The Glenn Beck Program - April 22, 2025


Is Argentina About to Prove Hitler Survived? | 4⧸22⧸25


Episode Stats

Length

2 hours and 11 minutes

Words per Minute

174.55527

Word Count

22,886

Sentence Count

2,485

Misogynist Sentences

25

Hate Speech Sentences

40


Summary

Glenn Beck's Easter Egg Roll didn't quite make it in time for the big day, but there's a good reason why he didn't make it at all. He's not feeling well, and it's not because he ate too much Easter candy.


Transcript

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00:00:15.240 Did she pay full price?
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00:00:17.580 Or that cashmere sweater?
00:00:18.820 Or those knee-high boots?
00:00:20.260 That dress?
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00:01:33.280 It's Pat and Stu in for Glenn in just a moment.
00:01:36.260 Hello, America.
00:01:43.700 You know we've been fighting every single day.
00:01:45.520 We push back against the lies, the censorship, the nonsense of the mainstream media that they're trying to feed you.
00:01:51.800 We work tirelessly to bring you the unfiltered truth because you deserve it.
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00:02:26.640 Now let's get to work.
00:02:32.560 Thank you.
00:03:02.560 The Fusion of Entertainment and Enlightenment.
00:03:20.520 This is the Glenn Beck Program.
00:03:24.160 Ah, yes.
00:03:33.100 Pat and Stu for Glenn today.
00:03:35.060 888-727-BECK.
00:03:38.620 Had the big Easter egg roll yesterday, which was quite exciting.
00:03:44.800 Did you go?
00:03:46.200 I did not.
00:03:47.140 You didn't make it?
00:03:47.660 Didn't make it.
00:03:48.600 Glenn's up in D.C.
00:03:49.040 I think Glenn was there, right?
00:03:50.340 I don't know if he went to the Easter egg roll, but he's up there right now.
00:03:52.720 Maybe he ate too much Easter candy.
00:03:54.360 He's not feeling well today.
00:03:55.420 That's possible.
00:03:56.500 Very possible.
00:03:56.780 In fact, I'd call it likely, frankly.
00:03:59.460 We'll get into that.
00:04:00.360 There's a lot to talk about.
00:04:01.700 We'll get into it coming up in one minute.
00:04:03.640 When you go to the meat aisle in the grocery store, what are your expectations?
00:04:08.520 I mean, you know, most of the time you might just grab a plastic-wrapped package and kind
00:04:12.300 of hope it came from the right animal, let alone your own country.
00:04:15.620 But when you order from good ranchers, you're backing the American farmer and the American
00:04:19.960 rancher.
00:04:20.600 The ones who get up before sunrise, who risk everything to keep this country fed, and who
00:04:25.980 are getting squeezed out by cheaper foreign meat that floods our stores, meat that's
00:04:30.020 often unlabeled or unaccountable and, you know, not American.
00:04:33.940 Every cut from good ranchers, whether it is, you know, you're talking about the ribeyes
00:04:38.300 or the fillets or the chicken or the seafood, is born, raised, and harvested right here in
00:04:42.640 the USA.
00:04:43.520 This is more than just dinner.
00:04:44.960 It's about preserving a way of life.
00:04:46.540 It's about knowing where your food comes from, who raised it, and what it means.
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00:05:09.340 Delivered.
00:05:11.160 And welcome to it.
00:05:12.260 So this has been a big tradition, I guess, in D.C. with the White House since Rutherford
00:05:21.800 B. Hayes.
00:05:23.180 Did you know that?
00:05:23.680 You know what's been going on, the Easter egg roll that long?
00:05:26.780 It's going to be shocking to hear.
00:05:27.900 I've not put that much thought into it.
00:05:29.140 You haven't.
00:05:29.560 You looked up the Rutherford B. Hayes history?
00:05:32.260 Yes.
00:05:32.640 Well.
00:05:32.840 It's impressive.
00:05:33.620 I looked up how long this has been going on, and it dates back to Rutherford B. Hayes.
00:05:39.200 Now, did Rutherford B. Hayes.
00:05:40.200 Which is everybody's favorite president.
00:05:42.500 He's actually my second.
00:05:44.000 Is he your second?
00:05:44.860 John Tyler.
00:05:45.680 Okay.
00:05:46.140 Yeah.
00:05:46.360 All right.
00:05:46.580 I'm a big John Tyler guy.
00:05:48.000 John?
00:05:48.260 Really?
00:05:48.580 Who's also, by the way, president.
00:05:50.120 A lot of people don't know that.
00:05:51.800 What about James Buchanan?
00:05:53.040 He's got to be in there somewhere, right?
00:05:54.500 I have him fourth.
00:05:55.820 Fourth.
00:05:56.140 Okay.
00:05:57.600 Most people have him 47th.
00:05:59.560 Yes.
00:05:59.800 A lot of people do.
00:06:00.600 A lot of people do.
00:06:02.080 Did Rutherford B. Hayes need the dressed up Easter bunny to guide him to the proper location
00:06:08.520 like Joe Biden did?
00:06:09.560 Actually, no.
00:06:10.300 Okay.
00:06:10.520 Surprisingly, he was able to handle that on his own.
00:06:13.420 Wow.
00:06:13.780 Yeah.
00:06:14.260 That's impressive.
00:06:15.080 And so, in fact, was Donald Trump who addressed the crowd at the White House yesterday.
00:06:20.440 Speaking of special, Easter is special, and it's one of our favorite days.
00:06:25.700 It's one of our favorite periods of time.
00:06:28.200 We're honoring Jesus Christ, and we're going to honor Jesus Christ very powerfully throughout
00:06:34.040 our lives, all throughout our lives.
00:06:36.420 Not just now, all throughout our lives.
00:06:38.700 We're bringing religion back in America.
00:06:41.300 We're bringing a lot of things back, but religion is coming back to America.
00:06:45.220 And that's why you see the kind of numbers that you're seeing, the spirit, and the kind
00:06:49.220 of numbers that you're seeing.
00:06:51.340 That's a very strange visual there.
00:06:53.460 That's a message that I think many of us, most of us would agree on.
00:06:57.720 Yes.
00:06:58.120 And it's him, and it's, you know, beautiful Melania.
00:07:01.460 They're standing on this balcony, and then they're standing next to a human-sized Easter
00:07:06.120 bunny, which is standing right next to them.
00:07:08.640 It's a very strange visual.
00:07:09.900 Very.
00:07:10.320 But it's nice to see that we have an administration who actually acknowledges that religion exists,
00:07:16.220 for example.
00:07:17.060 And on Easter, what it's actually about.
00:07:20.100 It's actually not about the bunny that was standing next to them, which is shocking to
00:07:25.460 some.
00:07:25.860 Really?
00:07:26.040 I know.
00:07:26.560 But yeah.
00:07:27.060 It actually talked about what Easter is about, which is incredible.
00:07:32.600 You never got that from Joe Biden, that's for sure, or Barack Obama.
00:07:36.900 So, it's really refreshing.
00:07:41.140 And then, of course, the Trumps started the Easter egg roll itself yesterday.
00:07:48.000 Look at him holding hands there.
00:07:56.200 Strange tradition.
00:07:57.460 Yeah.
00:07:57.840 They're just rolling eggs in the grass.
00:07:59.660 With a spoon.
00:08:00.780 I mean, obviously, the thing you're supposed to do is look for eggs and you hunt them.
00:08:05.320 Yeah.
00:08:05.700 And there's candy inside of them.
00:08:07.240 That's the appropriate thing.
00:08:09.680 And our government's like, what if we roll them on the ground?
00:08:13.440 And I guess the left is all pissed off about the fact that they actually used real eggs
00:08:18.480 yesterday.
00:08:19.240 Yeah.
00:08:19.440 That was...
00:08:20.060 Wow.
00:08:21.080 What a charming reminder that none of this means anything.
00:08:24.500 After a year of denying that egg prices meant anything at all, now all of a sudden they're
00:08:30.500 upset about them.
00:08:31.020 Now it's the most important thing.
00:08:32.660 Now they're down, like 50 or 60%.
00:08:34.700 Now it's really vitally important to your future.
00:08:37.960 How dare you use eggs?
00:08:39.660 Do you know how expensive those are?
00:08:41.600 Ugh, despicable.
00:08:42.740 Well, it's amazing that you know how expensive they are because you didn't acknowledge that
00:08:47.160 when they were eight and nine dollars a dozen just a while ago.
00:08:50.960 Yeah.
00:08:51.120 Under your guy.
00:08:51.880 No worries whatsoever.
00:08:53.480 No problem.
00:08:54.100 It had something to do with their power.
00:08:57.280 Now you do eat eggs, right?
00:08:59.080 I do.
00:08:59.640 You do eat eggs.
00:09:00.200 I mean, I eat your cookies, Kexy cookies, which I assume have eggs in them.
00:09:04.960 They do.
00:09:05.460 Yeah.
00:09:05.640 Yes, they do.
00:09:06.840 And it's...
00:09:09.220 By the way, I had one, was that a carrot cake cookie?
00:09:12.480 Yeah.
00:09:12.840 Yeah, yeah.
00:09:13.200 Oh my, incredible.
00:09:14.740 It's good for you.
00:09:15.460 It's actually good for you.
00:09:16.380 It's got carrot slices in it.
00:09:17.700 It does have carrot slices in it.
00:09:19.000 So, yeah.
00:09:19.540 That's not really the part I was focusing on in the cooking.
00:09:21.860 What part were you focusing on?
00:09:22.680 The deliciousness.
00:09:23.760 Okay.
00:09:24.460 All right.
00:09:25.000 Is that one available all the time?
00:09:27.140 Because my son's...
00:09:28.080 I think this month.
00:09:28.800 My son is a carrot cake fiend.
00:09:30.580 Oh, really?
00:09:31.380 This kid...
00:09:32.100 Oh, nice.
00:09:32.280 I don't know how he got into this.
00:09:33.960 Anywhere we go that has carrot cake on the menu, he has to order it.
00:09:37.060 Wow.
00:09:37.540 And I took a bite of that one, not knowing what it was.
00:09:39.800 It was in an unwrapped package that you nicely let us have.
00:09:45.920 And I took a bite.
00:09:47.260 I was like, I got to save this for my son because he's a fiend.
00:09:49.240 And he loved it.
00:09:50.200 Oh, good.
00:09:50.580 Loved the carrot cake cookie.
00:09:51.720 So, that's a separate...
00:09:52.800 It's got nothing to do with the Easter egg roll, but go to kexy.com and get the carrot
00:09:55.620 cake cookie.
00:09:55.900 But still, so while it was $8 and $9 a dozen, there was absolutely no problem whatsoever with
00:10:05.280 the Democrats.
00:10:06.360 They didn't even...
00:10:08.080 Did they even acknowledge the fact that there was massive inflation on eggs and they went
00:10:12.600 up 400%?
00:10:14.040 I don't think so.
00:10:16.480 And now it's come down to the point where I think the latest number I saw nationwide was
00:10:22.360 something like $297 a dozen or something.
00:10:26.620 So, I mean, it's come down a lot.
00:10:29.720 And now is the time when they go nuts and talk about how, how dare you spend that kind
00:10:34.360 of money on eggs?
00:10:35.280 Yeah.
00:10:35.780 They said something like, did you know that people were coloring potatoes to save money?
00:10:40.940 Like, were they?
00:10:41.660 They colored potatoes?
00:10:43.280 I mean, did that really happen?
00:10:44.660 Maybe it did.
00:10:45.740 I mean, did that really occur?
00:10:46.840 I want to hear from one person.
00:10:48.160 One person.
00:10:48.680 Who's like, you know what?
00:10:49.560 These eggs are too expensive.
00:10:50.000 Who colored potatoes.
00:10:50.900 Yeah.
00:10:51.100 I'm not doing that.
00:10:52.040 I'm going with potatoes.
00:10:52.680 I'm going to color these potatoes.
00:10:54.440 Are potatoes that much cheaper?
00:10:56.180 I don't know.
00:10:56.820 Maybe they are.
00:10:57.700 And I haven't paid that much attention.
00:11:00.440 You should.
00:11:01.060 You own a company that uses a lot of eggs.
00:11:02.740 Not a lot of potatoes, though.
00:11:04.000 Not a lot of potatoes.
00:11:04.780 I don't know that there's.
00:11:06.340 Infrequently.
00:11:07.160 Potatoes a lot.
00:11:08.080 A lot of potato product in our cookies.
00:11:10.140 That's probably why.
00:11:11.080 I mean, you very well could be the cause of this problem.
00:11:13.700 If there's a butter shortage, too, we know what's going on.
00:11:16.720 But that was the other thing.
00:11:17.940 During the egg situation, when there were $8, $9 a dozen, sometimes they weren't even available.
00:11:23.660 Yeah.
00:11:23.920 There were, I went to, I don't know, Kroger, Tom Thumb, one of the grocery chains here.
00:11:29.740 And they had like one dozen of eggs.
00:11:33.100 I mean, it was amazing.
00:11:35.280 You know, usually you can get 18 in a container.
00:11:38.840 You can get 12 in a container.
00:11:40.520 You can get all different brands.
00:11:42.820 And they had one kind of eggs for a while.
00:11:46.980 I mean, it was, there was a real shortage because they killed 100 million chickens.
00:11:52.160 But just the 100 million?
00:11:53.580 Just 100 million, though.
00:11:55.000 I mean, who would have guessed that would make a serious dent in the egg situation in this country?
00:12:01.200 Yeah.
00:12:01.800 Who saw that coming?
00:12:03.100 Come on.
00:12:03.540 It's shocking.
00:12:04.640 Shocking.
00:12:05.320 Who could believe it?
00:12:06.400 I will say that there is an expectation of abundance in this country.
00:12:10.440 Yeah, there is.
00:12:11.240 Yes.
00:12:11.520 Very much so.
00:12:12.560 That's because, you know, we've certainly been blessed.
00:12:15.500 We've been blessed, but also one of the reasons we've been blessed is the divinely inspired creation of capitalism, which has brought incredible abundance to this country.
00:12:26.600 And it's strange when you go to a store and you can't find something.
00:12:30.760 And the fact that that is something that we've dealt with recently, a lot, by the way, especially since COVID.
00:12:37.760 I mean, throughout COVID era, we had a lot of these supply chain disruptions.
00:12:42.280 I mean, you know, and again, we're kind of in a period now where some economic tumult, if you will.
00:12:49.260 I think we may be facing some of those situations again.
00:12:53.060 And it's shocking.
00:12:54.700 It's just not what we're supposed to have here.
00:12:59.780 We're supposed to be the country that is able to always have what we need and what we want.
00:13:06.400 And, you know, I guess we're back in the OK area with eggs these days.
00:13:10.880 But you don't know what's around the corner.
00:13:12.360 It does seem like we keep running into these things, whether it's medication or toilet paper or eggs, whatever it is.
00:13:18.280 There seems to be a new one around the corner all the time lately.
00:13:20.800 I've had multiple situations with medication that's not available.
00:13:23.700 I mean, I've had to wait two weeks for it.
00:13:26.460 Yeah.
00:13:26.800 Yeah.
00:13:27.100 I've had some, too.
00:13:27.960 Yeah.
00:13:28.300 It's not fun.
00:13:29.480 It's not.
00:13:30.300 And it could get worse than that.
00:13:32.080 I mean, you know, we're in this little battle with China and they manufacture almost all of our medication.
00:13:37.540 And that could be a problem at some point.
00:13:39.620 Now, in what way?
00:13:41.280 What could possibly go wrong?
00:13:43.140 Just say, you know what?
00:13:43.860 We're not going to deliver any more medication to no more pharmaceuticals to the United States.
00:13:48.560 How do you like that?
00:13:50.020 I wouldn't like that.
00:13:51.020 Yeah.
00:13:51.220 That would be very bad.
00:13:52.360 And it's fascinating because, you know, the way that, and this is happening with a lot of the other countries in the world, they're all worried because China's not going to just stop manufacturing them and exporting them.
00:14:02.700 What they're going to do is just pound these markets all over the country, all over the world.
00:14:07.640 When we are not doing trade with them, they're going to pound them with really cheap products.
00:14:11.120 And that's going to play with their economies as well.
00:14:13.900 No one's going to be happy with this situation.
00:14:16.700 But I do think, like, when you talk about the trade thing, that's a great way to focus this.
00:14:22.160 What are the products that we do need?
00:14:24.880 Right?
00:14:25.000 Like, you know, toys are important.
00:14:28.360 Yeah.
00:14:28.640 Kids like them.
00:14:29.480 I've noticed over the years that they seem to be fans of them.
00:14:32.540 But, like, I don't know that that necessarily should be our long-term target here.
00:14:38.100 Toys should not be our long-term target.
00:14:40.320 Toys, paper plates.
00:14:42.560 You know, like, these things, again, I'm not, if, you know, hey, if you happen to be a company that's, you know, there are American toy companies.
00:14:49.340 I don't know if there's American paper plate companies.
00:14:51.680 Maybe there are.
00:14:52.460 If there are, good for you.
00:14:53.900 That being said, you know, I don't know that that should be our focus.
00:14:58.820 If you think about things that we really need to, you know, medication's a great example of it.
00:15:03.660 You don't want to be relying on your adversary for all of the things that make your heart continue to beat.
00:15:11.080 You know what I mean?
00:15:12.100 Yeah.
00:15:12.580 Kind of.
00:15:13.460 And we've gotten ourselves into a situation where we're wholly reliant on them for that.
00:15:17.540 That and the metal situation, the minerals, you know, the rare earth minerals situation that we're in now.
00:15:27.640 Because we haven't been mining it.
00:15:29.720 I mean, we have some pretty good areas where we're well-stocked in rare earth minerals.
00:15:37.740 We're just not mining them.
00:15:39.360 And because of the regulations and we don't want to tear up the earth.
00:15:43.120 And all of these things that we've just ceded to the left.
00:15:47.440 All right.
00:15:47.760 We won't do that.
00:15:48.720 Okay.
00:15:49.100 We'll declare that off limits.
00:15:50.960 All right.
00:15:51.180 I mean, we just found this huge deposit in Wyoming of rare earth minerals that they initially thought was 2.3 billion metric tons of rare earth minerals.
00:16:03.160 They've revised that a little bit, but they still say it's one of the most significant finds on the planet.
00:16:09.980 So why aren't we going wholeheartedly full speed ahead into extracting those minerals?
00:16:19.720 Yeah.
00:16:19.860 And I think that that would be a really positive thing for politically speaking for the Trump administration to focus on is the positive reactions to the situation that we're in.
00:16:29.840 And rather than talking about, you know, the tariffs as often, they're not as popular policy.
00:16:36.980 Whether you care about that or not is, you know, I mean, you might still like them.
00:16:40.140 And there's no reason to stop a policy because it's unpopular.
00:16:43.520 But what you can do is focus on the positives.
00:16:46.200 Like, hey, we're going to not just, hey, penalize China or whatever and try to put this, you know, tariffs on rare earth minerals and such.
00:16:55.560 But, like, let's focus on how we're going to extract them from our country.
00:16:58.420 Let's talk about how we're going to utilize our own resources.
00:17:01.920 Let's talk about getting nuclear power going so that we don't have to worry about importing, you know, you know, worry about long term electricity concerns and power concerns.
00:17:14.080 Battery manufacturing, things of that nature where you can kind of say, OK, we're going to go and let's focus on the things.
00:17:20.380 Let's incentivize companies to come here, not because we're punishing the country they're currently in, but because we're making America a much more desirable place to do business.
00:17:29.300 And those things all are part of his platform, right?
00:17:31.860 It's just a matter of focus.
00:17:33.380 And right now, he's obviously been focused on this thing.
00:17:35.780 At some point, there has to be a conversion, a switching of the gears to a tax plan that's going to incentivize companies to want to come here.
00:17:45.880 You know, tax cuts that wind up benefiting businesses.
00:17:48.920 We talked to Stephen Moore about this, you know, who's one of Trump's economic advisors.
00:17:53.460 And he talks about this a lot.
00:17:54.800 Like, the focus just publicly is a big part of this.
00:17:58.460 You know, we're seeing some polls where, you know, approvals down.
00:18:00.700 It's not a huge surprise when you're going through some economic trouble.
00:18:02.960 But that can be turned around if you focus on the right side of this equation.
00:18:08.240 And that's all there.
00:18:09.220 It's all part of Trump's plan.
00:18:10.580 Just a matter of what his advisors and what he's decided to speak about.
00:18:14.540 888-727-BECK.
00:18:16.320 More coming up in one minute.
00:18:18.840 Well, if you knew a massive storm was coming, you probably wouldn't leave the doors and windows of your house open.
00:18:23.940 You shut them, right?
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00:18:29.660 So, why wouldn't you think about your finances that way if you believe maybe your retirement is out there kind of exposed?
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00:19:47.760 It's Lear Capital.
00:19:49.740 10-second station ID.
00:19:50.540 It's Pat and Stu for Glenn today.
00:20:02.920 Of course, during the Easter egg roll, President Trump was asked about the Pete Hegseth situation yesterday.
00:20:10.280 Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth in another little controversy, and he was asked about that.
00:20:15.780 I mean, I hear they're doing that whole thing again.
00:20:19.320 Here we go again.
00:20:20.600 Here we go.
00:20:20.860 Just a waste of time.
00:20:21.840 He is doing a great job.
00:20:24.720 Why do you still have confidence?
00:20:25.760 Because he's doing a great job.
00:20:27.400 Thank you.
00:20:28.920 Ask the Hooties how he's doing.
00:20:31.260 Ask the Hooties how much they're from.
00:20:33.260 Ask the Hooties.
00:20:33.980 There's none.
00:20:34.520 And the Bullet Fish.
00:20:35.260 The Bullet Fish, too.
00:20:35.820 The Bullet Fish, too.
00:20:35.840 He's doing a great job.
00:20:36.460 Yeah, yeah.
00:20:37.000 Everybody's happy with him.
00:20:38.020 We have the highest recruitment numbers I think they've had in 28 years.
00:20:43.720 No, he's doing a great job.
00:20:45.500 It's just fake news.
00:20:46.580 It just brings up stories.
00:20:47.760 I guess it sounds like disgruntled employees.
00:20:50.380 You know, he was put there to get rid of a lot of bad people, and that's what he's doing.
00:20:54.600 So you don't always have friends when to do that.
00:20:57.600 Okay.
00:20:59.260 So he seems to be sticking by Pete Hegseth.
00:21:02.820 He's very loyal to people that are loyal to him.
00:21:05.520 And Hegseth was accosted on the White House lawn, too.
00:21:11.500 Here's what he said about the leakers.
00:21:13.480 Cut nine.
00:21:15.440 I want to say, sir, about the Signal Chat controversy.
00:21:18.960 You know, what a big surprise that a bunch of, a few leakers get fired and suddenly a bunch
00:21:24.200 of hit pieces come out from the same media that peddled the Russia hopes that won't get
00:21:29.500 back their Pulitzers.
00:21:30.360 They got Pulitzers for a bunch of lies.
00:21:32.740 Pulitzers for a bunch of lies.
00:21:34.060 Pulitzers for a bunch of lies.
00:21:34.760 And on hoaxes.
00:21:36.040 Time and time and time again.
00:21:39.160 And as they peddle those lies, no one ever calls them on it.
00:21:42.440 See, this is what the media does.
00:21:44.640 They take anonymous sources from disgruntled former employees, and then they try to slash
00:21:50.000 and burn people and ruin their reputations.
00:21:52.580 Not going to work with me.
00:21:53.460 Because we're changing the Defense Department, putting the Pentagon back in the hands of warfighters,
00:21:59.380 and anonymous smears from disgruntled former employees on old news.
00:22:03.840 Doesn't matter.
00:22:04.520 So I'm happy to be here at the Easter egg roll with my dad and my kids.
00:22:08.640 Because, you know, this is what we're doing it for.
00:22:10.760 These kids right here.
00:22:11.960 This is why we're fighting the fake news media.
00:22:14.840 This is why we're fighting slash and burn Democrats.
00:22:17.100 This is why we're fighting hoaxters, hoaxters, this group, no, no, no, this group right here,
00:22:23.060 full of hoaxters that peddle anonymous sources from leakers with axes to grind.
00:22:28.760 And then you put it all together as if it's some news story.
00:22:34.140 And what we know, we know exactly what it is.
00:22:36.480 So I'm really proud of what we're doing for the president, fighting hard across the board.
00:22:41.280 And I'm going to go roll some Easter eggs with my kids.
00:22:44.240 Thank you very much.
00:22:49.240 There's a Calci market that has who is the first to be leaving the Trump cabinet.
00:22:55.200 And they do have Pete Hegseth at the top, 46% chance.
00:22:58.940 Oh, wow.
00:22:59.520 Howard Ludnick is second, 18%.
00:23:01.240 Scott Bessent, 8%.
00:23:02.800 Marco Rubio, 5%.
00:23:04.260 Pam Bondi, 4%.
00:23:05.240 And I'm down.
00:23:06.960 I mean, it's interesting because I think Trump, when these things happen,
00:23:11.280 if he feels like he looks, you know, weak or giving into the media pressure,
00:23:15.900 it's like less likely for him to, even if he didn't like Pete Hegseth,
00:23:19.620 he'll keep him around for a while.
00:23:21.340 I think he does like Pete, though.
00:23:22.460 I think so.
00:23:23.260 I think, you know, it would be something that would be,
00:23:26.140 it would have to be something that really pushed him over the edge to want to push Pete out.
00:23:30.940 Yeah.
00:23:31.240 Unless, you know, Hegseth just decided to resign.
00:23:33.760 I don't see, I mean, this new wave of like,
00:23:36.480 oh, he was also on another signal chat.
00:23:38.400 Okay.
00:23:38.800 I don't know.
00:23:40.880 I hope, I don't, I just don't think that's going to move the American people in some big way.
00:23:45.500 Doesn't seem to be so far.
00:23:47.660 All right.
00:23:47.980 888-727-BECK.
00:23:50.580 More Pat and Stu for Glenn coming up.
00:23:58.520 This is Glenn Beck.
00:24:02.300 Imagine you're sitting in traffic, not moving, not even creeping forward, just stuck.
00:24:06.720 Your windows are up, your doors are locked, but you're alone.
00:24:09.340 And the sun's just gone down.
00:24:10.680 And you see a man walking between cars.
00:24:12.820 He's coming straight toward you.
00:24:15.020 You don't know what he wants, but he looks angry.
00:24:17.160 And if you ran, you might outrun him.
00:24:19.460 He might outrun you.
00:24:20.460 If you fight, he might out overpower you.
00:24:22.540 But you don't have to do either.
00:24:23.780 Because what he doesn't know is within arm's reach,
00:24:26.660 tucked into your center console is a burner launcher.
00:24:29.760 It looks like a firearm, but it isn't.
00:24:32.200 It fires kinetic projectiles.
00:24:34.840 So, you know, you can have some that are loaded with pepper or tear gas as well.
00:24:41.060 It doesn't require a background check, a waiting period, or a permit in most states.
00:24:46.540 So when he tries to force your door open and crack the door in a window,
00:24:49.440 you've got the burner there.
00:24:51.380 You can put a, God forbid, I mean, probably you just show it to him and it's enough.
00:24:54.440 But if you have to fire it, it's going to cause confusion and disorientation.
00:24:58.720 And that's what you need.
00:24:59.620 Time to get away.
00:25:01.180 Time without having to take a life as well.
00:25:04.460 Burna.com slash Glenn.
00:25:05.600 Burna.com slash Glenn.
00:25:06.840 B-Y-R-N-A dot com slash Glenn.
00:25:09.060 You can get 10% off your purchase right now.
00:25:11.100 The Burna launcher, you're going to love it.
00:25:12.540 Burna.com slash Glenn.
00:25:14.900 Glenn Beck, Stu Bergeer, Steve Dace, Jason Whitlock, and me, Pat Gray.
00:25:19.100 Listen to all your favorite conservative voices at blazetv.com, promo code Glenn.
00:25:24.440 It's Pat and Stu for Glenn today.
00:25:50.720 888-727-BECK.
00:25:54.440 They've released what Pope Francis died from yesterday.
00:25:59.240 He apparently had a massive stroke and that's what killed him.
00:26:03.700 Not the illness that he had leading up to this, which he'd been sick for a couple months,
00:26:08.900 I think, and ailing.
00:26:11.820 And so, but they thought he was going to die a while ago, it seemed like.
00:26:16.140 They were preparing, the news was preparing us for it.
00:26:18.700 And then he, you know, was able to get back.
00:26:20.740 It seems like he came back fairly strongly.
00:26:23.060 I mean, he did the Easter service on Sunday.
00:26:25.160 Right.
00:26:25.420 It seemed like he wanted to at least get through that.
00:26:27.320 Yeah.
00:26:27.480 And he met with J.D. Vance on Sunday as well.
00:26:31.720 Right.
00:26:32.000 The left thinks that's hilarious, by the way.
00:26:33.460 The left thinks that basically J.D. Vance killed the Pope.
00:26:37.820 That's basically what they think.
00:26:38.880 That's basically, yes.
00:26:40.420 They think that's a hilarious storyline.
00:26:44.380 Which, you know, it's always funny to celebrate a death.
00:26:48.420 So, it's shocking.
00:26:49.820 Isn't it?
00:26:50.400 It's shocking that's the way they went.
00:26:51.920 Yeah.
00:26:52.220 I'm stunned.
00:26:53.120 Oh, my gosh.
00:26:53.940 Every time.
00:26:54.840 After watching their behaviors with the UnitedHealthcare CEOs murder.
00:26:58.560 Oh, my gosh.
00:26:59.080 It's shocking that they might celebrate somebody who died.
00:27:02.180 But, you know, this is a big moment for the Catholic Church, certainly.
00:27:05.580 You think about the difference between Benedict and Francis and the very divergent paths that the church could take here.
00:27:15.040 That's very interesting.
00:27:16.580 Yeah.
00:27:16.660 Will they go along the same lines as Pope Francis was leading them, or are they going to choose a new direction?
00:27:24.800 That's what's kind of going to be decided by this.
00:27:28.080 From what I understand, there's 250-some cardinals, but only 135 of them are electors.
00:27:37.500 So, only 135 of the cardinals vote.
00:27:41.040 And Pope Francis appointed one-third of them.
00:27:45.740 So, that gives him a pretty good base there to elect somebody who's going to continue his policies.
00:27:53.220 I feel like we're doing election analysis again.
00:27:55.520 And, anyway, we are.
00:27:56.700 Yes.
00:27:57.060 And, kind of, we are.
00:27:58.120 Now, I know on Pac-Rae Unleashed, you often have our own Jeffy Fisher on the program.
00:28:05.260 Jeffy.
00:28:06.000 Yes.
00:28:06.780 He claims, each time this happens, to run for Pope.
00:28:10.800 Is he running for Pope this year?
00:28:12.140 He wants to.
00:28:12.940 But, they, because of his first, his initial run, I guess they've mandated that you must be Catholic in order to become Pope.
00:28:22.760 No.
00:28:23.080 Yeah.
00:28:23.780 Apparently, that wasn't a rule before, but it is now.
00:28:26.340 Okay.
00:28:26.760 And, he claims it's because of his run, his candidacy.
00:28:29.980 Really?
00:28:30.580 That they made the change.
00:28:32.640 So.
00:28:33.760 He came really close one of those years.
00:28:35.260 Really close.
00:28:35.560 I can't remember which one it was.
00:28:36.440 Yeah.
00:28:37.060 Because, one year, he got, like, no votes.
00:28:41.260 So, that's pretty close, because the winner only got, like, 70 or something.
00:28:45.180 Yeah.
00:28:45.420 It was 70 votes away from being Pope.
00:28:47.280 Right.
00:28:48.160 Right.
00:28:48.580 I mean, that's pretty close.
00:28:50.300 Mm-hmm.
00:28:50.580 When you think about it, out of 8 billion people on the planet, you came within 70 votes?
00:28:56.320 That's not bad.
00:28:57.140 Not bad at all.
00:28:57.860 That's not bad.
00:28:58.640 Mm-hmm.
00:28:58.840 But, we're hoping he's going to show up in his Pope outfit tomorrow for the show for Pat
00:29:04.340 Greenwich.
00:29:04.520 Oh, really?
00:29:05.020 Yeah.
00:29:05.220 We'll see.
00:29:05.560 He has a Pope outfit.
00:29:06.860 He does have a Pope outfit.
00:29:08.260 You know, because he wants to be prepared, just in case he's the guy.
00:29:13.680 But, apparently, you've got to be younger than 80, so that's another disqualifier.
00:29:19.440 Oh, yeah.
00:29:19.660 He's definitely over 80.
00:29:20.760 Yeah.
00:29:21.160 Way over 80.
00:29:22.380 So, I think the lead candidate is Cardinal Peter Erdu from Budapest, Hungary, 72 years
00:29:31.720 old.
00:29:32.720 He's the highest-ranking Catholic leader in a country that's 80% Christian.
00:29:38.020 He's known for his support of the Pope's outreach to Orthodox Christians.
00:29:42.760 Then, you've got Cardinal Fredolin Mbongo, who is the Archbishop of Kinshasa in the Republic
00:29:51.360 of Congo.
00:29:52.380 He's a possibility.
00:29:54.640 We've got Cardinal Mario Gretsch, Secretary General for the Cenote of Bishops.
00:30:00.500 There's actually two Americans, and I doubt that they—I can't imagine an American ever
00:30:06.560 becoming Pope.
00:30:07.580 It's never happened.
00:30:08.940 But Cardinal Dolan, who is, I believe, New York-based, right?
00:30:15.700 And then Cardinal—who's the other one?
00:30:20.740 Joe Tobin, of course.
00:30:22.940 Joe Tobin of Newark, who is one of the biggies and very influential in New Jersey.
00:30:29.860 So, we'll see.
00:30:31.460 We'll see which direction they go.
00:30:32.880 There are some Catholics who think that the Pope should actually be Catholic this time
00:30:39.060 and adhere to a more Catholic doctrine this time.
00:30:43.940 But I don't know.
00:30:45.220 We'll see.
00:30:45.800 We'll see.
00:30:46.380 It was sort of a different feel under Pope Francis than certainly it was under John Paul II.
00:30:53.180 That's for sure.
00:30:53.720 Well, I just hope we have a Pope that focuses almost all of his attention on global warming.
00:30:57.600 You know, Pat, today is Earth Day.
00:30:59.980 Did you know that?
00:31:00.600 Did you even know that?
00:31:01.460 I didn't even know that.
00:31:01.980 I'm looking at you.
00:31:02.840 You don't know that.
00:31:03.740 You didn't even seem to know it.
00:31:05.040 I'm quite shocked.
00:31:06.160 Today is Earth Day.
00:31:07.120 Today is Earth Day.
00:31:08.180 Yeah.
00:31:08.580 The day that we celebrate the Earth.
00:31:11.520 Right.
00:31:12.100 And all of the emissions that we put into it and onto it.
00:31:15.400 The day partially created by a murderer who tried to compost his girlfriend.
00:31:23.440 Right.
00:31:23.680 Wasn't she in his closet for a while?
00:31:26.160 For a while.
00:31:26.460 Dead.
00:31:26.880 Yeah.
00:31:27.260 Yeah.
00:31:27.480 I think he actually did compost her, which that is Earth-friendly.
00:31:32.120 He's stuck by that all the way to the end.
00:31:34.280 It really is.
00:31:34.640 Yeah, this is a day where we've been warned that by today there would be no life on Earth, basically, from the first Earth Day when they said, you know, in decades of the future there would be no water and no food and we would all be burning or freezing.
00:31:48.740 At that time, if it was freezing to death.
00:31:50.260 I think it was.
00:31:50.640 But then it turned into burning to death later on, you know, a decade or so later.
00:31:55.300 And you look at this, I feel like you haven't even respected the Earth.
00:32:01.560 Have you prayed to the Earth at all today?
00:32:03.300 I have not.
00:32:03.760 There's a hole in the sky where the tree once was.
00:32:07.060 Somebody's making money.
00:32:08.760 It's true.
00:32:09.580 There is a hole in the sky where the tree once was.
00:32:13.200 So the tree was in the sky?
00:32:14.500 Yes.
00:32:15.320 And it created, well, now there's a hole because I guess they cut down the tree.
00:32:19.900 Oh, right.
00:32:20.380 They cut down the tree.
00:32:21.320 That's terrible.
00:32:22.320 You shouldn't do that.
00:32:23.220 By the way, you should take a private jet to an Earth Day conference.
00:32:27.860 Yes.
00:32:28.380 To learn about why the tree isn't there anymore.
00:32:30.740 That you should do on Earth Day.
00:32:32.380 But yeah, there's hardly any trees on this planet.
00:32:35.820 Do you know there's only three trillion trees on this planet?
00:32:38.580 That's it?
00:32:39.100 Yeah.
00:32:39.720 Do you know that there's only-
00:32:40.760 All time low, by the way.
00:32:41.760 Only 10 or 15 times the amount of trees on this planet than stars in the Milky Way galaxy.
00:32:47.980 Oh, really?
00:32:48.640 Yeah.
00:32:48.860 That's it?
00:32:49.320 Yeah, that's it.
00:32:50.200 That's it.
00:32:51.100 By the way, there are more trees now than there were because we've decided to plant them after
00:32:56.960 we cut them down.
00:32:57.860 There's this idea that, you know, they say they like to talk about renewable resources.
00:33:01.760 Trees are one of them.
00:33:04.020 They-
00:33:04.420 Really?
00:33:05.720 You can make new ones.
00:33:06.540 Are you getting that?
00:33:07.000 Yeah.
00:33:07.300 No, it's true.
00:33:08.020 Yeah.
00:33:08.400 It's science, Pat.
00:33:09.440 Because I thought with what Chris Matthews said the other day about, what are we going
00:33:12.540 to do?
00:33:12.860 Make more wood?
00:33:13.980 Do you guys happen to see that?
00:33:16.720 Yeah.
00:33:17.320 Yeah.
00:33:17.760 Yeah, Chris, we are.
00:33:18.420 We're going to make more wood.
00:33:19.180 That's one approach.
00:33:20.180 We're going to plant trees.
00:33:21.180 Yeah.
00:33:21.500 So-
00:33:22.040 That's an approach that would work.
00:33:23.440 Yeah.
00:33:23.860 It would.
00:33:24.720 Making more wood is actually the-
00:33:26.440 It's doable.
00:33:27.040 It's really the core of the industry.
00:33:29.400 Mm-hmm.
00:33:29.700 You know, it's really at the core of the lumber industry is making more wood.
00:33:36.220 That's a fascinating, it's so bizarre.
00:33:39.080 And, you know, one thing you could also do is have insensible environmental policies so
00:33:43.940 you don't burn down all of your forests.
00:33:46.620 Oh.
00:33:47.060 And all of your beautiful oceanfront properties in places like California.
00:33:53.800 That's another approach to having wood is not letting it all get lit on fire.
00:33:57.900 Now you bring that up.
00:33:58.640 Now you bring it up.
00:33:59.740 I know, I didn't, I should have mentioned it last Thursday that we would have been saved
00:34:03.500 from all of this.
00:34:05.280 Yeah, but you didn't.
00:34:06.700 And look what happened.
00:34:07.720 Yeah, it's really sad.
00:34:09.660 What a pathetic, pathetic display.
00:34:13.120 It really is.
00:34:14.340 You know, and then you, did you see, you know, you had Karen Bass, who's the horrible, horrible
00:34:20.540 mayor of Los Angeles and California, you know, had another mayor in Oakland and they
00:34:25.480 were like, we got to get rid of, we got to get rid of this mayor.
00:34:27.840 It's just absolutely terrible, corruption and all this.
00:34:30.600 So they recall the mayor and who do they elect?
00:34:32.660 Barbara Lee.
00:34:35.020 Another horrible former representative.
00:34:37.600 It's incredible.
00:34:39.220 I mean, when is California going to learn?
00:34:41.480 There's just no learning curve.
00:34:43.540 No.
00:34:44.300 Particularly in these large cities.
00:34:46.080 Because year after year after year, they just continue to elect the exact same people and
00:34:53.740 are like, well, what happens if we do this again?
00:34:56.300 Will we get a different result?
00:34:58.080 Some people say that that's insanity when you think that way.
00:35:01.960 And all of our major cities just continue to be on this plan.
00:35:06.340 Like, what if we continue to elect horrible Democrat after horrible Democrat after horrible
00:35:11.760 Democrat with all of the same policies?
00:35:13.720 What if we try it again?
00:35:15.740 Well, you got an even better chance that you're going to completely burn down the state.
00:35:19.620 Yeah.
00:35:20.220 Yeah.
00:35:21.220 It's so true.
00:35:22.260 And there's no, we did this a while ago in one of Glenn's books.
00:35:26.960 We did a study on poverty in this country.
00:35:30.620 And you look at the cities with the most poverty.
00:35:34.320 This is, this is a stats, you know, more, probably more than a decade old now, but there hasn't
00:35:37.920 been much change in this, obviously, as we just pointed out.
00:35:40.640 And you look at the 10 cities with the most poverty in America.
00:35:44.900 Who did they elect as mayor?
00:35:46.760 Is this a Republican city?
00:35:48.500 Is it a Democrat city?
00:35:49.140 It was, it was something like 8% it had been of the time in that period over 25 years that
00:35:54.900 had been run by the Republicans, 8%.
00:35:56.960 I bet it's less than that now.
00:35:58.700 It's got to be less, right?
00:36:00.020 I bet it is.
00:36:01.000 I remember one of the, at the time, one of the cities that was in that conversation was,
00:36:06.320 I believe Miami and Miami had a couple of Republican mayors.
00:36:09.780 I don't think Miami would be in that conversation now.
00:36:12.280 I don't think they'd be in the top 10.
00:36:14.080 I could be wrong.
00:36:14.880 It's been a while since I checked that stat.
00:36:16.320 But the point being that they just keep trying Democrats over and over and over again, who
00:36:22.680 all believe the same things, who bring the same promises and the same, the same policies
00:36:27.900 over and over and over again.
00:36:29.200 Yeah.
00:36:29.420 And the same results happen.
00:36:31.080 Everything gets worse.
00:36:32.220 You get farther in debt.
00:36:33.660 In fact, crime gets worse.
00:36:34.780 Crime gets worse.
00:36:35.580 Homelessness gets worse.
00:36:36.740 Poverty gets worse.
00:36:38.020 Education numbers drop.
00:36:39.640 And yet the next time it comes up, the Republican who, if there is even one on the ballot,
00:36:45.540 gets 24% of the vote again.
00:36:47.880 And that's the case in almost every major city across the country, including in red states
00:36:52.280 like Texas.
00:36:53.000 Why not try something different?
00:36:55.680 It boggles my mind.
00:36:57.080 Just look at it.
00:36:57.580 Just be like, look, let's just try it.
00:36:59.000 Let's try it for four years.
00:37:00.100 Let's see what happens.
00:37:00.940 Yeah.
00:37:01.420 Roll the dice.
00:37:02.080 I mean, Trump used to say that when he's on the campaign trail.
00:37:04.620 He'd be like, I don't know, guys, you see the results here?
00:37:06.640 Why don't you try anything different?
00:37:08.280 And you'd be like, oh, I can't believe he would say something like that.
00:37:10.580 Why?
00:37:11.340 Why wouldn't you try something?
00:37:13.240 I mean, it just seems like.
00:37:14.600 Just makes sense.
00:37:15.880 Try a libertarian.
00:37:17.320 Yeah.
00:37:17.540 Try something else.
00:37:18.720 And what they're like, okay, we'll try something else.
00:37:20.320 A socialist.
00:37:22.560 That's what they do.
00:37:23.880 It's working really well for them.
00:37:25.180 Amazing.
00:37:25.540 More coming up.
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00:40:38.880 It's Pat and Stu in for Glenn today, who's out sick.
00:40:41.940 He actually is going to be talking to, hopefully he's feeling better for tomorrow, because he's
00:40:45.520 talking to President Trump in an interview.
00:40:47.280 If he gets him sick, I'm going to be very upset with him.
00:40:49.340 So he's recovering today.
00:40:51.700 We'll be back on the air, I believe, tomorrow.
00:40:53.700 You mentioned, Pat, a rule I was not aware of, which is you now must be Catholic to be
00:41:00.740 Pope.
00:41:02.080 And so this is hurting Jeffy's candidacy for Pope.
00:41:06.080 Yeah.
00:41:06.560 In a big way.
00:41:07.420 He is not Catholic.
00:41:08.780 He is not Catholic.
00:41:09.820 So he's probably not going to get elected this time.
00:41:12.140 This did remind me, though, of a story that broke the other day.
00:41:15.760 This is a new rule instituted by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, the Oscars.
00:41:22.600 Yeah.
00:41:22.780 A raft of measures were announced by the Oscars governing body on Monday, including the stipulation
00:41:28.260 that, quote, Academy members must now watch all nominated films in each category to be
00:41:34.780 eligible to vote in the final round for the Oscars.
00:41:37.240 What?
00:41:37.940 So they now must watch the movies.
00:41:38.960 They got to see the movie they're voting on?
00:41:41.480 Yeah.
00:41:42.160 Oh, wow.
00:41:43.000 It's asking quite a lot.
00:41:44.040 That's a lot.
00:41:44.880 That's a lot to ask.
00:41:46.240 Wait, this wasn't the rule?
00:41:48.080 I assume, like, maybe it wasn't enforced.
00:41:50.420 Like, there's all these reports of they send you the screeners if you're an Oscar voter
00:41:54.680 and they can tell whether you've watched it or not.
00:41:58.220 And so they can see how much of it you've watched.
00:42:00.180 Like, a lot of people were watching 20 minutes and then just bailing on the movie.
00:42:03.180 It's like, well, you can't vote.
00:42:05.480 Like, you should at least be able to see the whole thing.
00:42:07.160 Right?
00:42:07.280 Yeah.
00:42:07.440 But I assumed it was one of those things that they said was a rule, but you just didn't
00:42:11.400 enforce.
00:42:12.360 Right?
00:42:12.580 Like, okay, you got to watch the movies, obviously, to vote.
00:42:15.580 However, we're not really going to check in on you.
00:42:17.580 Apparently, it wasn't even a rule until yesterday.
00:42:20.440 My gosh.
00:42:21.240 It's amazing.
00:42:21.760 You didn't even have to watch the movies.
00:42:23.780 No wonder so many crappy movies have won over the years.
00:42:26.820 Yeah.
00:42:27.160 People weren't even watching them.
00:42:30.120 They weren't even watching them.
00:42:31.720 That explains a lot, doesn't it?
00:42:32.520 That explains a lot.
00:42:33.380 It really does.
00:42:34.160 Yeah.
00:42:34.380 You know, I mean, was it Crash that won that one year?
00:42:38.060 And I remember thinking to myself, that movie, I saw it.
00:42:39.800 It was terrible.
00:42:40.900 It was a terrible, terrible movie.
00:42:43.960 And it somehow won Best Picture.
00:42:46.000 Yeah.
00:42:47.100 How?
00:42:47.820 It's because of vibes, right?
00:42:49.240 Like, you hear, oh, well, this movie's about race.
00:42:51.940 It's sending an important message about race.
00:42:53.620 So, that means that we got to vote for it.
00:42:56.180 That's the way this has been happening all these years.
00:42:59.420 Incredible.
00:43:00.420 It's absolutely incredible.
00:43:01.480 That horrible movie about the trans surgery that happened.
00:43:07.340 I can't remember the name of it now.
00:43:08.280 Did anyone remember it?
00:43:09.700 And remember, it was the trans best actor or actress.
00:43:13.600 I think it should have been actor, but was in the actress category.
00:43:17.400 And definitely would have won.
00:43:19.460 But then they found out that he had made previous insensitive jokes about some other protected group.
00:43:25.740 So, then that all fell apart.
00:43:27.480 And it's like, well, wait a minute.
00:43:29.360 Was the movie good or not?
00:43:30.780 First of all, at least the clip I saw was so bad that it couldn't possibly, it should never have won an award.
00:43:37.480 I did not see the entire movie.
00:43:39.100 But I guess I'm like every other Oscar voter until yesterday.
00:43:43.100 But, like, that was the way that they do it, right?
00:43:45.720 Like, there's vibes.
00:43:46.840 Like, well, we've been talking about trans things quite a bit.
00:43:50.220 So, that one wins, right?
00:43:52.140 Well, no.
00:43:52.780 They made jokes about, I don't know what it was.
00:43:55.240 I don't know what group they offended with their previous tweets.
00:44:00.300 But then that was a controversy.
00:44:01.700 And then they lost.
00:44:02.620 It's like, well, that didn't change the movie in any way.
00:44:05.220 You realize that the tweets that this transgendered person made 10 years ago didn't affect the movie quality, which, by the way, was low.
00:44:12.900 So, I still love it, though, when Hollywood eats their own.
00:44:15.840 Yes.
00:44:16.180 That's just good, clean fun right there.
00:44:18.280 It is.
00:44:18.740 Love it.
00:44:19.220 Love it.
00:44:20.120 888-727-BECK.
00:44:22.020 More patents.
00:44:22.560 Stu for Glenn.
00:44:23.020 Coming up.
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00:44:30.160 Once found in abundance, this hardworking species is now being pushed to the brink by foreign meat imports, by giant meatpacking corporations that believe in cheap processed fillers and that think that added hormones belong in everything.
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00:44:47.240 There is hope, however.
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00:46:01.540 Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh.
00:46:31.520 Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh.
00:46:34.720 Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, yeah.
00:46:40.080 Down the road where shadows hide.
00:46:43.260 Feel the dark on every side.
00:46:45.920 Stand your ground when times get dark.
00:46:48.340 Gotta face the door and embrace the fire.
00:46:52.900 The fusion of entertainment and enlightenment.
00:46:56.220 And this is the Glenn Beck Program.
00:47:03.220 With Pat and Stu for Glenn today, 888-727-BECK.
00:47:07.660 A little warning from an interesting source on the AI front.
00:47:12.560 We'll get into that and lots more coming up in one minute.
00:47:17.420 For generations from the earliest days of Christianity to the modern existence of the state of Israel,
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00:48:24.960 888-488-4325.
00:48:29.320 So as we know, artificial intelligence keeps getting smarter.
00:48:33.220 And pretty soon, according to former Google CEO Eric Schmidt,
00:48:37.960 it won't be taking orders from us anymore.
00:48:41.100 Oh, good.
00:48:41.600 Yeah.
00:48:42.000 Isn't that nice?
00:48:42.640 It's so much work to give it orders.
00:48:44.080 It is.
00:48:45.000 If it would just know what I wanted and do it for me in advance.
00:48:48.640 Or not listen to us at all.
00:48:50.860 Yeah.
00:48:51.280 And just go off on its own, do whatever it pleases.
00:48:53.540 Well, it's going to know what's better for us, Pat.
00:48:55.180 That's right.
00:48:55.700 That's the thing.
00:48:56.400 That's right.
00:48:56.820 We might think we want to do one thing, but it will know better.
00:49:00.080 For instance, what if humanity is a virus to the earth,
00:49:03.320 and he wants to eliminate that virus?
00:49:05.600 It's a great thing to think about on Earth Day.
00:49:07.120 Yeah, isn't it?
00:49:07.700 You know, Glenn's off today.
00:49:09.160 He's for his Earth Day celebration every year.
00:49:13.180 He has an annual Earth Day celebration.
00:49:16.100 It's a pilgrimage, really.
00:49:17.520 Yep.
00:49:17.840 He's planting seeds.
00:49:20.500 He's seeding the earth, reseeding the earth.
00:49:23.180 It's beautiful.
00:49:23.780 He's putting grass all over grass, seeded all over Washington, D.C.
00:49:28.160 Nice.
00:49:28.460 Today.
00:49:28.860 That's nice.
00:49:29.120 And if you're there, you'll see him.
00:49:31.300 He'll be out there just planting individual blades of grass to celebrate this.
00:49:35.980 Some people think there's way too much marble going on in D.C.
00:49:39.360 And so, blades of grass be very much appreciated.
00:49:42.700 Yeah.
00:49:43.040 Some green spaces in D.C.
00:49:44.900 I think that's needed.
00:49:45.820 Well, you know what Glenn always says, Pat.
00:49:48.120 He says he gets upset because we have paved paradise and then put up a parking lot.
00:49:53.340 Parking lots, yeah.
00:49:54.020 Did you know that?
00:49:54.620 Yeah.
00:49:55.400 That's, well, he's very famous for that.
00:49:57.440 The earth was perfect.
00:49:58.680 Yeah.
00:49:59.600 And now it's terrible because we can park our automobiles that we can drive to stores
00:50:04.840 where we buy the things that we want and need.
00:50:06.260 Well, if there weren't so many parking spots, there wouldn't be so many cars.
00:50:08.720 Right.
00:50:09.700 And if it weren't for any, weren't so many cars, there wouldn't be so many stores.
00:50:14.260 Right.
00:50:14.700 And we could go back to paradise, which of course was foraging for our own foods in the woods.
00:50:20.080 And oftentimes going hungry because we couldn't.
00:50:22.300 We couldn't find it.
00:50:22.880 We couldn't find any.
00:50:23.740 Right.
00:50:24.280 So.
00:50:24.800 Those were good times.
00:50:25.740 Those were the good old days, man.
00:50:26.580 Good times.
00:50:26.980 Those were the good old days.
00:50:28.040 Dang it.
00:50:28.400 And hopefully we get back to that when we were, when AI realizes that we're a virus.
00:50:32.860 Yes.
00:50:33.120 And it may very soon.
00:50:34.680 During a talk at a recent summit co-hosted by Schmidt's think tank, the special competitive
00:50:40.140 studies project.
00:50:41.140 The former Google head predicted that within three to five years, researchers will crack
00:50:46.320 the case on so-called artificial general intelligence or human level AI.
00:50:51.760 After that, Schmidt suggested all bets are off.
00:50:55.520 Now, this is interesting coming from a guy who wasn't worried about technology at all because
00:51:00.480 Google's motto was don't be evil or whatever.
00:51:04.660 Do you remember that?
00:51:05.220 Yeah.
00:51:05.300 He was, he was, he was the head of it back when they had that as a slogan.
00:51:08.600 They gave up on that.
00:51:09.520 I guess they did.
00:51:10.480 Yeah.
00:51:10.680 I can't.
00:51:11.280 You know what?
00:51:11.980 It's a little under, it's underrated.
00:51:13.360 Let's be evil sometimes.
00:51:14.300 Yeah.
00:51:14.820 And I think that's their new motto.
00:51:16.520 Occasionally evil.
00:51:17.640 Occasionally evil.
00:51:19.040 And so they're doing a good job of that actually.
00:51:21.200 But once AI begins to self-improve and learn how to plan, Schmidt said, it essentially won't
00:51:30.140 have to listen to us anymore.
00:51:32.000 At that stage, he said, AI will not only be smarter than humans, it will also reach what's
00:51:37.860 known as artificial super intelligence.
00:51:40.880 That's the ASI, which occurs when AI becomes smarter than all humans put together.
00:51:48.380 He thinks this could happen in three to five years.
00:51:51.720 Yeah.
00:51:51.960 That's basically Glenn's timeline on this as well.
00:51:54.320 Yeah.
00:51:54.620 Yeah.
00:51:55.120 He thinks it's the same timeline.
00:51:57.880 By the way, a lot of really amazing good things will come of that.
00:52:02.380 Then some scary ones probably.
00:52:04.320 Yeah.
00:52:04.660 That we don't really know what they are.
00:52:06.040 Yeah.
00:52:06.660 But there will be, they're already designing proteins and, you know, different components
00:52:13.800 that they believe are going to cure all these diseases and may very well occur.
00:52:19.340 I mean, I would not be surprised if a lot of this leads to really, really positive things.
00:52:23.720 It's just a matter of what is the long-term outcome.
00:52:26.040 Obviously.
00:52:27.140 He says, this path is not understood in our society.
00:52:30.540 There's no language for what happens with the arrival of this.
00:52:33.520 That's why it's underhyped.
00:52:35.040 I don't know if it's underhyped here.
00:52:36.740 I think Glenn does a pretty good job.
00:52:38.520 He hypes it.
00:52:39.260 Of hyping it.
00:52:39.880 I mean, it believes that he's, and this has been a long-term thing.
00:52:43.260 I mean, one of the first big interviews we did on the CNN headline news show was with
00:52:48.420 Ray Kurzweil, the futurist, who's been warning about all of these things this entire time.
00:52:53.260 And Glenn talked to him about it back in, what year was that?
00:52:56.040 2006?
00:52:56.660 Yeah, it was a long time ago.
00:52:57.620 Something like that.
00:52:58.140 It was a long time ago.
00:53:00.060 And so he's, this is not hype to him.
00:53:02.700 And I think now people are kind of awake to it.
00:53:07.040 It took a long time.
00:53:08.400 He was saying this way before Eric Schmidt was saying it.
00:53:14.040 That's for sure.
00:53:15.240 He says, people do not understand what happens when you have intelligence at this level, which
00:53:20.740 is largely free.
00:53:22.800 That conceit, it's worth noting, doesn't make, doesn't necessarily hold up.
00:53:29.240 Whoever reaches AGI first will guard it so strongly Fort Knox will look like a garden gate.
00:53:35.800 And until and unless an ASI frees itself from the shackles of human control entirely and
00:53:42.920 decides to make itself beneficial to humans, it will not be some sort of utopian virtual assistant.
00:53:49.480 As he jokingly referenced, the six year ASI timeline could well be a Silicon Valley mirage.
00:53:58.500 Still, they can't imagine that AI will not only outstrip human level intelligence, it'll surpass it very soon.
00:54:08.580 And we probably need to pay attention to that and maybe make some safeguards, some guardrails for it.
00:54:18.800 I mean, didn't they say that they weren't going to allow it to access the Internet?
00:54:24.260 And now, of course, it has accessed the Internet long since.
00:54:31.940 And I thought that was going to be, that was too dangerous right now.
00:54:35.120 And it's already surpassed that.
00:54:38.140 We've gone way beyond that.
00:54:39.740 We're in a bit of a pickle here, Pat.
00:54:41.260 Yeah.
00:54:41.600 I don't know if you've noticed this, but it does seem to be that there's no real way through this.
00:54:49.220 Like people talk about, well, we need to pause it.
00:54:52.080 There's no, there's no way you can do that.
00:54:54.960 There are too many people trying to accomplish these things.
00:54:58.160 We're going to let China get way ahead of us.
00:54:59.800 Like you can't, there's no, that's right.
00:55:01.240 They're not going to pause it.
00:55:02.520 No.
00:55:03.160 And even if we were to say, like, we all had this agreement among the nice people.
00:55:08.320 Hey, we're going to go back to, we're going to do like an M. Night Shyamalan, the village.
00:55:12.140 And we're just going to turn everything off.
00:55:14.320 And we're not going to go down this AI road at all.
00:55:16.480 There is going to be someone who does.
00:55:19.540 So a bad actor is going to.
00:55:21.660 So what do you do?
00:55:23.240 I mean, you, there, it is a, the only real way to do this is to march forward as we're doing it.
00:55:29.400 And hope that, that at the end of the day, and I don't think there is like, this is a tough thing about it.
00:55:35.680 I don't think there is an end of this, right?
00:55:37.620 Like, it's not like, okay, well, we got there first, so we win.
00:55:40.340 Like there's always going to be another, someone else trying to figure out how to do something terrible with this technology.
00:55:44.520 Yeah.
00:55:46.080 And, and how do you stop that?
00:55:48.700 You can't really.
00:55:49.740 It's not like a nuclear weapons where you can at least attempt to, well, it seems like Iran is developing them.
00:55:56.300 Let's go bomb their nuclear facilities.
00:55:58.000 Like you can't do that with AI.
00:55:59.580 Like you can try to put these guardrails up.
00:56:02.360 I don't think there's any way that they work.
00:56:04.720 I really don't.
00:56:05.620 I think they're, they're, they're going to be horrible uses of this.
00:56:08.780 They're already doing it with, with scammers, right?
00:56:10.820 Where they're using AI technology to, I mean, I don't know if you're getting pestered with more and more scams these days, Pat.
00:56:16.520 I feel like I am, I get more and more texts and, you know, attempts for phishing and all of that.
00:56:22.260 It seems to be getting much, much worse, which kind of makes sense when you have this technology and it's going to be more convincing.
00:56:28.080 They're going to start sounding like you.
00:56:29.960 I mean, I'm kind of really concerned about like, there has already been people who have had calls from what seems like a family member in crisis being kidnapped.
00:56:41.220 And they're telling about, you know, can you, you know, you have to send money to these people and it's not even them, right?
00:56:47.680 It's just a weird like AI recording.
00:56:50.320 What happens when like, how are you going to know?
00:56:52.340 How are you going to know?
00:56:52.940 And, and you think about like the way your banking works, right?
00:56:55.940 You enter your password, you get in there.
00:56:57.920 Maybe if something's going wrong, well, there's only way you can really set it right is by actually calling them, right?
00:57:04.220 And being like, Hey, here I am.
00:57:05.460 This is who I am.
00:57:06.800 Let me tell you on the freaking phone that I need this done.
00:57:10.880 Well, when you're being impersonated by AI, that is incredibly convincing.
00:57:16.140 Maybe even talking to an AI representative on the other side of the phone.
00:57:20.840 Yeah.
00:57:21.740 It's going to get out of control fast.
00:57:23.460 You worry about whether you're going to be able to protect and secure your own funds.
00:57:27.620 You're going to wind up with already the password situation is out of control.
00:57:30.640 I feel like 80% of my day is just entering passwords and reentering them.
00:57:34.200 And I'll go to your authenticator app and you need to say two, two factor authentication.
00:57:38.680 And it's like, it's most of my day is spent doing that.
00:57:41.400 I feel like already.
00:57:42.800 Yeah.
00:57:43.040 It's only going to get worse.
00:57:44.260 And it's amazing how much AI does already.
00:57:46.960 I mean, it's already doing people's homework, writing people's speeches.
00:57:52.360 It's already doing so much that we don't even realize it's AI.
00:57:57.820 I mean, I watch these documentaries sometimes on space because I'm really a space nerd and kind of into these documentaries
00:58:07.820 about deep space and things.
00:58:09.820 And they're almost all AI.
00:58:11.620 And you can tell because it'll mispronounce words sometimes and doesn't know that methane is pronounced methane, not methane.
00:58:18.720 And so you're like, okay, this is obviously being done by AI.
00:58:21.840 But eventually they're going to work all of that out.
00:58:24.700 And you're not going to be able to tell.
00:58:25.980 And not only do they have the voice and the vocal characteristics down, but you can fake videos pretty easily and convincingly already with AI.
00:58:39.900 It's incredible.
00:58:40.700 I mean, where this thing is going to end up, I don't know.
00:58:44.020 It's a little bit, it's a little bit chilling.
00:58:46.120 You ever have that moment, Pat, where you're walking in a parking lot or you're driving your car and a car is parked somewhere?
00:58:53.880 And you're like, oh, that's kind of cool looking.
00:58:56.640 What is that?
00:58:58.740 You just take your phone out and take a picture of that car and go into chat GPT and say, what is this car?
00:59:04.900 And it knows immediately what it is.
00:59:07.340 Wow.
00:59:07.940 I mean, by just a picture that you take.
00:59:10.060 You think about like, I was working with my son on his homework.
00:59:13.680 You mentioned people are doing their homework and there's so much cheating going on now.
00:59:17.980 It's unbelievable.
00:59:19.740 But so I don't have that on any of his devices for, you know, that reason.
00:59:23.740 I would have been very tempted by it back in the day.
00:59:26.460 And so I'm working on him with his homework.
00:59:28.700 And we're at that point now where he's certainly smarter than I am, but also is at the level where I can't really remember anymore what he's doing.
00:59:38.760 Like he's, you know, he's in some math class and, you know, it's just advanced math class.
00:59:44.440 And I'm like, I don't freaking remember.
00:59:46.320 And he's in seventh grade.
00:59:47.300 Like we're, this is only going to get a lot uglier because up until now, pretty much I could, oh, yeah, I kind of remember that.
00:59:54.140 And now I'm at the point where like, I can remember seeing it, but I don't remember at all how to do it.
00:59:58.160 And he was doing some graphing thing.
01:00:00.040 And so it was like a visual thing.
01:00:01.960 And I'm like, I don't remember.
01:00:03.900 And what I, occasionally when I've run into these issues, I've gone to chat GPT and I'm kind of, I'll walk myself through kind of what I remember about it and then have it fill in the blank.
01:00:12.220 So I can tell him what I'm reading and try to walk him through at his level, how to solve the problem without giving him the answer.
01:00:19.080 Right.
01:00:19.400 Like, so, you know, okay, well, what about, think about this.
01:00:21.660 And it helps.
01:00:22.300 It's very helpful.
01:00:23.000 Like that.
01:00:23.160 It's a great tool.
01:00:24.720 The other day it was so complicated and it was so late at night.
01:00:27.900 And I was like, I just got to get this over with.
01:00:30.180 I'm going to figure out how to do this.
01:00:31.760 So I, and I was like, wait a minute.
01:00:33.240 I can just take a picture of it.
01:00:34.320 I just took a picture of the question, a picture of the question.
01:00:37.320 And it has like a little graph and everything.
01:00:38.900 And I was like, how does, how to do this?
01:00:40.980 How does it work?
01:00:41.960 And it just understood the language.
01:00:44.660 It understood the graph.
01:00:45.900 It showed me step-by-step how to draw the graph, what it's supposed to look like, why it looked like that.
01:00:51.060 And it's like, wow, incredible.
01:00:53.140 I mean, it's basically.
01:00:55.020 And that's Grok.
01:00:56.080 That one was, I think, chat GPT.
01:00:58.240 But I mean, they all kind of, I think, have the same capabilities or similar capabilities.
01:01:01.860 Some do stuff better than others.
01:01:03.580 Wow.
01:01:03.880 But like, that's like what a teacher would do, right?
01:01:06.180 Yeah.
01:01:06.880 What a teacher would do to teach a kid how to do that, it could do it and it can explain it at any grade level.
01:01:12.400 You can say, explain this to a fifth grader, explain this to an eighth grader, explain this to.
01:01:15.840 And how are you going to control that?
01:01:17.520 How are you going to keep students from just using that?
01:01:19.720 Oh, they are.
01:01:20.400 They're not going to, they're not going to learn anything anymore.
01:01:22.680 They're just going to let AI do it.
01:01:24.320 There's some guy on the Twitters a few weeks ago who was saying that he was a professor and taught classes.
01:01:30.940 And he said, over the past year or two, he's noticed that it's the smartest class he's ever had.
01:01:36.880 No one asks any questions.
01:01:38.760 Everyone gets incredible grades on their homework.
01:01:41.360 Right?
01:01:41.380 And none of them come in for after school help.
01:01:44.500 None of them come in for office hours.
01:01:46.560 The only time you notice any difference is when they do tests in class and they all have horrible grades.
01:01:52.100 Wow.
01:01:52.480 Because none of them know how to do it.
01:01:54.080 They're all just going to AI and getting it all done for them.
01:01:57.260 Incredible.
01:01:57.620 And like, I mean, if you're, it's like societal collapse, but also if you were in that position at 19 years old, you'd be doing the same thing.
01:02:05.840 Absolutely.
01:02:06.280 You know you would.
01:02:07.120 Yeah.
01:02:07.720 Unless you were like a saint.
01:02:08.820 I know there's people out there like Hillary, who does our four-minute buzz.
01:02:12.000 She would actually do all the work.
01:02:13.460 She's the one good person.
01:02:14.880 Yes.
01:02:15.240 Who would do it.
01:02:16.060 But, I mean, most people are more like Jeffy than Hillary.
01:02:18.840 The Maryland man.
01:02:19.780 Well, the Maryland father.
01:02:21.060 Yeah.
01:02:21.360 The saint.
01:02:22.540 The father of three married Maryland man.
01:02:25.940 Oh, he would never cheat on his homework.
01:02:28.020 He would never, never cheat on his homework.
01:02:29.340 Thank God there are representatives to fly down there and free him from his situation.
01:02:35.300 Exactly.
01:02:35.580 Because he's a Maryland father who would never cheat on his homework.
01:02:38.280 Thank you.
01:02:38.820 Exactly right.
01:02:39.860 More coming up in one minute.
01:02:42.600 All right.
01:02:43.240 During every power outage, you realize a couple of things.
01:02:45.960 One, you have absolutely no idea where your flashlight is.
01:02:48.960 That's a hard, fast rule.
01:02:51.220 Two, your entire life is being held together by a series of machines.
01:02:54.480 Your fridge is dead.
01:02:55.540 Your Wi-Fi, if that sleeps with the fishes, your phone might still be alive, but you forgot to charge it.
01:03:00.440 It's sitting at like 4%.
01:03:01.440 And just like that, you have a third realization.
01:03:04.280 It's time to get a generator.
01:03:05.700 Might I suggest the Grid Doctor 3300 from MyPatriotSupply.
01:03:09.960 Unlike a lot of generators, this one is solar-based, so it's not the size of a battleship.
01:03:15.320 It's also not super loud.
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01:03:19.800 Modern disasters deserve modern solutions.
01:03:22.520 And you won't even have to siphon gas out of your neighbor's car for this one.
01:03:26.140 That's kind of nice.
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01:03:31.520 And I would assume on Earth Day, you're making everybody happy with your solar generator.
01:03:36.300 In a world where the Grid is becoming less reliable by the day, the Grid Doctor 3300 will give you peace of mind and practical everyday use.
01:03:44.080 You can get yours at MyPatriotSupply.com.
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01:03:55.880 Ten seconds.
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01:04:07.880 Pat and Stu for Glenn today.
01:04:10.060 What do you think of this?
01:04:11.260 Hitler maybe escaped to Argentina.
01:04:14.860 One of the coolest, most ridiculous conspiracy theories of all time.
01:04:22.200 Was that Hitler didn't commit suicide in Germany, but he went to Argentina and was living there with JFK or whatever.
01:04:28.640 I mean, maybe not living with JFK, but he was there with at least Elvis.
01:04:33.680 I mean, the two of them were together for a good long while.
01:04:36.440 But a former CIA agent believes there's growing evidence that Adolf Hitler did, in fact, fake his own death and escaped to Argentina, where followers tried to reboot his fallen Nazi empire.
01:04:49.140 That was reported in UK's Daily Mail on Sunday.
01:04:54.180 The agent, Bob Baer, believes that the official version of the story where Hitler committed suicide in Berlin, April 30th, 1945, might need some rethinking.
01:05:03.920 Once anticipated bombshell evidence is released.
01:05:08.360 I can't wait for this to be released.
01:05:10.080 Apparently, Argentina is going to release documents that supposedly support this claim that Adolf Hitler did, in fact, escape to Argentina and live there trying to create the Fourth Reich in Argentina.
01:05:23.740 You believe there's any validity to that?
01:05:27.240 I do not.
01:05:27.940 You do not.
01:05:28.500 I would be a skeptic on that.
01:05:30.140 I think he killed himself.
01:05:32.420 Good riddance.
01:05:33.760 I don't think he wound up with the wonderful.
01:05:35.960 There's some weird stuff in South America when it comes to Nazis.
01:05:39.460 We do know that some went there.
01:05:42.060 There's still that one town that celebrates like a Nazi day, something of the Nazi festival.
01:05:48.640 What is it in Brazil?
01:05:49.920 Did anyone know the story off the top of their head?
01:05:51.740 There's a real town that like.
01:05:53.760 That celebrates.
01:05:54.420 That celebrates.
01:05:55.140 Nazism.
01:05:55.360 Nazism and it's it's I wouldn't say it's as hardcore ideological as it is a weird tradition at this point.
01:06:04.160 I'll get you the details on this.
01:06:05.980 I don't know it off the top of my head anymore, but there is a lot of strange affinity.
01:06:11.920 Yeah.
01:06:12.220 Towards the Nazis in South America in particular.
01:06:15.680 Well, Bear commented that the documents will likely include a paper or a money trail indicating that the Argentinian government at the time was.
01:06:27.500 And that was one Perón.
01:06:29.280 It was involved in the construction of a possible Nazi hideout in Argentina and their Missiones province, which was uncovered in a 2015 archaeological dig.
01:06:41.040 Wow, it was already was buried from the 1950s already till 2015.
01:06:48.300 Hmm.
01:06:49.140 He added that the discovery is the most interesting find related to Nazis in Argentina so far.
01:06:55.960 He said lots of money was spent on a compound with plumbing and electricity in the middle of nowhere.
01:07:01.600 Of course, that doesn't mean it was Nazis.
01:07:03.840 But if you were going to hide Hitler, that's where you'd do it.
01:07:08.640 He claimed.
01:07:09.740 Yeah, so we'll see.
01:07:11.040 So Javier Mille is apparently going to declassify these documents and we'll get a chance to look at them shortly.
01:07:21.140 I would be surprised if it proved that Adolf Hitler was alive and well in Argentina in the, you know, after 1945.
01:07:28.220 You'd be surprised.
01:07:28.900 I'd be surprised.
01:07:29.720 Wow.
01:07:30.040 Yeah, I really would.
01:07:31.440 It's a hot take, Pat.
01:07:32.760 Thank you.
01:07:34.620 This is Glenn Beck.
01:07:37.320 All right.
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01:07:49.460 Well, welcome to the club.
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01:09:25.760 Pat Gray and Stupor Gear in for GLENN today.
01:09:29.980 We're just talking about Eric Schmidt warning about AI.
01:09:33.540 He thinks it's about to escape human control within the next three to five years.
01:09:38.400 So it's not like today or tomorrow.
01:09:40.260 But, you know, fairly soon.
01:09:41.760 It could happen.
01:09:43.060 He doesn't know that it will.
01:09:44.320 But it could happen.
01:09:46.500 But that's not the only issue Google's dealing with right now.
01:09:49.660 Right.
01:09:50.240 Well, this is so perfect.
01:09:52.020 Such a perfect example of the government and everything that's right.
01:09:54.760 We're right and wrong with it.
01:09:56.700 They Google is actually in court right now talking to the Justice Department about their
01:10:01.360 apparent monopoly in Internet search.
01:10:03.660 And we all know when you say you want to search something on the Internet, you say you Google
01:10:06.320 it.
01:10:06.580 Right.
01:10:06.880 Right.
01:10:07.100 Well, they unless you're a huge fan of Lycos, which so many of us are.
01:10:13.320 Are you big on Lycos?
01:10:14.100 Oh, I'm sorry.
01:10:15.280 What do you say?
01:10:16.380 I'm going to Lycos it?
01:10:17.300 Yeah.
01:10:17.900 I'm going to Lycos that.
01:10:19.360 And so or sometimes Yahoo search.
01:10:22.540 Yeah.
01:10:22.940 I thought you were an Ask Jeeves guy.
01:10:24.900 Originally, I was.
01:10:25.780 And then I found I discovered Lycos.
01:10:28.120 But yeah, Ask Jeeves way better than Google.
01:10:32.100 Yeah.
01:10:32.460 Right.
01:10:32.880 Google.
01:10:33.560 Google.
01:10:34.340 Now, Google came in and look, I'm not a huge fan of Google as a company.
01:10:38.760 I mean, either.
01:10:39.160 But believe in a lot of things that they believe in.
01:10:41.500 Everybody uses.
01:10:42.400 But they do make really good products.
01:10:44.440 Yeah, they really do.
01:10:45.620 They really do.
01:10:46.420 And they they make products.
01:10:47.740 This is how I'm this is one of the reasons why I'm so skeptical of this.
01:10:50.520 Like, oh, we're going to put guardrails on AI.
01:10:53.500 Like, I'm sorry, what we're going to do as American people, as in general, is use the
01:10:58.400 product that works the best.
01:10:59.860 There's no evidence that we'd ever do anything else.
01:11:02.840 It's really true.
01:11:03.740 Do you remember when we were like, do you remember the people we have call up?
01:11:06.120 They'd be like, I'm not going to use a cell phone because that means they're tracking me.
01:11:12.000 I don't want to be.
01:11:12.820 And then there's like, OK, then you look at the stats.
01:11:14.480 There's like 0.0001% of people that don't have the smartphones.
01:11:19.500 They were like, well, I'm not going to use my fingerprint.
01:11:21.680 That's got to.
01:11:22.180 And then wait, wait, wait.
01:11:23.680 It saves me one eighth of a second of logging in.
01:11:25.920 Of course, I'm going to use it.
01:11:26.780 Wait, now they're going to scan my iris.
01:11:28.560 Sure.
01:11:29.240 Like the second this stuff makes your life one tenth of a percent better.
01:11:32.620 Everyone jumps on board for it.
01:11:33.920 Yep.
01:11:34.380 Well, I remember when toll tags were a problem for people.
01:11:37.640 I remember getting those calls.
01:11:39.240 Remember that?
01:11:39.620 Yeah.
01:11:39.900 Oh, my gosh.
01:11:40.800 Now it's like a toll tag tracking.
01:11:42.940 And then like everyone's got it.
01:11:44.680 Not to mention.
01:11:45.520 Yeah.
01:11:45.960 The government does things that make it, you know, for example, like there's there's the
01:11:50.220 the license plate scanners that are everywhere now where they're just constantly taking place
01:11:55.200 of your pictures of your license plate so they know where you are anyway.
01:11:58.580 So the toll tag thing seems like an outdated complaint pretty much in today's world.
01:12:02.660 But that being said, it does seem like with Google, we would get complaints all the time
01:12:06.960 of people who hated Google.
01:12:08.120 They want it to get broken up like these big tech companies are doing all these bad things.
01:12:11.660 And then, you know, the email would come from a Gmail address.
01:12:15.740 You're just like, well, I don't know, because people like Gmail.
01:12:20.600 It works well.
01:12:21.260 Google Maps works well.
01:12:22.980 You know, Google Earth is really cool.
01:12:25.920 And people a lot of people like the Android phones and so on.
01:12:28.880 So search is their most dominant category.
01:12:31.700 And they wanted to get the government's trying to say, hey, we're going to break up this monopoly.
01:12:35.400 We're going to make you sell Chrome, which is their browser.
01:12:39.180 They're going to do all these things.
01:12:40.860 They're in court now dealing with this.
01:12:42.100 And I think, like, there's a lot of sympathy for breaking up Google on both sides.
01:12:49.440 And there's, you know, certainly people like Elizabeth Warren have been for it for a long time.
01:12:52.880 But also, there's some sympathy on the right for it because they just don't like Google.
01:12:58.220 And, you know, I think it's not necessarily, you know, they look at them as just a bad company
01:13:03.780 and they're too powerful and all of this.
01:13:06.160 You know, again, I tend to be more on the sort of classic free market side of that.
01:13:11.460 But still, I get the complaints.
01:13:13.260 And we just, you know, we just chose Google.
01:13:16.660 You know, we did.
01:13:17.580 Over Lycos.
01:13:18.660 Yeah.
01:13:18.900 Over Yahoo.
01:13:19.980 They won.
01:13:20.320 Over Ask Jeeves.
01:13:22.220 Because it just worked better.
01:13:23.660 And as much as Bing tries to make some kind of inroad, I mean, Google just dropped.
01:13:29.420 Well, in 2015, they dropped below 90% for the first time ever.
01:13:34.360 And now they're at 89.73%.
01:13:37.140 You can still round it to 90, thankfully.
01:13:39.800 Yes.
01:13:41.600 But, you know, it's fascinating when you think about how the market works because, you know,
01:13:45.860 we were told, and I remember hearing this just a couple years ago from people saying, like,
01:13:48.780 yeah, Google, they have this monopoly.
01:13:51.120 And it's not like those other times with the market.
01:13:53.280 Because what happened with Microsoft was they had Internet Explorer.
01:13:56.720 And Internet Explorer was shipped with all the Microsoft products.
01:13:59.500 And it completely dominated the market.
01:14:01.240 And everyone said, oh, that's a monopoly.
01:14:03.120 Well, you can't.
01:14:03.640 They're never going to lose their market share.
01:14:05.140 Until Chrome came out.
01:14:06.840 And now Chrome dominates.
01:14:08.860 And what happened was, you know, Microsoft was going through this monopoly, you know, trial.
01:14:15.460 At the same time, it was losing its market share to Chrome and others.
01:14:20.600 So what's happened now is the same thing is repeating itself with Google.
01:14:24.840 They are at the Department of Justice arguing about their monopoly on Internet search.
01:14:31.160 At the same time, they're in the battle for their lives when it comes to AI.
01:14:36.340 When everyone is switching to AI for Internet search, they're defending their monopoly for Internet search.
01:14:41.680 When they're in the middle of fighting against Grok and OpenAI and Anthropic, they have Gemini as their AI.
01:14:50.640 But, like, they're in a competition which they may very well lose on AI while they're defending a monopoly search protection against the U.S. government.
01:15:01.740 Amazing.
01:15:02.220 Which makes absolutely no sense whatsoever.
01:15:05.080 This happens every single time with this stuff.
01:15:07.260 The market doesn't always act on our timelines, but generally speaking, always comes up with something else.
01:15:14.620 And here, AI is now surpassing what we used to use as search.
01:15:19.060 I mean, I can't.
01:15:19.740 So many people now don't even use AI or don't even use Google anymore.
01:15:25.420 When they Google things, they just go to AI and they ask it the question in a more common language.
01:15:30.000 And it's really good at finding those weird things, you know.
01:15:32.380 It's really good at sussing it out.
01:15:34.440 Now, it's not perfect.
01:15:35.640 There's still a lot of problems with it.
01:15:36.680 People, I think, use it and depend on it too much.
01:15:39.300 They just look at it and they think it's just, it's, you know, set in stone.
01:15:45.380 And you've got to be really careful with that.
01:15:46.900 But you have to be careful with Google, too.
01:15:48.500 I mean, we all have to have a filter on what we read on the Internet.
01:15:52.060 This is not new news.
01:15:54.080 Everyone realizes there's a lot of BS on the Internet and you have to be able to put it through some sort of filter.
01:15:58.100 Or you'll just, you know, wind up being a complete sucker.
01:16:01.500 This is how, how do you think half the country voted for Kamala Harris?
01:16:06.680 You know, that didn't just naturally happen.
01:16:09.480 Right.
01:16:10.180 There's a lot of stupid people.
01:16:11.460 Right.
01:16:11.760 First, you had to force her into the nomination.
01:16:15.320 And you had to gift her the nomination without any votes.
01:16:17.940 And then.
01:16:18.360 Right.
01:16:18.700 You put her on the ballots and.
01:16:20.380 And look what happened.
01:16:21.160 And look what happened.
01:16:21.840 Went really well, right?
01:16:23.340 That went really well for them.
01:16:24.920 Their, their bench is so bad now in the Democrat Party that they're turning to ESPN for somebody to run.
01:16:33.060 Yeah.
01:16:33.220 For president.
01:16:33.700 Stephen A. Smith.
01:16:34.640 Can you?
01:16:35.160 Yeah.
01:16:36.200 We got nobody else.
01:16:37.460 Please.
01:16:37.920 Stephen A.
01:16:38.400 Can you do this?
01:16:39.200 The most satisfying part of the Stephen A. Smith thing is that they went to.
01:16:42.080 They're going to a left leaning person who's on ESPN and they still ignore Keith Olbermann.
01:16:47.780 Like, we got to get somebody who worked at ESPN who's a liberal.
01:16:53.540 Do we have anybody?
01:16:54.580 Stephen A. Smith?
01:16:55.640 I don't, I don't know.
01:16:57.040 And Keith Olbermann's like, wait a minute.
01:16:58.280 I'm still angrily blogging at my phone in my basement.
01:17:01.700 Doesn't that count?
01:17:03.440 I saw one of his latest rants for Keith Olbermann and I almost never see them.
01:17:08.700 I almost.
01:17:09.080 I mean, he's never.
01:17:10.020 Disappeared from society.
01:17:11.040 Completely.
01:17:11.900 But, you know, he, every once in a while, you'll see something that pops up from him that he did at his Central Park West.
01:17:17.780 Uh, penthouse or wherever he is.
01:17:21.160 He's out on his balcony.
01:17:21.880 Does he really still have that?
01:17:22.780 I guess so.
01:17:23.660 I guess.
01:17:24.200 I don't know how.
01:17:24.500 I mean, he did have a good career at the beginning.
01:17:26.840 Yeah.
01:17:27.320 He had a few years where he probably made millions of dollars.
01:17:29.520 I mean, it's been a while.
01:17:30.080 When he was with Dan Patrick on ESPN, they probably did really well.
01:17:34.020 But now he's, he's found this new angle where he's, he's positioned the camera about five feet above him.
01:17:41.860 And he's, he's looking up at the camera because I, I guess he thinks the new angle is going to really score big for him.
01:17:49.500 Uh, but I don't even know what he said.
01:17:51.220 I couldn't, I couldn't even pay attention to it because of the camera angle.
01:17:56.100 But that's one of those things that I feel like is a good reminder.
01:17:59.600 You're, you kind of like go through difficult periods in your life and like you think, you know, things aren't going your way and they can never turn around and it can't get any darker.
01:18:08.600 And then you realize, well, Keith Olbermann, it could be him.
01:18:11.340 It could be worse.
01:18:13.500 Right.
01:18:14.000 It could be much, much worse.
01:18:15.400 You could be Keith Olbermann.
01:18:16.760 And then everything seems fine.
01:18:19.140 Yeah.
01:18:19.380 Or you could be on MSNBC and, uh, and you could be Simone Sanders trying to decide, uh, who's going to be deported next because, you know, we're deporting everybody right now.
01:18:31.840 We are?
01:18:32.360 Yes.
01:18:32.580 Why are all of our numbers for deportations lower than previous administrations?
01:18:36.740 Yeah.
01:18:36.960 Isn't that interesting?
01:18:37.760 I think, I think president Trump has deported something like a hundred thousand people.
01:18:41.620 And at the same point, um, uh, Joe Biden was something like double that.
01:18:48.440 Oh, really?
01:18:48.820 With deportations.
01:18:49.720 Yeah.
01:18:49.740 Glenn with some of these numbers yesterday.
01:18:50.960 I can't remember them off the top of my head, but Clinton was always, is always one of the highest ones.
01:18:54.820 Way beyond.
01:18:55.360 By the way, I don't say this in defense of Donald Trump.
01:18:58.520 I hope that he gets around to it.
01:19:00.380 Yeah.
01:19:00.720 You know what I mean?
01:19:01.080 I think the numbers will come up.
01:19:02.460 I don't think it's because he's not trying to deport people.
01:19:04.580 I think he's going after criminals first.
01:19:06.840 And perhaps that's the reason why.
01:19:08.880 Also, a lot, far fewer people crossing right now.
01:19:12.220 So, right.
01:19:12.700 Fewer, fewer, fewer opportunities to just immediately deport someone who just crossed.
01:19:17.260 Right.
01:19:17.620 Uh, so there are reasons for those numbers.
01:19:19.520 I wouldn't say it's because, you know, Joe Biden was tougher on the border than Donald Trump.
01:19:24.460 That's not the point we're making by any means, but it is sort of absurd that we, we hear that
01:19:30.320 he's like, you know, this deporter in chief and he's deporting everybody.
01:19:33.380 Like that's not really happening yet.
01:19:36.300 But Simone's, uh, MSNBC, Simone, uh, Sanders is going to let you know who's next on the
01:19:43.820 deportation list.
01:19:44.900 Uh, I've been talking about this all week, but Janae Nelson of the NAACP Legal Defense
01:19:49.740 Fund, she penned an op-ed in The Nation this week.
01:19:53.580 I'm sure it was good.
01:19:54.180 And her op-ed talked about that we think that democracies, um, are, the way they die
01:20:00.860 is dramatically through these wars and blood is shed and it's, it's, it's cinematic in
01:20:06.740 a sense, but really the realistic way in which democracies die is it is dismantled brick by
01:20:12.840 brick, piece by piece.
01:20:13.900 And she says, um, that what we are seeing now with the lawlessness, um, from the, this administration
01:20:19.500 are really the canaries in the coal mine gasping for air.
01:20:22.980 I'm paraphrasing here.
01:20:24.060 But to me, that is why Kilmar Abrego Garcia's specific case, um, the case of the gentleman
01:20:32.380 who's a makeup artist out of California who was also sent to that prison.
01:20:35.880 That is why the, the, the more, the 75% of the folks who have been sent, the men who
01:20:40.760 have been sent there that don't have criminal records, that is why this is so important
01:20:44.260 because if they could do it to them and we, if they could snatch students off the street
01:20:48.380 without any pushback or recourse, they will do it to any of us.
01:20:52.480 To be very clear, it's going to be the people of color and vulnerable communities that are
01:20:57.140 next in line.
01:20:58.340 I think that's right.
01:20:59.280 And that's certainly, that's right.
01:21:00.400 That's right.
01:21:01.200 It makes a lot of sense, even though it's completely idiotic.
01:21:03.620 Thank you so much.
01:21:04.540 We are like, we are not for this.
01:21:06.300 I can't take it anymore.
01:21:07.480 Thank you, Pat.
01:21:08.160 I agree.
01:21:09.820 Exactly what you just said.
01:21:11.020 The most insane thing in the world that U.S. citizens are just going to be deported
01:21:14.320 because of the color of their skin.
01:21:15.400 I totally agree.
01:21:16.300 I'm not going to act like that's a controversial statement at all.
01:21:19.540 It is a totally normal thing to have just said.
01:21:22.260 Thank you, Simone.
01:21:23.240 What a, what a wonderful piece of analysis as you butcher some terrible op-ed in the nation.
01:21:29.900 Unreal.
01:21:30.260 I got so, so much there too.
01:21:33.320 And why do I care how democracies fall apart?
01:21:37.520 We're not one.
01:21:38.600 Right.
01:21:38.860 Go ahead and let them fall apart.
01:21:41.140 I don't care.
01:21:42.160 Yes.
01:21:42.440 We are a constitutional republic, not a democracy.
01:21:45.460 And by the way, my understanding was democracy died with thunderous applause.
01:21:49.400 Is that not accurate anymore?
01:21:50.560 No, it is.
01:21:51.140 It is accurate.
01:21:51.980 I thought it was always thunderous applause.
01:21:53.260 No, they don't fall apart piece by piece.
01:21:55.040 Like she said, they fall apart with thunderous applause.
01:21:57.480 Thank you.
01:21:58.000 I mean, we learned that from Natalie Portman years and years ago.
01:22:01.380 Who, by the way, is next after they go for people of color.
01:22:04.360 They're going to go for short white girls.
01:22:06.960 That, that Natalie Portman's next.
01:22:08.540 Uh-huh.
01:22:09.020 They're all, everyone who's associated with somebody that, that they, that MSNBC likes,
01:22:15.760 they're the, they're next on the list.
01:22:17.520 Yep.
01:22:17.620 Gets scared, everybody.
01:22:18.760 Yep.
01:22:19.220 So this is how liberty dies.
01:22:20.740 Liberty.
01:22:21.200 Liberty not.
01:22:22.280 With thunderous applause.
01:22:23.700 With thunderous applause.
01:22:24.660 Thunderous applause.
01:22:25.000 Thank you, Natalie.
01:22:25.580 Honestly, it's just so.
01:22:28.680 So ridiculous.
01:22:29.820 Ridiculous.
01:22:30.700 Oh, man.
01:22:31.420 And like, I, I don't know.
01:22:32.480 I, you know, I don't know anything about Simone Sanders.
01:22:35.240 I don't know her background.
01:22:36.860 I mean, she very well could just be this dumb.
01:22:40.500 But my belief is that she's just trying to scare her audience.
01:22:44.520 There's no evidence whatsoever that any of that is happening.
01:22:48.420 And have you noticed like a reversal in what the left does?
01:22:50.560 It used to be that when they wanted to make a point, they would target the most sympathetic
01:22:55.560 case possible, right?
01:22:57.280 Rosa Parks, right?
01:22:58.320 They had someone else who was, they had the back of the bus thing back in the day.
01:23:02.940 Again, like there's different groups and different political associations at this time, but separate
01:23:08.120 that from this analogy for a moment.
01:23:09.340 But they had someone else who had also stood up and decided they weren't going to leave
01:23:15.060 the bus and they weren't going to go to the back of the bus.
01:23:17.700 And because of who it was, I can't remember the exact details.
01:23:20.840 Glenn knows the story.
01:23:21.520 Well, he's told it before, but it basically was someone who, you know, it was like a,
01:23:24.160 maybe a teenage mother.
01:23:25.500 It was someone who at the time would be seen as unsympathetic.
01:23:28.680 Right.
01:23:29.020 And so they waited until they had the right person because they wanted to make sure this
01:23:33.180 stuff wouldn't happen.
01:23:34.340 Right.
01:23:34.640 Like it wouldn't be like, oh, everyone will be questioning the other things that they did.
01:23:37.280 And today's modern left is like, wait, a wife beater is in trouble.
01:23:42.000 What can we do?
01:23:43.680 Oh gosh, a wife beater gang member is in need.
01:23:48.000 There's no need to fear.
01:23:49.220 The Democrats are here and they come to, like they're picking the worst.
01:23:53.060 There are legitimate examples of people who were in really tough times, probably were
01:23:58.200 persecuted in other countries that came here from Venezuela or something that, you know,
01:24:02.940 had asylum.
01:24:04.000 Their families were tortured by left wing dictators.
01:24:07.280 And they came here and they, and, and they, they built a life and there are sympathetic
01:24:11.400 examples of people who could be deported because of illegal immigration.
01:24:15.740 They don't use them.
01:24:16.900 They're like, ah, let's find the number 13 person and try to defend them.
01:24:20.280 Incredible.
01:24:21.220 Triple eight, seven, two, seven back.
01:24:22.580 So, you know, the mother's day is coming, uh, but you don't need a holiday to tell you who
01:24:28.520 deserves comfort.
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01:24:49.040 If you are thinking, uh, head to mother's day.
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01:25:26.940 This is Glenn Beck.
01:25:36.680 There are certain things in life you assume are safe, like your house.
01:25:51.700 You know, that's one of them.
01:25:53.160 You're maybe you paid your mortgage.
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01:27:15.020 It's Pat and Stu for Glenn, 888-727-BECK.
01:27:30.840 Coming up, we've got to share with you Chris Matthews' thoughts on Donald Trump because they're
01:27:35.720 brilliant.
01:27:36.440 I mean, he's so reasonable and so wise.
01:27:42.700 Is he?
01:27:43.220 Yeah.
01:27:43.620 Oh, wait till you hear.
01:27:45.960 The wisdom that spills out of his face is really stunning.
01:27:50.380 Stunning, really.
01:27:51.540 Also, Bill Maher with Charlie Kirk.
01:27:53.840 That's a combination you don't normally expect.
01:27:58.880 But we've got some interesting thoughts from the two of them coming up and much more on the way.
01:28:08.840 This is Glenn Beck.
01:28:13.060 Let me tell you about a burner launcher.
01:28:26.340 Someday, something terrible could happen.
01:28:28.160 You don't know when.
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01:28:29.640 There could be a knock on the door that doesn't feel right or a stranger stepping into your space
01:28:33.660 too fast, too close.
01:28:35.260 The threat could be non-serious.
01:28:37.540 Maybe it's nothing.
01:28:38.080 But what if it's not?
01:28:39.860 It's why you have to carry a burner launcher because if you want to be prepared for that
01:28:44.220 one day you hope never comes, burner can help you do that.
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01:29:06.520 a split second.
01:29:07.740 You don't carry it because you're paranoid.
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01:30:19.760 Oh, oh, oh, oh, yeah.
01:30:21.780 Down the road where shadows hide.
01:30:24.880 Feel the dark on every side.
01:30:27.520 Stand your ground when times get dark.
01:30:29.940 Gotta face the dark and embrace the fire.
01:30:34.460 The fusion of entertainment and enlightenment.
01:30:37.820 And this is the Glenn Beck Program.
01:30:45.580 Today with Pat and Stu for Glenn.
01:30:49.360 Wow.
01:30:50.200 The comparisons the left is making of Donald Trump to Hitler continue.
01:30:57.040 I thought that was completely out of line and uncalled for and unacceptable.
01:31:02.500 You know, it's just too effective, Pat.
01:31:04.220 Too effective?
01:31:04.780 It's too effective.
01:31:05.180 It worked so well during the campaign that they thought they'd keep doing it, I guess.
01:31:10.780 And they are.
01:31:12.420 Go back to that same playbook over and over again.
01:31:14.260 Because that was working really well for you.
01:31:15.980 We'll get into that and much more coming up in one minute.
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01:32:33.800 For some reason, CNN and CNN personalities, both current and former, continue to turn to Chris Matthews for wisdom for some reason.
01:32:45.140 I don't know.
01:32:46.480 Jim Acosta.
01:32:47.980 Did you realize that Jim Acosta has a podcast?
01:32:51.140 I did not.
01:32:52.800 Is it good?
01:32:53.660 Oh, no.
01:32:56.460 It's not.
01:32:56.940 Okay.
01:32:57.440 Because it seemed like you were about to say yes, and you were going to describe how great it was.
01:33:01.060 I couldn't even joke about that, though.
01:33:02.940 I couldn't even bring myself to pretend like it's good.
01:33:07.360 He had Chris Matthews on, and here's what Chris had to say about Donald Trump.
01:33:13.080 The OJ trial all day.
01:33:15.320 That's right.
01:33:16.660 It's so true, and it just dominated our lives.
01:33:19.380 I remember that.
01:33:20.680 But the other thing, you know, one thing that every taxi driver will talk about these days is Donald Trump.
01:33:25.780 And I have to ask you some newsy questions before we spend the entire time together reminiscing.
01:33:31.540 I got a nasty one for you.
01:33:33.420 Okay.
01:33:33.800 Well, good.
01:33:34.240 I'm just wondering.
01:33:34.860 What did Hitler do in the Holocaust?
01:33:37.560 He took people from Germany to other countries.
01:33:41.560 Yeah.
01:33:41.960 Yeah.
01:33:42.180 There was no German law.
01:33:43.760 That was it.
01:33:44.240 There was not even a pretense of German law.
01:33:45.860 They took him to Poland or, you know, you're hungry or whatever, and he killed him.
01:33:50.340 And he killed him.
01:33:50.880 So, when you see what's happening right now with this El Salvadoran gulag, I mean, this Seacott gulag, he's basically taking a page out of that playbook, you think?
01:34:00.800 Well, it gets him out of the country.
01:34:02.160 And he gets this president of El Salvador to say, now, if I were at CNN or MSNBC and I was in that Oval Office, I would have asked two questions.
01:34:13.860 These are not original.
01:34:14.680 First question to the president of Salvador, if President Trump asked you to send this guy Garcia back to the United States, would you do it?
01:34:22.040 Then I'd go to President and I'd go to Trump.
01:34:24.440 Next question, Mr. President Trump, will you ask him to send him back?
01:34:29.620 Exactly.
01:34:30.720 I don't want to – of course, it's up to him to do it if he doesn't get facilitated by Trump, if he's not asked to do it.
01:34:37.980 But Trump doesn't have said anything.
01:34:40.020 Well, and I –
01:34:41.320 That's journalism.
01:34:42.020 No, and there's a component here that is deeply –
01:34:46.480 I really like listening to my podcast, like Zoom calls, where they just keep constantly talking over each other.
01:34:51.240 You do like that?
01:34:52.060 I think it's great.
01:34:53.300 Because a lot of people don't.
01:34:56.100 Really?
01:34:56.620 Yeah, that's strange that you do.
01:34:58.480 One thing I really despise is hearing one word at a time.
01:35:03.600 I like to hear two or three words layered on top of each other so that I can't particularly understand any of them.
01:35:09.760 Okay.
01:35:10.320 I think that's great.
01:35:11.280 It seems like a great show.
01:35:12.460 I'm surprised it's not – it hasn't taken off, though.
01:35:14.380 I know.
01:35:15.220 I know.
01:35:15.600 Because I haven't heard anything about this Jim Acosta podcast.
01:35:17.960 It is absolutely stunning.
01:35:21.280 And what happened – where's the ADL on this stuff?
01:35:25.000 Yeah, now you can compare everything to Hitler.
01:35:27.360 Yeah.
01:35:27.540 That's fine.
01:35:28.020 It's perfectly fine.
01:35:29.060 You remember if Glenn ever said anything about Hitler, ever, or the Holocaust, how dare he invoke the Holocaust or Jewish people having to suffer through things?
01:35:46.060 And it's usually like in the context of Hamas.
01:35:49.240 Yeah.
01:35:49.560 And it's like, well, I think that's actually a pretty good comparison.
01:35:52.440 Now, they may not be able to accomplish their goals at the scale of the Nazis, but they believe kind of the same stuff.
01:35:58.880 And they'll be like, how dare you bring up the Holocaust when you're talking about a group of people murdering Jews?
01:36:06.720 It kind of seems like maybe they're tied together loosely.
01:36:09.420 I don't think one person going to Salvador, as Chris Matthews described it, is exactly the same.
01:36:20.540 So there's a – you know, because, yes, it's true.
01:36:23.100 Some people were deported from Germany in that era.
01:36:26.780 Not really, though, what the period was known for.
01:36:31.760 No.
01:36:32.460 Yeah.
01:36:32.840 There was a lot more that went on there.
01:36:34.360 I think if it had just stopped the deportations, you probably wouldn't really be as familiar with the name Hitler as you are today.
01:36:42.260 It might not be that you might not have liked him.
01:36:43.840 You might have thought he was a bad leader of Germany or whatever.
01:36:46.280 But I don't think he would have the historical significance if what he did was have people occasionally move.
01:36:51.280 So you think the death of six million people had something to do with the reputation of Adolf Hitler?
01:36:59.980 Yeah, I straight up believe that, Pat.
01:37:01.380 Yeah, I think his reputation is largely formed by the murdering of six million Jews, along with many other people.
01:37:08.560 That does seem to be an important element.
01:37:10.240 Yeah.
01:37:10.920 I think it's – I think it's – you know, I dare say it's foundational to what we remember him for.
01:37:17.140 Now, I'm sure his immigration policies were not up to snuff.
01:37:20.420 And I'm sure there was, at some point, some questionable gang member that he deported improperly.
01:37:28.000 And I'm sure the stories are almost identical, but it went a little farther with the whole Hitler thing, if you remember right.
01:37:38.100 That's kind of what he's remembered for.
01:37:39.600 It went to genocide, which I don't think this quite raises to the level of that or lowers to the level of that.
01:37:50.280 Well, we just heard that he was going to deport American citizens of color.
01:37:54.560 We did hear that.
01:37:55.340 Now, that hasn't happened.
01:37:56.660 No.
01:37:57.300 Nor is it planned.
01:37:58.520 It's a total made-up fever dream of the left.
01:38:00.900 But if that were to happen, it still probably wouldn't go to the level of Hitler, which was really a pretty unique circumstance in history, unless you're talking about all the people that those on the left praise, like Mao and Stalin.
01:38:15.960 Because then it's not all that unique, because a lot of people did it when you're talking about communism.
01:38:20.300 But outside of that context, pretty rare.
01:38:23.220 Pretty rare.
01:38:24.060 I – you know, it's – the left is so out of control right now.
01:38:28.860 Elizabeth Warren was also on a podcast yesterday, and she had some fascinating things to say.
01:38:37.720 She was actually challenged by this person.
01:38:40.900 And I'm – maybe it's just me, but I felt like this person might be trans – a trans person.
01:38:48.820 Why?
01:38:49.120 Did they either hear the pronouns or –
01:38:51.600 I don't know if there were pronouns.
01:38:54.560 So you don't – you didn't hear the – how would you have even a guess as to what gender they were?
01:38:58.860 What would manifest?
01:39:01.760 I'm going to tell you the truth.
01:39:03.440 Okay, sure.
01:39:04.320 Stu, I base this purely on visual.
01:39:07.600 What?
01:39:08.780 Identification.
01:39:09.460 How would you visually identify someone's gender?
01:39:12.220 Visually identifying what this person may or may not be.
01:39:15.160 You can't tell that by looking at –
01:39:16.060 That's wrong of me, right.
01:39:16.960 I know.
01:39:17.780 I know.
01:39:18.300 It's really wrong of me.
01:39:20.420 I mean, it's a complete flip of the coin.
01:39:22.240 Yeah.
01:39:22.440 I mean, you tell me.
01:39:23.760 You tell me if I'm way, way off base here because I may be.
01:39:27.680 Okay.
01:39:28.160 But here's Elizabeth Warren being challenged by this person.
01:39:32.520 Do you regret saying that President Biden had a mental acuity?
01:39:36.240 He had a sharpness to him.
01:39:37.720 You said that up until July of last year.
01:39:40.260 Hmm.
01:39:41.020 I said what I believe to be true.
01:39:43.600 And you think he was as sharp as you?
01:39:45.140 Um, I said I had not seen decline.
01:39:52.380 Oh, my gosh.
01:39:54.340 And I hadn't at that point.
01:39:56.460 You did not see any decline from 2024 Joe Biden to 2021 Joe Biden?
01:40:01.140 Not when I said that.
01:40:02.680 Uh-huh.
01:40:03.040 You know the –
01:40:03.620 God, she's a liar.
01:40:04.660 Oh, my gosh.
01:40:05.420 The thing is –
01:40:05.720 It's unbelievable.
01:40:06.640 It's unbelievable.
01:40:08.520 He was sharp.
01:40:10.360 Right.
01:40:10.640 He was on his feet.
01:40:12.140 I saw a live event.
01:40:13.800 I had meetings with him a couple of times.
01:40:16.220 He was on his feet.
01:40:16.420 Senator, on his feet is not praise.
01:40:20.720 Thank you.
01:40:21.280 He can speak in sentences is not praise.
01:40:24.340 All right.
01:40:24.680 Fair enough.
01:40:25.560 Fair enough.
01:40:25.800 Fair enough.
01:40:27.000 Look.
01:40:28.440 That's so great.
01:40:29.000 It is –
01:40:30.080 The question is, what are we going to do now?
01:40:34.080 Okay.
01:40:34.740 Okay.
01:40:35.440 Now, okay.
01:40:36.060 Now, first of all, on the trans issue, was I way out of line?
01:40:39.080 Yeah, I don't know where you got that from at all.
01:40:40.520 I will say, trans or not, it's a freaking fantastic interview.
01:40:43.000 It is great.
01:40:44.260 I mean, the person did – they did well to challenge –
01:40:48.580 They did well.
01:40:49.400 They did well.
01:40:49.920 They did well.
01:40:50.520 Whatever group of people you're speaking of did well.
01:40:53.180 Yes.
01:40:53.880 That is not – I mean, she legitimately laughs.
01:40:57.940 She does.
01:40:58.620 When –
01:40:59.140 She tries to squelch a laugh when she's asked if he's as sharp as she is.
01:41:04.740 Yeah.
01:41:05.180 She thought that was ridiculous.
01:41:06.720 Of course not.
01:41:08.480 But that's what she was telling the American people.
01:41:10.820 Yep.
01:41:11.800 That's an incredible – that's actually a legitimately incredible moment.
01:41:14.400 It is.
01:41:14.820 That hurt, as you point out, squelching a laugh.
01:41:16.900 She is – she knows what she's saying.
01:41:20.680 The lies that she has told are so ridiculous, she can't keep a straight face through telling them.
01:41:26.420 Right.
01:41:26.880 That's incredible.
01:41:28.420 And I – by the way, I also – on the – I don't know on the trans situation.
01:41:32.500 I also – like, would you – which – did you have a directional – like, which transition occurred?
01:41:41.000 I don't.
01:41:41.740 You don't know?
01:41:42.120 I don't know.
01:41:43.680 I was trying to decipher that.
01:41:45.740 What's the name of the – do you have the name of the host?
01:41:47.280 I didn't have the name of the host.
01:41:48.260 Well, the name – does the name tell you –
01:41:49.640 The name would be helpful maybe – oh, Sam is the name.
01:41:52.580 Oh, that doesn't help at all.
01:41:53.400 So, that doesn't help at all.
01:41:54.540 Could be Samantha.
01:41:55.360 Stop.
01:41:55.660 Or it could be Samuel.
01:41:56.880 I don't – I don't know.
01:41:58.600 And that's –
01:41:59.400 It's not important, though.
01:42:00.260 I will say.
01:42:00.660 It's not important.
01:42:01.200 They did a good job.
01:42:02.700 They did.
01:42:03.860 Actually caring about the answer.
01:42:06.080 Yeah.
01:42:06.320 Not as an interview in service of some, you know, political outcome.
01:42:12.100 Right.
01:42:12.340 Actually trying to get an answer from someone who is a liar.
01:42:16.180 Yeah.
01:42:16.880 Elizabeth Warren is legitimately among the worst.
01:42:20.260 The worst of the worst.
01:42:21.280 She is terrible in every way.
01:42:24.880 There's nothing redeeming about Elizabeth Warren.
01:42:27.240 I mean, seriously, she's terrible.
01:42:28.300 I know.
01:42:29.620 Exactly.
01:42:30.680 And that person did a very good job of pinning her down on that.
01:42:34.860 That person did.
01:42:35.480 That person was great on that particular issue.
01:42:39.220 I mean, to sit there and – because anybody else on the left, anybody who has her on a podcast,
01:42:46.340 I'm sure she didn't expect this at all, to be challenged like this.
01:42:50.180 Yeah.
01:42:50.780 She thought – I'm sure she thought that they were going to go along with it and just say,
01:42:54.980 yeah, right, right, he was fine for that particular time period.
01:43:00.040 When, you know, good and well that Joe Biden was not fine and Elizabeth Warren knew he wasn't fine.
01:43:08.200 And to challenge her on that is refreshing.
01:43:13.140 And then for her to come back and say – and to continue the lie and to say,
01:43:16.620 at that time I didn't know, you liar, you pathetic liar.
01:43:21.180 Absolute garbage.
01:43:21.860 That is disgusting.
01:43:23.340 It is.
01:43:23.640 We 100% knew what was going on.
01:43:26.520 Everybody did.
01:43:27.580 We didn't even have inside information.
01:43:29.400 We didn't have any aides who were working with this guy on a daily basis.
01:43:33.600 We didn't have any insight other than what we saw publicly.
01:43:37.180 And all of us knew.
01:43:38.600 Everybody in the audience knew.
01:43:40.400 Every single person who watched him on television knew.
01:43:43.640 And you all tried to lie about it and, frankly, were able to convince, I think, some on the left that it was true.
01:43:50.900 Yeah, I think they did.
01:43:52.020 You know, I mean, they maintained that the whole time up until, really, the debate between he and Donald Trump.
01:43:59.640 That was really the first time they finally admitted, okay, yeah, he's been in decline for a long time.
01:44:04.860 Okay, where's this been the whole time?
01:44:09.000 I mean, it borders, to me, it borders on treason because you saw a president of the United States in complete mental decline and you did nothing about it?
01:44:19.660 In fact, except for lie about it and tell the American people that everything was fine when it clearly was not.
01:44:29.220 All right, 888-727-BECK.
01:44:31.280 More coming up in one minute.
01:44:32.760 And then, of course, they switched immediately to the golden age of journalism where they all were like incredible reporters uncovering all of this information for two weeks until it dropped out.
01:44:42.600 Right.
01:44:42.800 And then they all went back to their normal practices.
01:44:45.280 Fascinating.
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01:45:56.500 You know, our natural wonders are, you know, inspired.
01:46:04.040 A little strolled up memory lane.
01:46:05.100 Reflection inspires our right to take action.
01:46:07.800 You know, America is a nation that can be defined in a single word.
01:46:13.900 Yeah.
01:46:14.100 I was in the foothills of the Himalayas with Xi Jinping, traveling with them.
01:46:22.220 There's no sign.
01:46:23.120 Traveled 17,000 miles.
01:46:25.060 I don't know that for a fact.
01:46:27.140 A solid meeting with the...
01:46:33.620 With who?
01:46:34.140 They make a very good point.
01:46:35.500 Here's the deal.
01:46:36.560 What's the deal?
01:46:37.440 Uh-huh.
01:46:39.080 Here's what drives the driver...
01:46:42.320 Drives the driver in the states.
01:46:44.280 ...that are affected.
01:46:45.360 Yeah.
01:46:45.580 We owe these truths to be self-evident.
01:46:47.720 You're right.
01:46:48.200 All men and women created by...
01:46:50.080 Go, you know the thing.
01:46:52.920 Of Putin's kleptocracy.
01:46:55.940 Yeah.
01:46:57.060 Yeah.
01:46:58.640 Kleptocracy.
01:47:00.720 Just a little reminder.
01:47:02.760 There's no way to tell.
01:47:03.900 You know, he's top of his game.
01:47:05.640 So sharp.
01:47:06.240 Sharp as a tack.
01:47:07.840 There was no way to tell.
01:47:09.120 Remember, she's saying that she was in private meetings with him and noticing how on the ball he was.
01:47:14.580 Up until that debate.
01:47:15.460 And then they all switched.
01:47:17.080 All on the same day.
01:47:18.540 All decided that everything was terrible.
01:47:21.040 And it was obvious he should be dropping out.
01:47:23.200 And they put pressure on him.
01:47:24.380 And every news source had story after story after story of insiders who have known this the whole time.
01:47:30.220 Yeah.
01:47:30.400 And all the stories going back years about how he was falling asleep in meetings.
01:47:35.280 And he would stop in the middle of sentences.
01:47:37.560 They all had all these stories just ready to go when they needed them.
01:47:40.440 And we entered into the golden age of journalism.
01:47:43.620 Yeah.
01:47:44.020 Which lasted for two weeks where every journalist in the media did their job.
01:47:48.080 Because they wanted him out.
01:47:49.240 So they all did their job.
01:47:50.480 And they all reported all the things that they knew for two weeks.
01:47:52.740 And then it was over again.
01:47:54.120 Yeah.
01:47:54.280 Then Kamala Harris was a groundbreaking, brilliant woman who was going to, you know, the glass ceiling was finally going to be shattered.
01:48:03.640 And we went to that mode right after that.
01:48:05.040 But those two weeks were really like, it's how the media should operate on a daily basis.
01:48:10.300 And it proved once and for all they all were capable of it.
01:48:13.540 And the insiders who knew the whole time, we're finding out now, even his chief of staff, Ron Klain, talked about how out of it he was.
01:48:24.000 He talked about how during the debate and the preparation leading up to the debate with Donald Trump, he didn't even know what they were talking about half the time.
01:48:37.000 And then when he got to the debate with Donald Trump, Ron Klain said Biden didn't even know what Trump was saying.
01:48:44.880 He didn't even know how to respond to the questions he was being asked because he didn't know what was going on.
01:48:51.720 I mean, that's pretty bad.
01:48:52.560 It really is.
01:48:53.100 I mean, that is pretty bad.
01:48:54.640 And it was like happening in real time.
01:48:56.140 And it was obviously so important.
01:48:57.460 We really didn't, didn't really.
01:48:59.860 It was worse than we thought it was.
01:49:01.340 Appreciate how crazy it was.
01:49:02.220 I don't think I'll ever be more shocked in my entire life as to watching him walk out for that debate.
01:49:07.780 You knew immediately it was going to be a catastrophe.
01:49:11.560 Yeah.
01:49:11.720 He looked like he didn't even know where he was going.
01:49:13.520 He was, remember how pale he was?
01:49:14.380 That's because he didn't.
01:49:15.220 He didn't.
01:49:15.940 He didn't know.
01:49:17.060 Yeah.
01:49:17.200 And like, again, I didn't expect him to perform well.
01:49:19.860 But we had seen previously for some of those things, he would come out and he would be, he would scream a lot and he would show at least energy.
01:49:27.760 Right.
01:49:28.080 And he'd get through them poorly, but he'd get through them.
01:49:32.300 They couldn't, with one day, with one two-hour period, all they had to do was get him through one two-hour period.
01:49:39.580 Couldn't do it.
01:49:40.200 And they couldn't even do that.
01:49:41.880 That's shocking.
01:49:42.520 Was that the event where Obama helped him off the stage, helped him down the two steps?
01:49:47.920 Was it, was that the debate or?
01:49:49.940 Yeah, there was.
01:49:50.920 I don't, was it Obama?
01:49:51.840 Do you remember that?
01:49:52.200 I do remember.
01:49:52.860 I think it was his wife that did it at that event.
01:49:55.220 Yeah, it might have been.
01:49:55.880 It was Dr. Jill.
01:49:56.180 It might have been Jill.
01:49:57.360 Obama helped him at a different.
01:49:58.500 I'm sorry, who?
01:49:59.240 I'm sorry, Dr. Jill.
01:50:00.260 Thank you.
01:50:01.120 It was almost disrespectful of me.
01:50:03.120 But Dr. Dr. Jill.
01:50:04.620 Dr. Jill Biden.
01:50:05.340 Jill Biden.
01:50:06.040 Who did, I believe, help him down the stairs on that one.
01:50:08.740 And there were those two little teeny stairs.
01:50:10.900 I mean, it was hardly anything to even navigate.
01:50:13.460 And she had to help him down them.
01:50:15.980 I know what they're saying.
01:50:17.020 And I will say this is wrong.
01:50:18.360 But they, he is having, and I think you can say a lot of things about Joe Biden, but he's
01:50:23.400 having trouble now booking $300,000 speeches.
01:50:26.240 I saw that.
01:50:27.400 That's wrong.
01:50:28.140 That is wrong.
01:50:28.640 He deserves every bit of that money, of course.
01:50:31.580 Sure.
01:50:32.240 He was once president of the United States, a terrible one.
01:50:34.560 Yeah.
01:50:34.980 But obviously, he should get $300,000 for an hour to go talk.
01:50:38.420 That's a, that's a right of any president who leaves office.
01:50:43.380 Yes, it is.
01:50:43.960 They should be able to fund their lavish lifestyle with $300,000 an hour speeches.
01:50:48.280 And it's less than Barack Obama made.
01:50:51.460 He was making $400,000 per speech.
01:50:53.360 What are we going to, I mean, what are you going to make this guy go speak somewhere for
01:50:55.800 $175,000 an hour?
01:50:57.660 No, you can't expect that.
01:50:58.500 You can't do that.
01:50:58.960 You can't.
01:50:59.620 You can't do that.
01:51:00.120 That's wrong.
01:51:00.560 Every single one of our presidents, no matter how terrible, deserves at least $300,000 an
01:51:07.080 hour to go speak.
01:51:08.680 At least.
01:51:09.220 Come on, America.
01:51:09.960 Step up.
01:51:16.220 This is Glenn Beck.
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01:53:04.180 It's Pat and Stu for Glenn, 888-727-BECK.
01:53:11.420 We had this just incredible tragedy in the DFW area.
01:53:16.460 I think it was two weeks ago where you had the two 17-year-olds in a tent in this track
01:53:25.560 meet in Frisco, Texas.
01:53:27.280 And one of them was not supposed to be there and was told by another that he needed to go
01:53:34.480 somewhere else.
01:53:35.760 And Carmelo Anthony said to Austin Metcalf, touch me and see what happens.
01:53:43.260 And so Austin Metcalf did, in fact, touch him and got stabbed in the heart for it.
01:53:49.220 And so ever since then, it seems as though there are forces that are just trying to blame
01:54:00.620 the victim again, once again.
01:54:03.740 I mean, it's a similar situation to the UHC CEO.
01:54:09.200 It was his fault, I guess, that he got shot in the back.
01:54:11.680 And it's inconceivable to me that the left continues to try to make murder okay.
01:54:20.060 It's amazing what's been going on lately.
01:54:23.180 It is very true, though.
01:54:24.080 It is their direction.
01:54:26.060 It really is.
01:54:27.080 White fears are okay.
01:54:27.520 They're sympathetic characters.
01:54:28.980 Murderers are sympathetic characters.
01:54:31.240 We had an essay that we featured earlier this week, which was asking, at what point do you
01:54:35.220 step up and start killing conservatives because they're doing things that you don't want?
01:54:38.900 Wow.
01:54:40.040 That was just okay.
01:54:40.880 That's just okay now.
01:54:42.380 That's the conversation we're supposed to allow having.
01:54:45.560 And like, this is not new.
01:54:50.720 The left has tried to go to this place a lot over the past.
01:54:54.960 I think the difference is that it's just so, it's mainstream now.
01:54:57.780 I mean, we just had Elizabeth Warren play the clip of her.
01:55:01.140 Her answer to the UnitedHealthcare murder was, yeah, violence is bad, but healthcare, you know?
01:55:07.960 There's no but there.
01:55:09.800 No, no.
01:55:10.080 And every time they go down that road, violence is bad, but you know it's going to be ugly.
01:55:16.460 So, the Carmelo Anthony family has apparently appointed this spokesman, Dominique Alexander,
01:55:24.700 to speak for the family.
01:55:27.380 And he is not doing a great job, to my way of thinking.
01:55:35.020 I don't know if the Anthony family is happy with the job that he's doing, but here's who he tried to blame the other day at the press conference.
01:55:43.380 I'm trying to find how many of y'all have asked the superintendent or one single board of trustee,
01:55:51.480 why didn't you cancel or postpone with weather in that magnitude?
01:55:57.560 Two, you couldn't have a track meet in rain or thunderstorm or clouds.
01:56:03.180 Y'all are the media.
01:56:04.460 Ask your journalists, your weather journalists, how the weather was that day and that time.
01:56:11.040 Y'all do that research.
01:56:12.520 It rained.
01:56:13.120 Because as a person who is the administrator of, yet, children, you are responsible for the safety of the children.
01:56:28.300 And so, it seems as if Frisco ISD is trying to push this off.
01:56:32.900 On the actual killer?
01:56:37.840 Yeah, well.
01:56:38.440 That seems to be typical of law enforcement.
01:56:42.420 You're actually pushing this off on the person who actually killed that poor 17-year-old boy.
01:56:49.440 Yeah, I think they might be saying, yeah, you might want to blame the killer in this particular case.
01:56:57.780 It's not Frisco ISD because they went ahead with a track meet despite the rain.
01:57:04.200 So, he seems to be trying to say that if they had canceled the track meet, then the murder wouldn't have happened.
01:57:11.840 So, it's Frisco ISD's problem.
01:57:14.760 That's who's at fault here.
01:57:16.620 Well, I mean, look.
01:57:18.820 Wow.
01:57:19.500 Isn't it really the environment's fault?
01:57:21.440 Again, I know it's Earth Day.
01:57:22.740 Right.
01:57:22.980 But if that rain didn't fall in the first place.
01:57:26.380 Maybe they wouldn't have been under the tent.
01:57:28.540 Maybe that, you know, people are a seasonal affected disorder.
01:57:33.280 Okay.
01:57:34.260 Yeah.
01:57:34.800 People get upset when the weather turns a little nasty.
01:57:37.600 Uh-huh.
01:57:37.940 Their attitudes get a little darker.
01:57:40.440 Right.
01:57:41.060 And that leads to murder or something.
01:57:44.080 There's got to be some sort of excuse we can force in there.
01:57:46.580 Or what if you didn't have school?
01:57:49.100 Then you wouldn't have the school track meet.
01:57:51.920 And you wouldn't have had this event.
01:57:54.700 And it wouldn't have happened.
01:57:57.000 I just, I mean, this story is so crazy.
01:57:59.000 And we often, like, talk about stories like this.
01:58:01.020 And you're like, gosh, you know, can you believe the way this is being handled?
01:58:03.300 And then you think about this poor family.
01:58:05.320 Yeah.
01:58:05.760 Whose kid was just murdered for no reason.
01:58:08.620 Right.
01:58:08.880 And now they have to sit here in a world that is going to try to justify the murder because of some ridiculous, like, racial thing that they're trying to force in has nothing to do with the story whatsoever.
01:58:21.280 Here's the thing, Pat.
01:58:22.980 Let's just, let's remix this story a little bit.
01:58:26.040 Let's say the track athlete that was murdered, he instead started screaming the N-word at this particular individual, Carmelo Anthony.
01:58:39.280 Yeah.
01:58:39.520 Is his name not the basketball player?
01:58:41.260 And he just started, instead of saying, hey, he said, hey, you shouldn't be in this tent.
01:58:45.100 And he said, well, make me move.
01:58:46.460 And he said, okay.
01:58:47.000 And then he started screaming the N-word repeatedly, a hundred times in a row.
01:58:51.580 Would it then be okay if he was stabbed in the chest?
01:58:54.440 No, it would not.
01:58:55.560 No.
01:58:56.040 Even in the rain.
01:58:59.160 Well, wait, you didn't, you didn't give me the rain scenario was still a part of this.
01:59:03.020 The rain, I'm saying rain's still part of it.
01:59:05.520 Oh, wow.
01:59:06.080 Let me ask you this.
01:59:06.700 If the UnitedHealthcare CEO had specifically denied coverage to one of them?
01:59:11.740 To that, to that particular murderer.
01:59:13.680 Yeah.
01:59:14.560 Then.
01:59:14.900 And it was raining.
01:59:16.820 Would it then be okay?
01:59:18.700 You're making it really hard now.
01:59:19.840 Really hard.
01:59:20.480 I'm going to say no.
01:59:21.340 You still can't murder?
01:59:22.380 You still can't murder.
01:59:23.300 No.
01:59:24.520 No.
01:59:24.920 This is really a tricky one.
01:59:26.580 It's a hard one.
01:59:27.660 Would it be at least okay to beat your wife?
01:59:30.020 Is that okay?
01:59:30.840 Would that be okay?
01:59:31.620 Because I know the left loves that now, too.
01:59:34.180 They do seem to.
01:59:35.320 They seem to really respect people who.
01:59:37.220 They do seem to.
01:59:37.940 Potentially.
01:59:38.720 I mean, we don't know for sure that he was part of this MS-13 gang.
01:59:44.120 We just know that he was arrested with a bunch of members of MS-13.
01:59:48.240 Right.
01:59:48.360 And a source specifically pointed to him as a member of MS-13.
01:59:53.860 Now, I don't know if that's happened to you recently.
01:59:55.140 Also, his wife got a restraining order against him.
01:59:57.260 Well, we know the beating is another situation.
01:59:59.160 Yeah.
01:59:59.600 Yeah.
01:59:59.860 It's nice to know that they've repaired the relationship to the fact that she can act like she cares.
02:00:03.840 Wow.
02:00:04.160 Because, I don't know, frankly, if my spouse had beaten me, I wouldn't.
02:00:09.580 I'll be quite as upset about his being deported, but I guess that's a.
02:00:13.620 I wouldn't either, but I'm picky that way.
02:00:15.580 I am picky.
02:00:16.400 You know, we really are.
02:00:17.600 Yeah.
02:00:17.880 And even in the rain.
02:00:19.720 Really?
02:00:20.220 We still remain picky on such things.
02:00:23.840 But, like, I don't understand this approach from the left.
02:00:28.140 Like, these, we don't know for sure every aspect of this.
02:00:32.680 And we do know that there was a court ruling that, of course, said they're not supposed
02:00:35.240 to be deported to El Salvador.
02:00:36.480 But that doesn't matter.
02:00:37.420 I mean, it wouldn't mean that he lived here.
02:00:40.720 Right.
02:00:41.460 Right.
02:00:41.640 The only thing that might happen is he was to be deported to a different nation.
02:00:45.320 That's the difference we're talking about here.
02:00:47.960 Yeah.
02:00:48.820 There's really two things.
02:00:50.800 There was the protective order, supposedly, where he wasn't supposed to be deported right
02:00:55.060 then.
02:00:55.360 If they had just gone to court and cleared that up and they could have gotten that removed
02:01:01.520 and then deport him, that would have been okay, too.
02:01:06.600 I mean, isn't that really, wasn't that the administrative snafu that he went to the wrong
02:01:11.160 place and instead he went to the plane to be deported instead of court so that they could
02:01:18.360 have the hearing to remove the protection order?
02:01:21.460 Claudia was leaving for her pickleball tournament.
02:01:24.440 I've been visualizing my match all week.
02:01:26.980 She was so focused on visualizing that she didn't see the column behind her car on her
02:01:31.120 backhand side.
02:01:33.000 Good thing Claudia's with Intact, the insurer with the largest network of auto service centers
02:01:37.580 in the country.
02:01:38.680 Everything was taken care of under one roof and she was on her way in a rental car in
02:01:42.500 no time.
02:01:43.120 I made it to my tournament and lost in the first round.
02:01:46.320 But you got there on time.
02:01:48.520 Intact Insurance, your auto service ace.
02:01:50.720 Yes, certain conditions apply.
02:01:53.540 But I mean, there's just, there's no scenario under which any of this is okay that the left
02:02:00.760 is trying to smooth over.
02:02:03.280 Sometimes mistakes are made, Pat.
02:02:05.040 Sometimes you shoot a healthcare CEO in the back as he walks away from you and sometimes,
02:02:10.640 of course.
02:02:11.180 That's just a mistake.
02:02:12.020 Yeah, you stab a track athlete in the chest during a meet.
02:02:15.360 Another mistake.
02:02:16.020 Another oopsie.
02:02:17.140 Yeah.
02:02:17.340 Another type of mistake is when you come into the country, even though you're not allowed
02:02:23.940 to be here and come in illegally, but you just need asylum from your nation because your
02:02:29.320 mom's pupusa stand is being harassed.
02:02:33.080 And by the way, pupusas?
02:02:35.580 Yeah.
02:02:36.520 Tremendous.
02:02:37.040 Delicious.
02:02:37.540 They're so good.
02:02:38.580 They are good.
02:02:39.060 How did I not know about this until like this week?
02:02:41.620 The only reason I know about pupusas, or at least pupusas if I've ever tried them, was
02:02:46.020 because we talked about the MS-13 member's pupusa stand.
02:02:49.840 He was apparently being harassed at the pupusa stand by a rival gang.
02:02:55.780 Yeah.
02:02:56.000 And he was worried about that's why I came to America and forgot to tell anyone for five
02:02:59.620 years, which happens again.
02:03:01.980 Mistakes are made, Pat.
02:03:03.300 Right.
02:03:03.720 Exactly.
02:03:04.100 Sometimes, you know, you're thinking, gosh, that pupusa based harassment is a real problem
02:03:09.700 for me, but I forgot about it for the past half decade, you know, while I was going about
02:03:15.680 living my life.
02:03:16.520 This happens to people all the time.
02:03:18.300 All the time.
02:03:18.920 And why the Trump administration can't understand that, or can't find any sympathy for this
02:03:24.000 man who was just here to avoid pupusa based harassment and beat up on his wife a little
02:03:29.260 bit.
02:03:29.500 Why can't we just understand?
02:03:32.060 Maybe she wasn't making pupusas for him.
02:03:34.400 Has anyone considered that?
02:03:36.420 Not until this very moment.
02:03:37.840 Not until this very moment.
02:03:39.220 Wow.
02:03:39.980 You know?
02:03:40.700 So did you just try pupusas?
02:03:42.660 Yes.
02:03:43.240 You did?
02:03:43.620 Because of this story.
02:03:44.340 Because of the story, you tried a pupusa.
02:03:45.460 That is legitimately, in case you don't know, that is legitimately the story he told authorities.
02:03:49.160 Yeah.
02:03:49.280 That his mom had a pupusa stand.
02:03:51.340 There was a gang that was harassing the pupusa stand.
02:03:54.700 The pupusa stand, by the way.
02:03:56.420 They wanted protection money for the pupusa stand.
02:03:59.120 Now, we should also note the pupusa stand no longer exists, but his case was five years
02:04:03.820 later, gosh, I won't be able to go back home because I'll be harassed by this gang again.
02:04:09.120 Now, that is completely.
02:04:09.780 Yeah, but the pupusa stand doesn't exist anymore.
02:04:11.860 It doesn't exist.
02:04:12.000 So why would they ask for protection?
02:04:14.480 We don't know.
02:04:15.440 Again, I really do think that this is a bunch of lies from this guy.
02:04:20.160 And, you know, of course, I do think he was an MS-13 member.
02:04:22.980 I think the evidence, while not completely overwhelming on that front, does indicate that he was.
02:04:30.220 And certainly his excuse for being here was BS.
02:04:33.240 He wasn't supposed to be here.
02:04:34.660 His asylum claim, I think, was nonsense.
02:04:36.440 But that was his claim, that his mom's pupusa stand was being harassed.
02:04:43.320 And so even though the stand didn't exist anymore, he was still concerned about that harassment.
02:04:48.080 Now, when I heard that, I was like, what's a pupusa?
02:04:50.500 Then I started Googling it.
02:04:52.440 Or maybe I asked chat GBT.
02:04:54.600 I don't remember.
02:04:55.840 And kind of discovered that that actually kind of sounds delicious.
02:04:58.620 Went on Uber Eats.
02:05:00.780 And ordered pupusas.
02:05:01.760 And ordered pupusas that day.
02:05:03.240 Oh, wow.
02:05:03.640 And they were freaking incredible.
02:05:06.640 I mean, they were awesome.
02:05:08.260 I can't.
02:05:08.880 It is right up my alley.
02:05:10.520 Like, the type of food that I like.
02:05:12.520 So they're obviously vegetarian in nature?
02:05:14.680 Or you can get them that way?
02:05:16.200 You can get them all different ways.
02:05:16.700 All different ways.
02:05:17.520 I had a cheese one.
02:05:19.140 That does sound good.
02:05:20.320 It was very good.
02:05:21.060 And a cheese and jalapeno one.
02:05:23.320 Okay.
02:05:23.680 That's a little spicy in my life.
02:05:25.660 And they were both fantastic.
02:05:27.120 And I'm now, as we speak, considering ordering them again.
02:05:30.540 Because they were really.
02:05:31.700 And by the way, they were like $4.
02:05:35.080 Wow.
02:05:35.560 It was like I.
02:05:37.120 Apparently, tariffs don't apply to pupusas.
02:05:39.180 Because they were.
02:05:40.800 They were.
02:05:41.560 It was eight incredible dollars of food.
02:05:44.340 I felt I underpaid for them.
02:05:46.560 I actually felt bad about it.
02:05:48.060 I think this particular stand should implement tariffs on me.
02:05:51.260 Because they're charging too low a price for the pupusas.
02:05:54.260 But maybe that's because they don't have to pay protection money here in the United States.
02:05:58.460 I bet you're right.
02:05:58.860 There's no rival gang harassing their stand.
02:06:02.740 And that's why so many El Salvadorans are coming here.
02:06:06.000 That's why.
02:06:07.160 More coming up.
02:06:08.680 I mean, that's part of the.
02:06:09.900 If I remember right.
02:06:10.760 There's life, liberty, and the pursuit of pupusas stand.
02:06:13.620 Yes.
02:06:15.100 Look.
02:06:16.420 Let me tell you a little story here.
02:06:18.860 Dogs don't do things halfway.
02:06:20.160 You might know this.
02:06:20.780 If you have a puppy.
02:06:21.700 If you have a dog, you know this.
02:06:23.700 When they're happy, they show it.
02:06:24.800 When they're hungry, you know it.
02:06:25.900 And when they feel good, really good, they run, and they jump, and they chase, and they wag, and they spin, and they've got like something to prove.
02:06:32.040 Rough greens can help your dog get to that area.
02:06:34.640 Okay.
02:06:35.220 They unlock that kind of energy in your dog.
02:06:37.120 It's not a dog food.
02:06:37.960 It's a nutritional boost that you add to the food you're already giving your dog.
02:06:41.220 And it's filled with probiotics, and enzymes, and vitamins, and all the good stuff that dogs are supposed to have.
02:06:46.860 And when it hits their system, you really do notice the difference.
02:06:50.420 They're more alert.
02:06:51.320 They're more active.
02:06:52.580 And their digestion improves.
02:06:54.160 And they have a healthier coat.
02:06:55.920 And they are starting to act like themselves again.
02:06:58.500 So if you have a dog, if you love your dog, you've got to try Rough Greens.
02:07:03.580 Get a free jumpstart trial bag for your dog today.
02:07:06.740 You just have to cover the shipping.
02:07:07.840 You just go to roughgreens.com.
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02:07:14.380 You don't have to change your dog's food to improve your dog's health.
02:07:16.820 Just add a scoop of Rough Greens.
02:07:18.480 It's roughgreens.com slash BECK.
02:07:21.920 There you have it.
02:07:23.540 The truth stripped down like a fence post in a prairie storm.
02:07:29.440 Glenn Beck returns after this.
02:07:37.840 On Saturday, radical demonstrators rallied in Parliament Square in opposition to a British
02:08:04.900 Supreme Court ruling that affirmed sex as biologically binary.
02:08:11.720 How dare they?
02:08:13.320 How dare they?
02:08:14.940 Huh.
02:08:15.740 It barred men who identify as women from accessing women-only spaces.
02:08:21.320 Can you believe they did that in Britain?
02:08:23.900 That blows me away.
02:08:25.240 Because they're usually further down the liberal woke path than we are.
02:08:30.000 But we haven't made that ruling here.
02:08:32.240 And that has reversed.
02:08:33.700 It's not like that anymore.
02:08:35.360 No.
02:08:36.180 Europe is ahead of us on the same train when it comes to gender stuff.
02:08:40.480 They are.
02:08:41.180 It's bizarre.
02:08:41.540 They're actually better than us in most cases.
02:08:43.660 Abortion and the gender stuff.
02:08:47.140 Yeah.
02:08:47.720 Their abortion laws are still, even though some of them have changed a little bit more recently,
02:08:51.700 are still more conservative than our laws.
02:08:54.340 Statues outside Parliament, including a monument to suffragette Millicent Fawcett,
02:09:01.200 were vandalized during the protest, which saw crowds waving signs, reading,
02:09:06.440 trans women are real women.
02:09:09.100 And biology is not binary.
02:09:11.620 Meanwhile, I love this, Palestinian flags, union banners, and transgender symbols
02:09:17.760 were prominently displayed throughout the Capitol.
02:09:19.960 I mean, the incomprehensible ignorance of the LGBTQQIA2 plus group protesting for Palestine,
02:09:31.320 where if you were openly gay in the Palestinian territories, in the Gaza, in West Bank,
02:09:39.660 that would essentially be a death sentence to you.
02:09:44.820 They would not be okay with you.
02:09:47.800 Where does this come from, this support for Palestine?
02:09:54.200 I don't understand it.
02:09:55.820 And they chanted, trans liberation, one struggle, one fight, Palestine trans rights.
02:10:04.180 Hmm.
02:10:05.060 Okay.
02:10:06.540 All right.
02:10:09.180 As one of the onlookers said, the ignorance is astounding.
02:10:15.560 It really is, because you don't seem to understand they're not your friends.
02:10:23.700 They're certainly not your allies.
02:10:26.160 Wow.
02:10:27.540 All right.
02:10:28.360 I think Glenn is interviewing President Donald Trump tomorrow.
02:10:32.500 Yeah.
02:10:33.200 So tune in for that.
02:10:34.440 Get all the details.
02:10:35.600 Yeah.
02:10:36.160 It's going to be very interesting.
02:10:37.420 Certainly an interesting time to talk to the president.
02:10:39.920 Yeah.
02:10:40.160 So much he's dealing with.
02:10:41.340 So much going on.
02:10:42.020 So much going on.
02:10:43.560 All right.
02:10:43.880 So hopefully Glenn's back tomorrow.
02:10:50.420 This is Glenn Beck.
02:10:52.880 This is Glenn Beck.