The Glenn Beck Program - January 29, 2026


New Footage DEBUNKS the Media's Alex Pretti Narrative?! | 1⧸29⧸26


Episode Stats

Length

2 hours and 9 minutes

Words per Minute

161.26878

Word Count

20,935

Sentence Count

1,455

Misogynist Sentences

16

Hate Speech Sentences

15


Summary

On this episode of The Glenn Beck Program, host Glenn Beck talks about the recent raid on the offices of Ilhan Omar, a Democratic candidate running for Congress in Minnesota, who was allegedly involved in a raid on his campaign headquarters.


Transcript

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00:01:46.720 Hello, America.
00:01:49.620 You know we've been fighting every single day.
00:01:51.400 We push back against the lies, the censorship, the nonsense of the mainstream media that they're trying to feed you.
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00:02:02.580 But to keep this fight going, we need you.
00:02:05.080 Right now, would you take a moment and rate and review the Glenn Beck podcast?
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00:02:38.420 We'll be right back.
00:03:08.420 The fusion of entertainment, enlightenment, and empowerment.
00:03:23.000 This is the Glenn Beck Program.
00:03:26.820 Glenn Beck is on.
00:03:28.880 Hello, America.
00:03:30.240 Welcome to the Glenn Beck Program.
00:03:31.980 It is Thursday, January 29th of 26.
00:03:35.900 There's a lot going on.
00:03:36.960 Tom Homan just spoke a few minutes ago about the situation in Minneapolis.
00:03:41.760 We got a lot to say about the peaceful legal observer, the innocent man, the greatest guy ever.
00:03:48.460 No threat. End of story.
00:03:50.740 The lies that the media has said.
00:03:53.000 It's now verified video.
00:03:55.440 And we're going to talk about that.
00:03:56.920 He's clearly not peaceful.
00:03:59.600 He was there with intent and rage.
00:04:03.180 Honest to God, rage.
00:04:04.240 And I'll explain that coming up in just a minute.
00:04:07.160 Also, the raid on election headquarters, a topic we need to touch today.
00:04:12.540 Ilhan Omar, she was sprayed with a vicious, vicious, vicious substance.
00:04:18.940 Smelled weird.
00:04:19.840 And we'll explain what it was coming up in a minute.
00:04:22.580 Also, if this show were an early warning system, you know, not a news desk, not a panic room,
00:04:29.580 but just a system of, you know, like a panel that you would see in, you know, a control room.
00:04:35.680 Some lights would be flashing.
00:04:37.640 And I want to start there on what the flashing lights are as an early warning system.
00:04:42.640 We'll give you that to you in just 60 seconds.
00:04:44.760 First, let me tell you about American financing.
00:04:46.920 You know how people talk about finding money in their budget, like, you know, it's some sort of hidden treasure map.
00:04:51.780 You know, cut coffee, cancel streaming, you know, skip dinner out.
00:04:55.020 Sure, those things do add up.
00:04:56.500 It could add up a lot.
00:04:57.640 But sometimes real money is sitting in one place you haven't looked at in years, and that is your mortgage.
00:05:03.640 A lot of people get locked into a loan and then never, ever revisit it.
00:05:07.480 Life changes, rates change, your financial goals change.
00:05:10.540 But that payment just keeps going out the same way every single month for 30 years.
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00:06:16.100 So, you know, really good shows, really good podcasts will tell you what happened yesterday.
00:06:23.500 And there's a lot of those.
00:06:25.000 And they'll give you an opinion.
00:06:26.400 I personally think the world has enough opinions, and you certainly don't need mine.
00:06:31.380 I think my job really needs to be, as somebody who can see slightly over the horizon and show you what these things mean, what's happening, what happened yesterday, what they mean to you today.
00:06:45.180 More importantly, what does this mean if these things continue to go in the direction that they're going?
00:06:50.300 So we can not ignore these warning signs and look at them through history and through common sense.
00:06:57.880 So if we were an early warning system, there would be some lights on the panel that are flashing today.
00:07:03.420 Some would be red.
00:07:04.800 Some would be yellow.
00:07:06.460 And some would actually be green.
00:07:08.400 So let me just go through all of these things because it matters.
00:07:10.960 Not everything would be red, you know, but panic is what you feel after you have ignored the warnings or you didn't know that was a warning.
00:07:23.440 You didn't, you didn't, you didn't, you didn't hear about it.
00:07:26.040 So let me read the panel for you.
00:07:27.920 Honestly, here, there's some red lights flashing today that you need to know.
00:07:31.640 And these are not political opinions.
00:07:33.220 They are historic danger signs.
00:07:35.440 So I've checked these back and forth with history because I'm looking at history now and saying, where are we, you know, in, in Rome or in France, where, where are we in history?
00:07:48.460 One of the biggest warning signs that I see right now is, um, red light number one.
00:07:53.140 And that, that would be the loss of nuance.
00:07:56.580 This one is blinking really hard and you see it in the pretty, uh, conversation.
00:08:02.600 Okay.
00:08:03.200 There is no nuance here.
00:08:04.780 There, there is, you know, a healthy society can hold two ideas at the same time.
00:08:09.800 An unstable society cannot do that.
00:08:13.220 And right now we're losing the ability to say somebody can be really guilty and a bad guy and mistreated.
00:08:23.180 Law enforcement can be necessary, needed, doing their job and fallible.
00:08:28.440 Protests can be legitimate and infiltrated by insurrectionists.
00:08:37.020 Those things are all true, but America can't see that anymore.
00:08:41.820 And that's when, you know, when everything collapses into all good or all evil, there is no moral clarity anymore.
00:08:50.260 That's moral laziness.
00:08:51.760 Rome didn't fall when people disagreed.
00:08:55.960 America has never fallen when we disagree.
00:08:59.540 Rome and America will fall when disagreement becomes identity warfare.
00:09:06.120 That light is bright, bright red in America.
00:09:10.700 Warning sign, red light.
00:09:12.460 Number one, red light.
00:09:14.140 Number two, faction over truth.
00:09:17.500 Truth.
00:09:19.060 You know, you know what the name Israel means?
00:09:23.680 The name Israel means to wrestle with God.
00:09:28.960 Now, how could Israel be the chosen people if their name says wrestle with God?
00:09:37.340 Because truth is meant to be wrestled with.
00:09:41.140 It's meant to be argued about, wrestled with, thought about, argued about.
00:09:47.780 Tearing it apart, tearing yourself apart at night.
00:09:50.400 The only way I am who I am, the only reason why I know who I am, is because I wrestled with everything in me.
00:09:57.240 I tore myself apart.
00:09:58.580 What is it I really believe?
00:10:00.880 What is worth living for?
00:10:02.120 What's worth dying for?
00:10:03.560 What's worth arguing about?
00:10:04.900 What's not?
00:10:06.180 What's true?
00:10:08.620 But now, truth is something we argue for like a team.
00:10:13.580 And facts no longer persuade.
00:10:16.280 All they do now is signal allegiance.
00:10:20.400 That's really dangerous.
00:10:21.980 That's a late stage indicator.
00:10:24.680 Once truth bends to faction, power then replaces persuasion every time in every civilization in all of history.
00:10:34.940 And that light is flashing red.
00:10:37.800 All of these things are coming in Minnesota.
00:10:40.900 Red light number three, organized disorder.
00:10:44.460 Not protest.
00:10:47.540 Protest is needed.
00:10:49.180 Protest is important.
00:10:50.660 Protest is constitutionally protected.
00:10:53.980 No matter what anybody says, everyone has a right to go out and protest what ICE is doing.
00:11:00.940 Everyone has a right to go out and protest what some of these judges are doing.
00:11:06.200 By not enforcing what some of these cities are doing.
00:11:10.200 By saying they're a, you know, a sanctuary city.
00:11:12.940 You have a right to protest.
00:11:14.440 You have a right to protest the law.
00:11:17.700 You have a right, but you don't have a right to disrupt the law.
00:11:21.660 You have a right to go protest the people who make the law to get them to change the law.
00:11:26.000 You have a right to go and stand peacefully and protest the cops, if that's what you want, or ICE.
00:11:34.980 But you do not have the right to engage and disrupt the law.
00:11:40.180 When unrest becomes coordinated, when it becomes professionally funded, strategically disruptive, and shielded by moral confusion.
00:11:53.760 Because there's no morality here.
00:11:55.240 It's moral confusion.
00:11:57.500 That's no longer a spontaneous civic expression.
00:12:00.120 It's not.
00:12:00.620 That is pressure being applied to the system.
00:12:04.460 Rome faced this.
00:12:05.820 Internal destabilization.
00:12:07.020 It was justified as the will of the people.
00:12:10.340 Red light.
00:12:10.980 Red light.
00:12:11.660 Red light.
00:12:12.320 Red light.
00:12:12.960 Pay attention, America.
00:12:14.100 Red light.
00:12:15.740 Now, there's some other things that are flashing, and I want to go through, that are yellow lights.
00:12:19.980 And they're serious, but they're not fatal at this point.
00:12:22.600 These are warnings, not verdicts.
00:12:26.260 Yellow light number one.
00:12:28.460 Currency confidence.
00:12:31.280 Gold is rising.
00:12:33.920 And the way gold is rising, it's not a collapse announcement.
00:12:38.320 It is a stress gauge.
00:12:40.720 It is a very important.
00:12:42.440 Do you know what gold is up to today?
00:12:44.140 It is trading now today, at least a few minutes before I went on the air.
00:12:48.100 Futures were trading at as high as $5,600 an ounce.
00:12:53.380 It was $4,900 an ounce on Friday.
00:12:56.780 Today, I'll give you some historic comparisons of this here in a few minutes.
00:13:03.820 It's not good.
00:13:05.780 Now, gold doesn't predict dates.
00:13:08.140 All that gold does is reflect trust or the lack of it.
00:13:12.480 And when people begin to move towards hard assets, what they're saying is,
00:13:17.300 I'm not sure any of these promises hold.
00:13:20.060 Well, what promises are those?
00:13:21.820 Promises of, we're a stable society.
00:13:24.260 Uh, we are not going to spend ourself into oblivion.
00:13:28.660 That our, our government and our Congress gets it.
00:13:32.200 And they're going to, they're going to stop spending so much and borrowing so much.
00:13:36.280 They don't know.
00:13:37.220 They no longer believe that NATO can hold the world together.
00:13:40.400 America can hold the world together.
00:13:41.900 They know things are beginning to get really dicey.
00:13:44.780 It's a yellow light and it is trending hotter every day.
00:13:48.340 Pay attention to that.
00:13:50.460 Now, yellow light number two, this goes along with yellow light number one, debt saturation.
00:14:00.260 Debt isn't immoral, but debt that can't be discussed honestly, honestly, and paid back is immoral.
00:14:11.480 And it's dangerous.
00:14:12.620 When a nation stops saying, how are we going to pay this bill?
00:14:16.820 When the nation says, who's going to pay this bill?
00:14:19.600 Who bears the burden of this bill?
00:14:23.180 Or they stop asking, what happens if confidence breaks?
00:14:28.540 That's what's happening with gold.
00:14:29.960 What happens if people start to believe we're not going to pay this back?
00:14:33.120 That's when debt becomes corrosive and deadly.
00:14:35.960 Now, we're not Rome yet, but this gauge is rising.
00:14:40.520 Yellow light number three, institutional distrust.
00:14:44.640 This goes with the red lights I gave you and the yellow lights.
00:14:48.880 Not skepticism, but distrust.
00:14:52.820 Skepticism is healthy.
00:14:54.520 Skepticism is the American system.
00:14:57.700 What are the first five rights in the First Amendment?
00:15:00.540 You have a right to freedom of speech, freedom of religion, freedom of press, freedom of assembly,
00:15:06.940 meaning you can go and assemble in the streets, and freedom of petition.
00:15:10.740 You can petition your government.
00:15:12.040 I want answers.
00:15:13.640 So skepticism is our First Amendment, and it's healthy.
00:15:18.460 Distrust is paralyzing.
00:15:21.280 When people believe the courts are illegitimate, that it doesn't matter, you have to be connected.
00:15:27.100 You have to be on one side or the other.
00:15:28.280 If they believe elections are meaningless, law enforcement is either sacred and can make
00:15:33.920 no mistakes or evil and can do no good.
00:15:37.500 The system loses its elasticity, its ability to stretch and bend the way it has to.
00:15:45.180 That's yellow, not red, but close enough to pay attention because it's getting deeper yellow.
00:15:53.780 Before I break, there are some green lights.
00:15:55.720 Let me give you that, because these matter more than most people think, because the green
00:16:00.080 lights are important.
00:16:03.560 Green light number one.
00:16:05.080 These are good things.
00:16:06.420 We're still arguing about right and wrong.
00:16:09.280 We're still having those debates.
00:16:12.120 Collapsing societies stop arguing about morality.
00:16:15.860 They argue only about power, and we're still arguing about justice and what it means.
00:16:22.220 Limits, rights, responsibility.
00:16:24.940 That's not decay.
00:16:26.060 That's conscience.
00:16:27.000 It's still alive.
00:16:28.000 That's a green light.
00:16:29.020 That's a good light.
00:16:30.720 Green light number two.
00:16:32.860 The Constitution still exists, and it's still being cited.
00:16:37.380 Rome ruled by decree.
00:16:42.140 We're still fighting over the documents.
00:16:44.780 It's getting a little sketchy, but we're still arguing it, and that tells you something
00:16:50.460 powerful.
00:16:51.420 People still believe rules matter, even when they break them.
00:16:56.320 It's green, but it's fragile.
00:16:59.800 Green light number three.
00:17:00.900 I'm able to get on the air and speak to you about these warnings.
00:17:07.880 MSNBC is able to get on the air and speak to you about what they see as warning signs.
00:17:14.160 Rome silenced its warnings.
00:17:17.340 We are today still able to have them on the air legally.
00:17:22.360 Both sides.
00:17:24.080 That alone means this system is not finished.
00:17:27.300 Early warning signs only matter before the catastrophe.
00:17:33.920 And here's the most important thing to remember.
00:17:36.120 Red lights do not mean doom.
00:17:38.460 They mean choice.
00:17:39.960 Make a choice.
00:17:42.600 Civilizations don't collapse because warnings exist.
00:17:45.540 They collapse because warnings are mocked, politicized, or ignored.
00:17:50.520 So the question is, not are we Rome?
00:17:54.880 Rome, the question is, will we do what Rome didn't do and respond to the warning signs while
00:18:02.620 the lights are still on?
00:18:04.260 Because once the panel goes dark, there are no more warnings.
00:18:11.620 Pay attention to the warning signs today.
00:18:14.280 All right.
00:18:15.000 I want to talk to you a little bit about gold, then we're going to get into Minnesota.
00:18:18.140 We'll continue in 60 seconds.
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00:19:33.740 Glenn Beck is on.
00:19:46.260 Okay.
00:19:49.300 I got a lot to cover here.
00:19:52.180 Buckle up.
00:19:52.880 Here we go.
00:19:54.320 Gold.
00:19:55.340 Spot gold is today anywhere between $5,300 and $5,530.
00:20:03.740 An ounce.
00:20:05.720 Gold futures are trading at $5,500 to $5,600 in sessions.
00:20:12.660 So you have some idea.
00:20:14.360 Gold's price has grown nearly three times in just three years.
00:20:19.020 That is a pace that historically to do what it's just done would take four decades at normal rates.
00:20:28.740 It would have taken 40 years to do what it is done in three years.
00:20:35.240 Gold is not twice as what it was.
00:20:37.800 It's nearly five times what it was four years ago.
00:20:41.460 That's because a few things are happening.
00:20:45.000 And I tried to explain this the other day, and I think I did a really poor job.
00:20:47.800 So I want to try one more stab at it because this is important.
00:20:50.160 This is a, one of the red flashing lights on the, uh, on the warning, uh, table that you really need to look at and understand.
00:20:58.160 For decades, Japan lived in a really strange artificial calm.
00:21:02.900 You know, um, they, after the asset bubble, remember when they owned everything in the nineties and everybody was like, we're being taken over by Japan.
00:21:10.460 Japan crashed.
00:21:12.560 It had a bubble.
00:21:13.080 And then they did something.
00:21:14.100 And no other major company, uh, country had ever done at scale.
00:21:18.560 They were the first to freeze interest rates at or near zero.
00:21:23.460 And then they borrowed enormous amounts of money.
00:21:26.880 It's central bank.
00:21:28.040 The bank of Japan began buying its own government debt.
00:21:31.280 And the idea was really simple.
00:21:32.720 If we just keep money cheap forever, nothing breaks.
00:21:35.180 We could just keep printing.
00:21:36.420 I mean, it's insane, but it worked for a while for a long time.
00:21:40.420 It looked like Japan might be right.
00:21:43.040 Then came part two.
00:21:44.900 Then people started realizing, wait a minute, I can profit off of this.
00:21:48.500 And something became what's called the yen carry trade.
00:21:52.120 And it's basically Japan became the world's credit card.
00:21:56.360 Okay.
00:21:57.420 And here's the thing that most people miss.
00:21:59.720 Japan became the cheapest place on earth to borrow large sums of money.
00:22:04.960 So large global investors borrowed a yen at almost 0% interest.
00:22:12.280 They converted the yen into U S dollars.
00:22:14.580 And then they went out to our stock market and bought stocks and bonds and real estate
00:22:19.240 here in America, anything that would have a yield over zero and everything had a yield
00:22:23.820 over zero.
00:22:24.520 And then they would pocket the difference.
00:22:27.000 That's called the yen carry trade.
00:22:28.820 And the entire world was doing it.
00:22:31.740 Okay.
00:22:32.220 A simple analogy here is Japan is the friend who said, you can borrow as much as you want.
00:22:39.180 Okay.
00:22:39.640 Don't worry about interest.
00:22:41.040 Take your time.
00:22:41.740 Pay me back.
00:22:42.480 No big deal.
00:22:43.380 The entire global financial system was like, okay.
00:22:47.700 And America benefited enormously because the cheap foreign money flowed into U S assets.
00:22:53.940 U S borrowing costs stayed lower than they would have.
00:22:57.500 Markets were calmer than really they deserved.
00:23:00.040 Japan was basically the shock absorber for the entire world.
00:23:05.680 Why is it now a house of cards?
00:23:08.200 Because this only works.
00:23:09.640 If three things never change Japan's interest rates stay near zero, the yen stays weak, but
00:23:16.080 stable and investors believe Japan can always print its way out.
00:23:20.560 But history says, uh, no, none of that is true.
00:23:23.980 Okay.
00:23:24.240 None of that is true.
00:23:24.980 None of this will last forever.
00:23:26.420 So Japan now has to make a choice.
00:23:30.560 They have one of the highest debt to GDP ratios in history.
00:23:34.840 They have an aging population, rising inflation.
00:23:38.240 It can't ignore currency.
00:23:39.820 That's been bleeding value.
00:23:41.660 And eventually lenders start saying, if this is so safe, why does it need life support?
00:23:48.920 Now we're at the point where things are starting to break.
00:23:51.980 And let me tell you what's happening right now and why this matters to you.
00:23:57.080 In just a few seconds, stand by for that.
00:24:10.020 All right.
00:24:10.620 My Patriot supply.
00:24:11.620 So it feels like every day there's something new to worry about.
00:24:14.540 I mean, we're going to have temperatures in the forties here in Florida.
00:24:17.680 I mean, what, what's up with that?
00:24:20.160 Um, they're having a snowpocalypse in New York.
00:24:23.300 Yeah.
00:24:23.860 I saw that face too.
00:24:25.180 I saw it.
00:24:25.880 Yeah.
00:24:26.320 Complain about your Florida weather.
00:24:27.880 Keep going.
00:24:28.620 It's, uh, anyway, fun.
00:24:30.780 Uh, there's a, there are headlines after headlines.
00:24:34.680 Now that you're like, okay, what now?
00:24:36.420 What, what, what's coming our way?
00:24:38.760 Look, you can't fix global politics from your kitchen table.
00:24:41.860 You can't control the weather, but you can, you know, you can prepare for whatever comes
00:24:46.500 your way when it comes to your family's food security.
00:24:49.960 I trust my Patriot supply.
00:24:51.700 They specialize in long-term food storage designed for emergencies, meals with long shelf
00:24:56.980 life that are already ready when you need them.
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00:25:03.620 millions of Americans get prepared 90,000 five-star reviews.
00:25:07.680 A lot of families have already decided this is a step worth taking.
00:25:10.300 Would you just go there right now?
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00:25:14.860 It's my Patriot supply.
00:25:16.200 They almost never offer deals like this.
00:25:18.580 I want you to go to preparewithglenn.com, preparewithglenn.com.
00:25:24.660 Only a couple more days to check out all the Torch exclusive content that's available.
00:25:28.720 Make sure to go down to glennbeck.com and sign up.
00:25:32.200 I'm going to get to what's happening in Minnesota here in just a minute, but I think this is
00:25:50.820 much more important long-term, you need to pay attention because this one will affect you and
00:25:57.060 your dollar and your life and everything else, just as much as any kind of civil war will.
00:26:03.740 There is something going on when gold, you know, when gold has gone up almost a thousand dollars
00:26:09.280 in the last five or six days, that's astronomical.
00:26:12.400 It's just, it doesn't happen this way.
00:26:14.980 Okay.
00:26:16.220 And I want to talk to you about the delivery of gold and Stu was just telling me off the
00:26:22.980 air, I'm going to get back to Japan here and why this is all happening.
00:26:25.420 But, um, Stu and I were just talking off the air that, um, uh, he's seeing people saying,
00:26:32.860 you know, you shouldn't buy real gold.
00:26:34.380 You should buy paper gold.
00:26:35.800 Uh, let me explain why you're starting to see that.
00:26:38.420 Cause I think that's bull crap, but you know, hear me out gold and silver normally is sold
00:26:45.520 through the paper contracts.
00:26:46.780 Okay.
00:26:47.420 And they can promise to deliver at a later date and you can take delivery.
00:26:51.640 Most people don't take delivery of it.
00:26:53.140 They just want the paper.
00:26:54.080 Okay.
00:26:55.160 Um, and, and that, that is normal when you're living in normal times, but when you're not,
00:26:59.340 when you're saying, you know, I don't know if I trust anything anymore, you start to say,
00:27:03.020 I think I want that gold or silver delivered.
00:27:05.000 Okay.
00:27:05.360 And when that happens, you know, they start to deliver, uh, and, um, and there are certain
00:27:13.500 months out of the year that are big delivery months.
00:27:15.760 Okay.
00:27:16.580 January is not a big delivery month.
00:27:18.600 Let's just, let's talk about it for silver for a second.
00:27:22.260 Silver in January in, uh, you know, historically speaking, January's past, it's not uncommon to
00:27:29.580 see a million ounces of, of silver delivered or 2 million ounces, sometimes less, but you
00:27:36.720 know, it can be around that.
00:27:38.040 Okay.
00:27:39.060 January is typically quiet.
00:27:41.180 This is not where stress usually shows up.
00:27:43.960 And yet this January, this month on the books to be delivered by the end of the month, 40
00:27:52.640 million ounces, 40 typical is one or two.
00:27:58.340 We're at 40 million.
00:28:00.100 And this is way abnormal.
00:28:02.840 Okay.
00:28:03.300 This is not the way it works.
00:28:05.280 This is not a delivery month.
00:28:06.980 Okay.
00:28:07.780 And when delivery, uh, is demanded in months where it's not normally like this, where it's
00:28:14.580 way off the record.
00:28:15.660 What does it mean for a delivery month, a standard delivery month, and that standard delivery
00:28:20.240 month is March.
00:28:21.200 And so now they're starting to look at March because what is going to happen to the inventory?
00:28:27.480 Um, you know, normally in March, it can begin with 30, 20 to 30 million ounces.
00:28:34.460 And the system can absorb that easily and nothing happens 40 or 50 million ounces.
00:28:40.180 And the, the, the, the system starts to stress a little bit.
00:28:44.400 I don't, you know, we can do it, but it's stressful 70 to 80 million ounces.
00:28:51.160 And that's when they start saying, uh, we have a problem with inventory.
00:28:55.100 We're, I'm not sure we're going to make 80 million ounces ready for delivery or people
00:29:00.420 that are saying, I want delivery in March.
00:29:02.540 They bought their contract.
00:29:04.220 They want delivery in March.
00:29:05.540 They are now looking at, uh, uh, uh, delivery today in March of 110 to 120 million ounces of
00:29:22.820 silver earth shattering.
00:29:26.080 Something's very wrong.
00:29:30.300 Okay.
00:29:31.040 So what is happening?
00:29:32.840 Let me go back to the moment that we're at now where things are starting to break in Japan
00:29:37.580 because this is really important investors now, because Japan is under such stress, Japan
00:29:44.360 investors are selling their government bonds.
00:29:46.940 When the bond prices fall, that means Japan has to raise interest rates to attract new
00:29:53.880 people to invest in Japan.
00:29:55.840 So Japan, the bank of Japan has to choose.
00:29:58.500 Now, do we print more money to defend the system or do we let the rates rise and expose the
00:30:05.220 gigantic debt problem?
00:30:07.300 Either choice is really painful.
00:30:11.720 This is the moment of confidence, not math, confidence, confidence becomes the issue here.
00:30:18.260 Now we, we helped prop this country up and this is the uncomfortable truth, but it's, it
00:30:23.960 is true.
00:30:24.320 The United States benefited from Japan staying frozen in place and Japan began buying, you
00:30:30.820 know, a bunch of us debt helped fund the American deficits.
00:30:34.540 They were borrowing their own money, changing it into dollars, buying ours because they could
00:30:38.920 get interest and that would help, you know, help them.
00:30:41.560 But it also helped us.
00:30:43.100 It helped keep our markets liquid.
00:30:46.160 A stable Japan meant fewer shocks to the global system and to us here in America.
00:30:51.380 And it's not a conspiracy.
00:30:52.760 It was just mutual convenience and everybody was doing it.
00:30:56.400 America was not pushing Japan to normalize because cheap global money felt really good to
00:31:00.680 everybody.
00:31:01.240 Now enter something called the bond vigilantes.
00:31:07.480 Bond vigilantes scare sounds scary and they are, but they're also kind of needed and responsible.
00:31:14.940 This is where bond vigilantes finally walk onto the stage.
00:31:19.620 They're not activists.
00:31:21.120 They're not politicians.
00:31:22.560 They are just big lenders who say, yeah, you know, I don't believe your promises deserve cheap
00:31:30.240 money anymore and they don't yell.
00:31:32.380 They just sell.
00:31:33.880 And when investors, big investors sell governments like Japan have to pay higher interest rates.
00:31:40.340 Debt becomes harder to manage.
00:31:42.740 The control quietly shifts from politicians to markets.
00:31:46.240 Japan is seeing now the first signs of this discipline returning.
00:31:49.800 Ken Griffin just called Japan a massive wake-up call for the U S not because Japan is collapsing,
00:31:55.660 but because the markets are remembering how to say, no, I don't think so.
00:32:02.800 This affects us because Japan holds most of our debt.
00:32:07.560 So this has happened before Britain.
00:32:11.280 This happened in the 1970s and what happened in the 1970s was not good.
00:32:15.220 Britain in the seventies, uh, the, uh, Southern Europe, Greece, remember that in 2008 when Greece
00:32:20.420 was on fire emerging markets, it happens over and over.
00:32:24.040 And the pattern is always exactly the same.
00:32:26.580 Debt feels manageable.
00:32:28.600 Central banks suppress reality.
00:32:31.300 Investors start to go.
00:32:32.260 So I'm not sure interest rates spike governments lose freedom of action and government, uh, is
00:32:39.080 the Japanese government is in that process right now.
00:32:42.260 But, but early is when warnings matter one sentence to remember here, Japan is not the problem.
00:32:51.660 Japan is the preview.
00:32:53.900 Let me show you what the show looks like.
00:32:56.900 The show is when the referee comes back onto the field.
00:33:00.400 Okay.
00:33:00.920 For 15 years, 20 years, global economy ran without a referee.
00:33:05.580 Okay.
00:33:06.460 Interest rates were suppressed.
00:33:08.560 Gold suppressed debt piled up.
00:33:11.260 Central banks said, we got this.
00:33:12.960 We got it.
00:33:13.740 We all knew they didn't, but we all looked the other way.
00:33:16.280 And there was no ref on the field.
00:33:18.640 Japan showed us the first crack that, that markets are no longer convinced that this is
00:33:23.900 going to work.
00:33:25.860 Camera panned the main stage, the United States.
00:33:29.260 Not because America is weak, but because America is central to the globe.
00:33:36.300 Act one bond vigilantes.
00:33:40.100 What do they actually do in the real world?
00:33:42.680 When lenders start to lose confidence, they do three things and they do it in order.
00:33:47.500 They, one, demand higher interest rates.
00:33:50.320 They shorten how long they'll lend.
00:33:53.340 And eventually, I mean, unless everybody is, you know, changing their behavior, they stop
00:34:00.100 lending.
00:34:00.540 Again, unless people change their behavior or governments force them.
00:34:05.620 No drama, no ideology, just math plus trust.
00:34:10.640 Trust.
00:34:12.200 Trust.
00:34:13.320 This is the word you must understand.
00:34:17.060 All trust in everything, including your word, including in what the truth is.
00:34:23.340 All trust is going to go away.
00:34:26.220 It is going to become so rare.
00:34:28.080 It would be much more valuable than any gold.
00:34:32.140 Remember the rule of history.
00:34:34.740 The most powerful country is the one that can borrow the cheapest.
00:34:40.620 Act two.
00:34:42.160 This is the likely path.
00:34:43.680 This is the most probable outcome here.
00:34:48.040 Here's what happens.
00:34:50.020 U.S. Treasury yields are going to go higher.
00:34:53.080 Means it's going to be harder for us to pay the debt.
00:34:56.160 Government interest payments are going to crowd some of our, you know, things that, you
00:35:00.080 know, Donald Trump was out on the road with his new savings plan yesterday.
00:35:06.100 And at least somebody is doing something because you're going to start seeing that we cannot
00:35:11.300 afford these programs.
00:35:12.680 The markets are going to become jumpy and every crisis will cost us more to solve than
00:35:19.140 the last one.
00:35:20.140 Nothing collapses, nothing explodes, but everything costs more and everything feels tighter.
00:35:25.860 This is Rome before the fall, still very powerful, still dominant, but spending more to defend
00:35:33.000 less every year.
00:35:34.700 Britain in World War II, still an empire in paper, but debt quietly just dictated everything
00:35:40.140 that they did.
00:35:40.740 This is the world where America remains the safest house.
00:35:45.200 The house is more expensive to live in, but we still have a house.
00:35:49.960 Act three, the bad ending, okay?
00:35:54.420 The discipline shock.
00:35:56.220 This is the ending that Ken Griffin is warning about right now.
00:35:59.220 He's not predicting, he's warning.
00:36:00.940 And here's what triggers it.
00:36:01.880 A recession plus massive deficits, any kind of geopolitical shock like a war, a civil war, civil unrest in
00:36:14.340 America, or a moment where the markets realize there is no plan to stop borrowing.
00:36:20.840 This is just going to keep going.
00:36:22.020 I got to get my money out of this.
00:36:24.140 Suddenly, the rates will spike fast, not slowly.
00:36:27.700 Bonds and stock fall together.
00:36:29.520 The dollar stays dominant, but no longer forgiving.
00:36:32.480 And it feels like not the Great Depression.
00:36:35.040 Think 1970s America, not an apocalypse.
00:36:38.860 Inflation comes roaring back.
00:36:40.520 Real wages get crushed.
00:36:42.760 Political extremism rises.
00:36:44.840 Trust in institutions collapse.
00:36:47.180 This is the ending where markets are running the policy.
00:36:49.820 Politicians are only reacting.
00:36:51.360 The public is just paying the bills, and that's it, okay?
00:36:54.560 Let me give you one green light, a good ending, because this ending is possible.
00:37:02.160 Not likely, but possible, because it requires courage.
00:37:07.120 The U.S. starts treating borrowing like a national security issue.
00:37:13.260 Spending is prioritized, never promised.
00:37:17.140 Growth is favored over financial tricks.
00:37:20.180 Bond market is respected, not gamed.
00:37:22.440 Interest rates rise, but orderly, not violently.
00:37:28.380 This is America in the 80s.
00:37:31.000 That's exactly what happened.
00:37:32.380 It was painful.
00:37:33.140 It was unpopular.
00:37:34.180 It was disciplined.
00:37:35.340 But it was followed by decades of strength.
00:37:39.220 The vigilantes never fully attack, because credibility is restored before they have to attack.
00:37:45.500 And the final truth of this story is bond vigilantes are not villains.
00:37:49.440 They're just gravity.
00:37:50.820 Japan is experiencing gravity.
00:37:54.440 Anybody who says truth doesn't matter, gravity matters.
00:37:59.340 Math, I'm sorry, Common Core, it matters.
00:38:03.560 It's not just how did you show me how you got there.
00:38:06.760 It's the wrong answer.
00:38:08.760 It's gravity.
00:38:09.880 And America is now in the position where you have to decide, do we respect it right now, or are we going to meet it suddenly as it hits us on the head?
00:38:23.060 Japan is and was the rehearsal.
00:38:26.820 We are now opening night, America.
00:38:29.460 The audience is the bond market.
00:38:33.080 You will feel the effects of all of the decisions that are being made right now, and you might feel them sooner rather than later because of what is happening.
00:38:45.620 People who are not like the people in Minneapolis or in Des Moines or wherever, the average working stiff is not hearing this, and no one is explaining this to them.
00:39:03.500 You need to know, because you are the ones who are going to pay for it.
00:39:09.180 It's not going to be the super rich or the super powerful.
00:39:13.520 It's going to be you and me.
00:39:16.500 You need to know.
00:39:18.260 So you are prepared.
00:39:21.580 It doesn't need to end poorly.
00:39:23.720 We need to make sure that our politicians are looking at the long term and are doing the right things for the long term, not the short, feel-good,
00:39:35.540 just-help-me-get-elected-this-time kind of moment.
00:39:39.860 All right.
00:39:40.340 Back in just a minute.
00:39:42.220 You know, one of the things that I think the Trump administration is doing really well is bringing things back to America.
00:39:48.080 You know, I started a company 1791 years ago, and it was almost impossible because nothing was made here in America.
00:39:55.440 In fact, we were the last buyer of what's called Cone Denim.
00:40:00.440 Cone Denim was the denim that made the original 501s.
00:40:04.460 And it's just the best denim ever made.
00:40:08.000 And it went out of business.
00:40:09.900 And it was the last really good quality denim in America.
00:40:13.820 Well, that was years ago.
00:40:15.380 That American giant came in, and they took a hard road, and they had the clout to do it.
00:40:21.680 They make their clothing right here in the United States with great denim, with great cotton.
00:40:27.120 Everything here is from America.
00:40:29.100 The buttons, people sewing the buttons on, the fabric, everything.
00:40:32.780 American community staying alive because they've decided they can make better clothes here in America, and they make the best hoodies you've ever had.
00:40:40.700 The shape, their T-shirts that don't twist or sag after a few washes, jeans, jackets, basically built to last.
00:40:46.520 When you buy from American giant, you're not just buying something you wear.
00:40:50.600 You're supporting a supply chain that stays right here in this country.
00:40:54.480 Skilled jobs, local economies, and a level of craftsmanship that's getting harder and harder to find.
00:40:59.700 These are the kind of companies that will save us.
00:41:01.860 In a time when products are cheap and disconnected from the people who make them, this is made by Americans just like you who care about the work.
00:41:10.640 Buy American today at American-Giant.com slash Glenn.
00:41:14.720 American-Giant.com slash Glenn.
00:41:17.340 Save 20% when you use my name for your first purchase.
00:41:20.620 That's American-Giant.com slash Glenn.
00:41:23.140 Faith, family, a full work day.
00:41:28.380 That's not fascist.
00:41:30.120 That's just Tuesday.
00:41:32.160 More Glenn Beck straight ahead.
00:41:43.740 It can be really frustrating trying to lose weight and, you know, doing all the right things, and yet you still feel stuck.
00:41:49.980 You can clean up your diet, you can try to be more active, you can cut back where you can.
00:41:54.980 But hunger still beats the crap out of you, you know.
00:41:57.760 I think the gravings still hit you, they just keep coming.
00:42:01.840 And energy feels all over the place when that's going on.
00:42:05.280 A big part of that comes down to your blood sugar and how your body handles fuel.
00:42:08.660 When blood sugar swings up and down, it's not just about willpower.
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00:43:12.260 Welcome to the Glenn Beck Program.
00:43:27.780 Stu is going to join us here in just a minute.
00:43:30.540 He's got some amazing facts that he's found online.
00:43:34.340 I didn't know this, but apparently we've killed nine people in cold blood.
00:43:37.440 ICE has.
00:43:37.900 Now, Tom Homan and all of ICE and I think even baby Jesus would say,
00:43:44.480 I disagree with that.
00:43:45.640 That's not true.
00:43:47.460 But that's what they're peddling.
00:43:49.580 And I'm also going to get into the amazing footage yesterday of the most innocent,
00:43:54.960 kindest, most gentle dove of a man ever.
00:44:02.580 I'm not trying to justify his killing by any stretch of the imagination,
00:44:06.120 but I do think it's worth mentioning what is the media saying about this guy?
00:44:11.540 Look at how they are portraying this guy.
00:44:14.480 Two things can be true.
00:44:16.020 He can be a bad guy and he shouldn't have been killed.
00:44:19.440 Can we be adults?
00:44:20.820 Can we be adults and have that conversation?
00:44:23.640 Well, if you're not an adult, you might want to miss the next hour
00:44:26.580 because that's where we're going when we come back.
00:44:29.180 One of the most frustrating parts of hearing loss is that it can make you feel completely disconnected
00:44:37.700 without ever announcing itself.
00:44:39.420 You're still in the room.
00:44:40.580 You're still nodding along, still showing up, but you're working a lot harder just to keep up.
00:44:44.460 And sometimes you're guessing more than you'd like to admit.
00:44:47.400 What stops a lot of people from doing anything about it is not denial.
00:44:50.800 It's the process, doctor appointments, multiple visits, adjustment, a price tag
00:44:55.000 that'll make you wonder if it's even worth starting.
00:44:57.060 So people wait, even when they know they shouldn't have to.
00:45:01.420 Audion was built to remove any barrier like that.
00:45:04.620 Their Atom X is over the counter.
00:45:06.460 It's a hearing aid designed to be straightforward, approachable, without prescriptions,
00:45:10.760 no complicated setups, a charging case that has a touchscreen that lets you adjust the volume
00:45:15.040 and modes without any buttons or a learning curve.
00:45:17.480 It's clear, natural sound developed with input from audiologists, so conversations feel less
00:45:22.880 like work and what they're supposed to be, connection and easy to follow.
00:45:26.320 Don't wait.
00:45:27.220 AudionHearing.com.
00:45:28.340 Take control of your hearing today.
00:45:30.060 AudionHearing.com.
00:45:33.240 Investing is all about the future.
00:45:35.280 So what do you think is going to happen?
00:45:37.300 Bitcoin is sort of inevitable at this point.
00:45:39.780 I think it would come down to precious metals.
00:45:42.360 I hope we don't go cashless.
00:45:44.220 I would say land is a safe investment.
00:45:46.480 Technology companies.
00:45:48.200 Solar energy.
00:45:49.140 Robotic pollinators might be a thing.
00:45:51.820 A wrestler to face a robot.
00:45:53.520 That will have to happen.
00:45:55.100 So whatever you think is going to happen in the future, you can invest in it at Wealthsimple.
00:46:00.840 Start now at Wealthsimple.com.
00:46:02.880 We'll be right back.
00:46:26.400 We'll be right back.
00:46:28.960 We'll be right back.
00:46:30.260 The fusion of entertainment, enlightenment, and empowerment.
00:46:51.880 This is the Glenn Beck Program.
00:46:55.440 Glenn Beck is on.
00:47:00.260 I said something last hour that in five years, the most precious, valuable commodity will
00:47:12.600 be a man's word, will be his honesty and integrity.
00:47:18.580 If you don't have that, if you're not putting every egg into that basket right now, you're
00:47:24.600 not going to be able to survive as a leader at all.
00:47:30.680 You are not going to have any influence because I want to show you there's this Alex Preddy
00:47:38.460 video that has come out.
00:47:40.500 And the way the press is handling it, it is showing you what is coming next.
00:47:47.660 And I'll explain coming up in just a second.
00:47:49.940 First, let me tell you about American financing.
00:47:51.480 Most people think financial stress comes from big, dramatic events.
00:47:54.800 And sometimes it does, you know, job loss or medical bills, something major.
00:47:58.180 But a lot of stress comes from small pressure.
00:48:00.700 Every single month, bills stacking up, interest piling on, feeling like you're working hard
00:48:05.020 but never quite getting ahead.
00:48:06.700 Your mortgage is one of the biggest pieces of that picture.
00:48:09.700 And if it hadn't been looked at in years, there is a good chance it's not working as efficiently
00:48:13.940 as it could be.
00:48:14.880 American financing helps homeowners revisit that loan and see if there's a better way
00:48:19.580 to structure it for today's reality.
00:48:22.140 Not the one you were living in when you first signed the paperwork.
00:48:25.180 That could mean a lower rate, different term, or consolidating high interest debt into one
00:48:29.000 more manageable payment.
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00:49:08.080 Alex Preddy.
00:49:15.300 When I say that name, now people all across the country feel one way or another.
00:49:23.360 What's her name?
00:49:24.180 Molly Ringwald from Pretty in Pink thinks we'd all look pretty in orange.
00:49:28.040 She now says that when this is over, when the Trump administration is over, they're going
00:49:32.340 to go for prosecutions of people like you, like me.
00:49:34.760 And she will be pushing for treason and there will be executions.
00:49:40.500 That's Molly Ringwald.
00:49:42.100 Thank you, Molly.
00:49:43.040 This is not a, this is not something that is, uh, uncommon.
00:49:50.340 One side is gearing up for purges.
00:49:53.500 And I hope, I hope we come and find common sense, but we first have to find truth.
00:50:02.680 And this Alex Preddy story is showing me that truth doesn't matter and it's only going to
00:50:14.160 get worse.
00:50:15.420 Let me, you know, I was thinking about this yesterday.
00:50:17.340 I was doing an interview, uh, for parents media on, um, AI and I said, look, you have to understand
00:50:29.520 Gutenberg when Gutenberg made the printing press that gave ownership of the truth to others
00:50:38.100 before it was only the Kings and the churches that had truth because books were too expensive.
00:50:42.240 That's where truth lived.
00:50:43.020 And so this gave ownership of truth to the average person.
00:50:47.580 Then our relationship to the truth began to change when radio came in because we could
00:50:52.320 hear it.
00:50:53.200 We heard it ourself.
00:50:55.240 And so we felt differently about the truth and we knew what the truth was because we could
00:51:00.540 hear it.
00:51:01.580 Then television came along and we could see it.
00:51:04.440 And that changed our relationship.
00:51:06.220 It deepened our understanding of the truth.
00:51:08.460 Remember those who were listening to John F Kennedy and the Nixon debate thought Nixon
00:51:12.260 one, but those who are watching thought John F Kennedy one, which one was true based on
00:51:19.960 what your eyes were telling you.
00:51:21.600 Okay.
00:51:22.280 So it changed our relationship.
00:51:25.200 Then the internet came along and internet was the beginning of the chipping away of trust.
00:51:34.300 Those who were supposedly telling us truth, it started chipping away and we started seeing,
00:51:39.180 wait a minute, no, you're playing games with the truth.
00:51:40.800 That's not the truth.
00:51:41.540 Why aren't you covering this?
00:51:43.620 And then you started having people with the internet that wanted to game the truth.
00:51:48.420 And we started losing trust even more.
00:51:52.400 AI for the first time in human history is going to make the truth irrelevant.
00:51:57.060 irrelevant because the system will still be able to somewhat function.
00:52:05.240 The system will be able to function, uh, as it gives everybody, I don't know, a billion
00:52:13.640 different truths.
00:52:14.760 You don't have to tell one big lie anymore.
00:52:17.000 Why not tell 500 million lies and it can keep, it can, it can take the truth and custom make
00:52:24.080 it for you.
00:52:24.940 So you're comfortable with that truth, but that's not the truth.
00:52:28.080 That's your truth.
00:52:29.780 Okay.
00:52:30.840 That's the world we're heading, heading toward.
00:52:33.160 So we must begin to say, I demand the truth and nothing but the truth.
00:52:39.820 I don't want it filtered.
00:52:41.260 I don't want AI, uh, to change things.
00:52:44.100 I just want to see it.
00:52:46.080 I want to know what it is.
00:52:47.420 And when you see it, you must deal with it, whether you like it or not, you must deal with
00:52:53.140 it.
00:52:53.800 So let's look at the pretty video.
00:52:56.480 First, let me start here.
00:52:57.820 This is what CNN has been saying about pretty.
00:53:00.840 This is before the latest footage footage was put out.
00:53:04.880 Listen to this cut to, please.
00:53:06.800 They chose to, uh, they killed the wrong guy, right?
00:53:10.160 Because this is like, this is like the perfect guy.
00:53:13.240 Alex pretty is the guy you would want to date your daughter.
00:53:16.120 They want the guy you want your son to grow up, to be a decent human being who was serving
00:53:21.920 humanity, serving sick veterans, who is, you know, there is nothing that has been said
00:53:28.460 about that man that isn't wonderful.
00:53:30.260 And so they can't malign him.
00:53:34.260 They can't malign him because we have the videos.
00:53:36.600 Okay.
00:53:38.940 We do have the videos.
00:53:40.080 Now we'll CNN publish these videos.
00:53:42.140 Will they make as big of a deal about these videos, this video as the last video?
00:53:47.460 I doubt it.
00:53:48.940 Here is the video.
00:53:50.140 The new footage of Alex, uh, Alex pretty 11 days before his death.
00:53:56.200 Listen to this.
00:53:57.060 This is a moment the news film filmed on January 13th in Minneapolis, showing a man who appears
00:54:03.080 to be Alex pretty interacting with federal immigration agents 11 days before Border Patrol
00:54:08.640 shot and killed him.
00:54:10.600 Our footage was from the BBC, whose facial recognition technology confirmed his identity
00:54:16.300 to a 97% degree of accuracy.
00:54:18.660 On the morning of January 13th, our team received a tip that federal agents were blocking a street
00:54:26.180 at East 30 Park Avenue in Minneapolis.
00:54:30.380 We saw observers shout as they walked back to their vehicles.
00:54:37.300 When they started driving away, the man kicked their taillight.
00:54:41.660 Went out of the vehicle, grabbed him, and pushed him to the ground.
00:54:45.120 During the altercation, agents fired tear gas and pepper balls into the crowd.
00:54:51.020 They continued to hold the man down before they retreat, and he...
00:54:55.040 The man in our footage is wearing a similar outfit to what Preddy was wearing on the day
00:54:59.980 he was killed.
00:55:01.220 What appears to be a gun is also visible above his waistband.
00:55:06.400 Okay.
00:55:07.820 So, why is this video important?
00:55:10.200 Because this is 11 days before, puts him in exactly the same situation.
00:55:13.620 He's got a gun in the small of his back, again, and he is spitting on the vehicle that the ice is in.
00:55:21.600 And then he kicks the taillight out as they're driving away.
00:55:25.020 Now, can I ask you, is that a man you want dating your daughter?
00:55:28.220 Is that a man who is completely under control?
00:55:31.180 That's the most important thing.
00:55:32.520 Is he under control?
00:55:34.740 Because I've never kicked the taillight out of a car.
00:55:38.560 Now, I could see myself doing it if I were enraged, but not calmly walking up and making a decision,
00:55:46.320 thinking, you know, this is a logical decision.
00:55:47.940 I want to kick the taillight out of this car.
00:55:50.560 That's rage.
00:55:52.220 That is rage.
00:55:53.560 And the media keeps telling us, this is really simple.
00:55:56.240 This is a peaceful, legal observer, an innocent man.
00:55:58.540 No threat.
00:55:59.080 End of story.
00:55:59.820 But that story is incomplete.
00:56:02.540 Therefore, it is a lie.
00:56:05.020 You must complete it to tell the truth.
00:56:08.360 You know, when the press leaves out facts that matter, they're not informing you.
00:56:12.380 They are shaping you.
00:56:15.780 Clarity here matters.
00:56:18.360 Being angry does not justify you being killed.
00:56:21.760 Let me say that.
00:56:22.780 Kicking a taillight out does not justify lethal force.
00:56:26.100 Filming police does not justify being shot in the back.
00:56:30.320 Those truths don't change.
00:56:32.600 I'm giving you the full truth.
00:56:36.840 Those things don't warrant you being shot.
00:56:40.520 But here's the other truth that he tries to carry.
00:56:43.720 He's not a passive bystander.
00:56:46.740 He is not a calm observer.
00:56:49.440 This is not a man who is simply standing there with a phone saying, I'm just recording.
00:56:54.660 An observer does not spit on the police or ice and does not kick the taillight out of a federal vehicle.
00:57:03.020 You don't do that.
00:57:04.560 An observer does not scream obscenities into a driver's window.
00:57:08.700 An observer does not chase a marked law enforcement SUV and shatter the lights as it pulls away.
00:57:15.020 That's not observation.
00:57:16.900 That's confrontation.
00:57:18.540 And that matters because context matters.
00:57:22.120 The Associated Press, CNN, they all have rushed to paint a saintly figure, ICO nurse, Vietnam veteran saved by him, peaceful legal observer.
00:57:35.260 All of those things may be true.
00:57:38.080 And all of those things can exist at the same time as this truth.
00:57:43.480 Alex Preddy had uncontrolled rage towards ICE.
00:57:47.380 This video, not coming from the right, released from the BBC, shows plainly, you don't need commentary, you don't need spin.
00:58:00.580 You can see it.
00:58:02.280 Do your eyes still connect to your brain?
00:58:05.400 You can hear it.
00:58:06.700 Do your ears still connect to your brain?
00:58:09.460 You can watch the moment where anger turns into action and action turns into escalation.
00:58:15.780 And here's the part the media doesn't want to say out loud.
00:58:21.020 They knew about this video.
00:58:22.740 They knew it existed.
00:58:27.200 They knew it contradicted the narrative.
00:58:30.420 And yet for days, you were told this was a peaceful man doing nothing but filming.
00:58:36.900 That omission is not an accident.
00:58:40.380 That is a lie of omission.
00:58:43.640 A lie of omission.
00:58:46.280 Let's address the line they keep repeating like a shield.
00:58:52.920 Nothing that happened a week earlier could possibly justify his killing.
00:58:57.980 Let me say something shocking.
00:59:01.220 That's a true statement from the press.
00:59:04.560 No one serious is arguing otherwise.
00:59:08.540 Who's arguing that?
00:59:11.020 He kicked the taillight out.
00:59:12.940 He should have been shot.
00:59:14.300 Nobody's arguing that.
00:59:15.400 I'm not arguing that.
00:59:17.580 That statement is again a lie.
00:59:21.240 It's sleight of hand.
00:59:22.760 A way to avoid a harder question.
00:59:26.740 Why were the public in the jury pool fed a one-dimensional lie?
00:59:32.820 Why were Americans denied the full picture of who this man was in that moment?
00:59:37.960 Why does the media always do this?
00:59:40.380 Turned complicated, volatile, volatile human beings into symbols stripped away of agency, responsibility, and any warning sign.
00:59:49.040 Why?
00:59:49.420 Why?
00:59:51.220 Because the story is about a flawed, angry, emotional, volatile man doesn't mobilize outrage.
00:59:58.880 That's why.
00:59:59.700 The story about St.
01:00:03.140 Freddie, the perfect victim, does.
01:00:06.640 Here is the dangerous consequence of this kind of reporting.
01:00:12.000 When the press insists that every confrontation is peaceful.
01:00:17.280 Every five-year-old kidnap is a true story.
01:00:21.260 Every escalation is erased.
01:00:23.860 Rage is rebranded as virtue.
01:00:27.740 You teach the next crowd that nothing they do counts.
01:00:31.660 You teach them that taunting, spitting, vandalizing, burning a city down, provoking, that's invisible.
01:00:39.580 Nobody will even notice.
01:00:40.480 Nobody's going to say anything.
01:00:41.640 Do it.
01:00:43.260 And then when the situation explodes, you tell them the system murdered an angel.
01:00:54.140 Who benefits?
01:00:56.560 Do the people of the United States benefit from those things?
01:00:59.900 Does the republic become more stable or less stable?
01:01:08.520 Does that protect justice or does it poison it?
01:01:16.460 Two things can be true at once.
01:01:19.840 The time for America to decide, are you an adult?
01:01:23.860 Adults in a republic have to be capable of holding two truths at the same time.
01:01:29.180 I don't like the way Donald Trump says some things.
01:01:33.920 But he's done some things that are really good.
01:01:38.740 That doesn't make you a Trumper.
01:01:41.520 It doesn't make you somebody who is against Trump.
01:01:44.340 That makes you an adult.
01:01:45.740 So here are the two things.
01:01:50.520 The shooting appears unjustified, in my opinion.
01:01:52.980 Has to be fully investigated.
01:01:55.180 I give the police the benefit of the doubt because 8,000% increase of threats on their lives.
01:02:02.700 It makes them jumpy.
01:02:04.120 When somebody says, gun, gun, gun.
01:02:06.080 Two guys pull out their gun and they shoot.
01:02:08.100 I can at least understand it.
01:02:14.840 The media lied by omission.
01:02:17.600 It's portraying this guy as a harmless observer.
01:02:20.820 If we can't say that we need to look into what happened on the shooting, and we need to have a fair trial, not a lynching, a fair trial, and that the press has lied to the jury pool.
01:02:37.960 They have lied.
01:02:40.100 If you can't say both of those things, you don't have the ability to reason anymore.
01:02:45.660 And when reason dies, the only thing that is left is rage.
01:02:50.960 And that's what they are counting on.
01:02:55.540 Rage is not justice.
01:02:58.580 Rage is how societies unravel.
01:03:01.700 And it usually happens one dishonest headline at a time.
01:03:07.960 More in a minute.
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01:04:23.040 Well, Stu.
01:04:24.540 Yeah.
01:04:25.320 I mean, there's some good points in there, you know.
01:04:27.360 I mean, I guess in an alternate world and an alternate reality, you know.
01:04:33.580 Your last date, which is tomorrow, cannot come fast enough.
01:04:37.420 It just can't come fast enough.
01:04:38.680 Well, I can understand why.
01:04:40.380 Because there's going to be nobody here to call you out when you lie about how.
01:04:45.580 Oh, I lied.
01:04:46.080 With this Alex Preddy video, you act like it was real when we know the truth.
01:04:51.160 Oh, my God.
01:04:51.540 You know, I thought it was real at first, too.
01:04:53.900 And then I went to Reddit.
01:04:56.280 Oh, you went to Reddit?
01:04:57.540 I discovered the truth on Reddit.
01:05:00.140 Because I was looking at a subreddit called, is this, you know, real or is this AI?
01:05:06.800 And there they broke it down.
01:05:09.180 Let me give you some of the comments here.
01:05:11.500 Preddy is wearing the same outfit he was executed in.
01:05:15.080 They just ran all the public execution videos through AI to make this for sure.
01:05:20.260 Also, watch how his arms and body move in this video in comparison to the execution.
01:05:26.060 His arms are also too long at several points in this video.
01:05:31.880 You didn't cover that at all.
01:05:34.060 Let me give you this comment.
01:05:35.220 Do you really think that if it had happened, he'd have been non-incarcerated a week later?
01:05:41.460 Because ICE is so forgiving.
01:05:45.080 You didn't cover that.
01:05:46.280 You wouldn't cover that.
01:05:47.140 Are you kidding me?
01:05:48.440 They haven't arrested people who burned whole cities to the ground for the love of Pete.
01:05:53.920 I will say.
01:05:54.680 By the way, your problem has to be with the BBC.
01:05:57.460 Then what you're saying, to believe that, this is so easy.
01:06:01.580 Hang on just a sec.
01:06:02.240 So if I believe that, I have to believe that now the BBC is making this up and is on the side of ICE?
01:06:11.620 It's, well, you know, again, they're not that smart because there's a lot of this, too.
01:06:16.100 They really expect us to believe he assaulted several officers and damaged a car and they just released him?
01:06:20.980 You know, I will say.
01:06:22.660 Yeah.
01:06:24.280 That's a pretty effective argument if you didn't know the thing.
01:06:27.680 Because I roll through a stop sign at the end of a cul-de-sac and I get pulled over.
01:06:36.000 You can kick cop cars and break their lights and nothing happens to you.
01:06:41.740 They just put you on the ground for 30 seconds.
01:06:43.620 That's a real thing.
01:06:44.440 I had no idea that was reality, but I will.
01:06:47.460 I have to tell you, if you're living in a red state, that's not reality.
01:06:50.860 If you're living in a blue state and you're a protester in those kinds of things and it's ICE, that is the reality.
01:06:57.820 I mean, and I wouldn't have believed it either.
01:06:59.620 Yeah.
01:07:00.280 Ten years ago, but I see this happen all the time now.
01:07:07.300 All the time.
01:07:08.680 Now, that's exactly what you'd say.
01:07:10.120 As you lie about Alex Peretti and the fact that, you know, the whole backlight, including the part of the car, fell in one kick.
01:07:18.600 This is definitely AI.
01:07:20.720 Fake and disgusting.
01:07:21.840 Look how the top left of the car in the background seemingly extends.
01:07:24.940 This is AI.
01:07:26.520 The people are moving like they're cartoon characters.
01:07:28.940 Comment after comment after comment, Glenn.
01:07:30.500 Just like that.
01:07:31.220 Amazing.
01:07:31.420 As I said, the most valuable commodity will be integrity very soon.
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01:09:01.020 Welcome to the Glenn Beck program.
01:09:19.080 Tomorrow is Stu's last day on the show.
01:09:25.640 The second time he has quit the show.
01:09:27.480 That's not accurate.
01:09:30.100 I don't know if there will be a third.
01:09:31.260 I don't know if there will be a third.
01:09:32.560 But the second time he's quit the show.
01:09:34.800 And he'll be here tomorrow for his last exciting episode.
01:09:40.020 I look forward to it.
01:09:41.120 We'll be talking about what I'm doing next as well.
01:09:43.960 I'm excited about that.
01:09:45.360 Yeah, yeah.
01:09:45.940 Whatever.
01:09:47.660 At 30, the 30th anniversary, you know what I was getting you.
01:09:52.400 You know what I was getting you.
01:09:52.820 I mean, no, I don't.
01:09:54.500 Yes, you do.
01:09:55.700 I was going to get you a Lotus.
01:09:56.980 The car of your dreams.
01:09:58.100 I was going to get you a Lotus for your 30th.
01:09:59.980 This is.
01:10:00.500 What do you get for 28 years?
01:10:02.140 What do you get for 28 years?
01:10:04.180 A paper pirate's hat.
01:10:06.440 That's what I did.
01:10:06.780 And I don't mean a pirate like, I mean, matey.
01:10:08.860 I mean, I mean, I mean, a pirate's hat.
01:10:14.900 I want the audience to understand what's happening.
01:10:19.220 The audience needs to understand how manipulative this is.
01:10:23.820 I went through a five-year anniversary, a 10-year anniversary, a 15-year anniversary, a 20-year anniversary, and a 25-year anniversary with, I think, maybe there was one bacon, egg, and cheese biscuit offered at maybe five years.
01:10:41.840 No, there was nothing.
01:10:42.540 Nothing.
01:10:43.200 No, there was nothing.
01:10:43.840 And now at 28 years, 28 years, I'm leaving.
01:10:47.860 Saving it for the 30th.
01:10:49.140 The 30th, not the 25th, which would be the obvious big one, but the 30th was when the $200,000 car was going to show up.
01:10:57.660 Well, it's only because, and this is the honest God's truth, and you know it's true, because I got you a hat and a t-shirt of Lotus.
01:11:04.080 You got me a hat.
01:11:05.160 That is true.
01:11:05.720 You got me a hat and a t-shirt, which is more than you got me on my 25th anniversary.
01:11:09.760 Because what happened was, I was talking to a friend of mine.
01:11:13.060 He's like, you did nothing.
01:11:14.400 You did nothing.
01:11:15.040 And I'm like, I didn't even think about it.
01:11:16.840 We were on the air one day going, how many years has it been?
01:11:19.440 25 years?
01:11:21.900 So I decided right then and there.
01:11:23.960 30th, Lotus.
01:11:24.780 You did nothing.
01:11:25.200 No, I want to make sure I understand.
01:11:26.960 So the 25th year, you-
01:11:29.580 No, it was 26th, I think.
01:11:31.720 That's not true.
01:11:32.700 Yeah, it was 26th.
01:11:33.080 The 25th year, we talked about it during the 25th year, and literally the conversation was, oh, wow, 25 years.
01:11:38.100 Wow.
01:11:38.860 And that was it.
01:11:39.480 But at 30 years, you were going to buy me this car after, and you only tell me it after I tell you that I'm leaving after 20 years.
01:11:48.080 Well, I'm not going to tell you beforehand, hey, you know what you're going to get?
01:11:51.780 No, I'm not going to tell you that beforehand.
01:11:53.040 This is such a scam.
01:11:54.200 I hope the audience knows the fraudulent person you listen to on a day-to-day basis.
01:11:58.980 Hey, Sarah.
01:11:59.800 Sarah.
01:12:00.840 Who do you believe?
01:12:02.160 Which one of us do you believe?
01:12:04.040 Oh, you are so dead.
01:12:06.380 That was risky.
01:12:07.280 You're still working here.
01:12:08.260 I've been here 18 years.
01:12:09.720 I haven't gotten anything.
01:12:10.640 Yeah, thank you.
01:12:12.080 Is that 30?
01:12:13.720 Is that 30?
01:12:15.360 Is that even 20?
01:12:16.680 No.
01:12:17.480 No.
01:12:18.120 And you haven't gotten anything.
01:12:19.420 You have my love and respect.
01:12:21.200 Deep, deep love and respect.
01:12:21.460 That is not true at all.
01:12:23.040 Respect?
01:12:23.660 You don't want?
01:12:24.140 Oh, yeah.
01:12:24.380 That's definitely not true.
01:12:25.600 Yeah.
01:12:25.840 I will say, by the way.
01:12:27.400 I'll get you a bottle of booze.
01:12:28.660 You'll be fine, and you'll forget about how many years you've worked there.
01:12:30.760 Oh, she'd love that.
01:12:32.360 She would love that.
01:12:34.320 Even if it was just like the generic vodka brand.
01:12:38.320 No, I can give her a thunderbird, and she'd be fine.
01:12:41.480 Yeah, totally fine.
01:12:42.120 This is the love and respect we were talking about.
01:12:44.220 Excellent.
01:12:48.280 So tomorrow, we say our final goodbyes, because we're never going to talk to him again.
01:12:52.700 Wait.
01:12:53.240 He's dead to me.
01:12:54.940 He's dead to me.
01:12:56.360 Really?
01:12:56.680 Tomorrow, you're going to reveal what you are going to do, right?
01:13:03.940 Because I know what you're going to do.
01:13:05.300 Yes.
01:13:05.700 You at least know part of it.
01:13:07.780 But yeah, it's going to be a really interesting thing, I think.
01:13:12.140 I think people will be interested in it.
01:13:14.200 And we'll talk about it tomorrow with all the details and where you can go to get involved.
01:13:18.780 It's going to be fun.
01:13:19.160 I've worked weeks on jokes for this.
01:13:21.740 I've worked weeks on jokes.
01:13:23.460 I don't need you to joke about it.
01:13:24.780 I would like you to say, hey, that's a great thing.
01:13:26.960 People should join up.
01:13:28.340 I'm supportive.
01:13:29.320 Stu.
01:13:30.140 Stu, that is the relationship we have here.
01:13:32.660 We hammer each other to death.
01:13:35.360 And tomorrow, I guess I get the last word.
01:13:38.020 I guess I get the last word.
01:13:39.440 I mean, I...
01:13:40.740 This is going to be a disaster.
01:13:44.240 Tomorrow is going to be wonderful.
01:13:46.720 I should just call in sick, honestly, is what I should do.
01:13:49.600 I should just call in sick tomorrow.
01:13:51.020 General strike.
01:13:52.060 You know what you don't get?
01:13:53.420 You don't get the pirate's hat.
01:13:56.220 You don't get the pirate's hat.
01:13:57.220 Are you serious?
01:13:58.120 Yeah.
01:13:58.440 You don't get the pirate's hat.
01:13:59.240 You don't get it.
01:14:00.100 You don't get it.
01:14:02.480 I'm just saying.
01:14:03.420 I appreciate that.
01:14:04.780 Thank you, Glenn.
01:14:05.560 Thank you.
01:14:05.960 Thank you for a wonderful 28 years.
01:14:07.880 And obviously, we almost got to that really important, everyone talks about 30th year anniversary.
01:14:12.740 It's only because I didn't pay attention to the other ones.
01:14:18.580 I started feeling guilty at 25.
01:14:20.360 And I'm like, you know what?
01:14:21.460 Gosh, Tanya must be so lucky.
01:14:23.220 And then I looked at how much I pay you.
01:14:23.720 And I was like, what am I thinking?
01:14:25.700 I mean, he's been getting lotuses like crazy every single year.
01:14:29.820 So please.
01:14:30.140 Oh, I forgot about all the lotuses I have.
01:14:32.000 The low tie that I have in my garage.
01:14:34.860 You know, this is exactly what I would expect out of you.
01:14:37.660 I'm sure Tanya's a very lucky woman to be able to get this sort of attention.
01:14:40.660 And of course, you could always make the 25th right.
01:14:42.840 There's no reason that you couldn't just say, hey, by the way, ordered this for you.
01:14:46.980 It just came in.
01:14:47.760 I just totally believe it.
01:14:49.620 So, but no, go ahead.
01:14:50.700 We'll wait till 30.
01:14:52.220 I appreciate all of there.
01:14:54.260 No, no, no.
01:14:54.720 I could order it and have it come in.
01:14:56.540 It wouldn't be going to you because you'd no longer be an employee.
01:15:00.560 So, I mean, I can give it.
01:15:01.820 Sarah, would you like a Lotus?
01:15:03.760 Okay.
01:15:04.140 Sarah, look good at a Lotus, I will say.
01:15:05.960 Sarah would like a Lotus.
01:15:07.260 Sarah, are you the longest running employee now?
01:15:09.400 So, me and Nick tie, yeah.
01:15:12.020 Nick Daly, yeah.
01:15:12.600 You and Nick tied.
01:15:14.340 It's going to be a very expensive 30th.
01:15:16.660 Anyway, go ahead.
01:15:17.780 Remind me.
01:15:19.020 This is company policy, by the way.
01:15:21.900 Glenn's going to have a mass firing spree at 29 years every time.
01:15:25.840 Every time anybody hits 29.
01:15:28.200 I hope to God I'm dead before everybody hits 30 years.
01:15:32.120 All right.
01:15:32.500 Anyway.
01:15:32.800 Do we have time?
01:15:34.980 Do we want to go through some of this Alex Preddy stuff we were discussing earlier?
01:15:39.220 The crap that's going around social media?
01:15:41.320 Give me a couple.
01:15:42.240 Give me a couple.
01:15:42.740 Okay.
01:15:43.120 So, ICE has killed nine people so far in 2026, says every social media post.
01:15:47.560 ICE has did.
01:15:48.360 ICE.
01:15:48.760 Or ICE did.
01:15:49.520 ICE has.
01:15:50.200 ICE did.
01:15:50.340 ICE has killed nine people so far in 2026.
01:15:54.100 Alex Preddy, Rene Good, Keith Porter, Hebert Sanchez Dominguez, Victor Manuel Diaz, Paradis
01:16:01.780 La, Luis Beltran, Yanez Cruz, Luis Gustavo, Nunez Caceres, and Geraldo Lunas.
01:16:10.940 Rivera?
01:16:11.980 No, he's still around.
01:16:13.080 Campos.
01:16:13.820 Oh, he's still around.
01:16:14.040 So, you got those nine.
01:16:15.140 Huh.
01:16:15.320 So, I haven't really, I haven't heard any of those.
01:16:20.200 Yeah, it's weird.
01:16:20.600 I mean, I've heard the first couple.
01:16:21.500 Yeah, first couple, right?
01:16:22.240 So, Alex Preddy, we know that whole story.
01:16:24.180 We've been talking about it.
01:16:24.980 Rene Good, you know that whole story.
01:16:27.060 And we've been talking about it.
01:16:28.440 Let me give you some of the others, though, because you'd think, and of course, everyone
01:16:31.320 retweeting it has not actually looked at what has happened with those situations.
01:16:35.080 But I decided maybe we should.
01:16:36.880 So, this is what we have.
01:16:37.900 Geraldo Lunas Campos.
01:16:40.040 He was a Cuban immigrant, and his death was, at an ICE facility, ruled a homicide.
01:16:47.920 An investigation is going on.
01:16:49.780 In a statement, they said he was pronounced dead after experiencing medical distress.
01:16:55.460 He became disruptive while in line for medication, refused to return to his assigned dorm.
01:17:01.620 He was subsequently placed in segregation.
01:17:03.820 While in segregation, he was observed in distress, and they brought in medical personnel.
01:17:10.040 In the autopsy, it was ruled a homicide due to asphyxia.
01:17:13.960 So, it's possible he was just murdered, or, you know, he was resisting, and there was
01:17:18.480 a struggle.
01:17:19.100 They're going through that investigation now.
01:17:21.520 And before...
01:17:22.500 Now, it deserves investigation.
01:17:23.880 I would agree.
01:17:24.520 Right?
01:17:24.680 That's the one that I think, like, hey, we need to know what the truth of that is.
01:17:27.080 If it is some terrible thing, we should know about it.
01:17:29.740 I will note, this might adjust your sympathy level a little bit.
01:17:35.820 He had prior convictions, including sexual contact with a minor.
01:17:40.660 So, this...
01:17:41.360 Now, look, that doesn't mean he should be murdered in prison, if that's what happened.
01:17:45.120 Yeah.
01:17:45.500 Well, at least not by authorities.
01:17:47.280 I mean, if a child predator is murdered in prison, at least let's not have the authorities
01:17:52.580 do it.
01:17:52.920 You know what I mean?
01:17:53.440 For sure.
01:17:54.040 For sure.
01:17:54.540 Right.
01:17:54.680 But, again...
01:17:55.540 Okay.
01:17:56.240 Yes, a child molester died in questionable circumstances.
01:18:00.240 But that...
01:18:00.560 Okay.
01:18:00.820 You want to include that list?
01:18:02.020 Fine.
01:18:02.100 But I still wanted to investigate...
01:18:02.920 I just feel like you should note that, by the way, this guy was a child molester, and that's
01:18:06.680 why he was in prison.
01:18:07.280 Yes.
01:18:07.500 I didn't know that.
01:18:08.000 Yes.
01:18:08.260 Okay.
01:18:08.900 Then we have, again, this is 2026 killings by ICE, murders by ICE, active shooter or ICE
01:18:15.700 agent's victim.
01:18:16.740 What happened in L.A. New Year's Eve killing is the headline of this next one, which is
01:18:21.320 interesting because it's 2026 and it happened on New Year's Eve.
01:18:25.420 So, they couldn't even put the one that...
01:18:27.440 So, it hadn't happened yet.
01:18:28.000 It hadn't even happened.
01:18:28.980 No, well, it's in 2025 New Year's Eve.
01:18:31.520 They couldn't even get that right.
01:18:32.240 But anyway, this is about Porter is his last name.
01:18:37.340 It's Keith Porter.
01:18:40.060 He was actually shot by an ICE agent.
01:18:42.980 It is true this time.
01:18:44.540 He was shot by an ICE agent.
01:18:47.120 During a big ICE raid, was he going to a home depot?
01:18:51.080 Was ICE driving by, just firing into a home depot to see if they could hit illegal immigrants?
01:18:55.140 That might be what you think.
01:18:56.180 In reality, what happened was, an ICE agent was at home on New Year's Eve, in his home,
01:19:04.580 off duty, just home.
01:19:07.240 And he decided, when he heard a bunch of gunshots outside, to go out and make sure there wasn't
01:19:15.400 an active shooter situation going on, which is what he believed.
01:19:19.440 That bastard.
01:19:20.620 What's that?
01:19:21.500 Yeah.
01:19:21.940 That bastard.
01:19:22.940 That bastard.
01:19:23.280 Went out there, by the way.
01:19:24.400 Early news reports after the incident said that Porter, the victim here, quote unquote,
01:19:29.320 was firing an assault style rifle.
01:19:33.420 Now, you might say, well, that's just what reporters are saying.
01:19:37.080 Well, there is a defense, and it is important to hear the defense.
01:19:41.260 We should note this was not an ICE investigation.
01:19:43.280 It was an ICE agent who was off duty at home protecting his home.
01:19:46.380 That's what happened.
01:19:47.060 So totally out of what we're talking about normally.
01:19:49.180 But there is a defense for Porter from his family.
01:19:51.640 Porter's loved ones and advocates say they believe he was ringing in the New Year by
01:19:56.500 firing a gun into the air over and over again.
01:20:00.300 And they are-
01:20:00.560 That happens in the Middle East all the time.
01:20:03.080 All the time.
01:20:03.560 Now, it's a crime.
01:20:04.280 All the time.
01:20:04.720 And those bullets, by the way, those bullets never come down.
01:20:07.360 Never come down.
01:20:07.940 They just keep going.
01:20:09.020 They just keep going deep into space.
01:20:11.100 They never come down.
01:20:11.800 One of the complaints by the family, by the way, is that the other people who were also
01:20:15.540 firing guns into the air at the time, they didn't get shot.
01:20:19.540 So that is their big defense on that one.
01:20:22.580 Next up, Parody Law.
01:20:25.720 Parody Law.
01:20:27.000 Now, he's a criminal illegal alien from Cambodia convicted of receiving stolen property, robbery,
01:20:32.560 criminal conspiracy, theft, DUI, forgery, intentional possession of a controlled substance, violating
01:20:40.200 probation, receiving stolen property, another intentional possession of a controlled substance,
01:20:44.700 and another conviction of forgery.
01:20:47.760 He's been doing this-
01:20:48.420 Even he never touched a child.
01:20:49.880 That's true.
01:20:50.780 I'd rather have Parody Law around than the other guy.
01:20:53.780 Right.
01:20:53.900 But this happened over a period of 20 years while he was here illegally.
01:20:59.020 20 years.
01:21:00.100 He was arrested by ICE agents outside of his Upper Darby home, transferred to detention
01:21:04.100 center where he received treatment for severe withdrawal.
01:21:06.720 So he was heavily addicted to opioids, had a withdrawal.
01:21:11.920 When they saw he had a withdrawal, the staff immediately administered CPR and several doses
01:21:18.000 of naloxone.
01:21:19.500 He then was transported to the hospital in critical condition and passed away.
01:21:27.780 So again, he wasn't murdered by ICE.
01:21:29.660 He had extreme withdrawal.
01:21:30.940 They tried to save his life multiple times and were unsuccessful.
01:21:35.540 Then we have Luis Beltran Yanez Cruz, Glenn, another one of these ICE murder victims.
01:21:42.140 Again, another guy.
01:21:44.020 He was-
01:21:45.140 Luis-
01:21:45.620 He had been deported already, came back in.
01:21:47.560 Um, he was a Honduran national, died after he was admitted into the hospital, having heart
01:21:52.980 related issues.
01:21:54.200 He had a heart attack.
01:21:57.120 That was-
01:21:58.000 Murderers.
01:21:58.320 That's another murder, apparently.
01:22:00.280 Luis Gustavo Nunez Caceres.
01:22:03.280 Uh, yes, Glenn, you'll be surprised to hear another illegal immigrant.
01:22:06.740 He was pronounced dead January 5th in Houston after being treated for chronic heart related
01:22:11.340 issues.
01:22:11.720 So, ICE is now putting cholesterol into the veins of these illegal immigrants and causing
01:22:18.140 heart attacks.
01:22:19.040 Wow.
01:22:19.580 Shocking.
01:22:20.120 But died in U.S. custody.
01:22:22.340 That's the important part, Stu.
01:22:23.720 Died in-
01:22:24.440 How old was this guy?
01:22:25.660 Uh, that guy, I think one of them was 68.
01:22:28.860 One of them was 42.
01:22:29.840 Well, 68.
01:22:30.340 Who has a heart attack at 68?
01:22:32.240 Yeah, that's shocking.
01:22:33.460 Shocking, shocking.
01:22:34.140 It's shocking.
01:22:35.300 A couple more shocking ones, Glenn, before we go.
01:22:37.060 Hebert Sanchez Dominguez is another guy on this list.
01:22:39.960 ICE murdered him, and if you want to ask him the details about this, obviously difficult
01:22:46.680 because he's dead, but I think he would have a particular opinion as to whether he was murdered
01:22:52.220 by ICE, largely because he murdered himself by hanging.
01:22:57.140 He committed suicide in the prison cell, yet he's included on the list of ICE murders.
01:23:03.460 They found him in the cell hanging, but that's ICE's murder.
01:23:08.600 And then, of course-
01:23:10.760 Wait a minute.
01:23:10.780 Wait a minute.
01:23:11.920 Paper sheets?
01:23:13.560 Hmm.
01:23:14.080 I don't know.
01:23:14.600 That's a good question.
01:23:15.360 Yeah, paper sheets.
01:23:15.940 No, I believe it was a vote.
01:23:16.380 Because it might have not been ICE.
01:23:18.000 It could have very well been Hillary Clinton.
01:23:20.520 That's true.
01:23:21.820 Just saying.
01:23:22.660 Last one on the list here, Glenn.
01:23:23.600 She's done it before, you know.
01:23:25.260 Victor Manuel Diaz.
01:23:27.860 Yes.
01:23:28.280 Victor Manuel Diaz.
01:23:29.220 Did ICE murder him?
01:23:30.720 I don't know.
01:23:31.540 Let's ask him.
01:23:32.520 It's hard to tell because he also killed himself in prison at the sprawling tent complex at
01:23:39.900 the U.S. Army's Fort Bill Base in El Paso.
01:23:43.160 He killed himself.
01:23:45.340 Now, maybe we'll find out later.
01:23:47.340 Big setups.
01:23:48.900 You know, they came and they put him on the end of that rope.
01:23:51.580 All of these, of course, deserve, when you have someone who dies, deserve investigation,
01:23:55.260 but does not at all appear.
01:23:56.520 And there's any evidence supporting the fact that they were murdered.
01:23:59.560 Have to tell you, I don't have a problem looking into all of that.
01:24:02.660 No problem looking into all that.
01:24:04.680 You know, if something foul was happening, I want those people, you know.
01:24:09.680 Maybe we'll find that out.
01:24:10.680 Corrected, whatever it is.
01:24:12.100 But, yeah, I don't think the nine people were murdered.
01:24:14.780 Anyway, let's go to Berna.
01:24:16.860 I mean, you hear them saying that?
01:24:18.180 Let's just have an investigation on all of these.
01:24:20.140 Let's let the chips fall while they may.
01:24:22.000 Berna, I hope you never need to defend yourself, but hope isn't a plan.
01:24:25.240 And the real world is, you know, has a way of just throwing situations that escalate fast.
01:24:29.860 A threat move closer, your heart rate spikes, and in a matter of seconds, you're forced
01:24:33.600 to make decisions you can't unmake.
01:24:35.620 And that's why I like having options that, you know, don't immediately jump to lethal
01:24:39.240 force.
01:24:39.960 The Berna launcher is a non-lethal self-defense tool designed to stop a threat at a distance
01:24:44.080 using powerful pepper and kinetic projectiles.
01:24:47.140 Gives you a way to create space, disrupt an attack, and get you safely away from the situation
01:24:53.180 before you have to pull a trigger that you can never take back.
01:24:56.480 The compact launcher makes it more practical.
01:24:58.640 It's smaller, easier to conceal, simple to carry, which means it can be actually with
01:25:02.340 you when you need it, not left at home because it's too big or bulky.
01:25:05.180 My wife carries it in purse.
01:25:06.560 We have it in our glove box.
01:25:07.720 My kids have it in their backpack.
01:25:09.500 I mean, it's all 50 states.
01:25:11.100 It's legal in, doesn't require a permit.
01:25:13.460 You can have a real self-defense option without regret.
01:25:15.580 Go to Berna, B-Y-R-N-A dot com slash Glenn, Berna dot com slash Glenn.
01:25:19.500 Try before you buy it.
01:25:20.520 Sportsman's Warehouse located near you.
01:25:22.420 That's Berna, B-Y-R-N-A dot com slash Glenn.
01:25:26.520 You show up, you work hard, you speak the truth.
01:25:30.960 Even when it ain't popular.
01:25:33.560 That still counts for something.
01:25:36.200 Back.
01:25:36.800 We'll be right back.
01:25:45.580 Well, most people plan their day around time.
01:25:51.660 You know, the meetings, the errands, or whatever deadlines you have.
01:25:55.560 You don't really think about it when you think about like, we're going to have energy to do
01:25:59.420 any of this stuff.
01:26:00.680 You just hope you'll have enough to get through it all.
01:26:02.700 And when you don't, you blame sleep or you blame stress or you, you know, I'm just getting
01:26:06.460 old without realizing a lot of it can trace back to how your body is handling food.
01:26:10.860 Health code was designed to support metabolic health, which is really about how
01:26:15.360 steady your internal fuel system is.
01:26:18.640 When meals send your blood sugar on a roller coaster, your energy tends to follow.
01:26:23.600 You feel good for a bit, then hungry, foggy, or tired not long after.
01:26:28.860 This approach behind health code is going to fix a lot of the stuff that people are
01:26:32.700 dealing with.
01:26:33.200 Dr. Ben Bickman, who studies how insulin and blood sugar regulation affect how we feel
01:26:37.620 from day to day.
01:26:38.320 He's been working on this for a long time.
01:26:39.940 And the goal isn't eating less per se.
01:26:41.580 It's about eating in a way that helps your body stay more stable and predictable.
01:26:46.440 Health code is a nutritionally complete meal shake that is built around that principle and
01:26:50.740 emphasizes protein, healthy fats, low, very low in carbs, avoids the added sugar and supports
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01:26:58.500 Instead of constantly reacting to your meals, your body gets the kind of steady support that
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01:27:07.340 You can save on this right now if you go to shakesavings.com.
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01:27:28.180 Tomorrow, Pat Gray will be joining me and Stu.
01:27:31.200 It's the last day for Stu as part of the program.
01:27:33.600 It's going to be a fun, fun Friday show.
01:27:35.400 Also, today, or this weekend, the last weekend, you can try glennbeck.com and The Torch for
01:27:40.480 free.
01:27:41.320 Just go to glennbeck.com and check it all out.
01:27:43.680 Yeah, and I'll be announcing where I'm going tomorrow, the new project.
01:27:46.800 But if you happen to miss the show tomorrow or just want to make sure you don't miss that
01:27:50.340 announcement, we're going to have it up on YouTube as well.
01:27:52.820 YouTube.com slash StuDoesAmerica.
01:27:54.500 Go there.
01:27:55.200 Follow it.
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01:27:56.220 You know, a lot of back discomfort comes from one big movement, and it comes from repetition.
01:28:07.300 Sitting too long.
01:28:08.400 Standing too long.
01:28:09.280 Moving the same way every day.
01:28:10.820 And over time, that tension just settles in and starts to feel normal, even though it shouldn't.
01:28:15.620 What Chirp does is go straight to the source of that tension.
01:28:19.400 Their wheel-style back rollers are designed to target the muscles that run along your
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01:28:34.480 The design is smart and intentional.
01:28:36.140 There's a groove down the center, so you're never putting pressure on your own spine itself.
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01:28:45.680 want it something gentle or more targeted.
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01:29:40.560 No, no, no, no.
01:29:42.720 the fusion of entertainment enlightenment and empowerment this is the glenn beck program
01:29:56.400 hello america welcome to the glenn beck program i don't know if you saw this story from the press
01:30:04.600 but a gray honda sedan was seen in footage circulating or yes circulating on social media
01:30:14.480 backing up and plowing into the side entrance of the world headquarters of a jewish synagogue
01:30:20.880 and it was pretty bad police responded to the car
01:30:26.940 uh ramming itself into the doors of the synagogue and as i read this story for the new york times
01:30:35.220 today i thought to myself gee when was the last time i read a story about let's just say an ice
01:30:39.840 agent where gun killed innocent bystander gun did this police arrived to find gun smoking no why why
01:30:52.760 won't you why why why won't you say who this person was what was going on why is it only car car car
01:31:02.480 car did this car did that car didn't do anything car was driven by a human being tell me about the
01:31:07.860 human being not the car i don't care about what the honda did because the honda did nothing except
01:31:12.340 what it was instructed to do by the driver anyway uh also elan omar another story in new york times
01:31:21.760 front page new york times it was so so very tragic what happened we finally now know what that
01:31:27.240 dangerous substance was in the syringe that was sprayed at her in a press conference could have
01:31:33.300 been really really bad turns out no not so much we'll tell you about that in 60 seconds first most
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01:32:59.960 so i want to talk to you a little bit about elon marr because um you know when i saw somebody spraying
01:33:10.040 uh something on elon omar i immediately was thought boy she just got to freak her out honestly
01:33:18.120 because in in her country uh in some muslim countries in some muslim communities uh that
01:33:25.140 happens to women and they they spray battery acid on their face and then their face is melted off
01:33:31.780 and i thought wow that could be really i mean she must be concerned because she knows in muslim
01:33:37.360 communities uh some people do that but that's not what this was uh that's not what this was this
01:33:44.980 was some guy who looked like fred flintstone that took a syringe and filled it with are you ready
01:33:50.500 this is horrible filled it with apple cider vinegar now i'm not sure if you're aware of this but
01:33:58.140 stew correct me if i'm wrong i believe that can stain a nice sweater like that it can leave a mark
01:34:03.460 we should be clear we do not have any evidence of this particular apple cider vinegar attack
01:34:08.400 staining that sweatshirt or discoloring the stripes but that is a possibility and that is
01:34:15.840 the the main thing we need to talk about today her bravery uh in uh being able to incredibly
01:34:22.860 so you get through a moment like that it i just i think we have to stand here in awe
01:34:29.680 and just appreciate her hero hero is what comes to mind now i agree glenn like legitimately when i
01:34:36.840 first saw that we didn't know what what the liquid was it could have been really dangerous i'm not
01:34:42.020 minimizing like that could have been scary for her she is a divisive figure it could have been
01:34:46.180 something terrible right it could have been horrible yeah um and the person who did it uh is
01:34:51.780 looks completely insane and on something to me in the video like just looks completely crazy a
01:34:57.100 crazy person charges you gets close to you gets close to any public figure there is the possibility
01:35:01.860 that it turns into something really really bad horrible that being said when typically we find out
01:35:09.720 it wasn't something bad the story pretty much goes away i could give you dozens of examples
01:35:15.680 of conservatives getting hit in the face with a pie a conservative being glitter bombed right these
01:35:24.240 things happen all the time and when it when they are happening there is real risk to that person
01:35:29.120 it can it could have gone much better when you have a person who hates you that much to run up to you
01:35:34.460 and and be that close to you it could have gone in a very ugly direction when we find out that it
01:35:39.360 didn't it is a quick incident that goes away almost immediately with no additional coverage
01:35:44.440 not the case with ilan omar ilan omar the next day after this incident was the top story
01:35:51.740 at the new york times all day long all day the top story at the new york times and the the story which
01:36:01.400 is called uh attack on ilan omar follows years of trump's targeting her that is what the headline
01:36:09.760 of the story is and i looked all around here glenn not analysis this is a news story
01:36:18.380 a news story it's by annie carney reporting from washington as president trump riled up a rally
01:36:28.700 crowd on tuesday night describing immigrants bent on harming and killing americans he singled out one
01:36:35.180 person in particular uh ilan omar the crowd booed they recognized the name of the democratic congresswoman
01:36:42.520 from minnesota whom the president has demonized and dehumanized for years with racist and xenophobic
01:36:48.960 attacks i can't take it no i can't i can't take it because all i can think of is what they're doing
01:36:52.440 to the ice every single member of ice right now right i can't i can't my head will explode a hundred
01:36:58.460 percent like they they are demonizing these people calling them nazis every single day on television
01:37:03.740 every day saying get them i hope your wife dies i'll kill your family all of these things but that's
01:37:09.060 all of these trump has never said anything and by the way and by the way who was it that suggested
01:37:14.200 recently to go get a syringe and fill it with a paralytic we just saw it was a nurse on the left
01:37:21.760 who put it on tiktok this guy didn't fill it with a paralytic he put apple cider vinegar thank god
01:37:28.700 but he still had a syringe who was the one suggesting get a syringe with a needle and jam it into people's
01:37:35.920 next with a paralytic it was a nurse a nurse from virginia now former so please uh and by the way
01:37:45.080 that wasn't covered at all by the media the next paragraph in this story though glenn not long
01:37:51.180 afterward remember this is about the attacks of donald trump and his rally not long afterward at
01:37:56.120 our old event in north minneapolis ms omar was attacked by a man who rushed the lecture lectern
01:38:02.140 where she was speaking spraying her with a strong smelling liquid so we should note there is literally
01:38:09.640 no evidence whatsoever that these two things are tied to each other the fact that he was having a
01:38:15.840 rally at another place in the country while he he was she was having this rally in minnesota
01:38:20.760 there's no evidence this man was inspired by donald trump in fact what he says is stop dividing
01:38:27.800 minnesotans which is a weird thing to say if you're super mega maga maybe i don't know maybe it's
01:38:32.900 maybe he is maybe we'll find that out but there's no evidence that he heard this speech about elan omar
01:38:38.420 that he was inspired by anything trump has ever said about it it's just listing two things that
01:38:44.000 occurred one event where donald trump mentions elan omar and another event where ms omar is having a
01:38:50.020 rally now not focused on there is the rally omar is having is divisive is targeting christy noem and
01:39:00.520 saying all sorts of terrible things about christy noem now that's apparently completely okay in a heroic
01:39:06.720 act while donald trump criticizing omar is the cause for this attack which is fascinating i will also note
01:39:16.020 that very recent history lee zeldin was almost stabbed on stage during one of his events this event
01:39:27.160 occurred in the home state of the new york times and was barely covered at all it was covered it was
01:39:34.680 not the front page top story for 24 straight hours now let me give you a little bit deeper into the
01:39:42.400 story one more thing here well let me just this one's let me just point out this is ridiculous
01:39:46.880 with the lee zeldin story was there apple apple cider vinegar no there was a knife no i mean there's
01:39:54.580 a difference between those two it wasn't a syringe with no one is on the front this is like a turkey
01:39:59.860 baster essentially what is what is what caused the attack on elano quote-unquote attack on elanomar
01:40:05.560 and yes i get you if you're elanomar you don't know what's happening in that moment you don't know
01:40:10.140 it's apple cider vinegar i know a lot of people are talking about maybe she did know and until we
01:40:14.040 have evidence on that i'm not going to go down that road maybe we'll find that out as well uh but
01:40:18.500 you know it's important to understand yeah sure she probably was freaked out but listen to the way
01:40:23.960 that her reaction is described by the new york times i remind you in a news story this is this is not
01:40:31.140 like a a romance novel that you'd pick up at the airport this is a new york times news story about
01:40:38.560 this incident when she was attacked ms omar reacted with defiance she did not cower behind
01:40:48.320 the lectern she instinctively lunged at the man attacking her and insisted on finishing her remarks
01:40:58.520 even as her security detail and staff tried to persuade her to retreat she did not cancel other
01:41:06.980 events for the week she announced she would tour carmel mall in minneapolis on wednesday and then
01:41:14.900 hold a news conference in short ms omar barely flinched i'm built that way ms omar said calmly
01:41:29.220 that is a quote from a news story in the new york times about i remind you a woman who got vinegar
01:41:41.480 on her shirt how does a civilization civilization with a supposedly free media
01:41:51.620 exist when people are trying to decipher facts from sources like that i have no i'm just looking
01:42:00.280 up right now i'm just looking at the new york times i'm trying to find quotes uh
01:42:05.460 uh i'm just looking for quotes from the new york times and the story and how they describe
01:42:12.340 donald trump and his reaction to actually being shot yeah that's i mean that's another reminder
01:42:18.620 because you know this is all about how donald trump is bad and he's causing all this violence
01:42:22.920 we you do remember him bleeding on stage because a bullet hit him right like is anybody i i really
01:42:30.920 thought i didn't really think i really hoped that after that event maybe we'd lose this nonsensical
01:42:39.200 hysteria that the right wing is responsible for all the violence in this country just because there
01:42:44.220 was yeah we could give you dozens of examples which we've done yeah we could prove this case
01:42:49.540 over and over and over again that the leftists have committed many many violent acts in this country
01:42:54.220 and you know the fact that they you know not that the conservatives have never done anything
01:42:58.360 but the numbers are much much different and when you talk about this we could have done that but like
01:43:03.660 when you have a big event a marquee level event where the president of the united states is almost
01:43:08.960 murdered multiple times as he's running for office you'd think
01:43:12.060 maybe that would be included in at least a little bit of context here hey you know the left also
01:43:17.380 shoots the donald trump so you can see how he might be a little sensitive on these things nothing
01:43:21.380 nothing it's just how ilana mar the the wearer of vinegar is the real hero in this in this tale
01:43:29.400 it's unbelievable try this as agents helped him up and escorted off the stage he raised his fish
01:43:37.780 pumped it at the crowd and mouthed the words fight fight fight fight which some say was a powerful
01:43:43.720 symbol of his reaction which some say uh times and other reporters noted after being struck uh and
01:43:51.620 brought to cover by secret service trump asked agents to let him get his shoes um okay that's
01:43:59.100 well glad to me before you move off of that i was watching that of course as probably everybody was i
01:44:04.900 happened to be watching it on cnn i was at a hotel i was watching it at c on cnn and then i was at an
01:44:10.180 airport which of course is the main place where people watch cnn and i'm watching cnn and in the
01:44:16.140 moments directly after this they talked about him standing up and saying fight fight fight and they said
01:44:21.540 they were concerned that it would cause escalation his words of that incident might be something that
01:44:29.200 would make the right wing get violent this is a man who just took a bullet on stage and the fact that
01:44:35.960 he said fight is a concern that the right wing might get violent in this country i i it's impossible to
01:44:43.820 overstate the depravity of this nonsense come on look i was worried for her when this happened i was i was
01:44:51.720 nervous like i don't you should never do anything even if it's silly you shouldn't run up throw a pie in
01:44:57.360 people's face you shouldn't throw vinegar on their shirt but we now know what occurred which was
01:45:01.340 nothing thank god it was nothing but it was nothing here's but here's why i wasn't concerned
01:45:06.340 about that if there was something bad it looks like she was taken care of right away didn't get on
01:45:11.780 her or if it did it got her sweater if it was something really really bad it could have been a
01:45:15.840 real problem yeah but they caught the guy i know the guy is going to be prosecuted i know the guy is
01:45:20.880 going to go to jail i know the system will work on that and i know the system would have worked if she
01:45:25.720 was you know in trouble and and had some problems the system would work there i had no doubt that
01:45:31.160 that guy was going to get you know caught and he'll probably you know end up saving you know spending
01:45:35.580 much more time than anybody who tried to do that to a republican would spend if uh you know if they
01:45:41.460 spend any time at all um so i wasn't concerned and you know one of the reasons why i wasn't concerned
01:45:46.800 and this was my honest reaction i said this when i first saw it you know on radio um look at her she's
01:45:52.480 a fighter it might be because she's from somalia and grew up in a war zone but uh look at her i mean
01:45:57.380 she went after this guy she was she's not she you know she's not somebody you don't uh that you just
01:46:03.900 you could count out and say oh well she's a softy she's not a softy it's ilan omar all right more in
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01:47:23.780 so the glennbeck podcast is back um on thursday at glennbeck.com you can find it no ads
01:47:43.300 for torch insiders which by the way is free uh then on youtube and blaze tv and you know in the um
01:47:49.840 rss feed on saturday it will come out wherever you get your podcast this weekend you'll be able to hear
01:47:55.460 it uh but it's ad free now at glennbeck.com and it is uh episode 276 jack ryan predicted maduro's
01:48:04.000 capture annie jacobson one of my favorite guests on the podcast she is great she's the one you remember
01:48:11.440 seeing this uh when they got maduro and um and they played the jack ryan episode where she was
01:48:18.300 like or where the the where jack ryan was in front of the class he's like what's the biggest you know
01:48:23.220 what's the biggest threat um and he said why didn't anybody mention venezuela and he suggested that
01:48:29.540 maybe you go in in the cover of night and get maduro and sneak him out and take him to new york for
01:48:33.640 well that was annie jacobson's suggestion she was part of the writing team
01:48:37.560 uh and she is a great investigative reporter and so they asked her to consult and actually be a part
01:48:43.200 of the writing team that was her suggestion so i talked to her about that all of the things that
01:48:48.280 she thinks we might have in secret weapons i mean it is really really fascinating and then the golden
01:48:55.680 dome um you know she wrote the book on nuclear war and you know there's there's no way out of nuclear
01:49:02.280 war you just do not want a nuclear war and i asked her about the golden dome all of that is available
01:49:06.860 now at glennbeck.com no ads for insiders torch insiders you can get you can get it right now
01:49:13.100 at glennbeck.com it's free until monday uh monday i think is the first of the month and then we're
01:49:17.660 going to start charging people uh to become a torch insider but it's at glennbeck.com also at glennbeck.com
01:49:23.920 there is something else and this one is really personal to me um this is uh chance and young soon
01:49:33.700 they're two brothers of a pastor uh they're they're sons of a pastor in south korea he is being held
01:49:42.480 uh in prison he is deteriorating quickly um and he is one of the most selfless people he is i really
01:49:51.300 believe this guy is a modern-day dietrich bonhoeffer um and what he's standing against in south korea is
01:49:59.600 remarkable south i didn't say north south korea south korea is changing you need to see this this
01:50:06.960 is another torch exclusive conversation you can find it also free at glennbeck.com today i spoke
01:50:13.880 to the sons you have to see the part where i asked them about their father and how as sons they felt
01:50:20.700 about their father and they started to cry and it was just this is an amazing interview all of it
01:50:26.180 available now at glennbeck.com and while you're there sign up torch uh you'll get your subscription
01:50:33.800 and all of this stuff commercial free first before anybody else glennbeck.com all right let me tell you
01:50:40.620 about real estate agents i trust.com um people will spend weeks researching a new car then they'll
01:50:45.820 you know pick a real estate agent based on a yard sign or a recommendation it's one of the biggest
01:50:49.780 financial decisions that you ever make where you live how much you net you know what you can afford
01:50:55.100 next it all ties back to how the deal is handled this is why i created real estate agents i trust.com
01:51:01.740 this is a network of agents that we have vetted for experience track record and how they actually
01:51:07.020 treat their clients um i have a guy in phoenix uh john who is actually the guy who is in charge of
01:51:13.940 all the vetting and this guy is relentless i mean relentless he puts these agents through the ringer
01:51:19.440 because he wants to make sure that he's a huge fan of the show and he's like glenn i don't want
01:51:24.200 to do anything that hurts your reputation and your word so i want to make sure that everybody's
01:51:28.780 treated the way you would want them to be and how you would say they would be um and we have about
01:51:34.760 i think two or three thousand agents around the country we we have a waiting list of about 10 000
01:51:39.800 but we're not taking any more because we want to make sure that we can monitor everybody these guys
01:51:44.520 will get the job done and they'll do it right and it's a free service to you we just we just recommend
01:51:48.780 them to you i don't charge you anything it's realestateagentsitrust.com realestateagentsitrust.com
01:51:54.380 just a couple days to get free access to all the exclusive material from torch get it at glennbeck.com
01:52:01.820 welcome to the glennbeck program we're uh we're working really hard um on a few things
01:52:23.400 uh for you every day we do something with uh george ai and glenn ai and i want to explain what that is
01:52:30.020 george ai is uh something that i have built this is not chat gpt this is something that my team
01:52:35.920 my tech team uh has has built i heard really good tech uh group um about i don't know eight months
01:52:44.080 ago or so to build the ai part of my next phase of my life for education and george ai is a fully
01:52:54.880 proprietary system that has the library that i have collected and david barton and mercury one has
01:53:02.720 collected over the years it is the largest uh library third largest in the in the world for
01:53:09.120 founding documents it's the largest private library on the founding goes from the uh pilgrims and we've
01:53:15.420 put up until about 1820 uh all of the documents and everything else and it is very early on in this
01:53:22.380 and right now we are using it to create what is called george ai uh jason what is george ai on today
01:53:29.280 george ai today is on i was i was kind of motivated by the borders are heading to minneapolis and taking
01:53:37.580 charge the general tom homan so i did it specifically on what the founders would have thought about the
01:53:43.260 need for or the importance to the american project of having a strong and secure border and the proper
01:53:49.320 enforcement of immigration laws is there even a debate on that not only is there a debate but if
01:53:54.820 they do agree with that why do they agree with it reference uh all the founders and it's it's pretty
01:54:00.480 enlightening uh so so people know how do you get people because people say well it's not chat gpt how
01:54:06.940 do you how do you how does it understand minneapolis can you explain this process real quick
01:54:10.360 yeah and specifically in this one i didn't give any so normally if i have to do that i give
01:54:15.200 a hypothetical situation and i have to type into it when i'm doing the prompt exactly what the
01:54:20.960 hypothetical situation is and uh at one point i even put a hypothetical i said the department of
01:54:26.920 homeland security it obviously didn't know what that was and it sounded like this was going to kick
01:54:30.980 off a whole nother debate i actually might have to do that one tomorrow because that one might be
01:54:34.720 interesting but anything that's happening that they wouldn't know about i have to hypothetical into
01:54:39.160 it so and that stuff is not kept it's purged out of the memory so it is we're keeping it clean it is
01:54:45.800 only stuff from the only things that the founders either wrote themselves or would have influenced that
01:54:51.440 we know influenced their thinking at the time that's all that's in there um and when it goes to glenn
01:54:57.920 ai this again is not chat gpt you could go and ask you know chat gpt hey what would glenn beck think
01:55:03.900 about and it would i don't know might get it right might get it wrong um but it wouldn't be me for
01:55:08.860 sure um glenn ai is all of my words everything that i have ever said printed spoken on tv or radio
01:55:18.360 uh many of the stuff that i've said in speeches 30 years of that all put into again proprietary uh
01:55:27.020 technology and it cannot take anything from the outside so if you asked it about the you know the
01:55:33.720 earthquake of 89 in you know uh in san francisco it probably wouldn't be able to find anything and
01:55:40.820 tell you anything about it because it doesn't have that information it's only the things that i spoke
01:55:44.520 into it so they are very very different and every day we provide one of those things for you and we
01:55:51.180 are guarding our credibility and making sure that everything we do with ai is marked ai so you know
01:55:58.620 it is really important that you know some things are made by ai this one is the authentic real deal
01:56:06.100 um and and we have to guard our credibility and i am working really hard on that because i as i said
01:56:13.940 to you earlier today i believe in five years credibility is going to be the only thing has
01:56:17.860 any value because no one's going to believe anything within five years nothing will be believable
01:56:24.620 and i think five years is an outside wall um which is why it really bothers me when people say you
01:56:31.240 know glenn beck you're just a shill for donald trump not a shill for donald i'm not a shill for anybody
01:56:36.880 for anybody i mean anybody who has actually listened to this show you know that i criticize him hard
01:56:44.040 when i believe he deserves it publicly clearly without any hedging and i also praise him when i believe
01:56:49.980 he earns it just as publicly and just as clearly that's not loyalty that's that's judgment and i'm
01:56:56.700 i'm telling you this because this is how we all have to start to be we all have to just be fair
01:57:03.240 down the middle i'm not for a man i'm for truth i'm not for a team i'm for truth and truth is really
01:57:10.200 inconvenient because it refuses to stay on one team i was just talking to jonathan turley uh i've got a
01:57:16.140 interview with him coming out next week with his book and yesterday we were talking and he said uh
01:57:21.280 you know i said to him i said you know jonathan the reason why i love you is because you are so much
01:57:25.060 like the constitution the constitution always doesn't always cut my way the constitution doesn't
01:57:30.780 always say you know what glenn you're right sometimes it's like glenn you're a dummy yeah you're
01:57:34.480 wrong and and you then you have a decision to make i'm either going to deny the truth or i'm going
01:57:40.080 to go well okay well the constitution says that's wrong so i guess i got to follow the constitution
01:57:44.720 and i like those people who challenge me i like those people who i can't always you know put into
01:57:50.700 a box you know i've said repeatedly in moments like what we're seeing right now in minnesota
01:57:56.420 i may be wrong but i lay out what i'm seeing and i explain the pattern i that i believe is forming
01:58:03.440 and then i do something apparently that drives people crazy i tell you what to watch for next i give
01:58:08.420 you the markers and the timelines and the signals because analysis without accountability is
01:58:13.780 propaganda that's it if the facts change i have to change with it and i have to and i have to tell
01:58:19.260 you that and that's not a weakness do that in your own life that's not weakness that's integrity
01:58:24.660 you know the people have been saying you know shill for donald trump because i've said recently
01:58:33.020 i don't find donald trump's negotiation skill remarkable i don't i find it sometimes otherworldly
01:58:39.940 it's so good but there's a pattern that you have to watch from it's not is he so good it's his
01:58:46.040 pattern and if you watch the pattern the way he reframes he pauses he lets others overplay their
01:58:52.300 hand and then he quietly gets everything he always wanted all along but could i be wrong about the
01:58:59.100 things that he's doing right now yes and i say so every time i talk about one of the things i'm
01:59:03.220 praising him for i'm like i hope this is what it is it could be wrong but i think
01:59:06.420 you know there are two possible paths ahead of us all the time and there's two things that
01:59:11.420 you know you get up in the morning and you can believe two things that are objective
01:59:16.480 one i'm ugly two i'm a pretty good looking person they're objective i mean i mean they're not objective
01:59:26.080 they're subjective okay there there is no truth to that one way or another why do we always
01:59:31.940 on subjective things why do we always pick the damaging one why do we always go yeah i'm really
01:59:37.480 ugly why and when it comes to truth those those are not subjective
01:59:45.660 but we we will pretend it is and then we pretend we have certainty on that
01:59:52.660 i just want people to watch the evidence watch it with me correct me you know here's what troubles me
02:00:00.540 we've lost the ability to hold hope without surrendering our brains some people say donald
02:00:07.180 trump is the savior that confuses me he's a man he's not our savior he's the only man that can do
02:00:13.420 it well he he is one of the only men i mean i can't think of another that can do it but he's not going
02:00:18.960 to be the savior of us all and at the same time other people say he's folded he sold out and they
02:00:24.620 raised that you know he's raised a white flag and that confuses me just as much because both positions
02:00:30.320 demand faith without any evidence and they're pointed in opposite directions i reject both of
02:00:37.840 those i mean we have a choice right now you can go full black pill if you want assume betrayal is
02:00:44.340 inevitable that nothing matters that discernment is naive that all roads lead to someplace very very
02:00:51.580 dark or we can do something far more difficult we can learn from history we can face the facts honestly
02:00:57.580 we can choose optimism only if the facts support it not fantasy not blind trust not you know uh measured
02:01:05.760 hope uh just let's not be a shill let's be an adult
02:01:10.000 and one thing because i've been thinking about this all week has been bothering me and it'll bother me
02:01:17.540 until i get it off my chest i'm a recovering alcoholic i know what it feels like to lose your
02:01:23.760 word because alcoholics if you're an alcoholic or recovering alcoholic you know exactly what i'm
02:01:28.280 talking about you lied to everybody in your life you covered everything for your whole your whole life
02:01:33.040 while you were drinking you were drinking and telling everybody you weren't you had a problem when
02:01:36.860 you told everybody you didn't um i mean you're really good at lying i was really good at looking
02:01:42.260 in the mirror and uh lying even to myself really good and eventually your promises to yourself
02:01:48.140 and your promises to everybody else eventually mean nothing and i remember the time when i was at my
02:01:56.340 most broken and i realized i didn't have anyone in my life at all anyone who knew me anybody who
02:02:02.640 would listen to me nothing nothing nobody believed a word i said because they shouldn't have because i was a
02:02:08.400 liar i was an alcoholic my whole life was a lie and all i said i made a pact with the lord i will do
02:02:15.120 exactly what you asked me to do to the best of my ability if you will just help me regain the trust of
02:02:21.240 people i just want to look somebody in the eye and say this is true as i understand it and them to go
02:02:28.320 okay glenn i might they might think i'm wrong but at least they know i believe it
02:02:33.340 and i vowed that i would never ever violate that again i would never give it away not for approval
02:02:41.540 not for power not for money not for access nothing and i have spent 35 years rebuilding that bond
02:02:47.880 and i am not going to throw it away for a politician or better podcast numbers or for applause or any of
02:02:55.400 that never if you're listening to this show you should know i'm not nor am i trying to get on
02:03:02.820 trump's good guy list would i like to be there yes am i no i'm not on his bad guy list either
02:03:10.460 i don't think i could be i don't want to be on any list okay when i think somebody's right i'll say so
02:03:19.500 when i think they're wrong i'll say that too and if i'm wrong either direction i'll reevaluate and i'll
02:03:23.860 apologize and i have a long track record of that here's the deal i made with myself i'm not going
02:03:29.440 to break that and it's the deal i make with you i'll tell you what i believe i could be wrong but
02:03:35.000 it's what i believe and and i ask you to do that too and if that's what you want in a host you're in
02:03:42.760 the right place but if you want a host that always agrees with you who never challenges you
02:03:46.180 who never asks you to reconsider never admits uncertainty then you know what you're probably
02:03:52.160 right this is not the show for you but actually as i have been thinking about it that actually
02:03:57.700 makes me sad because i value people who don't think like me i hire people that don't think like
02:04:04.980 me i learn from people who don't think like me but it sharpens my own thinking i'm sharper because of
02:04:12.780 them but when disagreement instantly becomes you're a sellout you're on the wrong team you're on the wrong
02:04:19.900 side of history and it is absolutely known by the other person
02:04:25.100 what do you do when curiosity becomes betrayal when humility becomes weakness
02:04:33.400 well for me that tells me something team jerseys are on too tight
02:04:39.300 whatever that team is that people want me to be on i'm not on that team
02:04:44.580 and i hope you're not either i'm a thinking human being i am an individual
02:04:52.240 to act not to be acted upon i have my own mind my own conscience my own point of view my own
02:05:00.880 responsibility and i am inviting you every day if you're willing to be the same kind of person i warn
02:05:06.800 you it is harder it is lonelier but it is so worth it in the end it is a much better way to go
02:05:14.340 through life and it is the only way i know how to do this job
02:05:18.720 back in a minute
02:05:21.680 rough greens dogs don't complain when they're you know not feeling their best they don't say
02:05:29.560 well you know my joints feel a little stiff my tummy's been off lately they just go outside and
02:05:34.200 eat grass and then they slow down a little bit by bit they sleep a little more they play a little
02:05:38.940 less and most of us think oh they're just getting older and i hate to see that but a lot of times it's
02:05:42.600 not just age it can be nutrition dry kibble is made to last on a shelf which means it's cooked
02:05:49.080 at very high temperatures that reduce many of the live nutrients that dogs you know were designed to
02:05:54.880 get from real food and that's why i want to tell you about rough greens it's not a new food it's a
02:05:59.640 powder that you add to the food that you're already feeding your dog and it's loaded with antibiotics
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02:06:10.160 overall health don't change your dog's food just add rough greens rough greens offering a free
02:06:15.540 jumpstart trial bag you just cover the shipping use the discount code beck and claim your free
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02:06:25.700 just add rough greens and watch the health benefits come back to life glenn beck
02:06:31.760 wow stew you know i've been going to the um your youtube site stew does america yeah and um man uh
02:06:59.300 i'm just checking because i'm waiting for this big announcement that you're going to make about
02:07:02.720 what you're going to do when you leave here tomorrow is your last day and thank you you know i first read
02:07:06.760 you know the description of you know the about and i and i thought wow stew is so humble and gracious
02:07:13.540 and nice uh may i just read what what was posted yesterday yes thank you please do uh stew does america
02:07:18.940 description welcome to the stew does america the show that is hosted by a man who really truly owes his
02:07:23.300 entire career livelihood and his whole existence to glenn beck and i thought wow that is over the top true
02:07:28.840 but over the top this is the channel to hear stew's analysis and points of view or more accurately
02:07:34.020 glenn beck's points of view which have been stolen by stew and then dumbed down by about 40 percent
02:07:38.340 stew that is i mean again true but not necessary not necessary you should just just let it go when
02:07:45.800 you can't you can't steal that which is being given stew when stew does have an original thought
02:07:50.620 or emotion it's mostly awe directed towards radio hall of fame member glenn beck and then you just
02:07:56.120 bluntly say stew is not in the radio hall of fame which is true again that is true tune in or don't
02:08:02.460 um that was an odd way to end that but that's what makes you the success that you are stew yeah and
02:08:08.140 then i read today the description it's usually you don't change the youtube.com channel stew does america
02:08:14.920 yeah youtube channel description is for some reason i'm not hearing okay but normally it's not something
02:08:18.480 you change on a basis there it is what now you don't normally change the youtube description of
02:08:24.140 your channel on a day-to-day basis but i've noticed it's been changing um i don't know how
02:08:29.660 this well i've noticed maybe you've been hacked do you see today you better make sure this doesn't
02:08:34.380 happen again today because this morning i i read it and says welcome to stew does america the show
02:08:40.220 hosted by a canadian spy sent to america to destroy it now that's something i've often thought but i would
02:08:46.860 have never i mean that's have you been hacked best known as the leading purveyor of child care
02:08:52.520 facilities in minnesota stew brings the same intelligence and honesty to the show he he brought
02:08:58.240 to his founding of the quality learning center in minneapolis title of the show is a bit of an
02:09:04.200 homage to the fact that stew is not legally allowed to leave the country due to travel restrictions put
02:09:08.420 on his passport by the doj and dhs as well as various foreign nations he's also a huge wnba fan
02:09:15.260 again all of this stuff is true but you should check if i'd hate to see what man that really
02:09:23.220 that hacker those hackers i can't wait to see what he says today
02:09:26.900 you
02:09:34.860 you
02:09:36.860 you
02:09:38.860 you
02:09:40.860 you
02:09:42.860 you
02:09:44.860 you
02:09:46.860 you