MAGA Goes Off on Pam Bondi's Hearing. Glenn Has Some Thoughts ... | Guests: Liz Wheeler & Alexandra Lavoie | 2⧸12⧸26
Episode Stats
Length
2 hours and 7 minutes
Words per Minute
146.65306
Summary
On today's show, Glenn Beck talks about the latest in the ongoing saga of the Save America Act, and what it means for the future of the country. He also talks about Bitcoin and the potential impact it could have on the economy.
Transcript
00:00:22.000
So, whatever you think is going to happen in the future,
00:00:30.000
One of the most frustrating parts of hearing loss
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is that it can make you feel completely disconnected
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But you're working a lot harder just to keep up.
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And sometimes you're guessing more than you'd like to admit.
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What stops a lot of people from doing anything about it
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A price tag that will make you wonder if it's even worth starting.
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It's clear, natural sound developed with input from audiologists
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so conversations feel less like work and what they're supposed to be.
00:01:35.000
the nonsense of the mainstream media that they're trying to feed you.
00:01:39.000
We work tirelessly to bring you the unfiltered truth because you deserve it.
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Right now, would you take a moment and rate and review the Glenn Beck Podcast?
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because every single review helps us break through Big Tech's algorithm
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to reach more Americans who need to hear the truth.
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This is a movement, and you're part of it, a big part of it.
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So if you believe in what we're doing, you want more people to wake up,
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Oh, oh, oh, oh, na, da, da, da, da, da, da, da, da, da, da, da, da, da, da, da.
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The Fusion of Entertainment, Enlightenment, and Empowerment.
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The House passed the Save America Act, thank God.
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But John Thune is starting to look very wobbly.
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Or is he going to let the Democrats call for a 60-member vote?
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If he doesn't use his position to do everything to hold the Republicans together and say,
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We're going to let them make this case for 30 days.
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But then we get the 50-vote, just simple majority.
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It was a fundraiser and a Freedom of Speech Award for Real Clear.
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And I'm sitting there and I'm talking to a bunch of friends.
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And we're talking about if the Save America Act does not pass, we may never win an election again.
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And if we don't win an election, these guys are crazy.
00:05:02.260
And it builds on something I talked to you about a couple of weeks ago called Accelerationalism.
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Accelerationism is an ideology and a belief that says society is corrupt beyond repair.
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And I told you about this a few weeks ago when it started.
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I want to add to that because what is now happening in our halls of Congress is the next step.
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And so I'll bring you up to speed on that and all of the news of the day coming up in just a second.
00:06:06.500
Because every dollar you spend is broadcasting something about what you support, what you value, what you're willing to tolerate.
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Do you ever wonder what your money is saying when you pay your cell phone bill?
00:06:25.280
Well, your money doesn't just pay for the towers and the data.
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With a lot of big mobile companies, they make a fortune off of this.
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And a portion of it ends up funding causes that run completely opposite to what you believe.
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Put your money where it makes a difference in your direction.
00:06:50.680
Plus, they take a portion of their profits and they support the things that you support.
00:06:55.640
Small switch may not seem like it's a big deal, but it is actually very powerful.
00:07:07.600
And you're going to help America stand on the principles that we believe in.
00:07:19.380
Okay, so accelerationism, the belief that everything needs to be burned down, that nothing is worth saving.
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And I told you that the key change in the last several years is that this is more connected than it ever has been.
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More capable of spreading tactics and targets and narratives.
00:08:04.760
The second fact of this, the line between protest and insurgent behavior is now being tested.
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I see up on the screen Tom Homan is now speaking.
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This is the administration understanding perception versus reality, correcting it, telling Tom Homan, you know, put the giant stick in your back pocket for a minute.
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And he's changing perception, but he's still holding the line and getting it done.
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Protests are protected, even loud offensive protests that make you furious, but not violent ones, not ones where you're attacking.
00:08:46.960
Now, let me add on to this a new set of facts, because for years we have told ourselves political violence was the danger.
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Molotov cocktails, riots, burning down cities, broken windows, et cetera, et cetera.
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And we've told ourselves that we can just stop the street chaos.
00:09:07.360
Because before violence really becomes common, something else has to happen first.
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Not as a neutral constraint, but as a weapon to be aimed.
00:09:25.280
That's why you can't get people to be prosecuted in some states.
00:09:35.620
And you're hearing this, but I want to shape this here so you really hear what's going on.
00:09:41.320
This week, a sitting member of Congress, Sri Thandar, he leaned forward in a hearing,
00:09:48.700
and he told a federal law enforcement official, you better hope you get pardoned.
00:10:01.220
Not, he didn't say, not, you know, you violated the law and you should be investigated.
00:10:08.000
What he said was, when power changes hands, we're going to punish you for enforcing the law.
00:10:18.800
The moment the enforcement itself becomes criminalized retroactively, the rule of law does not merely weaken.
00:10:32.720
The message becomes, guess who's going to be in charge later?
00:10:44.560
And this is how accelerationism migrates from the streets into the state, okay?
00:10:52.580
It's no longer just mass protesters or some sort of anarchist group with a bunch of slogans.
00:10:59.300
It's the core belief that is simpler and far more dangerous.
00:11:07.920
Therefore, breaking these institutions is justified.
00:11:11.740
In the streets, that always turns into burn it down.
00:11:15.620
But inside the government, and you're beginning to hear it now, it starts to sound like, and we'll deal with you later.
00:11:25.580
That is nothing I have ever heard ever in my lifetime in America.
00:11:36.020
When lawmakers openly promise prosecutions after elections, they're not talking about justice.
00:11:50.280
Now, let's just say, let's call a spade a spade.
00:11:54.440
Donald Trump said this, I'm going to put her in jail, lock her up, lock her up, lock her up.
00:12:02.460
And we told you, don't take him, don't take him literally, take him seriously.
00:12:07.880
He'll be a law and order guy, but he's not going to lock her up, okay?
00:12:24.440
You notice what follows, because voices echo the same logic.
00:12:28.780
Warnings that statutes of limitation are going to be used as countdown clocks.
00:12:34.500
Public speculation about resurrecting prosecutions once political protection ends.
00:12:46.540
The casual talk now, and this is happening, of Nuremberg-style trials for domestic opponents.
00:12:53.200
Nuremberg trials, applause for the idea of prosecuting the former regime at every level, and anyone who was participating, that means you.
00:13:06.280
Anybody who was on the side of the right, you better look out, because when we get power,
00:13:15.740
this is not about one person, this is not about left versus right, this is about something far more corrosive.
00:13:25.860
The normalization of the idea that power exists to punish the previous holder of power.
00:13:40.060
In functioning republics, elections decide who governs.
00:13:44.700
In failing republics, elections decide who gets immunity.
00:13:50.340
Once that line is crossed, enforcement stops being about lawfulness and becomes about survival.
00:14:00.340
First, if you're a federal agent, do you enforce the law, or do you hesitate?
00:14:08.420
I mean, you have to calculate now who's in control of the DOJ in three years.
00:14:18.360
Again, as the regime is collapsing, everybody who is working with the regime, all the police, now have to decide,
00:14:25.920
am I going to enforce what the regime says, or am I going to do the opposite because a new regime is coming in?
00:14:32.480
Some of them don't want to be killed themselves, but are brave enough to say, I'm not going to do that.
00:14:39.880
But this is an actual state that is rounding people up and killing them.
00:14:45.880
When you kill 35,000 people in two weeks, that's a state where you should be saying,
00:14:54.160
you better watch out because when we get in, we will find you, and there will be Nuremberg trials.
00:15:03.940
Let me ask you, if you're a prosecutor, do you apply statutes evenly, or do you quietly protect yourself from future retaliation?
00:15:13.320
If you're a citizen, do you trust the investigations, or do you now assume that every indictment is political theater and that's it?
00:15:28.400
There's going to be growing fear and selective action.
00:15:33.220
Once selective enforcement takes root, the street movements learn super fast.
00:15:46.440
And then they begin to realize, I don't need majority support.
00:15:53.140
I only need to make enforcement so dangerous legally, politically, reputationally, physically.
00:15:59.880
I just need to make it so dangerous that if officers actually enforce the law, they risk getting killed by a mob in the streets.
00:16:10.940
Or if prosecutors act, they risk career death and actual death.
00:16:17.180
If judges rule, you're going to be delegitimized.
00:16:20.760
So the enforcement slows down, then it fragments, then it becomes discretionary.
00:16:26.720
Isn't our law really quite discretionary right now?
00:16:30.240
You're not a country if you have discretionary laws.
00:16:33.960
And when the law becomes optional, intimidation becomes rational.
00:16:39.260
And this is how republics fall, in a quiet recalibration of fear.
00:16:46.360
And at that point, violence doesn't need to be widespread.
00:16:53.780
That, that is the most dangerous word in politics.
00:17:07.640
Well, I don't like it, but I understand why they're doing it.
00:17:14.020
Well, I don't support threats, but look at what the other side is doing.
00:17:19.320
Well, this is what happens when institutions fail.
00:17:31.720
And history teaches that early phases, the one we're in right now, is the decisive one.
00:17:41.920
I can understand why they are angry, but that does not excuse them of this behavior.
00:17:57.480
And when prosecutions are still selective, but being promised, it begins to sound like a threat.
00:18:08.460
When threats are still rhetorical, are they being normalized?
00:18:22.340
That's when everyone starts preparing for the worst, and the preparation itself becomes the engine of collapse.
00:18:38.820
And it's going to flip until, as I told you, we will swing so wildly back and forth until the real authoritarian steps up and says,
00:18:51.520
this is going to stop, this is going to stop, and they grab power.
00:18:55.240
And when they grab power, they stop the vote from counting.
00:19:07.300
You're going to get cycles of revenge dressed up as accountability.
00:19:14.560
You're going to get bureaucrats who answer not to the law, but to future protection.
00:19:19.880
You get citizens that withdraw because speaking the truth is too dangerous.
00:19:28.480
And eventually, you get a country where elections no longer settle disputes.
00:19:42.720
And I don't think that's an America that the people I know who vote differently than me, that they want that either.
00:19:50.660
But it will be America if we keep pretending that this is normal.
00:20:01.700
It's not cheering when your enemies are threatened.
00:20:05.500
The antidote is one standard applied to everyone in daylight.
00:20:11.340
No retroactive criminalization of lawful enforcement.
00:20:17.360
No euphemisms when power is being wielded through fear.
00:20:21.360
Because the only thing stronger than anger on the street,
00:20:28.740
is a public that believes the law is still real.
00:20:54.680
Home is supposed to be the one place where you can actually relax, right?
00:20:57.640
A lot of people lie in bed, you know, hearing every little noise.
00:21:01.900
I don't know what that was, honey, but it's not somebody coming in.
00:21:05.560
You know how many cameras we have on the house?
00:21:09.680
The problem is traditional home security used to be a real hassle.
00:21:13.220
Long contracts, pushy sales calls, wires everywhere,
00:21:16.100
and a system you didn't understand, but you were stuck paying for.
00:21:22.380
It is designed to be simple to set up, easy to use,
00:21:25.300
built around your home, not the other way around.
00:21:32.280
If you want professional monitoring, help is there when you need it.
00:21:37.420
just real protection that works quietly in the background
00:21:43.140
And when something does happen, you're not on your own wondering what to do.
00:21:46.900
You get alerts right away, professionals ready to respond.
00:21:49.400
They're already most likely have the pictures of the person
00:21:53.920
that's on the front lawn, not even at the window yet.
00:22:05.240
Just go to simplisafe.com slash Beck, simplisafe.com slash Beck.
00:22:26.060
Schellenberger had a great thread on what happened in El Paso.
00:23:08.180
And put a council together of Madison, Adams, Jefferson,
00:23:19.440
I want to share that with you coming up in a second.
00:24:19.960
This is a rugged, ready-to-go communication device
00:58:25.880
Secondly, I think the liberal government, based on
00:58:33.180
this to further clamp down on law-abiding citizens
00:58:40.700
So essentially, the former Prime Minister Justin
00:58:47.000
council, which is a form of executive order in the
00:58:53.380
It's a little bit different, but he banned about
00:59:03.080
A lot of them are just used for sports shooting,
00:59:06.920
But he just did this blanket ban, and they're in
00:59:18.120
country are refusing to do the dirty work for the
00:59:21.160
government, but they're essentially doing what they
00:59:26.360
But it's a federally enforced gun grab, and they
00:59:32.660
And once that grace period ends, if you own any of
00:59:35.300
these 1,000 firearms, which you actually purchased
00:59:39.160
legally and owned legally and used responsibly, you
00:59:45.760
And they can pursue charges against you for owning
00:59:49.460
So I think based on the weapons that were used, we
00:59:55.440
I'm not sure what the modifications were or whether
01:00:04.820
I think they're going to push to ban things like the
01:00:08.440
SKS, which is, I believe, in consultation for a ban.
01:00:12.420
They're going to go further with their clampdown on
01:00:17.760
people's rights to own guns in Canada, as limited as
01:00:25.160
Cosmin, I look at the world, I look at America, and I
01:00:34.920
But then I look to Europe and England and, frankly, Canada, and I
01:00:52.020
Yeah, Glenn, I definitely think there are people who are
01:00:55.820
awake and who are aware of what's going on and the direction.
01:01:00.060
Yeah, but like I said, it is the constant stream of propaganda
01:01:10.000
And it's quite complicated because a lot of this has to do with
01:01:15.920
So a vast majority of the main media companies in Canada take
01:01:22.860
So in the last decade, the federal government has created all
01:01:27.720
these plans, all these schemes to fund the media directly, which
01:01:33.480
creates a huge problem of transparency and accountability and
01:01:37.840
the ability for the media to actually remain objective as they
01:01:41.420
claim to be when they're not when they're accepting federal money
01:01:52.940
And the only lifeline they have is the government redistributing
01:02:02.660
We fund taxpayers fund the CBC, the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation,
01:02:07.240
the public broadcaster, which is a crown corporation, meaning
01:02:10.900
a federal government organization to the tune of $1.4 billion every year.
01:02:20.220
It took, you know, at least 24 hours for them to come out with the name
01:02:29.780
When independent media like us, we were already on top of it like the
01:02:40.420
You're one of the great journalists and journalism outlets in Canada.
01:02:45.500
Anything we can ever do to help you continue to stand, you just let us
01:02:59.980
I want to tie this up a little bit here in just a second.
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Torch Insiders, you're going to get an exclusive tonight.
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She is a Christian artist, but she sounds, I don't know, Adele, Ella Fitzgerald.
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And I sat her down at a piano, and we talked, and she played.
01:04:56.500
You're going to want to see that for Insiders Tonight Early.
01:05:28.780
We've got to make sure that we're giving the right pronoun.
01:05:43.200
The other pronoun that you could apply is evil.
01:05:46.060
It doesn't, by not saying that this is somebody that was in transition, you block all of the facts of what that kid was going through.
01:06:01.740
What the changes in his own body, the drugs, the inability of your own health care system to help somebody who, who said at 15, I'm deeply mentally disturbed.
01:06:17.440
You, if you're unwilling to define mental illness, you're going to see more and more of these.
01:06:27.660
I grew up 45 miles south of the Canadian border, just right in British Columbia.
01:06:48.660
And if you need to ask what Cascadia is and you live in the Pacific Northwest, probably too late to save you.
01:06:54.960
Um, but, uh, you should look it up, but that's this utopia that is so twisted in its, in its ideology, um, that it'll be deadly for a lot of people.
01:07:07.640
And you're seeing it happen and play out right now, this week in British Columbia.
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Some pain announces itself, you know, you know exactly what you did.
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The kind of stuff that wears you down, however, is different.
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It's the daily stiffness, the aches that never fully go away.
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So Cuba is, Donald Trump's trying to collapse Cuba, uh, and he just might do it.
01:08:56.420
Um, he has put an oil embargo on Cuba that is shutting everything down.
01:09:01.580
I mean, Russian planes aren't going, nobody is going to Cuba because they don't have the
01:09:06.300
fuel to refuel the jets, uh, and to run, uh, their society.
01:09:11.720
It's, it's, it's going to be really, really nasty.
01:09:14.740
I'm going to go back up to Canada here for another story because our media, I think they
01:09:23.720
And when they do, it's like, have you seen their healthcare?
01:09:30.120
Uh, anyway, um, and the only company up in Canada, there's only a handful that would
01:09:36.880
do a story and show you the truth and go down and actually, um, reveal what the average people
01:09:51.540
So, you know, look at Cuba as a place to go for cheap vacations.
01:09:55.580
Um, you know, and they stay in these resorts and they're not, nobody's talking to them
01:09:59.800
about, you know, socialism and you don't see it.
01:10:12.640
They just kept them because they thought they were quaint.
01:10:17.580
Um, the, um, the author of this report that is, is out right now.
01:10:22.340
It just came out, I think last week called, let me see, where is it?
01:10:30.360
Um, is, uh, Alexander, uh, Alexandria, uh, Lavoie.
01:10:57.520
So tell me about what you've experienced in Canada, uh, and what the people of Cuba actually
01:11:06.820
Um, this is something that is different with the U S the U S cannot really travel for vacation
01:11:14.520
in Cuba, but for Canadian, this is one of the most, uh, important vacation place.
01:11:24.100
Uh, I would say, I think for just Quebecers, because I'm French Canadian, uh, we represent
01:11:36.940
And a lot of them, they are traveling over there.
01:11:40.340
They have no clue of what is happening outside of resorts.
01:11:49.420
And by doing this, they are helping the people over there.
01:11:53.680
But no, that's not a reality because the money that is actually going into the resort, into
01:12:00.040
the hotels are not going to the people over there.
01:12:04.140
Um, there is two reality on the ground in Cuba.
01:12:07.500
There is the hotel and government workers, and there is the other, um, the hotel workers
01:12:17.480
and the government workers, obviously they are pro regime.
01:12:21.240
They are supporting what is happening because they are the ones that are the richer.
01:12:26.540
They can go to markets, buy everything that they want.
01:12:31.040
But on the other side, you have like doctors, uh, teachers that cannot even afford, uh, having
01:12:44.720
The, the, um, the, the grocery store, the drug store, they are all empty for those people.
01:12:54.720
Um, and you can see that capitalism is good when it comes to the regime, but when it comes
01:13:05.400
Literally, they have to beg into the street after they finish working because they cannot
01:13:17.320
Um, we actually went there, uh, we filmed districtly.
01:13:23.480
So most of the people didn't know that we were filming them when they were talking with
01:13:29.640
They showed us around, they brought us inside of their home.
01:13:34.840
They actually explained exactly how life is in Cuba.
01:13:48.400
I can tell you that Cuba, it's one of the poorest country I visit in my life and the most
01:13:57.100
dirty at the moment because, uh, garbages are just peeling up because, uh, the regime is
01:14:02.920
saying that they don't have fuel to go and pick the garbage up.
01:14:07.020
Um, so, and then, so what is, what is, what is the average person telling you about, you
01:14:19.480
What, what are they, how are they perceiving this?
01:14:23.740
Um, most of them, they are waiting for U S help.
01:14:31.620
They, they, they want, uh, foreign intervention.
01:14:35.220
They say that they cannot do it by themselves because speaking out against the regime, it's
01:14:40.080
five to 10 years in prison going to 30 years, depending of what you're saying.
01:14:50.900
Um, literally they are just waiting that something will happen as Venezuela because they knew that
01:15:00.200
by doing something to Venezuela that will directly impact them because of the fuel, because of
01:15:08.900
And when I mentioned Donald Trump, there is so many people literally started smiling and
01:15:15.940
say like how much they love that man and how, how much like they are waiting for something.
01:15:21.720
I was kind of surprised that some, some people say that they want Marco Rubio as president.
01:15:30.400
They, they are aware of what is happening and they are literally requesting help from the
01:15:39.380
So international flights are starting to be canceled.
01:15:45.380
I think, uh, more and more, we will see more pressure.
01:15:49.840
Um, I saw this morning that Russia is planning to send fuel and oil, uh, in Cuba.
01:15:58.020
I don't know if, uh, the United States will let that happen since, uh, they are pressuring
01:16:03.080
all Latin America countries to not send anything to Cuba because what the U S wants to do, they
01:16:13.500
want to have a discussion and an agreement of regime change and also to reopen the market
01:16:22.560
And by letting foreigners like, like Russia or China interfering with that, I don't think
01:16:38.660
Uh, uh, you know, the things that we're doing, I mean, you know, many of us here in America
01:16:47.080
And honestly, they're going to build statues of this guy in all of these countries that are
01:16:52.180
suddenly war free or, or free for the first time.
01:16:56.320
And in, in, in America, you know, he'll be lucky to have a street corner named after him.
01:17:01.740
Um, and probably in places like Canada too, cause they just, they, you know, he's just
01:17:08.720
What, what is the perception of us and him in Canada right now?
01:17:17.240
I think Canada is a country who has the highest level of people suffering from derangement syndrome.
01:17:26.820
There is so many people who literally freaked out when they hear about Donald Trump or anything
01:17:33.820
that he's doing without actually looking at the action.
01:17:38.100
They are just looking at the man itself and what he's saying.
01:17:41.680
Obviously, like sometimes he's making joke about Canada.
01:17:45.020
So you need to not like jump to the conclusion right away.
01:17:48.540
But there is some people that cannot differentiate in between jokes and what he's just saying.
01:17:57.460
Um, obviously there is a part of Canada with supporting, uh, what the U S is doing, especially
01:18:05.320
with, uh, regime change in Iran, regime change in Cuba and in Venezuela.
01:18:12.880
Um, but there is some people who really like hate profoundly Donald Trump.
01:18:19.520
And this is mainly because of the mainstream media.
01:18:24.160
We have like a really leftist media who is being paid by the government.
01:18:29.820
So they are being subsidized by the government.
01:18:32.600
Uh, 99% of our media is being subsidized in all kinds of form of subsidies.
01:18:39.060
Um, but, uh, yeah, there is some people who are supporting Trump and there is some people
01:18:48.060
And especially with like Minnesota and what happened with the ice.
01:18:52.320
And, um, and I would say like Canada is turning into like, we need what Donald Trump is doing
01:19:02.100
in the U S because Canada would be lost in a couple of years from now.
01:19:06.680
Um, our immigration is out of control, uh, crime rates.
01:19:15.160
Um, there's so many stuff that is happening in Canada, so many fraud, corruption, and we
01:19:25.500
I have like actually a really huge story that's coming up, uh, exposing, um, terrorist link
01:19:37.960
Um, but yeah, it's, it's something that we have now in our street and we need to deal
01:19:44.240
with it because, uh, some of them received citizenship.
01:19:51.940
And, um, instead of looking at our own problem, no, they look at in the U S and they freaked
01:19:59.440
out about what Donald Trump is saying, but they are the close, the blind eyes on what
01:20:07.840
This is a reality of Canadian, um, that doesn't care about their own country.
01:20:13.480
They just care about what your president is saying.
01:20:21.620
Thanks for all your reporting and everything you guys do at rebel news.
01:20:25.100
Um, I don't think we would know what was really going on in Canada without you.
01:20:28.700
You can follow her on Twitter or at X, uh, the voice, uh, Alexa, uh, and, uh, website is
01:20:38.700
I mean, I don't know of anybody who's actually doing this story like this, um, anywhere in
01:20:43.760
journalism to tell you what's really happening.
01:20:46.820
Um, in, uh, Cuba, you can find the story at the truth about Cuba.com, the truth about Cuba.com.
01:20:56.720
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Thank you so much for listening at glennbeck.com.
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It's an original piece written from, uh, the point of view of somebody who is honest in
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France, sees what is happening in their own country.
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And, uh, and looks at the statue of Liberty and says, mother, wake your children, remind
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Um, and then there's an, another song about Ellis Island and about why people came here
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For a sky stretched wide in the Western night, for the chance to be more than the sum of
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their scars, to raise their children by the flame of the stars.
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They came with nothing but faith and a plan to stand in the glow and become who they can.
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This is called, they came for the hope and, uh, it's a duet and we would love to have people
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You can try out for the male or female, or if you're already a duet, um, all you have
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Both of these songs will be performed live, uh, at Ellis Island.
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Um, uh, hopefully I'll be authorized to give you details on, on, on, on the show.
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What exactly is happening that night, but this is a massive night.
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And, uh, I wanted to, I look, I can hire people to come and sing this, but I would rather,
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you know, the, my whole, if you will, last phase of my career is to empower you.
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I want you to know, I mean, I wrote down today, do not, do not doubt that God hears you.
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He loves you and he is answering your prayers right now.
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I wrote that down and usually I don't put something at the top of my list of things just
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to remind me of you and what I think you need to hear, um, through prayer.
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And, uh, I don't know if that means it, maybe it's for you.
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I was so moved by that, um, today, but, um, I want to empower people.
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And so I want somebody from the audience that has the ability to sing and wants the opportunity
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This is one of the biggest opportunities you will be able to have.
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Just go to blendbeck.com slash contest, send it to somebody who, you know, can just knock
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it out of the park, um, and have them apply and audition online.
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May 1st, we start judging people, uh, for this contest next week.
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When we talk about America turning 250 years old, the real story isn't just in the history
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01:27:42.540
the fusion of entertainment enlightenment and empowerment this is the glenn beck program
01:27:55.700
hello america you know life it's easy to say oh this is it's black and white it's black and white
01:28:06.780
decisions are black and white sometimes they are but only towards the end when a society has gone
01:28:14.220
so far off the rails that the decision is clearly right or wrong black or white but most of the time
01:28:24.540
life is not about right or wrong it's about right versus almost right and if you keep making the
01:28:34.620
almost right decisions um and keep choosing almost right in the end it becomes wrong and black and
01:28:44.540
white again and we're going down that almost right uh road we've been going down for a long time and
01:28:50.940
that's why some things are so clear to some people because it's back down to right and wrong good
01:28:58.460
versus evil but my job is to try to help you understand the right versus almost right as well
01:29:06.940
as right versus wrong um as i try to figure it out myself so let me take you through a couple of
01:29:13.900
stories uh here uh and see if we can figure them out uh together one is a 250 page report from the
01:29:21.900
election oversight group uh that's been examining what's happening in fulton county georgia and you
01:29:28.540
know i i know this has been in the news but i went through the whole report and what it describes is uh
01:29:36.460
it goes way beyond clerical errors and we've got to get this one right so we're going to go there in
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okay so this 250 page report has come out from election oversight group the reason why i want
01:31:03.340
to talk to you about this today is because of what happened with pam bondi yesterday um and i
01:31:11.020
honestly i need some new insight on this because i just don't know where to go with this pam bondi
01:31:16.460
thing because i thought it was not good yesterday um i just don't think she's capable of
01:31:29.260
and we have to fix the doj it must be fixed because there's too many important things that are
01:31:34.940
riding on it one thing that they are doing that is right is the fulton county georgia situation with
01:31:41.900
the election of 2020 the morning after the election that's just to remind you georgia's secretary of
01:31:48.220
state went on national television and said 4.7 million votes had been cast he said only about
01:31:55.740
two percent remain to be counted which is roughly 94 000 ballots and he said at this moment the margin
01:32:04.220
is decisive even suggested if one candidate won 100 of all of the outstanding votes it's not going to
01:32:11.580
change the outcome but when the final um tally first came in the total wasn't 4.7 million votes that
01:32:20.060
have been cast it was 5.023 million okay wait wait what and in fulton county alone the absentee ballots
01:32:32.540
reportedly rose from 74 000 to more than 148 000 between election night and final certification where did
01:32:41.980
that come from and that's why this shift happen reverse the apparent outcome uh of the of the state
01:32:52.300
and that's why donald trump was like wait a minute cheating is going on
01:32:57.660
the report now states no no known explanation has been provided to justify the surge pause
01:33:06.540
if the numbers change by that magnitude after officials publicly declare with near final certainty
01:33:18.700
then again we've got to get it right not almost right we need it right we don't need defensiveness
01:33:27.660
dismissal we need clarity the report then goes into the chain of custody okay listen to this
01:33:37.180
investigators found that 148 000 absentee ballots were accepted and counted without first
01:33:44.700
performing mandatory signature verification tens of thousands allegedly arrived at state farm arena
01:33:53.260
in unsecured mail carts wait what do you know what chain of custody is chain of custody is
01:34:01.980
really important it's not a partisan phrase it is a basic legal principle chain of custody comes into
01:34:09.020
play a lot of times in criminal trials also financial audits when you gather evidence you have to know who
01:34:18.540
who had that evidence that's that's one of the problems with the epstein files what's the chain of custody you had all the
01:34:25.580
evidence whose hands were on that you have to know and if the chain of custody breaks then you can't rely on that being
01:34:33.180
reliable anymore you can't count that as reliable information because you don't know how it got from this place to the next place okay the next thing they found was the missing
01:34:45.820
tabulator tapes this is really important because election law requires daily zero tapes what that means is it is it's a check to prove the machine
01:35:00.460
starts at zero it requires closing tapes to document the total at the day's end okay so it proved it was at zero and then it proves that this is the
01:35:13.100
number of votes that this is the number of votes that came in according to testimony cited in the report more than 100 required tabulator
01:35:20.100
tapes representing about 315,000 early votes weren't signed or weren't signed properly
01:35:29.660
state investigators say they couldn't locate the required zero tapes for early voting on many machines what you can't what now the report concludes that
01:35:42.100
the statute requires accounting and chain of custody records but they don't exist in the entirety of early voting okay well that's a really big failure then the last problem is the math problem the math problem the county records reportedly show 148,318
01:36:12.080
absentee ballots counted yet again this is going to be hard to do you're I'm going to give you time so you can work out the the math on this you had
01:36:23.500
uh only 125,785 voters 148,000 voters the votes cast but only 125,000 people showed up to vote so
01:36:40.860
what that's a that's a pretty big gap more than 22,000 ballots uh in a race that was decided by 11,779 votes after multiple certifications the counts didn't match one another
01:36:59.880
now here's where this becomes serious way beyond politics philip stark he's he does stats he's from berkeley
01:37:11.460
so i would say he's probably not a conservative he came in and he reviewed all of the aspects of the process
01:37:22.500
here's what he didn't do he didn't say this is widespread fraud but he did say there are real reasons to distrust the election outcome
01:37:33.720
he found machine counts and audit tallies disagreed substantially even about the number of ballots that were cast
01:37:42.600
he wrote that some ballots listen to this appeared to be included at least twice in the original counts and multiple times in recounts
01:37:52.420
he warned that unreliable ballot marking devices could make recounts a little more than security theater
01:38:03.300
that's a little devastating to uh the trust in the republic and our vote
01:38:11.960
republics don't crash when one side loses republics collapse when half the country believes the referee
01:38:21.480
is unreliable and that's what's happening we don't believe the referee
01:38:26.680
referee this is why the position of pam bondi is so important and she seems to be doing a good job on this one
01:38:33.960
because historically 1876 this i mean we just recovered from the civil war and we almost lost the union
01:38:46.260
post-civil war in 1876 tammany hall new york it operated on ballot manipulation reformers came in
01:38:56.120
and they forced structural transparency because there it was it was all garbage all of it and everybody knew it
01:39:04.760
nations in latin america eastern europe why do they spiral out of control because their ballot was imperfect
01:39:13.080
no they spiral out of control because the citizens lose faith and trust that ballots even mattered
01:39:29.720
confidence is the oxygen that brings the flame of liberty to life
01:39:38.060
this is why the fulton county thing matters so much it's not about proving somebody right or proving somebody wrong
01:39:45.440
it's not about relitigating personalities i mean they actually said to donald trump
01:39:49.420
what difference does it make it's not going to change the election no it's not
01:39:53.560
but we must know what happens so it doesn't happen again are people this stupid
01:40:00.400
i think not and then i go out and i talk to some people and i'm like oh my gosh they are this stupid
01:40:18.560
in daylight if procedures failed they have to be fixed
01:40:23.580
openly if records are missing we need to know why they're missing
01:40:28.900
and then correct the structure or arrest the people
01:40:35.220
because if americans conclude that outcomes can shift without clear documentation
01:40:41.820
if chain of custody is just shrugged off on i don't know
01:40:59.600
of course i dwell on that i have to dwell on that
01:41:08.960
they say your numbers aren't right and you're like don't dwell on that
01:41:31.420
that one time somebody's not going to believe the election
01:41:38.480
then you must have an accounting on what happened in fulton county
01:41:58.760
they did not design a system based on blind trust
01:42:16.140
i have a right to demand answers from the government
01:42:23.380
my religion can compel me to answer those questions