Is the CIA Funding Animal Super-Weapons?! | Guests: Sage Steele & Amie Parnes | 4⧸8⧸25
Episode Stats
Length
2 hours and 9 minutes
Words per Minute
170.06572
Summary
In this episode of The Glenn Beck Program, host Glenn Blume talks about pain and how science can help you get rid of it. He also talks about a new drug that could help you kick pain in the butt and help you feel normal again.
Transcript
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hello america you know we've been fighting every single day we push back against the lies the
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welcome to the glenn beck program hello and uh i'm excited stew i don't know about you but science
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is exciting right now um we have the new we have the new dire wolf out well not new actually the one
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one that was snuffed out uh because you know it just it probably shouldn't have lived uh any longer
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and so it just dies out as a species and now uh after 10 000 years we mixed one up in a jar and uh
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sprayed one out so the new dire wolf is the the old dire wolf is back oh i can't wait to see the fun on
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this and next snuffleupagus uh now here is the here is the um the question this is a this is a
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this is a company that we've had on before to talk about you know what what what are you guys doing
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have you ever watched jurassic park this is not a good idea uh there's another story out um about this
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and it just talks about some of the investors in the company and one of the investors is the cia
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now i don't know about you but i don't think the cia should be investing in companies
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okay but the real question is why would the cia be investing in companies
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oh there's some theories it's scarier than the dire wolf and uh a little scarier than tyrannosaurus
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rex as well i'll give that to you here in just a second stand by first have you ever noticed how
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one day pain just shows up like an uninvited guest and then just never leaves like family
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you know what i mean you're like oh hi there knee pain must have twisted something few days go by and
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you start realizing that pain really is overstated it's welcome and uh next thing you know it's just
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hanging around all the time it's there when you wake up in the morning hasn't left you when you
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go to bed at night it's time to kick that uninvited guest out kick him to the curb best way i found to
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do that is relief factor it's not a drug it was developed by doctors and it goes right after the
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real enemy inflammation in your body it is the root of most of our pain and when you get rid of that
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your body actually has a shot of feeling normal again you remember normal right relief factor help me
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kick my pain out could help you 1995 the trial pack three week quick start just try it see if
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it works for you it doesn't work for everybody they're up front and honest about that 70 of the
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people though try it go on to order more month after month just like me 800 for relief 800 the number
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for relief it's relieffactor.com so stew how excited are you that the animal made famous
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by game of thrones that went extinct 13 000 years ago is among us now you know they said trump was
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the greatest comeback story and now we have the dire wolf yeah so do we have any of the video the
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here's the dire wolves their little babies oh aren't they cute oh my gosh i want one yeah no you
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don't no no no no you know you really don't they are oh my gosh i want one
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oh they're so cute aren't they and they're a little loud forget it
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you know you want to get up in the middle of night and hear
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no i i know so uh they retrieved the dna from fossils of dire wolves uh 13 000 years ago
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they were over uh then they discovered additional dna uh dna and they edited 20 genes of gray wolves
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and then put the dire wolf in the gray wolf and we now have the new and improved dire wolf which
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i'm not sure this is a good idea you know when it comes to ai when it comes to all of the
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has anyone watched a movie has anyone watched a movie this was all science fiction dystopia stuff
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it's now here so as i'm going perusing this because remember the next thing is woolly mammoth
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and we had the the ceo on the program remember and i said why why are you thinking about bringing
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the woolly mammoth back he said be good for the environment what yeah it'll be good for the
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environment how how is a woolly do they not fart and do they eat cows what how is that he didn't
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really have a good answer uh on that but uh it'll make a lot of people on the left feel good oh it's
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good for the environment so we'll bring the woolly mammoth mammoth back and look at they're so furry
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and stuff they'll make great throw rugs in the end uh so the next step is to bring back the woolly
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mammoth okay again you know if you believe in uh darwin you believe in uh survival of the fittest
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there's a reason these animals went extinct one of the reasons i think for like these large dangerous
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animals is so we could live you know there was a lot of oh my god
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going on you know what i mean i just want to make that clear maybe we've forgotten about that but
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that's what those animals were doing to humans but we'll put them on a special island uh and then
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then we'll be fine so uh now we have the uh now we have the dire wolf uh which is is is truly
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wonderful um and as i get into this i see who some of the investors are and uh one of the investors
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that is really excited about just pouring money into into the colossal bioscience is uh the cia
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i'm giving you a chance to process that for a second first of all cia uh they've got a budget to invest
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in companies sounds like a bad idea it shouldn't really be part of what the cia does well it's not a
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it's not a hedge fund right they're not just investing they have good reason to invest okay
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uh so so if you're you're looking if you're looking to do what the cia does this might be a very good
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uh uh application for them um here's why gene editing is uh catching the eye of the are you ready
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it's a dual use technology gene editing tools like crisper are inherently dual use meaning they can serve
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civilian purposes conservation biotech breakthroughs and military intelligence ones
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so okay i'm trying to woolly mammoths woolly mammoths why would you want to bring a woolly mammoth
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well uh one of them is they believe that they could crisper their way into um bioengineering
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resilient organisms you know like spy drones that are animals i don't know uh enhancing human
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capabilities maybe we can mangla our way into gene splicing a little of the dire wolf into all of us
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so we'll be a little stronger i feel like just on its surface we shouldn't mangla our way into
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anything you don't think so i think that's always a bad choice all right i always thought so the wrong
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one yeah oh i thought so there's lots of college campuses right now where they're saying the
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opposite i've noticed in protest but i'm gonna go with no on the mangla into anything try this one
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out for size uh another reason why the cia may be interested in uh uh the the new hey let's bring
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animals back from the dead uh ecological and geopolitical leverage
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de-extinction great word huh new de-extinction could reshape ecosystems intentionally or not
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imagine reintroducing a species to destabilize a rival nation's agriculture or environment
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say flooding a region with engineered pests or alternate or altering food chains
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you know i i i don't think this is a good idea i don't think this is a good if you weren't
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convinced the cia is out of control uh you might want to share this with your friends
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biosecurity and threat assessment reason number three if adversaries develop gene editing for
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hostile purposes in other words a weaponized pathogen or super soldiers the cia needs to stay ahead
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investing in colossal gives them a front row seat to cutting edge biotech letting them study its limits
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and vulnerabilities they're not just funding it they're learning how to defend against it or wield
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it themselves if necessary now this comes from a story out of china where china is re-engineering people
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uh trying to make them smarter i mean come on guys chinese are always they're better at instruments
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they're better at math they're better at really almost everything this is interesting research
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though it's an interesting approach i'm you almost have to come up with a name for it like like a
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gain of function research would that be something that would maybe oh my gosh what a great idea that
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gain of function that that would work perfectly oh my gosh go wrong okay now uh reason number four
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synthetic biology for synthetic biology for covert ops picture a bioengineered animal say a dire wolf with
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tweaked senses used for surveillance or tracking in remote areas where drones might fail we are screwed
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uh-huh we are screwed uh-huh uh number five future proofing influence biotech is posed to uh is poised to
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explode economically think lab grown meat i don't want to think about lab gene therapies or climate fixes
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i don't think we should be doing stuff you know can we really stop we really should stop we're creating
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god in ai we're now thinking we can bring things back from the dead i believe that was those two things
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were the story of frankenstein throw that in there okay we can bring things back from the dead you know
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what we can do we can bioengineer so things could live forever and it'll be smarter and of course it
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will always stay under our control oh my gosh by backing colossal the cia uh via iqt gets a stake in a field
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that could rival big tech in influence if d extension if d extinction tech scales it might affect food
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security land use or even cultural narratives okay
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so uh there's your update on how the world will end today that's one of the most disturbing things i have
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i've read in a long time i mean you know i'm just trying to get my arms around uh ai and how we can
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use ai for a very short period of time before it's turned against us and it eats us all well we might
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the the dire wolf might eat us first but uh i'm just getting my arms around that i don't think we
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needed to introduce this one too and the fact that the cia is involved not good
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yeah but we can release a bunch of animals in places where drones won't be effective
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with their special senses where where where on earth where on earth would a drone not be effective
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well a tunnel right like like think of the hamas tunnels if we could release some uh some dire
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wolves down there probably more effective than our drones but still i think we could go over a good
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idea i think we could go over to really nasty parts of like the czech republic and get
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dogs that have just been you know they're breeding them to tear people apart and throw them in the
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tunnels i don't think we need to go back yeah but they don't have the special senses they don't have
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laser eyes no you're right they don't you need to have wolves with laser eyes what could go wrong
00:16:15.840
with those they're probably great pets the problem with this is like i feel like the industrial revolution
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gave us a lot of these types of things where you'd say like for example uh we we develop cars
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and we could have had the same conversation you know model t's rolling off the assembly line and
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we're like hey you know people are just going to keep making these things faster and faster and
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faster and they're going to get to the point where they're going to 300 miles an hour and that
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happened right that's happened but it doesn't there was never a point where they're going so fast that
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the entire world ends right like that with ai with gene splicing with um uh biological warfare
00:17:01.500
nuclear warfare we keep having these conversations of eventually some bad actor is going to take this
00:17:07.820
to some logical extreme and we're all screwed what are the chances there are no bad actors in the
00:17:12.760
world can you name a thousand 1.2 billion 4 i mean 4 billion i mean besides everyone that is you know
00:17:22.900
when somebody writes a prescription and gives you advice as a doctor i don't think they need uh a
00:17:30.220
pardon so they can never go to jail you know i mean you know when fauci's just writing a prescription
00:17:35.760
he's like look you should wear a mask you should wear a mask and and you know take this i you know
00:17:41.280
that's doctor's advice i don't think that you need a pardon what he was doing was so corrupt
00:17:48.680
that he needed a presidential pardon i don't know those are the kind of doctors that maybe we should
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put in jail maybe it's just me uh i mean how do we get to this place how do we get out it's going
00:18:05.980
to be interesting to see how this all works out it will how do we get out of this place where we just
00:18:11.840
seem hell bent on our own destruction and i just you know with all of these things i just don't see
00:18:17.700
how i mean like our our our response with nuclear weapons and biological weapons was to just try to
00:18:24.340
limit them as much as possible right to go out and every time we heard hey uh bob over in iran might
00:18:29.740
be doing uh so maybe have the nuclear weapons let's go over there and stop them that's kind of
00:18:33.860
been our approach and it's worked so far but eventually it's it probably won't and with ai
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our response is let's just keep pushing it as fast as possible with a bunch of different really smart
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companies competing along with governments that are doing the same thing well we did kind of i mean
00:18:51.100
that's unfair a little bit is it yeah it is let me give give me a minute sure and we'll break and
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then i'll come back and i'll explain why that's unfair um we live in a culture now that uh lies
00:19:01.420
to women full stop career is the most important thing you can do in life you should be nice to the
00:19:07.940
dude in the dress let him play sports because he's actually a woman too that thing inside of you just a
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clump of cells doesn't matter all of this is nonsense it's lie and it's evil that's why the ministry
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second station id so you have to remember that uh we didn't control things until after we used the
00:20:27.080
bomb everyone was rushing towards it and we didn't know i mean there was honestly there were i don't know
00:20:33.700
10 percent of scientists that said if we do this it could cause a chain reaction that could set the
00:20:40.840
entire world on fire i remember that from the documentary oppenheimer okay all right so kind of
00:20:47.240
not really anyway uh so close we had no idea what we were doing we just knew we had to get there first
00:20:55.380
so afterwards this is where it becomes fair afterwards we could ban it we could control it it took
00:21:06.060
extraordinary amounts of money to do it it took a certain equipment that we could just ban you can't
00:21:13.020
do that okay uh and it was only only nation levels that that could actually create one you know the
00:21:21.440
average person couldn't create you know even if even if you had all the knowledge in the world you
00:21:25.800
couldn't create a nuclear weapon in your basement right you need access to certain things that could
00:21:30.500
be banned when when it comes to ai that's not true that's not true ai uh you're gonna have to ban
00:21:39.080
so much and if somebody is using a nuclear weapon on their own people you know it you know what i mean
00:21:47.000
you'd know it if somebody's using ai against their own people you'll never know it i mean that's the
00:21:55.220
kind of things that we're we're dealing with now where it is so insidious that it can fall into one
00:22:02.200
the hand of one person and it can design a weapon that they can make themselves that will kill half the
00:22:09.740
people on the planet and you didn't even see it coming you didn't even know you didn't even know
00:22:14.780
you could have the government ban it but they're using it on you and you'd never know that's the
00:22:22.700
real problem i think with ai uh and the fact that you can no longer put it back in the bottle it's
00:22:29.440
it's going to happen we're all racing to get there but there is no way to put this back into the bottle
00:22:35.120
there's no way to control this like there was with nukes and honestly that's why that's why silicon
00:22:42.780
valley went to trump you know this right they were having a meeting remember when kamala harris
00:22:49.720
was like ai it's great it's a fun two letters it's actually two words artificial intelligence
00:22:57.960
remember that oh yeah so insulting that was the meeting that she had with all of the big wigs in
00:23:03.420
silicon valley and they said at that meeting don't spend any more money on server farms or anything
00:23:08.640
else we're taking care of it you this will all be controlled by the united states government because
00:23:15.020
it's too big to let anyone else have it except for the united states government they all walked
00:23:21.060
out and went we can't let the government have this we'll let the government be the only one that has
00:23:25.600
this that's not good that's why they flipped to trump because they realized this cannot just be in
00:23:32.180
the hands of the government but i'd be the one in the room going i don't think any of you guys should
00:23:38.020
have this in your hands nobody should have access what you're building is a an anti-god
00:23:45.300
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you say hello and welcome to the one and only pat gray from pat gray unleashed i love pat gray
00:25:31.620
hello he's a monster oh is he yeah he's a monster a lot of scandals really yeah it's right here
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wow uh anyway uh did you hear about the the dire wolf yes yeah yeah yeah and the cia is thinking
00:25:44.880
about uh now the cia part i didn't know you didn't know that no yeah they're thinking of investing yeah
00:25:49.920
they want to invest in it in the dire wolf no not the dire wolf program but in the whole let's bring
00:25:54.940
animals back from the dead uh yeah why are they thinking dinosaurs could be used against the soviets
00:26:01.600
is that what it is pretty much they're talking about they're talking about bringing things and
00:26:06.060
gene splicing things to use them as possible weapons wow you know uh you know you'll china
00:26:12.900
i mean look out well i mean really actually look out look up first when you see those planes dropping
00:26:19.740
woolly mammoths from the sky you'll know it was us you'll know it was us so don't screw with us
00:26:25.800
it's terrifying yeah it is we're just talking about how we're doing so many things right now that
00:26:32.900
all of us it's you know i really the older i get the more i realize it's not the people
00:26:38.460
it's really not the people if there were no such thing as politicians we'd be pretty good i mean we
00:26:45.100
need them because we need to have some sort of you know society and some somebody holding things
00:26:51.980
together but they're the ones who are just we will i think we could all go into a room uh you know a
00:26:59.560
big room with like i don't know 300 million people where there's no politicians in there and we go hey
00:27:07.760
what do you say we start bringing back dinosaurs i think we could get a consensus pretty quickly yeah
00:27:13.120
no no yeah no thank you no hey let's have the cia invest in that no no no you know what i mean
00:27:20.140
right it's the politicians that are screwing things up all the time the average person is like i have no
00:27:25.160
problem i have absolutely no problem with anybody in russia i have no problem with anybody in the
00:27:31.220
ukraine i'm sure they're both fine it i'm convinced it's the politicians because you know they're over
00:27:37.600
they're going this is going to get us into a war what what is he doing what is he doing they don't say
00:27:42.140
it or they'll find themselves slipping out of a window you know on the 18th floor of some building
00:27:47.680
it's very cold a lot of ice a lot of ice by the windows by the windows a lot of time that's you
00:27:52.200
know cold air comes in yeah you have a little water you're falling out a window yeah you're
00:27:57.780
falling on the window it happens all the time all the time yeah are you i feel like we were talking
00:28:02.340
about this earlier pat of these things that we've created that are just getting out of control and at
00:28:06.720
some point something really bad is going to happen with them um they're not out of control yet
00:28:11.640
what do you mean right it's not out of control ai is a great example of this right like i was i was
00:28:16.240
reading this thing where these people were writing about ai and the different uses for uh different
00:28:19.820
ai systems and they were saying like oh you know chat gbt is great for creative writing um but uh you
00:28:25.920
know grok is better for coding and they were talking about this and this guy was doing coding he's like
00:28:29.780
you know i just love it because every time i could just type these things in and it'll just code
00:28:33.100
and it codes it perfect every single time and i was thinking about like how that plays out over a long
00:28:38.020
period of time uh-huh because we've had where there are nobody there was nobody writing code
00:28:41.940
anymore right yeah so like we've had this situation for a long period of time where these people really
00:28:47.540
smart people they've learned to code they took the advice of what was it was it clinton or no it was
00:28:52.260
biden was it biden yeah learn to code they learned to code and they go through every line of code
00:28:57.260
and they're meticulous and they do a really good job most of the time and then there's like 20 other
00:29:01.940
people that are checking it and looking at every line of code because they're all familiar with how
00:29:05.080
this code works yeah and then every once in a while you have a situation that things really go
00:29:09.600
wrong we missed that line right like do you know the uh sonos the speaker company have you guys
00:29:13.800
followed the story at all no they did an app update maybe it was a year ago and it was an utter
00:29:19.220
catastrophe like to the point of like it like almost put the company out almost put the company out of
00:29:23.280
business ceo had to resign yeah it didn't work with a bunch of the different speakers and you know
00:29:28.100
the stock price dropped by like 70 or whatever the story was it was a real catastrophe another example
00:29:34.100
of this would be uh the documentary superman 3 where richard pryor was stealing a fraction of a
00:29:41.920
cent from each transaction and then it was this was duplicated in this in another documentary office
00:29:47.520
office space yeah um but you in that case maliciously you when they put code in there and
00:29:53.240
they were stealing a little bit of a fraction of every transaction to make themselves wealthy my point
00:29:57.540
here is that when you go down these roads and instead of a person or many people meticulously
00:30:03.140
looking through every line of code you're just going into grok and going make me program that
00:30:08.140
does this with speakers right and it just does it uh-huh what how how are we going to know where the
00:30:16.840
problems are when they develop uh where in what part of the just giant chain of transactions we
00:30:25.960
already don't know how it works we don't even know how it works imagine imagine somebody you go
00:30:31.180
into a car dealership and they're like this car is fantastic it's fantastic it'll run forever uh
00:30:36.940
it'll go 400 miles an hour on you know uh just the whiff of gas you just bring it by a gas station
00:30:43.500
and just the fumes it'll power it for four months and you'll be like this is fantastic yep yep it's you
00:30:50.320
can take it right now how does it work we have no idea we have absolutely no idea well wait a minute
00:30:57.460
wait a minute wait a minute what do you mean you don't know how it works well it doesn't work and
00:31:01.740
it'll run forever how do you know it's going to run forever well it just will well but you don't
00:31:07.040
know how it is how it even works how are you going to know it's not going to break down ever hey let
00:31:11.160
me ask you is it possible that it could just drive me into a tree at some point well that's ridiculous
00:31:16.680
that's a conspiracy theory no you don't have the answer because you don't know how it works
00:31:22.260
it's never been tried before so you have no idea you should ask these questions what happens if we
00:31:28.900
start mixing you know uh ancient animals that were extinct for a reason and start bringing them back
00:31:36.240
and introducing them into the system that might have some ramifications that we don't understand
00:31:42.380
we have never seen humans as arrogant as they are right now and as a sleep they're asleep yeah but
00:31:52.180
also really smart and capable of incredible things right like that's the problem here like
00:31:58.880
these aren't just little minor things where oh gosh something goes wrong and little things happen
00:32:03.440
these are why you incredible achievements that if they go wrong is going to be big consequences this
00:32:08.040
is why if you have children you keep handguns in a safe okay yeah we are children we are children
00:32:15.280
the smartest of us are children working with these things no no and with AI it's all
00:32:22.160
already lying to us and it's already hiding things that it doesn't want you to see so you're not a
00:32:29.420
little alarmed by that and nope we just keep going forward and we just keep barreling full steam ahead
00:32:35.140
i have to tell you because i'm i've been struggling with this i mean you know still i've been talking
00:32:40.660
about this for since the 90s the night when we first met probably one of our first conversations
00:32:45.740
one you have no you don't know about ai you don't know what it can do first times pat i was bored by
00:32:50.660
him um it goes all the way back then wow about it wow i see where this is going uh or went really
00:32:57.780
kind of rearview mirror at this point uh but uh i mean it this has been coming for a very long time
00:33:06.840
and i have been struggling with how do you deal with it and because it is a miracle tool it is a
00:33:15.340
miracle tool yeah but there is going to come a time you just have to be you have to just be away from
00:33:21.400
it enough you have to have it in your life but guardrails all around it so you can easily go okay uh
00:33:31.340
we're jettisoning that now out remember in uh remember in uh star wars where they where they hid
00:33:37.920
in the garbage right before it was ejected and they just let their magnet on their spacecraft go
00:33:43.240
so it floated out into space so they couldn't see it do you remember that episode no vaguely well
00:33:48.980
anyway at some point we we really need to be like that where we can just like open a bay door and
00:33:55.520
everything's sucked out away from our life but i don't think you can no i mean i mean society won't
00:34:01.120
be able to think about this you have someone writing code for uh full self-driving right it
00:34:10.260
goes into a tesla and it's driving around and it's totally fine 99 of the time and then one day it
00:34:14.960
is a hey there's a kindergarten class i'm just gonna run it over who's at fault i mean no one even wrote
00:34:20.000
the code i know i'm the driver can't be at fault right but it's just i mean i guess tesla gets sued
00:34:26.340
but this is one of the things remember years ago we were talking about that mit study
00:34:30.840
uh and they were doing you know who does the who does the automatic car kill you've got a bus full
00:34:37.620
of nuns and then you have uh and you have a car with four people in them but one of them is the
00:34:43.460
head of microsoft you know and you know some some nobel prize winner which one do you kill well you
00:34:50.480
won't make that decision ai will plus it's not even that hard a decision it's really not microsoft
00:34:55.580
yeah i know it's really not it's really not of course it's the nuns that you kill
00:34:59.800
right of course but uh he's too important yeah but i mean it's it's going to make all of these
00:35:07.400
decisions for us and uh yeah that only makes us into me want code let me ask you this if you use
00:35:17.940
grok you misuse grok and you're not learning from it you're just using it as google i mean
00:35:24.700
we used to sit around all the time and i'm not pining for these days and we'd be like what was
00:35:29.940
the name of that movie what was the name of this what was that and it was kind of like a badge of
00:35:33.340
honor that you like could remember something it was fun it was fun it was fun yeah we don't have
00:35:38.620
that no anymore because there's always someone in the back of the room goes oh it's this one and
00:35:42.380
they just hold up their phone you're like arm right thank you you've ruined the conversation i
00:35:45.840
know uh so but we are now entering a place to where everything will be grokified so you don't
00:35:53.520
have to even think you just ask it if you want to go there what happens to our ability to think this
00:36:01.300
is where ray kurzweil and i had that argument about 15 years ago remember i said he's like well you're
00:36:06.500
going to make space for other things so you can ponder deeper questions and i'm like yeah you might
00:36:12.300
maybe maybe once a week i will but everybody else will be like i can play video games forever now
00:36:21.280
i don't have to think of me think nothing yeah yeah what was the movie where humans didn't do
00:36:27.200
anything uh robots did at all and so they were all fat and couldn't walk anymore wally yeah wally
00:36:32.420
wally yeah the documentary wally documentary wally showed us what becomes of us when machines do
00:36:38.880
everything for us we just sit around and get fat it's so so clearly a fairy tale because in real
00:36:45.540
life the machine would kill the fat ones it's true they're like why am i why am i serving these fat
00:36:51.500
ones that can't even move what is wrong with me i you know i think it's so interesting because
00:36:57.000
when you ask like a question to one of these eyes you know i don't mean to signal anything about because
00:37:02.440
they all do things pretty well but like one thing that's interesting is when you ask the same
00:37:06.180
question right you ask a question a direct question when you ask it again later three days later it
00:37:12.000
gives you usually a similar response right like it'll give you like they should give you the same
00:37:15.980
general information but like the words are all different it's it's a it's like you're having a
00:37:20.620
conversation with a human and every time you have a conversation with a human the words are a little
00:37:24.260
bit different they're not gonna they're not you know machines except for ted cruz who would just
00:37:27.700
word for word sound for sound well ramaswamy and ramaswamy there you go imagine if those two could
00:37:32.600
have kids and one of them could get pregnant that's true that's true but imagine those that
00:37:36.760
would be frightening that would be frightening but like think about how many times we do this we all
00:37:42.040
do this just as a show right you read an article right and then two months later we're talking about
00:37:49.440
something and you're like oh yeah i remember i was reading this piece about this and this happened
00:37:53.460
and this happened and this happened how do you check your references when it's ai the conversation's
00:37:58.960
gone i mean yes maybe it's in there somewhere if you know how to search for it but like i don't
00:38:02.500
right and maybe you're an ai expert you could pull that up it's really you just don't delete the
00:38:06.680
conversations on the side yeah i know but like finding the right one it's not like googling like
00:38:11.320
it's i i've man i've played with it enough to know that like half the time it doesn't know where it is
00:38:16.860
it kind of remembers that you had a conversation but it can't pull it up no it won't remember that
00:38:20.940
right now it can't remember that right so like how am i referencing that you're not right like am i
00:38:28.100
taking every single one of these conversations out but it's in my head it's three months ago i
00:38:32.620
read it and it was a good smart piece of analysis can i go quote now can i go back and like oh well
00:38:38.180
i remember this piece i read from daniel horowitz that i can bring you to that i can't bring you to
00:38:44.460
the thing i read three months ago that will change right now that is a problem because do you know how
00:38:50.220
the you know what vectoring is i mean i'm learning so much about ai right now it is frightening
00:38:55.220
vectoring you know how you used to have to type in exact if you're searching for something you had
00:39:01.120
to type it in exactly yeah right okay if you're you're searching for a word or a sentence or something
00:39:06.780
you'd have to type it in exactly and you keep trying trying trying trying trying
00:39:10.000
vectoring now the way it is it is looking at each word is called a token and each token each word has
00:39:19.240
like i forgive me for for you who don't really understand ai it's got like 460 different meanings
00:39:26.440
to every token and so what it does is it strings all these tokens together and it looks at all 460
00:39:33.380
meanings of each word and then figures out amazing most likely you're looking for this and it does that
00:39:40.300
in a split second right in a split second and that's because of all of that computing power that's
00:39:46.220
why it can't remember things because it it can't also keep track of all of that at this point it's
00:39:52.740
just too much but it will yeah it will eventually eventually yeah yeah but it's hard because you i
00:39:57.660
mean especially when you're human yeah and you're trying to say hey i remember i read this thing
00:40:02.540
well who did you read from was it a reliable source was it was it ai was it a real human was it something
00:40:08.640
that like like you're you're filling your head with all of this information and it's hard to be able
00:40:14.300
to trace it back like i how many times have we done this like oh i remember this article and we
00:40:18.240
were searching for it and searching for you finally locate it yeah ai is great helping to find that
00:40:22.900
article but when ai is the article it's not great at it which is bizarre all right back in just a second
00:40:29.540
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there was a time and it really wasn't that long ago when faith-based films kind of meant something
00:42:05.460
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when i found out my friend got a great deal on a wool coat from winners i started wondering is
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the fusion of entertainment and enlightenment this is the
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the glenbeck program hello america welcome to the glenbeck program i just want to lay out
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the choice that is in front of us right now it's what's really happening in the world that i think
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no one is really talking about it's important that you understand it so you can lead your family and
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your friends and your circle of influence so they can understand what's going on in the world really
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we'll do that in 60 seconds first uh you ever feel like modern life comes with way too many logins
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i hate that i can't take the login thing your banking app your streaming services grocery delivery
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uh health care portal wallet app airline app all of this crap oh my gosh i'm if i if my toaster ever
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all right so we survived yesterday thank goodness yesterday was kind of scary there for a while
00:48:23.820
uh because when i first got in they were screaming on television 37 minutes before the stock market
00:48:30.520
and they're like oh okay all right um and then it turns out to be like nothing i mean we lost one
00:48:40.380
percent but really from in the morning this is gonna be the worst day in the history of all mankind
00:48:46.740
you remember january 6 gonna be worse than that okay all right calm down so you know europe it went
00:48:57.120
down six percent markets worldwide went down we went down one percent and uh that's because president
00:49:04.120
trump who announced a zero for zero tariff scheme i love that word used all over in in mainstream media
00:49:11.760
today trump's tariff scheme oh that sounds honest doesn't it uh would slap 20 duty on things like
00:49:20.580
from the european union well european union came out yesterday uh led by their trade commissioner who
00:49:26.120
i'm not even going to attempt uh to even pronounce the name because it has like little down arrows over
00:49:33.360
four of the letters in the name so i don't even know what that means anyway uh they countered with
00:49:38.200
their own uh zero for zero uh proposal yesterday and trump said no not good enough they're like a
00:49:45.340
zero for zero no why he said you gotta buy oil from us now in a sane world they would immediately go
00:49:54.980
okay can we get a good deal on that if we're buying all of our oil from you can we get a good deal on
00:49:59.520
that yes we'll give you a great deal buy your oil from us and everybody in nato would go hey that'll
00:50:05.880
keep us off the teat of russia and china what do you say we buy oil and gas from the united states
00:50:12.940
so it's a good thing because just like all of the nato conversations that they've been having with
00:50:19.340
uh the eu if the united states has a national interest at stake you want to go in and march across
00:50:26.860
europe wait a minute they are a major factor to our economy because they are buying our oil
00:50:33.360
uh i don't think you're gonna do that are they this blind to not understand what is happening now
00:50:40.860
we're no longer gonna fight the wars just to fight wars no unless it's in our national interest
00:50:48.460
now it is in our national interest to have a strong west but not for free gang no so i told you last
00:50:58.260
week that he named the tariffs liberation day and i think that is because after world war ii
00:51:04.320
we had liberation day we had the day where everybody is free from the nazis and and and everything else
00:51:10.280
um and the united states did something that no country has ever ever ever even considered doing
00:51:18.860
first of all we became the broker to bring all of the art and everything else back that had been
00:51:24.100
stolen we didn't take those spoils for ourselves we returned them to the original orders and we're
00:51:29.980
still doing it it's incredible nobody has ever done that then we had the marshall plan that was 13
00:51:37.340
billion dollars but in today's money that's 135 billion between 1948 1952 why what was it we were
00:51:46.300
rebuilding so they could have factories to open up for their people now an evil country company would
00:51:53.880
or country would just say no you're gonna buy everything from us you will be our slaves now we
00:51:59.620
rebuilt europe so they could have jobs and factories we helped them rebuild volkswagen and mercedes-benz
00:52:08.780
hello okay we didn't have any obligation to do it but we saw it as morally right so we did it
00:52:18.000
so we allowed the high tariffs on american goods while keeping ours low because it was good for them
00:52:25.140
and we also shouldered the burden of their defense through nato we spent billions of dollars annually
00:52:31.240
the the u.s defense spending accounts for 68 percent of nato's total budget
00:52:37.460
roughly 560 billion dollars last year alone meanwhile europe was prospering now why aren't
00:52:49.180
they now because they had sugar daddy that would be there for the old when you have a sugar daddy you
00:52:55.620
tend to get lazy why are the american people so lazy now because we have the united states government
00:53:00.720
being everybody's sugar daddy oh they'll just give it to me oh it doesn't matter if i make a mistake
00:53:05.840
with trillions of dollars they'll just bail me out that doesn't work okay it didn't work for them
00:53:12.820
it's not working for us so we we go down this road after liberation day the first time and we get to
00:53:21.200
the 1970s and now we're getting fat and sassy and we're like you know what we control the whole world
00:53:26.200
we can just make stuff up and so we decide to get off the gold standard because half of the politicians
00:53:33.340
want to have big war and the other half wants to have you know big uh big welfare state well you
00:53:41.680
can't do both and like any good parent our government said you can have both you know what you can have
00:53:48.720
both yeah and so we got off the gold standard but we played a trick on everybody okay when we got off
00:53:56.160
the gold standard everybody around the world went wait a minute wait a minute we hold your dollars
00:53:59.680
because they're good as good as gold we can turn a dollar in to your federal reserve or your treasury
00:54:05.280
and we can demand we get a dollar's worth of gold now you're saying you're not going to have that
00:54:10.740
standard anymore so i can't take a dollar and buy a dollar's worth of gold no but you can trust us
00:54:16.120
oh run from those people so we said we've made a special deal that's going to be super good for
00:54:24.280
everybody we're gonna we're gonna have u.s dollars become a petrodollar you'll only be able to buy
00:54:32.160
saudi arabia's oils oil and oil from opec by using a u.s dollar so it's as good as gold it's just black
00:54:40.380
gold oh okay and then when that didn't do enough we also said to them by the way we're going to also
00:54:49.220
just come in and we're gonna we're gonna buy all you know you bought maytag washing machines and
00:54:55.120
everything else we're gonna move maytag to your countries so you can build it and we'll become
00:55:00.740
your buyers now we'll become the buyer of the world okay you really that's not a good idea just
00:55:09.840
to become the consumer of the world eat eat eat eat eat no you also have to do some other things
00:55:16.040
and we do export a lot of things but we're not able to sustain ourselves every country should be
00:55:24.820
able to sustain itself so we created the demand for german machinery from japanese tvs and everything
00:55:33.380
else the petrodollar made it happen and then what happened our manufacturing jobs start dropping
00:55:41.360
uh from 33 percent of the u.s employment in 1950 now manufacturing jobs only eight percent and i'm not
00:55:50.060
saying that manufacturing is the place you ought to be but it's important to understand what else was
00:55:57.120
happening at the same time because of manufacturing our system was reshaped and this is again why donald
00:56:04.460
trump trump is saying this is liberation day our our our country was reshaped our society was shaped
00:56:11.740
in subtler ways after world war one and world war two we started having the assembly line and everything
00:56:18.640
else and we retooled our education now why why did we go from one of the world's best educators
00:56:28.780
with the best educated in the world in the history of the world to a bunch of just morons have you met
00:56:36.560
the american people lately uh we're just morons why because the giant corporations did not need thinkers
00:56:47.400
they wanted just obedient workers this is why and i just i want you to hold on to this because it
00:56:55.280
explains everything about our education system and you heard it a million times when you went to school
00:57:01.960
boys and girls take out your pencils and your paper and write this down because this will be on the test
00:57:09.180
what does that tell you that tells you the teacher is teaching to the test
00:57:16.180
and it's teaching you what to think not how to think okay why because if you're in the assembly line
00:57:27.220
i don't need you to think just do it well but why why am i putting this and this together wouldn't it
00:57:33.200
be better no just do it okay you're not a thinker those people went to college they have a degree that's
00:57:40.560
why you couldn't get into business unless you had a college degree because you had to learn how to
00:57:46.860
think if you were going to work in the office upstairs above the factory all right so this was all planned
00:57:54.500
for this economy the way it was working now we spend more money per pupil fourteen thousand eight
00:58:02.900
hundred and twenty five dollars per pupil in 2022 yet we're 36th in math 13th in reading uh and uh
00:58:13.640
we've created the most expensive and least effective educational system the world has ever seen
00:58:18.700
is that working for us is the way we fight our wars working for us because we then also became the
00:58:26.840
world's policemen after after world war ii we said you know what we'll take care of this
00:58:31.480
since the cold wars end we we have been fighting the same way that we were fighting back in 1948 and
00:58:40.340
52 against the soviet union everything was geared for that big kind of war that's over now it's over
00:58:47.820
the u.s military spent six trillion dollars on military operations in the middle east alone and
00:58:54.480
what do we have to show for it strained alliances a new airport that china now has that we
00:59:01.320
gave to them in afghanistan and a ballooning national debt of 34 trillion dollars so now this
00:59:09.800
puts us into like the 1990s and we're seeing that this is going to start to come apart and this is in
00:59:17.880
the 80s ronald reagan started talking about saying there's a debt and we're gonna have to pay this
00:59:22.560
someday and it's social security and everything else these things don't work the math doesn't work
00:59:27.940
out and he said soon after the turn of the century you will see it will all start to fall apart and we
00:59:33.020
will be out of good options we should fix it now and everybody said that but that's when they came up
00:59:39.720
with it we got a lock box we got a little lock box we're putting all the money from social security
00:59:44.120
a little lock box they don't have a lock box okay that was a lie again but it was just to say
00:59:49.860
we got a lock box so you can have it all no no so now we have 34 trillion dollars in debt
00:59:57.680
and instead of addressing the root causes what did our elites do this is the key to all of it
01:00:04.380
you want to understand what donald trump is trying to do this is the key to all of it and i'll explain
01:00:10.960
it in 60 seconds it's hard to nail down exactly when change happened but somewhere along the line
01:00:16.040
grocery stop shopping started to feel a lot like gambling you know you'd pick up your chicken and
01:00:21.380
think is this more chemical than it is chicken what country did this come from honestly you don't know
01:00:27.860
it's a roll of the dice pretty much every time if you're not getting your meat from good ranchers
01:00:32.640
i love them because everything they sell is 100 american meat no gambling no wondering if you're about
01:00:39.060
to eat imported mystery meat with good ranchers is high quality beef chicken or seafood raised here
01:00:45.400
in america by american farmers and ranchers that's one reason i love good ranchers so much they're
01:00:51.340
actually working to help save the small farms and ranches throughout the united states i i live among
01:00:57.120
those people uh for about four months of the year i live in a small town it's about 450 people
01:01:02.840
everybody is a rancher or farmer or something to do with the land i should say most of them uh and
01:01:08.820
that's the salt of that's the backbone of america if we don't support our farms and ranches we're
01:01:16.740
screwed so get your meat get your chicken your beef your seafood anything from good ranchers.com
01:01:24.320
good ranchers.com you're helping support our farmers and our ranchers every time you have a piece of
01:01:31.020
meat from good ranchers good ranchers.com good ranchers american meat delivered 10 seconds station id
01:01:36.860
okay so sometime i think during the clinton administration the elites understood that wait a
01:01:55.540
minute this thing is not sustainable the way it's running it's not sustainable and a
01:02:01.000
lot of them didn't believe in the united states they didn't believe in the freedom of the
01:02:05.760
declaration of independence and our our bill of rights etc etc and so they thought you know there's
01:02:10.720
a lot of stuff bad about america so is it that bad that it's going to pass away no but we don't want
01:02:18.320
a revolution we don't want blood in the streets so let's just manage the decline okay and we can even
01:02:25.720
help it along enter the modern climate change agenda which is not about saving the planet it is about
01:02:34.400
helping the decline of the west killing our energy supply all this esg social government standards
01:02:43.200
dei uh even blm all of this stuff is rooted in various social concerns but they're co-opted into a
01:02:52.640
broader narrative decouple america from its history its entrepreneurial spirit its faith everything
01:03:01.240
that empowers the individual and fosters self-reliance we've got to undermine it so this is the managed
01:03:09.520
decline and that is in stark contrast to what made america america because what what made us was we had a
01:03:19.940
country of stable laws we were unified not in our differences we were unified in the few principles
01:03:26.220
that we had in common our bill of rights so we had stable laws rooted in the long longest running
01:03:32.340
constitution in the world provided a predictable framework for business a stable government all of
01:03:39.560
this stuff educated populace hard-working ethical people that were god-fearing and abundant cheap energy
01:03:47.800
okay how much of that is true anymore you want to make america great you've got to fix those things
01:03:57.660
so what is donald trump really doing why would he say no europe i got you i see you're zero zero but
01:04:08.140
you're going to buy our oil as well his strategy is a radical departure from the post-war order
01:04:16.320
it's high stakes do not get me wrong but it's to force the world to renegotiate on america's terms
01:04:24.480
to shape the next chapter of the world when he rejected uh the zero for zero offer from europe he wasn't
01:04:34.500
just playing hardball he's signaling a new era by our energy we're your friends in the west let's help
01:04:45.340
each other this isn't a charity this is a partnership and when it's good for both sides
01:04:51.340
then that's a great partnership most favored nation status should mean mutual benefit not one-sided
01:04:59.380
sacrifice so his uh approach is really what they tried to do i guess with the american free trade
01:05:10.040
agreement in 94 but that had so many flaws in it and everything else but it's can we just bring
01:05:17.360
people together that are friends and let's help each other all of us win now i want you to know
01:05:24.120
agree or disagree it's it's a it's really a a bold plan a very bold plan uh and a little frightening
01:05:33.960
at times it's like a roller coaster ride um but i kind of sit in the back seat and i'm like it's
01:05:39.680
going to be interesting to see how this all works out you know that's the way you have to it's the way
01:05:44.460
if you're going to survive you have to watch society be engaged at your level with your friends your
01:05:51.280
family but you need to say going to be interesting to see how they work this out i i have no idea how
01:05:56.540
this goes but this is a new dawn now and that's what you have to understand that's what he's
01:06:01.880
shooting for a new dawn the great reset except it's a reset in reverse instead of managing decline
01:06:09.800
trump is aiming to save the patient he believes and i believe you believe i think that our best days are
01:06:17.080
not behind us they're ahead and when you want to win big you have to risk big
01:06:24.920
you know europe wasn't built with with a lot of strings attached we did attach some strings
01:06:33.500
um they're not rushing to our aid now nor should we expect them to we don't need any foreign strings
01:06:41.840
we need to stand on our own you know elon musk said i hope the united states and europe can establish
01:06:47.780
a very close partnership effectively creating a free trade zone between europe and north america
01:06:52.100
that's worth fighting for it is and if you see the world i think the way the president sees it the
01:07:01.300
way i see it right now this is a huge gamble to revitalize our country to face the future
01:07:08.900
and and have a promise for our kids that to me is a gamble worth taking
01:07:14.880
this is glenn beck and with that said trump's announcing more more tariffs on china
01:07:24.700
great uh by the way uh next week we may be uh tariffing the moon um but uh anyway been trying
01:07:34.420
to fix this bleeding system um i can't say you know i can't say enough i trust his instincts more
01:07:40.700
than any politician i think i've encountered in my lifetime but even when the right guy is at the
01:07:44.940
wheel that doesn't mean you know that he's he's right all the time or the road won't be bumpy
01:07:50.100
so what do we do well you don't panic for one you don't go out and sell all your stocks because
01:07:55.520
jim kramer says to sell all your stocks you hope for the best um and it's important that you also
01:08:02.940
hedge you put a fence around the stuff that you have to have if you've if you've been saving for
01:08:08.900
retirement you have any kind of savings at all your dollar is going to fall please call lear
01:08:14.840
capital today at 800-957-gold 800-957-gold get your 4200 gold report 800-957-gold ask about getting
01:08:23.820
up to 15 000 in free gold or silver with a qualifying purchase you want to stress a little less about
01:08:30.720
what's happening with the stock market and the dollar and everything else 800-957-gold
01:08:35.700
it's blaze tv.com slash glenn subscribe now save 30 bucks blaze tv.com slash glenn
01:08:43.040
you don't want you don't want to miss anything in the next 60 minutes um we have amy parnes on
01:09:01.720
with us coming up in about a half an hour she is she's one of the co-authors of fight inside the
01:09:07.760
wildest battle for the white house uh she is the co-author of the book about joe biden's decision
01:09:14.400
to not seek re-election and the loss of kamala harris i got a few questions i have a few questions
01:09:20.700
we're going to be asking her uh coming up in just a second also did you see stew that uh gina carano
01:09:25.900
has just uh won a lawsuit against disney yeah that's a big that doesn't normally happen does
01:09:32.380
no it really has some big lawyers no uh and there's a reason for that walt disney learned his
01:09:38.700
lesson at about 19 i think 29 or 30 something he had oswald the rabbit and uh he leaves them he leaves
01:09:48.720
universal and he's like don't worry and universal's like all right well go ahead and he's like we're not
01:09:55.280
afraid i goes i got oswald the rabbit and they're like no actually we have oswald the rabbit and he
01:10:00.900
had already quit he had already put the gears into motion and he had nothing oh he didn't realize he
01:10:06.360
didn't own that he no he had no idea so he gets on a train and his brother is freaking out in the west
01:10:12.260
coast he's like wait a minute what and he's like yeah well don't worry i got something else he had
01:10:17.240
nothing he gets on the train and he starts doodling and on a napkin he draws a mickey mouse this is why
01:10:23.060
you love him so much these stories oh yeah yeah yeah he risked everything and he had actually
01:10:28.320
nothing but then he made it up afterwards and it all worked out it worked out anyway what are you
01:10:32.480
saying uh anyway uh uh so he's he he was bound and determined i will never be behind the eight ball
01:10:42.400
ever again so he created the nastiest uh attorney firm in the history of the world i don't think
01:10:50.560
there's any corporation that is more nasty than you know than than the disney corporation here we have
01:10:56.920
two stories now we have gina carano and the last time i saw somebody win was sage steel yeah that's
01:11:03.460
right that's two women that have beaten disney i think that's remarkable uh i wanted to call uh our
01:11:11.540
good friend sage steel get her on sage how are you hello glenn i'm great thank you and i'm so happy
01:11:18.580
for gina it's not over yet but this is a major battle right she won right she she actually now
01:11:25.000
disney has to turn over information about how everybody is uh you know paid on the mandalorian
01:11:31.320
and and any other star wars shows um uh and they didn't want to do that but would you agree with me
01:11:38.500
sage that that's just that's a remarkable win absolutely it's a huge win and also i mean disney's
01:11:46.760
delay tactics have just been ongoing and they lost that too a couple of months ago when they
01:11:52.340
were trying to get the lawsuit thrown out all together and judge said let's go quit procrastinating
01:11:58.220
and so this is massive because when you look at how they paid other stars on these projects
01:12:04.480
pedro pascal rosario dawson other people um basically this is about disney trying to hide what
01:12:11.060
they've been paying those people this whole time um while allowing them to go off on social media and
01:12:17.200
pedro pascal you know comparing donald trump to hitler one of those and that's fine to do on your
01:12:22.100
social media but gina carano gets fired so now that they have to reveal these financial records
01:12:27.100
this goes to show what gina would have made had they not wrongly terminated her and this is a major
01:12:34.060
major victory what is it like when you realize oh good lord they're sending the mouse with the
01:12:42.240
briefcase my way what is that like when you realize you're in a lawsuit against disney
01:12:48.120
well first of all filing the lawsuit against disney is not fun right did everybody in the room when you
01:12:55.000
said that would everybody go uh what did you just say you're gonna do yeah you idiot yeah i mean david
01:13:03.440
versus goliath for sure i mean i had disney i had disney i had gina on my show last summer and i
01:13:09.880
hadn't met her i of course had followed her story and when we met we just hugged and it was an emotional
01:13:14.760
episode because we both understood in a very unique way that i hope many others don't have to understand
01:13:20.700
the fear that comes with it but at some point you get pushed around enough and you say no this is wrong
01:13:28.020
and if i stay silent then it's on me and then i know personally i couldn't have looked myself in
01:13:34.020
the mirror and gina felt the same way and she has worked so hard and done so professionally you know
01:13:42.120
to the nth degree for all those years um gina's one thing i didn't have and my attorney is the best
01:13:49.700
in the business brian friedman um who represented megan kelly who represents tucker carlson who's
01:13:55.140
representing justin baldoni against crazy blake lively right now my attorney is the best and he
01:14:00.460
is a dear friend of mine now too gina has elon musk on her side like financially she's in a little
01:14:07.680
different situation than me because elon musk is putting the bill for her because he's standing up
01:14:11.880
for what's right and the first amendment so you look at gina what do you think you have
01:14:19.100
what what what was it that you bonded with on that episode that you did
01:14:24.620
initially i think it was the obvious okay wow two people who stood up to disney two women
01:14:32.640
like yeah what happened like who are we what happened to our lives and it was just
01:14:37.480
that obvious bond because it was such a big deal and people going whoa um but more so it was the
01:14:46.660
betrayal that we felt coming from what we once thought was the best company on earth um and such
01:14:56.120
an honor to work with them and for them and then when you realize that you are just cast aside
01:15:03.660
because you didn't believe what they wanted us to believe which goes against everything they preach
01:15:10.080
diversity of thought and acceptance and inclusion and all those things you realize that they were full
01:15:17.140
of it um and people that you looked up to people that you worked alongside for years and years and years
01:15:24.560
and what they said about you publicly and privately um certainly never to your face um there is just a
01:15:32.220
real sense of loss for relationships um because gina is as tough as they get i have realized that
01:15:39.180
i'm tougher than i thought never wanted to be but gina is as tough as they get and she was hurt
01:15:44.440
um i think that's kind of and this is not like oh woe is me we we never gina doesn't want sympathy
01:15:50.360
this is about what's right and calling these companies out and that's the other thing we bonded on
01:15:55.320
is calling these companies out the biggest companies in the world because
01:15:58.700
if we don't and expose it because we have the ability based on platforms that we've you know
01:16:04.460
it's it's a blessings i've had these platforms right if we don't use them to expose and therefore
01:16:11.960
hopefully maybe fingers crossed prevent other companies from doing the same bs to uh to these
01:16:17.780
people women men anywhere doesn't matter black white green blue lgbt i don't care just treat
01:16:23.760
us equally and not punishing us if we don't agree with what you say because by the way you're going
01:16:31.400
to say this today and that tomorrow who can keep up right diversity of thought first amendment and so
01:16:36.120
we bonded over so much and i just i i admire her and her courage to continue this because she
01:16:42.260
completely threw her career away as well as people said i did but look she's standing up for what's
01:16:48.200
right and glenn i told you when we we were together last month doing your show in texas the harder
01:16:53.760
right versus the easier wrong gina is doing the harder right and that takes courage i'm so honored
01:17:00.800
to know her you know and i tell you it doesn't i i think you grow from this you're you're seeing new
01:17:06.740
success she's seeing new success and you have become bigger than what you were in many ways because
01:17:13.740
um you're now a human success story you're not you now have experienced strife and trouble and come
01:17:21.240
out the other side and realizing i didn't hurt so much i mean i it hurt but it didn't hurt like i
01:17:27.840
thought i was gonna hurt i thought i was gonna burn myself up uh and uh i didn't and so you become this
01:17:33.980
the this additional success story that i think you know you look at you look at the what's the woman
01:17:40.020
who's now playing snow white whatever her name is yeah um so you know they're not firing her which
01:17:47.780
a must drive you nuts um they're not firing her and she tubed the crown jewel i mean next to mickey
01:17:56.460
mouse it is snow white um and that's the that's the movie that built that company and uh for her to
01:18:05.940
go in and destroy the story of snow white all of that money because you guys weren't bleeding money
01:18:13.260
on on you and your your point of view or her point of view absolutely not right absolutely not i mean
01:18:20.420
you figure no matter who's in office about half the country agrees with you right which means the
01:18:26.040
other half disagrees it's usually right down the middle and they could have gotten out of that mess
01:18:30.940
with rachel i think over a year ago when she first started to mouth off and maybe too much had been
01:18:34.860
invested if nothing else why don't you at least have a chat okay fine don't fire her like you did
01:18:39.260
us or and i didn't get fired i mean i i we settled my lawsuit and i chose to leave um gina was fired
01:18:44.300
though rachel was allowed to say much worse than i think gina ever said and i don't know who could
01:18:50.600
disagree with that and you could show the direct damages you could show the damages yeah look at the
01:18:55.920
numbers exactly and they chose to stick with her and now look so you reap which is so for sure
01:19:00.780
but the double standard is the reason what must be what must be called out and they could have at
01:19:06.340
least pulled rachel aside and said we need you to tamp down a little bit this isn't good for business
01:19:11.960
maybe they didn't she didn't listen if so okay that's a whole other story but to your point about
01:19:16.900
like what you gain when you do stand up um you realize it's just a lot bigger than you yeah and that's
01:19:25.440
and when people come up to gina and and come up to me and i've had fathers come up to me because
01:19:31.060
they've been afraid to stand up for their daughters in sports and why are boys competing against their
01:19:34.600
daughter because they're afraid to go to the school board meeting and get fired the fear is real
01:19:38.220
like we know that so i am so grateful um that i chose to stand up and i know gina is because the
01:19:47.360
people that you are affecting just by doing that standing up in her case for freedom of true freedom of
01:19:52.940
speech it is everything that's so much bigger than any career i could have dreamt of having and same
01:19:58.540
with her disney is getting their comeuppance and they need to and they seemed it's so obvious they
01:20:05.040
do this to themselves and that is why so many people were more than okay to see what's happening
01:20:10.880
with the snow light debacle shame on them uh i may switch subject here for a second stew um i'm doing
01:20:17.460
something with the diesel brothers uh here in a couple of months and i'm taking one of my my 1934
01:20:24.740
race car uh out uh and we're just going to open it up on a track and two other cars and uh you were
01:20:32.560
you were leaving my studio and you were going to the airport and you were like i'll get an uber and i'm
01:20:38.480
like no no i'll take you to the airport i'm going that way so i take you to the airport and you are the
01:20:42.620
biggest car hound i have i mean i'd be broke if i were married to you because we would you'd let me
01:20:49.940
buy all the cars my wife is like stop it stop i'd be like what are we buying this weekend i know
01:20:57.000
listen the one the one thing i regret the biggest regret i have in life right now is that i didn't ask
01:21:02.920
you for a selfie that day when glenn beck drove me to the airport and what kind of car was that
01:21:09.840
it was a continental gtc thank you yeah and it was forest green and it was stunning and the top
01:21:17.320
was down and my wild hair was bigger than ever and i'm like no one's gonna believe this but i
01:21:22.180
didn't want to be tacky and ask you you should have a selfie i know i want to make sure the world knows
01:21:26.960
i want to make sure you're going to come out when we do the diesel brothers thing stew is going to be
01:21:30.560
there i'm going to be there and i'd love to have you and you drive one of the cars okay is everybody
01:21:36.520
listening you can play this back glenn said you drive one of the cars how are you doing on
01:21:43.200
accidents do you have many accidents but i can give me that stick shift let's go no no accidents
01:21:50.360
nothing but i do have a little bit of a lead foot but i mean what what a waste yeah i know you don't
01:21:54.860
take those cars and open them up do you like do you like uh electric engines not even an engine
01:22:01.040
driven it like twice i i don't know listen i i appreciate how you barely tap it and then it's
01:22:07.160
like whiplash and you're gone like i appreciate that but i i guess i'm old school give me that
01:22:12.720
clutch i know me do it that's the real strength and power you know come on yeah sage great talk to
01:22:19.900
you we'll talk we'll talk again thanks for joining us thank you glenn thank you take care sage steel
01:22:24.220
host of the sage steel show you can get that wherever you get your podcast and at sage steel
01:22:30.480
dot com all right let me tell you about rough greens dogs are really interesting creatures
01:22:35.080
one day they're lying around just like they've been retired and the next day you're zooming around the
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house like they're you know you're chasing a cruise missile made out of fur um last night tanya and i
01:22:48.160
made the decision that uh we were going to put uno down this weekend and i had to call my son and say
01:22:55.300
you got to come home and uh yeah it's so hard people that don't have dogs you just don't understand
01:23:03.100
um because they are always there they're like they're like children except without all the bad stuff
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i mean you know my kids could crap in the front room and if that's the worst thing they ever did
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you know then maybe i wouldn't have to have a dog uh you know because they do worse things than that
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and your dog never you never have to go you know the principal's never calling uh and saying you know
01:23:31.920
what your son did today you know what your daughter did today anyway um i want to thank rough greens for
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i'll tell you about uh home title lock uh glenn has talked about ai as a sort of a black hole
01:24:34.640
you either have to learn to manage it or you risk being swallowed by it and like it or not he's right
01:24:40.080
of course um you know i don't tell you i don't like telling him that uh the ai revolution unfortunately
01:24:45.520
is already here and it's bringing a lot of good things but a lot of bad things as well
01:24:49.180
um some of the things we're facing are kind of sci-fi robot uprising type stuff but
01:24:54.080
uh the speed of change is really creating real risks one of them is home title theft ai is advancing
01:24:59.280
faster than most people can keep up and criminals are already finding ways to exploit ai and exploit
01:25:04.620
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the fusion of entertainment and enlightenment this is the glenn beck program
01:30:02.480
hello america i want to talk to you a little bit about uh the book that came out i think last week
01:30:12.780
week before fight inside the wildest battle for the white house we have one of the authors of that
01:30:18.160
book and i've got a little a few questions on it the uh stories that were happening behind the scenes
01:30:23.780
at the white house we all knew were happening um except everybody denied it now we know it did happen
01:30:31.620
what a surprise it seems so very familiar uh one of the authors the co-author amy parnes is uh with us
01:30:38.260
now she's a hill senior political correspondent she's going to talk to us a little bit about fight
01:30:42.740
inside the wildest battle for the white house in 60 seconds first let me tell you about real estate
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agents i trust.com go there now all right amy's with us amy parnes hill senior political correspondent
01:31:51.480
author of uh fight inside the wildest battle for the white house amy how are you hi glenn good thanks
01:31:57.560
for having me you bet uh so you know i can we play the uh can we play just that little collage of all
01:32:05.320
the people that said this wasn't happening do we have that can we play that real quick joe biden has
01:32:10.520
vision he has knowledge he has a strategic thinker this is a very sharp president in terms of his
01:32:19.640
public presentation if he makes a slip of the tongue here or there what's the deal you're asking me my
01:32:25.400
personal opinion uh he is sharp uh he is on top of things he when we have uh meetings with him with
01:32:32.280
his staff he's constantly pushing us getting trying to get more information i can tell you this was the
01:32:37.160
day before that interview i can tell you he was sharper than anyone i've spoken to about a very
01:32:42.920
this was happening all the time amy everyone was saying how sharp he is that is that was according
01:32:49.560
to your book just absolutely not true and everybody in the white house knew that how how go ahead yeah
01:32:57.320
no it was uh it's something that we really dug into in reporting out this book um and we had questions
01:33:04.280
about what interactions certain people had with the president we we detail how eric swalwell a
01:33:11.320
congressman from california for example attended a congressional picnic with uh the president a
01:33:17.560
year before the debate debacle a disaster and um and he had to almost remind then president biden who he
01:33:26.040
was and this was someone who he competed against in the 2020 presidential election um he should know who
01:33:32.280
he is um and there's detail after detail about that in this book you know that you in your book you
01:33:39.320
talk about how there were bets being paid how they were looking you know shopping for judges on who
01:33:44.280
was going to swear her in they thought he was going to die before the election um i mean did you did
01:33:52.040
you get the sense from anyone while you're researching this book that anyone thought maybe this
01:33:57.240
isn't really good for the constitution i mean that's why right now you're seeing a lot of errors
01:34:04.200
thrown in the direction excuse me of the the former president and his aides um people are really really
01:34:11.080
upset about they think it's a cover-up they think that you know they should have been more candid even
01:34:16.280
within their own party about the president's cognitive abilities um and you know glenn i i covered the
01:34:24.360
president for a long time um and i tried to get up after the story and the white house was constantly
01:34:31.400
i know my colleagues were as well it's not like any of us were asleep at the switch but the white house
01:34:36.280
would batter us uh when we asked questions about his mental acuity and his age it was a constant
01:34:42.280
constant battle but was there was there anybody that knew that should have spoken out i mean in the press
01:34:50.280
or anything i mean it's one thing to it's one thing to speculate it's one thing to i hear rumors
01:34:57.080
but and if you're you're shut off from it but you know in the white house it seems like there were
01:35:03.400
quite a few people that knew this is a disaster yeah hey who's who's running the country at that point
01:35:11.560
who was the president this close set of advisors kept him really close and that's why i think you didn't
01:35:19.160
see him as much right now president trump is out there talking to reporters every day yeah i think
01:35:24.600
the press corps wanted to see biden do some similar things and take a similar media approach and he did
01:35:31.160
not um you know and and we we detail in the book you know there's there's a fundraiser where someone you
01:35:37.880
know says that he he looks like he's going to die at the fundraiser there are other moments where um
01:35:44.920
you know we we take you inside phil murphy's house and we detail how he's speaking to just a couple of
01:35:53.160
a couple dozen fundraisers at a small house and he needs fluorescent tape on the floor to guide him
01:36:00.520
from place to place he needs a teleprompter you know these aren't common things for a house at a house
01:36:07.240
yes um and you know makeup when he this is this was another revelation in our book whenever he
01:36:15.400
traveled overseas he was met with a makeup artist that was his first order of business sometimes he
01:36:20.360
met me he missed meetings because the makeup artist was there um to touch him up they were clearly
01:36:27.720
concerned about the optics around his age and around his mental acuity you you write in one point that the
01:36:35.320
makeup artist he goes in he sits down for the makeup and then he calls it a day and that was it yeah
01:36:40.840
yeah and you know these are aids that were talking to us about this obviously they knew about it and
01:36:46.120
they said at times he looked really frazzled he would get out of the limousine and you know would
01:36:51.640
look around and would would know where he was um and so yeah it was it's very startling even to the
01:36:58.120
people who were telling us these stories but you know it's one thing to be um it's one thing to go
01:37:06.120
yeah that was really weird and i guess it's another to realize that is the man that has to make the
01:37:12.440
decision um you know for the country god forbid we're attacked or whatever um and he's not there there was
01:37:21.160
was there anyone inside fighting and saying we have got to alert the american people we have to invoke
01:37:29.160
the 25th amendment is 25th isn't it so um yeah yeah we've got to invoke the 25th amendment this isn't
01:37:37.080
right the people have in have put their power in this man he is no longer capable of making these
01:37:44.720
decisions i think a lot of people would have had respect for that instead i walk away going
01:37:50.920
was there no one that cared about the constitution and cared about what could have happened with this
01:37:58.520
guy in charge no and and i think that's why you're seeing so much uh fire aimed at uh his close set of
01:38:06.440
advisors right now because they could have been more candid and um you know democrats in general i think
01:38:12.600
were confused as to his cognitive abilities i think the reason he wanted to do this debate and his advisors
01:38:18.440
wanted to do this debate earlier the one this disastrous one in june last year is because they
01:38:23.880
wanted they knew that he was losing in the polls obviously they wanted to change the trajectory of
01:38:29.320
this race and they thought that that was a moment that could help him um instead it brought out you
01:38:36.680
know it should display everything uh for the american public so i honestly thought for the longest time
01:38:43.960
that they did that knowing somebody was like no let's put him on the stage and let's do it now
01:38:51.000
before you know things get completely out of hand and he's going to be running for uh re-election i i
01:38:57.240
really thought they put him on stage that early because i've never seen that happen before in american
01:39:01.160
politics put on stage that early so he would be exposed and everybody would be like okay we can't run him
01:39:08.120
or no and what's fascinating glenn is that we take you inside i mean we open the book inside nancy
01:39:14.040
pelosi's living room and she's watching the debate alone she had warned president biden at the time
01:39:19.800
she said oh you don't want to debate trump and she you know mentioned it under the guise of oh why would
01:39:25.160
you belittle yourself and appear on stage with him but she knows and jim cliburn who's also watching the
01:39:31.880
debate alone in his living room and we take you inside there he's having a drink and watching it they're all alone they're not at
01:39:37.960
some debate watch party together because they almost know what is about to happen they're watching the
01:39:44.040
train wreck unfold bit by bit and alone so what do we do to ensure this let me ask you before i ask you
01:39:53.480
that again try again who was running the country that's that's a very good question i think you know his
01:40:03.960
obviously his close set of advisors had a great big role in that um you see ron clain these days sort
01:40:11.560
of trying to distance himself he was the former chief of staff trying to distance himself from the
01:40:16.840
optics of uh what was happening um but it's not but it's really not optics it is the truth somebody was
01:40:25.880
making decisions because the president could you know i've i was always fascinated in history by woodrow
01:40:32.120
wilson edith wilson ran the white house for a while but it was his own party that came in because
01:40:38.920
it was the same thing people like rumors and they're like i don't think he's really there uh and he wasn't
01:40:45.000
seen for a long time and so the leadership of the party came finally forced the first lady uh and said
01:40:52.600
because she was saying he's going to run for a third term and they said no no or we'll expose all of
01:40:57.640
this right now he's not running for another term um uh you know but it seems to be the same thing i'm
01:41:04.840
wondering how many presidents have we had that you know nobody seems to really care that the elected
01:41:11.320
official isn't actually doing what that official is supposed to do they're just some unelected people
01:41:18.120
just making the decisions yeah and the fact of the matter is glenn i mean you see the president the
01:41:23.320
former president has all but disappeared from public view since leaving office and i think that
01:41:28.360
also speaks volumes um about his state of mind was was kamala uh that in the note which i mean if if
01:41:39.560
god forbid something would have happened yeah who would have grabbed the football who would have been
01:41:44.360
the one it would have been kamala harris and that's sort of why i mean you teased this earlier but
01:41:49.400
her communications director would carry around this spreadsheet of republican judges um because
01:41:57.000
he felt almost that like she had to be validated in that moment and only a republican judge could really
01:42:03.800
swear her in and um and have that validation um from republicans he thought that there was no way that
01:42:10.440
um such a divisive country um you know and people would support her and so we detail how he came into
01:42:19.880
that role with the spreadsheet he traveled with it the dnc had plans in case um something happened to
01:42:26.840
the president um and we've exposed all of this for the first time in this book can you find any because
01:42:32.360
i'm i'm a i'm a self-taught you know historian but i'm pretty good at it i've never seen anything like
01:42:39.320
this in american history have you it's pretty remarkable it's really unprecedented and it was
01:42:46.520
really interesting to report out you know i think people have questions about the media and how we
01:42:51.640
went about reporting this and it's it's almost like the president needed to leave office for people to
01:42:58.360
actually admit what was happening and and tell us stories that's what's interesting i think you know when
01:43:04.760
you cover a president they're always worried that the white house is going to come down hard on them
01:43:09.720
um and so they're they're less prone to want to tell you things and then when they leave office this is
01:43:16.520
when the floodgates open up um is anybody going to be held accountable for this i mean i think right
01:43:24.200
now the the party that's why you're seeing the democratic party scrambling i think first of all they
01:43:29.560
need to come out and and admit what had happened here and almost look themselves in the mirror and
01:43:35.320
talk about joe biden the other day jake tapper asks tim walls about it and tim walls kind of just
01:43:42.040
around the question i think they need to be very frank about what was happening and what they were
01:43:47.480
witnessing and they they don't they don't want to do that right now you know it's interesting to me i just
01:43:52.520
told this story on the air because people are kicking around donald trump wants to run for a third term
01:43:56.600
no no that's against the constitution and that that that was put there for a very uh clear reason
01:44:03.960
and it wasn't put in there by the republicans it was put in by the democrats fdr's own party when they
01:44:09.960
saw what had happened to the presidency it just gained far too much power and it's not good for anybody when
01:44:17.720
that happens um and you know here you have as soon as fdr died that's when all the democrats were like
01:44:25.080
okay okay we got to make sure that doesn't happen again but they were for him when he was alive
01:44:30.040
it seems to be kind of the same thing here that everybody was like okay it's cool uh but is anybody
01:44:37.480
going to step up now and say this cannot happen ever again i think that's what has to happen glenn
01:44:45.480
someone has to take responsibility for it and um no one is and i'm curious to see how the democrats
01:44:52.120
reckon with this uh amy thank you very much i'm glad somebody uh finally told the story and and
01:44:59.480
got the story it's it is if we don't fix this it's just going to happen again and it'll happen with the
01:45:04.600
other party i mean it just it will i mean you give people in in power an inch they are going to take a
01:45:10.840
mile and uh this cannot happen this just cannot happen again amy thank you so much thank you glenn you
01:45:17.560
bet amy parnes fight inside the wildest battle for the white house uh all right let me talk to
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what'd you think of that stew um i thought it was very interesting i i have i'm on the record multiple
01:47:02.680
times saying i think this is a massive scandal and i think republicans have not paid enough
01:47:07.320
attention to it since the trump administration started i know they're doing a lot of stuff i
01:47:10.760
know they're really busy but there should be a house committee going after this for accountability
01:47:17.480
reasons so exactly what you said doesn't happen again you want that to happen do you want if donald
01:47:22.040
trump god forbid uh you know you know had a stroke or whatever that's what happened to woodrow
01:47:26.760
wilson had a stroke and would you want that to happen and you not know about it and just you know
01:47:32.760
the people around him were running the white house because yeah you trust them no no no no no no no no
01:47:41.000
the person we elect must be the person in charge and if they can't handle it that's what the 25th
01:47:48.040
amendment is for you go and you know the uh we didn't have this for a long time um and it was after
01:47:56.360
kennedy wasn't it or is it fdr i think it was kennedy if something happens the vice president has the
01:48:04.520
the responsibility to step up i mean the one that should be really held responsible is kamala harris
01:48:11.320
she knew she should have gone to the cabinet because it's the vice president only that can make this call
01:48:19.240
the vice president has to go to the cabinet or the cabinet comes to the vice president and says
01:48:25.880
mr or mrs vice president this is what's happening or she goes and says cabinet members the president
01:48:31.560
is clearly not present uh and it can't last i ask that you would invoke the 25th amendment
01:48:39.160
yeah and that's that's the constitutional remedy and i think it's the appropriate one and it's important
01:48:44.680
that the other party can't invoke the 25th amendment only the vice president and the cabinet cabinet
01:48:51.560
right but if if they're all in for power and they're not there to protect the constitution if
01:48:58.280
they're like i don't care how we get the power if they don't care yeah interestingly though this would
01:49:03.320
have empowered the cabinet and empowered kamala harris i i think even short of that which is an
01:49:10.920
extreme measure it's never been you know successfully uh well it's never been invoked i don't think ever
01:49:17.240
that's what i mean it's never been you know never no one's ever gotten to the point where they
01:49:21.160
successfully got it over the finish line though it's been talked about many times um just going
01:49:27.480
to the media right like there was talking about it publicly they not only that they tried to get him
01:49:34.520
re-elected until he got in front of the american people the american people like whoa what is going on
01:49:39.960
this is really happening this isn't just some you know glenn beck fever dream that this guy
01:49:44.920
no it wasn't as soon as they saw it the whole thing changed but they that could have happened
01:49:49.960
so much earlier and frankly it would have helped the democrats if it did if in 2022 this happened
01:49:56.840
and kamala harris came to the media and said you know look you know this it would have gone in multiple
01:50:01.320
levels of leaks before this point but kamala harris goes to the media and says look joe biden's a great
01:50:06.040
man he's doing great things he's doing everything he can but you know unfortunately you know age always
01:50:12.120
wins and you know we were in a difficult situation it's time for him to step down he would do it
01:50:17.640
she would have been president for a couple of years and may have won re-election may have won
01:50:21.800
who knows i mean it was pathetic at every single level but it was also misleading the american
01:50:28.040
people in a way that is absolutely unconstitutional and wrong and needs we need to have a remedy for it
01:50:33.000
can't use misleading that's a a harsh terrible line glenn beck must be present in certain states
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still i just want to point that out um now join us at blaze tv blaze tv.com use the promo code glenn
01:52:02.840
so the uh amazing the um the doctor that you know was joe biden's doctor uh said everything was
01:52:31.640
everything was was great he was just fabulous was it dr nick from the simpsons i think it was
01:52:38.680
i think it was i'm starting to wonder kevin o'connor uh they are now saying that he is going to be
01:52:46.520
grilled by the republicans um who are now you know investigating the cognitive decline
01:52:53.400
ronnie jackson from texas said he's absolutely positively uh will be implicated in the cover-up of
01:52:59.080
all of this he's a massive massive part remember it was right after right after the um uh the debate
01:53:06.200
right after the resignation that he was like no he's good he's all good remember when they had the
01:53:12.280
guy from um what was he was a that wasn't an alzheimer's guy he was um i remember this controversy
01:53:20.440
parkinson's someone yeah it was someone who visited and yeah and they were like no he was just uh he was
01:53:26.120
upstairs uh he actually he's a fuller brush salesman yeah why uh and they were like no he's not being
01:53:34.440
at parkinson's what are you talking about um yeah uh he's going to be called in as well i do think that
01:53:43.480
it's interesting the the type of accountability and massive scandal we're talking about here
01:53:50.280
a big part of that process are journalists actually doing their job amy parnes one of them
01:53:58.920
actually doing her job we hope you know i i think i give i give i'm gonna give her a pass um you know
01:54:07.480
and i appreciate coming out with it now and i give them pass i give everybody a pass because i don't know
01:54:12.920
who knew what but right right there were those that were close enough that had to have known
01:54:21.160
and why they didn't say anything is most likely because they would have been ostracized in a pariah
01:54:26.840
and they probably would have lost their job and everything else but there are things worth standing
01:54:30.840
up for i think though she kind of i'm not accusing her of no totally i totally i know you're not i think
01:54:36.200
you know she outlined i think that the issue with that at the time for some people is that nobody wants
01:54:41.560
to talk when you're still in power and you are you know a lot of this is you know it's a lot of cya
01:54:47.960
going on too with these people it's important to understand i tried to get this out of her and i don't
01:54:52.520
think she really understood the question or maybe we just look at it from from such different things
01:54:56.920
sure is there no honor is it was there not one person in the biden white house in the biden no come
01:55:04.600
on i mean not one person that said very few this is not right i mean very few
01:55:13.640
would you work for joe biden no i i wouldn't but i mean then how do you then how do democrats
01:55:20.120
i mean right however you're gonna finish that sentence you know the answer to it right yeah they
01:55:26.600
can't they can't um i do think though you're right there probably were some people and look we did get
01:55:31.480
some stuff that leaked out it was just not frequent enough and we complained at the time that hey
01:55:36.600
where were these stories at the time they did a lot i mean think about this glenn they didn't meet
01:55:44.120
with with anyone in the house for years just that should have come out a lot earlier than it did wilson
01:55:52.440
didn't meet with anybody from the house for like nine months yeah and the house went nuts the democrats
01:55:58.440
went crazy what's going on yeah and i do think that that is the type of stuff i don't know that
01:56:04.360
we could have had all the detail that's going to be in this book or some of the others that are coming
01:56:07.480
out because there's several that are coming out and addressing this and i think what i'm sure i guess
01:56:11.640
i'm trying to say mostly is i think these books are important efforts uh even if they're not perfect
01:56:18.120
even if it's more delayed than we want when it comes to accountability it doesn't protect us for
01:56:23.400
what happened to us during the biden presidency it has to but it has to we have to get it repaired
01:56:29.080
you know i i feel the same way about uh you know covet like me too the fact that we don't have
01:56:37.080
laws that say the clear as day even during a pandemic when everyone's panicking you don't close churches
01:56:47.400
right like just like how is this we do have that law it's called the first dimension right the first
01:56:54.040
amendment but i'm saying an extra clarifying measure all of those things that we all now kind of say god
01:57:01.560
that was nuts those things need to be codified and they haven't been right and i don't think and
01:57:06.440
nobody's paid a price yeah who has paid a price for the millions of people you know what kills me
01:57:13.240
is we could argue you know there's a political price that was paid in the 2024 election yeah that's
01:57:19.240
nothing that is nothing compared to millions of people died millions of people died millions of
01:57:26.120
people lost their jobs their livelihoods children lost their children lost their grandparents or their
01:57:32.520
parents without being able to say goodbye i mean the the list of those injured is non-ending and i
01:57:41.400
almost feel like it's so big people don't want to deal with it which i get at some level from a
01:57:45.960
human perspective but that that's why you have a justice system right that that doesn't care about
01:57:51.160
the human perspective right it punishes people not based on anger or fear but based on facts that's what
01:57:58.280
that's how it's supposed to work and i these things you know there's been some efforts on the covet
01:58:02.680
thing i you know mostly unsuccessful there have been some of those books written that really go through
01:58:08.280
all of this uh but you know i don't think we covet was obvious i think that people disagreed about
01:58:15.160
what the punishment should be who was responsible but i think everyone knew something went very wrong
01:58:20.040
there i i feel like we're not sure people still that that everybody i would bet you a lot of people
01:58:26.040
in california they don't think anything i think that went wonderfully they went swimmingly yeah or they
01:58:31.480
complain about the first few months under trump and then nothing after that yeah i mean i i look there's
01:58:36.520
still people walking around every once in a while i see one in a mask and i'm like gosh this is still
01:58:39.880
happening to a lot of people you know i want to stop them and say get help yeah i mean sincerely not
01:58:44.600
not not something way yeah just please get help there there you you you are living in a fantasy world
01:58:53.400
right now and you know if you have a compromised immune system or whatever or you're just chinese or is
01:58:59.640
it japanese that always wear the masks or michael jackson you know well he should get help too but anyway
01:59:05.240
get help this is a serious mental issue if you can't at this point go and look at the facts
01:59:16.440
but is anybody really talking about them i mean you know there's not there's there's no big breakthrough
01:59:21.880
here's another story it's from the daily caller hunter biden asked embassy for help with burisma's
01:59:26.680
difficulties while while joe biden was vice president they've unearthed letters though they that oh they
01:59:33.720
unearthed them did they they were probably sitting on somebody's desk when the trump administration
01:59:39.240
came in probably framed on a wall going yeah look what i got um they didn't unearth them we've known
01:59:45.880
this stuff and now it's coming out and all of it comes out in dribs and drabs and nobody cares
01:59:53.080
look at the precedent that just this last administration just set
01:59:57.560
you could you could take money for your family millions from enemies of our country enemies
02:00:07.080
and get away with it you can do a massive cover-up you can throw people under the bus
02:00:14.280
like crazy let them go to jail for things that are absolutely your fault uh you can lie about
02:00:22.520
you know somebody's health and it's the president of the united states you can do that apparently and
02:00:29.880
not pay any price look at what we've set up the precedent if this if these things are not corrected
02:00:41.080
that's why you know uh i'm going to washington in a couple of weeks to do the hundred uh hundred days
02:00:46.920
and um i had to narrow it down to a couple of people and one of them that i really want to talk
02:00:52.120
to is pam bondy i really want to know pam these things have to be corrected where are we where are
02:00:59.560
we on these things this is not revenge this is make sure it never happens again you know it was
02:01:08.200
woodrow wilson's own party that said no fdr after he was there it was his own party that said never
02:01:17.640
again it feels like we've lost that though we have that instinct we have is gone and i i and it has to
02:01:22.840
happen in both parties i think i was gonna say i think it's on both sides on that one it is a lot
02:01:27.080
there's a lot that i can point out i think it's on both sides i don't think that there's a lot of
02:01:32.200
interest anymore in holding uh your own side accountable at least at some level i mean i think you
02:01:37.000
look our audience sits here and complains about republicans every single day i think generally
02:01:40.760
speaking in the human the human being the american people still have that well but the politicians i
02:01:46.440
don't know where they are on it right and and i'm not sure all of the people do because they have it's
02:01:51.800
been a i mean it's practically a cia op on the american people the way these parties have fought and the way
02:01:59.720
they have pushed people into you know opposite corners mostly on lies um it's been an op it puts
02:02:09.160
you into your lizard brain and then you just can't think straight anymore it's it's fight or flight and
02:02:14.680
so you you know they're they're not able to think anymore they're just not able to think why do you think
02:02:22.200
that this tesla stuff is going on in the streets it is not it has very little to do with uh elon musk
02:02:29.720
and really hurting him it has a lot to do keep people in their lizard brain do not let them get
02:02:36.520
comfortable with this because once you're out of your lizard brain once you once you are like okay
02:02:42.840
all right i'm so tired of this you start to think and that politicians can't have you thinking
02:02:49.640
that should tell you an awful lot shouldn't it all right back in just a second patriot mobile
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how well do you really know your cell phone company i mean you pay them every month but you
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have your checked out find out what they stand for it's kind of like cell phone companies are a little
02:03:04.440
like hookers you know i mean i don't really want to ask any questions you know just pay them all right
02:03:10.200
if that's the way you want to be then you know stay with the big three uh but who do they donate to
02:03:16.040
who do they lobby for who they've been sleeping with you know what i'm saying some of these
02:03:19.880
companies the big ones you've heard of are using your money to push policies and causes that you
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are in direct opposition uh planned parenthood do you want your money any of your money a penny of your
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money going to kill babies not me well if you're with verizon congratulations you're doing that most
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the media is peddling slop these days better stay sharper you might end up taking it on the chin well
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welcome to the glenn beck program uh there's a just a delightful story that is coming out of ohio a
02:05:33.800
high school teacher is accused of attempting to hire a student to murder her soon-to-be ex-husband
02:05:39.320
uh but apparently the mom found out about the murder for hire plot uh because she was snooping
02:05:47.400
through her son's phone good for you mom uh and alerted police uh and and he was you know her son
02:05:53.800
was like saying to the teacher isn't somebody going to hear gunfire the neighbor's going to hear the gun
02:05:58.840
shots uh no i don't care about the neighbors oh okay this woman is absolutely insane she has been
02:06:05.880
terrorizing her own children and her her soon-to-be ex-husband um she's been charged with first degree
02:06:12.760
felony conspiracy to uh commit murder uh but you know she was she was right there she still had
02:06:19.320
she was still had her teaching she was able to do teaching uh so that's uh that's good don't know
02:06:25.320
where the unions stand on that but the academy for urban scholars high school said uh she's no longer
02:06:30.840
employed i love this as soon as we became aware of the situation we immediately took action to
02:06:37.080
terminate her employment now that's the way it should be answered right oh we can't comment on
02:06:42.360
ongoing investing no are you kidding me as soon as we found out her ass was out on the street she was
02:06:49.400
nuts that's the way it should be handled maybe it's just me maybe it's just me you think yeah
02:06:55.400
that's uh i i like that approach um can i give you one more uh clip here before we go sure this is
02:07:01.880
a fun one and she's my favorite i have a new favorite in the whole world oh yeah and her name
02:07:05.960
is jasmine crockett love her uh you know you know sure you need to say her full name jasmine crockett
02:07:11.080
for president yes okay i don't know what any year i just want her running i want more of her yeah
02:07:17.080
here she is describing the illegal immigration problem uh apparently from the democratic position all right
02:07:24.600
so i had to go around the country and educate people about what immigrants do for this country
02:07:30.520
or the fact that we are a country of immigrants right right the fact is ain't none of y'all trying
02:07:35.960
to go and farm right now okay so i'm lying raise raise your hand
02:07:42.920
you're not you're not we done picking cotton oh we are you can't pay us enough to find a plantation
02:07:59.320
oh so we're bringing in the immigrants to pick the cotton it's so you're arguing on behalf of
02:08:05.000
slavery is that i'm sorry it's just uh this is what i said what three weeks ago in a model like i'm like
02:08:11.560
this is what they're in effect saying no now she is actually saying it oh with her trademark sass
02:08:20.040
yes she's gonna sass you well i love it's so fake and transparent i love it i i cannot get enough of
02:08:28.600
this nonsense with her it's so good it is so good and the idea that jasmine crockett would go around the
02:08:35.800
country and educate anyone is so hilarious on its face i just why can't we why can't she be
02:08:45.400
on television all the time talking i want it all the time i want her to represent and she does every
02:08:52.520
viewpoint i want her to be the face of the democratic party i want all of her viewpoints to be the face of
02:08:57.800
the democratic party i want her explaining every policy position they have she's fantastic they're
02:09:02.360
going to have a problem with that i'm looking for the report today it's in the show prep at glenbeck.com
02:09:07.720
uh where is the story about the polls of the people that the democrats are like yeah we need this
02:09:13.800
person to be president oh yeah i saw it's at the end of uh one of these preps i just was looking at
02:09:18.200
it one of these prep packets on i got it for you here we go here we go uh number one this is uh
02:09:23.240
who do we need right now who who is the leader of the democratic party number one kamala harris 19 oh my
02:09:28.200
god to barack obama 17 but cory booker i guess because he made a speech recently 14 aoc 8 sanders
02:09:35.240
8 jeffreys 8 schumer 6 crockett crockett only three come on that needs to be 80 cory cory
02:09:44.280
crockett that's what we need to work on that i'm telling you god i could not take we gotta have her
02:09:48.840
we gotta have her i mean what a lineup that is this is glenn beck