide.
01:31:39.580
He supposedly cares about his fallen friend and lies about carrying it.
01:31:44.360
Now, they're saying that he, well, he did carry a photo.
01:31:48.780
He used to have one around with him and they had to recreate it so that people, they're trying to find a way out of this now.
01:31:54.940
But they've been caught by the New York Times, apparently, where this was just made up.
01:32:00.520
Where they made up a photo and splashed coffee on the face of a fallen officer intentionally to make it look like it was an old photo.
01:32:12.500
And, of course, for weeks, the media ate it up.
01:32:14.440
I mean, it's not exactly, but it is amazing that they made the effort to catch him in this lie.
01:32:20.880
Well, yeah, he's been carrying it around for 36 years.
01:32:29.680
And then he just manufactured it a few days later.
01:32:35.460
The spokesman for the mayor's office criticized the New York Times for what he characterized as a campaign to paint the mayor as a liar.
01:32:44.140
Imagine having the balls to make that statement after all this.
01:32:51.160
You're pouncing on this to make him look like he's a liar, even though what he said was a lie.
01:33:06.460
Now, they also mention here, and tell me if this is at all familiar with any other public figures you might know.
01:33:11.480
As mayor, Mr. Adams frequently shares personal recollections, helping him connect to his working class base.
01:33:19.080
Many of his stories are difficult to verify, and at times he has been caught stretching the truth.
01:33:24.920
The mayor, for example, said he was vegan before being forced to admit that he eats fish.
01:33:29.900
He said that a story that he told in a 2019 commencement address about intimidating a neighbor was true, but acknowledged it did not happen to him.
01:33:41.700
Like, if I were to say, hey, Pat, I was the first president of the United States, that's a true story in that it happened to someone.
01:33:49.320
That doesn't make it a true story because I'm telling it about myself.
01:33:52.440
That is just like, that is just like Joe Biden.
01:33:57.840
How many stories does Biden tell that just aren't true?
01:34:00.780
I mean, Eric Adams looks like the most honest man in the world compared to Joe Biden.
01:34:05.940
They did bring up as well, Mr. Adams also recently has claimed to have sold his stake in a one-bedroom apartment in Brooklyn,
01:34:11.320
and then he was contradicted by his own financial disclosure forms that shows that he still retains ownership.
01:34:18.560
But this one is, you know, it's one thing to, like, to lie about, you know, something like your financial interests.
01:34:29.480
We see, you know, Joe Biden's gotten away with that a million times.
01:34:32.920
When you're talking about the death of a police officer and how much it means to you and how you've been carrying this picture for 40 years in your pocket,
01:34:39.760
and it turns out they printed it out off of Google and spilled coffee on it intentionally to make it look old.
01:35:06.660
So he's married, if you remember the story, he's married to a woman who claimed to be a lesbian, right?
01:35:14.380
And they, he was very, you know, if you know Bill de Blasio, he's a very boring looking white guy.
01:35:22.020
And he's married to, he's a, it's a mixed marriage and they have a mixed child.
01:35:26.220
And that was something that he promoted heavily in his run for mayor.
01:35:30.240
When he, he was, he used his kid as a prop constantly.
01:35:33.480
That was like the central part of why you should elect Bill de Blasio.
01:35:38.920
So that means you're supposed to elect him or something.
01:35:40.840
And he was a terrible mayor, obviously a socialist and, and just a complete disaster for the city of New York.
01:35:48.740
But they had, the relationships are very weird.
01:35:53.360
They, they decided they're going to split up, but stay together.
01:35:57.380
They're going to date other people while living in the same home while separated, but remaining married.
01:36:02.940
And all that sounds really, really confusing, but perhaps the most confusing part about it is they apparently called up the New York times and did a three hour interview on their plans.
01:36:12.240
Now, no one cares about what Bill de Blasio's plans are when he wanted to run for governor and Congress.
01:36:18.700
Why the hell would they care about what he's doing in his stupid relationship?
01:36:24.060
Why would you even take his phone call if you're the times?
01:36:29.960
They're not going to tell you, um, about, I don't know who's doing cocaine in the white house.
01:36:35.700
They're not going to tell you about, um, you know, all the stuff that's going on with the Biden family and the, like the WhatsApp messages that are going back and forth between Hunter Biden and Chinese officials.
01:36:46.200
And the pen, $10 million payments to the Biden family.
01:36:51.480
They're not going to, I mean, and even if they do talk about it, and I should say, occasionally this stuff has been reported by the times and other sources.
01:36:57.680
When, when they first, when they first admitted the, uh, whistleblower story from the IRS, they put it on page 15A.
01:37:15.220
And like, they have hit the fact that he's gone through this custody battle, uh, with his, with Joe Biden's granddaughter that he will not acknowledge.
01:37:22.900
And you saw yesterday, we played the clip earlier of one reporter asking Corinne Jean-Pierre, Hey, what's going on with this?
01:37:28.520
Why will he, he's going to acknowledge his own granddaughter.
01:37:33.200
But like when a Republican is in one of these controversies, the difference between what the press does and what they do with the Democrat is they actually get answers.
01:37:41.980
They press and press and they, they get outraged that they will ignore the question.
01:37:48.240
Corinne Jean-Pierre just was like, Oh, we have no new information on that.
01:37:52.720
What else are you doing with your day other than wearing your 1000th outfit that you've never worn a repeat of the entire time?
01:37:59.940
Her clothing budget is bigger than our military budget.
01:38:17.480
I just got to know what the budget is for her clothing.
01:38:19.460
I've got to know it just because it's incredible.
01:38:23.660
She's just, she's obviously terrible at her job.
01:38:25.820
Every answer she gives is, well, we don't know.
01:38:27.960
We have no information, no new information on this.
01:38:32.860
Maybe next time you're sitting in the same room with Joe Biden, you make him walk out of the interview until or answer the question.
01:38:44.800
Make him stand up and walk out of the interview.
01:38:50.180
I mean, I know it's not the most important thing in the world.
01:38:53.920
But like, it is, it sells a hell of a lot about a man's character if he won't even acknowledge his own grandkid.
01:38:58.720
And if it's, if it, if it was Donald Trump, they would push that every day, all day.
01:39:05.780
What about your son's grandchild that you won't acknowledge?
01:39:14.820
And it would be the most important story of every day to the press.
01:39:20.460
And like, look, I, I, it's not the most important thing when it comes to world events, but man, it is a really important thing when it comes down to the character of a person.
01:39:28.000
And, you know, you say, you can easily say if you're Joe Biden, look, my son got into a lot of messy behavior, but that's not this little girl's fault.
01:39:39.000
I want her to be at every event with our family.
01:39:42.740
Even if you don't mean it, you could at least say it.
01:39:47.080
You know, he's not even acknowledging she exists.
01:39:52.120
And he's specifically been asked how many he has.
01:39:55.320
And he has specifically ignored her completely.
01:40:03.140
And I mean, to go back to the press side of this for a second, Pat, the follow-up needs to be there.
01:40:08.640
Like, at this point, we now have this WhatsApp message that went back and forth.
01:40:13.460
Hey, I'm sitting here with my dad and he wants to know where this money is.
01:40:18.080
You need to wire it right away or he's going to hold a grudge against you.
01:40:21.940
He's going to make sure that everybody he knows holds a grudge against you.
01:40:28.660
We have to get the president of the United States at the very least to admit that his son was using his name for influence.
01:40:37.480
Who was, if he wants to accuse his son of lying in a drug-induced haze, I'm okay with that for the moment.
01:40:44.880
Because we have to get to that step before we get to the next one.
01:40:48.780
We have to confirm that he is acknowledging that his son did these things.
01:40:56.780
Because until we get over that hump, we can't get to the next one.
01:41:00.620
We need to get him on record lying about this and saying he knew nothing about it.
01:41:06.520
Then we'll get the next set of messages that prove he did know something about it.
01:41:10.180
But we can't get there because the press asked this question.
01:41:13.360
They either won't ask or they'll ask and get a, well, we have no new information about that.
01:41:20.300
Your whole job is to keep going when they give you that answer.
01:41:23.280
And that was the goal of every journalist that I ever saw, you know, profiled in a movie that overturned Watergate and all these.
01:41:35.100
You got to that brick wall where the person at the White House was telling you there's nothing here.
01:41:44.200
And it's the exact opposite of what they do now.
01:41:46.760
The second Corinne John Pierce says, yeah, I don't have anything.
01:42:01.780
We're going to put it on our front page until they answer it.
01:42:03.700
And pressure and pressure and pressure and pressure.
01:42:11.220
Well, you've worked pretty hard for the money you've made over the years.
01:42:13.780
You've probably been fiscally responsible, saving money where you can, not living behind, you know, beyond your means like the government does.
01:42:20.420
But year after year and month after month, you watch the value of the money you have moving in a wrong direction.
01:42:26.800
You know that things aren't looking good at all for the U.S. dollar in general.
01:42:29.880
The numbers that came out today were a disaster.
01:42:32.140
They do not have this inflation thing under control at all.
01:42:34.640
They're lying about having it under control because of their policy.
01:42:42.280
Goldline is a company that we've been working with for a very long time.
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01:43:29.640
Did you see this interesting story on the United Nations and the emergency powers they're trying to seize over the United States
01:43:40.280
In September 2024, less than two months before the next U.S. presidential election,
01:43:45.280
the U.N. will host a landmark summit of the future where member nations will adopt a pact for the future.
01:43:52.280
The agreement will solidify numerous policy reforms offered by the U.N. over the past two years
01:43:57.800
as part of its sweeping Our Common Agenda platform.
01:44:03.320
Although there are numerous radical proposals included in the agenda,
01:44:07.340
perhaps none are more important than the U.N. plan for a new emergency platform.
01:44:13.360
A stunning proposal to give the U.N. significant powers in the event of future global shocks,
01:44:35.860
Once triggered, the emergency platform would give the U.N. the ability to actively promote
01:44:40.280
and drive an international response that places the principles of equity and solidarity
01:44:48.120
The U.N. would bring together the stakeholders of the world, including academics, governments,
01:44:52.880
private sector actors, and international financial institutions, to ensure there's a unified global
01:45:09.200
Okay, they can declare these emergency powers in the event of a major climactic event,
01:45:16.220
a future pandemic risk, a global digital connectivity disruption, a major event in outer space,
01:45:26.040
like, I guess, aliens, or comets, meteors, that kind of thing.
01:45:38.540
So they can declare emergency powers if there's an unforeseen risk.
01:45:48.700
We learned this, if anything, from the 2003 HEROES Act.
01:45:53.720
The HEROES Act, which was designed for military members who were in the middle of a terrorist attack.
01:46:00.820
Let's say there's a terrorist attack that goes on.
01:46:02.100
We need to go to war with almost no notice, like what happened on September 11th.
01:46:07.300
They passed a bill to say, hey, you know, these guys who are in the military,
01:46:11.380
they should be forgiven these loans in these situations,
01:46:13.960
because they have no way of working around the schedule that we've just presented them, right?
01:46:22.560
They, you know, this is, they're called into active duty with no notice.
01:46:28.860
And the way it was written was in case of a terrorist attack,
01:46:32.840
in case of military emergency, in case of war, national.
01:46:38.260
It was like, and another, and other national emergencies.
01:46:42.140
And that was the justification they used to forgive all student loan debt,
01:46:47.820
$400 billion at least, through this student loan debacle.
01:46:51.860
Now, luckily, the Supreme Court caught it this time.
01:46:55.320
But this is the type of stuff that gets manipulated later on.
01:47:01.280
And if anything, we should be going the opposite way, saying they cannot do this.
01:47:08.860
The Biden administration is going along with this.
01:47:12.760
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I don't care about the Nathan's Hot Dog Contest at all,