The Glenn Beck Program - November 20, 2018


No Way He Wins? | 11⧸20⧸18


Episode Stats

Length

1 hour and 46 minutes

Words per Minute

191.22328

Word Count

20,444

Sentence Count

2,026

Misogynist Sentences

60

Hate Speech Sentences

21


Summary

On today's show, Pat and Stu discuss the incredible Monday Night Football game between the Los Angeles Rams and San Francisco 49ers. They discuss the controversy surrounding Colin Kaepernick's decision to kneel during the National Anthem and whether or not the NFL should have done the same.


Transcript

00:00:00.000 The Blaze Radio Network, on demand.
00:00:30.000 But how about just food?
00:00:32.060 A lot of these things are just extracts and weird supplements and things that, you know, there's some odd collection of ingredients.
00:00:38.760 Not Field of Greens. Field of Greens is just food. It's just real food.
00:00:41.720 You get to eat your vegetables without having to eat your vegetables.
00:00:44.880 For a limited time offer, visit BrickHouseGlenn.com.
00:00:47.540 Use the promo code Glenn. Get 15% off your first order.
00:00:50.360 It's BrickHouseGlenn.com.
00:00:52.620 15% off if you use the promo code Glenn. Do that now.
00:00:56.260 It's BrickHouseGlenn.com.
00:00:58.300 Glenn. Back.
00:01:00.460 With Pat Gray and Stu Brigier.
00:01:02.740 888-727-BECK.
00:01:05.000 Pretty good Monday night football game last night.
00:01:06.920 Yes. In fact, it's all I want to talk about today.
00:01:10.140 I know that might not be the most popular choice, but that's exactly what I want to talk about today.
00:01:14.480 Is the National Football League.
00:01:16.920 That game last night was one of the...
00:01:19.060 It was honestly one of the best sporting events I've ever watched in my entire life.
00:01:22.780 Now, of course, it comes into a distant second, at least, to last year's Super Bowl, which was the greatest sporting event of all time.
00:01:30.060 But that game last night, Pat, and I don't think you stayed up for it, right?
00:01:33.280 You have to get up so early for Pat Gray Unleashed.
00:01:36.080 I recorded it.
00:01:37.100 You did. It's worth watching.
00:01:38.260 It's actually that fun.
00:01:40.100 And it was an incredible game last night.
00:01:42.480 And I'm watching it.
00:01:43.180 I mean, because, you know, it was 54-51 as a final.
00:01:46.380 I was listening to a little of Pat Gray Unleashed earlier, and you made the point, which is a sensible one, of was there any defense on the field at all?
00:01:55.040 And that's what I think was incredible about that game, is that there was...
00:01:59.020 There was a lot of defense.
00:02:01.180 I mean, there were three defensive touchdowns.
00:02:04.060 Three in the game.
00:02:05.480 You know, two of them by one guy, Samson Ibukom.
00:02:12.000 He was incredible.
00:02:13.760 Aaron Donald played one of the best games, most dominant games by an interior defensive lineman I've ever seen.
00:02:22.020 That's hard to believe.
00:02:22.880 I've ever watched.
00:02:23.560 I mean, he was dominating the entire game.
00:02:29.240 And again, it was 54-51.
00:02:31.500 Now, again, 21 of the points were on defense.
00:02:33.840 So, I mean, you could see.
00:02:34.680 And there was a decent amount of turnovers.
00:02:36.200 I mean, it was just back and forth and crazy.
00:02:38.200 And as I'm watching this game, it is just one of those things fully, if you like sports, right, there's a certain line of people.
00:02:48.060 And Glenn always falls on the other side of this line.
00:02:53.520 He's transitioning when it comes to sports.
00:02:56.220 And he is on the other side of that line, and he doesn't care about it.
00:02:59.700 So, if you don't care about sports, you don't care about sports.
00:03:03.100 But as this game is ending, I'm thinking to myself, there are some people who don't care about sports.
00:03:08.780 There are some people like a Mr. Pat Gray who's responsible and decided not to go, just actually to go to bed, but still recorded it, right?
00:03:15.920 Yes.
00:03:16.880 And all that, there's some people who watch the game.
00:03:19.380 All those people I fully understand.
00:03:21.900 But allow me to make a pitch here.
00:03:24.400 Allow me to revisit with new information the group of people who love the NFL, who love watching football, but who didn't watch because they were boycotting the league.
00:03:38.680 Polls show this is not a huge number, but in this audience, it's probably a significant representation in this audience.
00:03:45.760 And you're not doing it because, as we know, Colin Kaepernick was kneeling and all the controversy that's gone over that over the last couple of years.
00:03:53.720 And I understand why you would do that.
00:03:56.000 I understand why you would think the national anthem and our country is more important than sports.
00:04:03.040 It's a sensible decision, and I understand it.
00:04:07.080 However, Colin Kaepernick isn't in the league.
00:04:13.140 The man is not employed by the National Football League.
00:04:16.780 He is not in the league and has not been in the league for multiple years.
00:04:20.300 He, yes, he took a knee.
00:04:23.160 And yes, he has no idea what he's talking about when it comes to the statistics of policing.
00:04:29.020 Does he understand what any of the words that come out of his mouth?
00:04:32.560 The answer to that is no.
00:04:34.200 He doesn't.
00:04:35.820 He does not understand it at all.
00:04:37.900 But you can't let Colin Kaepernick's sock choices determine what you do with your life.
00:04:46.560 I felt, I thought to myself, like, this is, this is one of the most enjoyable sporting events I've ever watched in my life.
00:04:54.160 And people are avoiding it because of what Colin Kaepernick put on his feet.
00:04:59.300 Who cares what Colin Kaepernick does?
00:05:02.800 He should, he deserves no power over anyone in this audience.
00:05:06.820 He should not be making one decision for any individual person in this audience.
00:05:12.460 We're conservatives.
00:05:13.420 We're individualists.
00:05:14.320 We're people who think for ourselves.
00:05:16.300 And to let Colin Kaepernick make a choice for you makes no sense to me at all.
00:05:20.720 Remember, this is a league that not only does not employ Colin Kaepernick, but employs what?
00:05:27.180 Two, two players who are kneeling?
00:05:30.620 And I think one cheerleader who's kneeling?
00:05:34.240 Two players and one, there's a thousand players.
00:05:36.820 There's two players in this league.
00:05:38.420 There's two players who are kneeling.
00:05:41.580 What, why would you boycott something over that?
00:05:45.240 And we don't even hear about them.
00:05:46.820 And we don't even hear about them anymore.
00:05:48.300 I understand that these culture sort of wars go on and, and you feel like, you know, with social, I mean, you know, Glenn's book really keeps popping into my head as I, as I watch this stuff go on.
00:05:57.840 Addicted to Outrage available now.
00:06:00.120 But I mean, you're going to see this at Thanksgiving, there's Thanksgiving table too.
00:06:03.020 And people are going to be so angry about all these, you know, little issues related to politics and people take their sides.
00:06:08.220 And I understand all that.
00:06:09.180 And sometimes it's important to make your, make your stand.
00:06:12.460 And, you know, these issues, these cultural issues can be important.
00:06:16.520 We talk about them every day.
00:06:17.500 But the idea that two out of a thousand players are kneeling that would keep you away of such an enjoyable three plus hours last night is just, it's criminal.
00:06:31.300 Colin Kaepernick should not be controlling our lives and our decisions.
00:06:34.740 And I, I, there's something about this where I don't know, we just get on these lines and it's partially because of politics and partially because, you know, Colin Kaepernick's points are really terrible.
00:06:48.220 Like, he's vilifying American heroes.
00:06:53.200 He, uh, is doing things that, uh, that push back against the cultural fabric of this country.
00:07:01.940 You know, I'm a patriotic guy.
00:07:03.920 I know most of the audiences as well.
00:07:05.920 Pat's got a flag on his shirt right now.
00:07:08.300 I'm not kneeling.
00:07:10.020 I'm not kneeling in front of it.
00:07:11.760 I've got no interest in kneeling in front of the flag.
00:07:14.120 And I got no, I, you know, when we've gone over the stats a million times, Colin Kaepernick
00:07:17.860 and the people who agree with Colin Kaepernick that are in the NFL are wrong on most of these issues.
00:07:23.540 That's not to say there's never an incident of, uh, of unwarranted violence towards African-Americans by police officers.
00:07:30.400 But we know, we've looked, we've looked at these stats a million times.
00:07:33.440 There is almost nothing to support the opinion of Colin Kaepernick.
00:07:39.000 But that's even more of a reason to not let it just to determine your choices.
00:07:44.020 It's, it's even more of a reason to not let Colin Kaepernick make these choices for you.
00:07:49.000 He makes bad choices.
00:07:52.260 He's made choices that have cost him millions of dollars, arguably.
00:07:56.680 Most of those choices were throwing it to defensive players instead of offensive players.
00:08:00.560 But that's a whole nother situation.
00:08:01.720 And I just can't, I, I just was watching this last night and I think by our audience, most of them will do what they want to do.
00:08:10.860 Most of them will say, Hey, you know, look, I, I'm not going to let this guy, you know, decide my life for it.
00:08:16.820 I think football sucks.
00:08:17.820 I'm not going to watch it.
00:08:18.500 If football is great, I'm going to watch it.
00:08:20.220 But I don't understand this.
00:08:21.580 You know, every place you go into has people who feel like Colin Kaepernick.
00:08:26.880 Every grocery store trip you go into, you're buying food that was stocked by people who agree with Colin Kaepernick.
00:08:35.340 Every, every, uh, every restaurant you go into has a server or a cook or someone else who works there who agrees with Colin Kaepernick.
00:08:45.200 And they're probably posting publicly about it on their social media accounts.
00:08:48.960 Every single time, I guarantee the radio station you're listening to with all the conservative hosts has an engineer or an IT guy or somebody else that agrees with Colin Kaepernick.
00:09:02.940 These, this is our world.
00:09:05.500 You deal with people who are wrong all the time.
00:09:09.560 And yet the one thing that everybody seems to want to boycott is the National Football League.
00:09:15.520 The one thing I know, at least in my life, is the highest level of entertainment.
00:09:21.340 I know I love it so much.
00:09:23.580 And I know that's not everybody.
00:09:25.200 It's easy to avoid entertainment you don't like.
00:09:28.260 But if you love it,
00:09:30.080 there's just no reason to let Colin Kaepernick or any of the other morons making points associated with him control your decisions.
00:09:38.140 It's just not sensible.
00:09:39.360 And I think in the heat of the moment when there's, you know, Trump's tweeting about it and Pence is going to the games and leaving games and it's a big issue and MSNBC is talking about it all the time.
00:09:50.300 I can understand being, getting in the middle of that and taking a side on it.
00:09:53.760 Because I, of the two arguments, I completely side with Donald Trump on the idea that it's a terrible protest.
00:09:59.980 They should have the right to protest.
00:10:01.420 But I think it's a bad, it's a bad series of points.
00:10:06.480 But the, that's past now.
00:10:09.500 The fury has passed.
00:10:11.840 The, the, the, the intense back and forth has passed.
00:10:16.860 Isn't it another moment to, isn't it time in this really complicated world where everybody hates every, everybody for everything to just step back and say,
00:10:25.640 look, if a football game is something I want to watch, I'm going to freaking watch it.
00:10:28.800 You know, it's the same thing with movies.
00:10:31.440 You know, I'm very excited, as you know, Pat, to go see Creed 2 tonight.
00:10:35.740 And Sylvester Stallone is Republican-ish, right?
00:10:39.880 I don't know if he's officially out that way.
00:10:42.020 I mean, he's, he's has a good relationship seemingly with Donald Trump.
00:10:45.020 He worked with him on a pardon a few months ago for a former boxer.
00:10:50.820 But, you know, Sylvester Stallone, obviously the Rocky guy.
00:10:54.400 But guaranteed, half or more of that cast, probably, if they had a choice, would side with Colin Kaepernick, right?
00:11:02.000 Like, every Hollywood movie you go to, every television show you watch.
00:11:06.280 I mean, every time you watch a Fox News program, you're watching a show that is, that probably has camera guys and, you know, people working behind the scenes in every capacity that agree with Colin Kaepernick.
00:11:21.200 But we don't boycott Fox News.
00:11:24.140 You know, Shepard Smith's on the air.
00:11:26.480 And we don't boycott Fox News, right?
00:11:29.960 Like, these, we have to understand, I think, that so often people in Washington and in the media find little issues like this.
00:11:42.260 And that is what this is, by the way.
00:11:44.400 Colin Kaepernick, a man who has, I wouldn't trust to order the catering at Thanksgiving dinner.
00:11:50.920 I wouldn't trust him with any decision in my life.
00:11:54.340 I don't trust him.
00:11:55.760 I've seen the analysis he has made on two major situations.
00:12:00.140 One, how bad cops are.
00:12:02.000 I know he's wrong there.
00:12:02.800 And two, who he's supposed to throw to.
00:12:04.620 And it's constantly the other team.
00:12:06.260 So I know he does not make good decisions.
00:12:08.520 It's the reason he's not in the league.
00:12:10.680 Much more the decision making on the field than the other way around.
00:12:14.000 But it's like, you know, to see that and to, I just feel like Washington and the media and all these sites and all the social media accounts
00:12:23.620 are constantly trying to use us to get us to click on things, to push us into these passionate decisions that we're going to make
00:12:34.140 and lock ourselves into choices that we ourselves don't even enjoy.
00:12:37.780 We're taking things that we like out of our lives because of other people's choices.
00:12:42.540 And I just, you know, it's Thanksgiving week.
00:12:46.920 One of the most important parts of Thanksgiving.
00:12:48.920 I think number one is obviously football.
00:12:51.140 Number two, I think it's family or something.
00:12:53.780 And, or no, it's two's food and three's family.
00:12:56.120 And four is like talking to people.
00:12:58.580 And I think five is that great nap that you have after you have dinner and you fall asleep on the couch
00:13:03.620 and your gut's half hanging out over your belt and you look, you look like Jeffy, basically.
00:13:10.540 At least you feel like Jeffy.
00:13:13.000 Those are the important moments of Thanksgiving.
00:13:16.100 And I just, this week, I think it's time to reconsider that if you went that way.
00:13:20.380 You made your point.
00:13:21.460 I mean, if you wanted to make your point, you made your point.
00:13:23.940 I mean, the National Football League seems to be thriving.
00:13:25.860 I don't know that it had a huge impact on them, but, you know, it's not, that doesn't matter.
00:13:29.960 If you believe it, then do it.
00:13:31.420 You know, if you really believe that this is an important thing to do, you know, more power to you.
00:13:36.160 I just feel like so many people get locked, you know, get caught up in this without even thinking through the idea
00:13:40.900 that what they're doing is giving power over their lives to some dope who's kneeling on a field.
00:13:48.100 And it just doesn't make any sense to me.
00:13:49.800 And the protest is essentially, for all intents and purposes, over.
00:13:56.080 Over.
00:13:56.700 It's over.
00:13:57.720 I mean, nobody talks about it.
00:13:59.360 Nobody even makes note of it.
00:14:01.420 I don't even know who the two players are that you mentioned.
00:14:04.920 I'm making the number up.
00:14:06.040 I mean, I don't even know if there are two.
00:14:07.420 I mean, I know Eric Reid is still in the league, and he was one of the guys who was.
00:14:11.660 He said he was going to keep doing it.
00:14:12.840 He said, I don't know if he's still doing it.
00:14:14.740 Yeah, I don't even know.
00:14:15.560 I don't know.
00:14:16.480 I mean, think about this, how ridiculous.
00:14:17.720 The only thing I've seen is the cheerleader.
00:14:19.640 The cheerleader was recent.
00:14:21.120 One, I think, a Buccaneers cheerleader.
00:14:22.880 Who cares?
00:14:23.420 I mean, I don't care what the cheerleader does.
00:14:25.720 But, like, that's a great point, though.
00:14:27.820 You know, I don't care what the cheerleader does either, right?
00:14:30.540 But, like, shouldn't we think of the players the same way?
00:14:33.560 Yes.
00:14:33.820 Why do we favor what the players think about a political issue over the cheerleaders?
00:14:37.620 The cheerleaders have more time to be thinking about it.
00:14:40.280 They probably are more informed than most of the players.
00:14:43.820 There's no reason.
00:14:44.980 And, you know, a guarantee, like, you go to that game, if every single player stops kneeling
00:14:49.040 and every cheerleader stops kneeling, there's going to be thousands of concession workers
00:14:53.060 and thousands of people working at the networks that carry the games
00:14:56.780 and thousands of people who work for the websites that you visit that would go and talk about the games.
00:15:02.120 Every franchise has got people in their offices who do this.
00:15:05.580 This is an issue.
00:15:06.900 We live in a society where people get to make their own minds up,
00:15:11.220 and sometimes they make really terrible decisions, and they're wrong.
00:15:15.280 And, you know, I can't.
00:15:16.760 You know, Glenn's got into this world before, and we always talk about this.
00:15:19.420 We used to have this argument with Glenn all the time whenever he would decide,
00:15:22.240 I don't know, maybe I'm going to boycott X, Y, or Z.
00:15:24.180 It was usually sports, and we always made fun of him, because you don't like sports, Glenn.
00:15:27.580 It doesn't count as a boycott.
00:15:29.660 You can't boycott the NFL.
00:15:31.500 Right.
00:15:32.500 Because you weren't watching it in the first place.
00:15:34.580 Exactly.
00:15:35.140 You know, I'm boycotting ballet.
00:15:36.720 Right.
00:15:37.220 Then you do.
00:15:37.800 Okay, that's powerful.
00:15:39.560 You're taking a tough one.
00:15:40.660 That's like Lent when you give up.
00:15:41.920 I'm giving up crack cocaine.
00:15:43.840 Well, I don't do crack cocaine.
00:15:45.580 I do regular cocaine, so I wouldn't need, that wouldn't even be a, anyway.
00:15:48.980 But, like, with Glenn, it was always, we always come back to him and say,
00:15:51.660 well, what about entertainment?
00:15:53.760 You go to 16 movies a week, you're giving those up?
00:15:56.920 Right.
00:15:57.320 He usually would get very mad at us when we made that point.
00:15:59.140 Yes.
00:15:59.520 But, you know, it's true.
00:16:01.400 I mean, it's like, you can find this everywhere.
00:16:03.520 There's no way to be consistent in your life on these stances because every single thing you do has, people, there are conservatives, we know this, in every aspect of society, right?
00:16:18.780 I mean, even in, with the exception of maybe academics, you can basically find them everywhere, even in Hollywood, right?
00:16:25.280 And so many of them are in hiding, but still, they're out there.
00:16:29.100 The same thing happens with people who are completely wrong about police officers.
00:16:32.280 They're there.
00:16:33.000 They're everywhere.
00:16:34.340 And you're just never going to be able to be consistent on this issue.
00:16:38.060 So why pick one that's going to cost you enjoyment out of your life that you'll never get back?
00:16:43.780 I just don't get it.
00:16:46.680 And, you know, I don't know.
00:16:48.280 Maybe I'm alone on this one, but it doesn't, I, I like your point here, Pat, too.
00:16:53.100 It's basically over.
00:16:54.540 It is.
00:16:55.240 It's over anyway.
00:16:56.040 Yeah, it is.
00:16:56.520 So even if you thought, when Kaepernick was in the league, at least there was an argument.
00:17:00.240 The guy's not even in the league.
00:17:01.700 He hasn't been in the league for two or three years.
00:17:02.920 I don't think he's ever going to be again.
00:17:04.320 Nor should he be.
00:17:05.100 No, nobody cares anymore.
00:17:07.460 And he had his chance.
00:17:08.980 I mean, he had several teams offer him.
00:17:10.880 Yeah.
00:17:11.460 But I think, you know, it was too big a point he wanted to make.
00:17:14.700 And so he continued to make the point.
00:17:17.220 All right.
00:17:17.560 Well, you made your point.
00:17:18.520 Good for him.
00:17:18.960 You lost out on probably, who knows, over three or three years now.
00:17:23.140 It's probably $30 million you lost out on.
00:17:27.020 Well, good for you.
00:17:28.380 That must be great.
00:17:29.580 That's a great, but I mean.
00:17:30.620 That's a pretty powerful point.
00:17:32.020 There you go.
00:17:32.520 He got his Nike commercial out.
00:17:33.560 Yeah, he did.
00:17:34.140 Yes, he did.
00:17:34.780 He got that.
00:17:35.480 All right.
00:17:35.940 888-727-BECK.
00:17:38.040 More Pat and Stu for Glenn on the Glenn Beck Program.
00:17:39.940 It's Pat and Stu for Glenn.
00:17:46.260 888-727-BECK.
00:17:50.240 You getting pumped up for the Tom Steyer presidential bid?
00:17:53.040 Oh, my gosh.
00:17:53.580 I can't even.
00:17:55.040 Oh, my gosh.
00:17:55.740 I'm so pumped about Tom Steyer.
00:17:58.340 He wasn't even on any of the poll questions.
00:17:59.880 Democrat billionaire.
00:18:01.200 Yeah.
00:18:01.960 He's basically, I think what he's trying to do is get out ahead of Bloomberg.
00:18:05.460 Yeah.
00:18:05.620 Because this is a guy, you've seen his face before, if you've watched cable news, probably.
00:18:09.760 He's leading the way for impeachment.
00:18:11.960 Yeah.
00:18:12.160 He's been the guy.
00:18:12.920 He's spent $20 or $100 million of money to try to push people into getting familiar with
00:18:20.820 the Donald Trump impeachment that he's trying to push for.
00:18:23.740 And so this is going to be where he runs if he does.
00:18:26.540 And he's taking steps.
00:18:27.740 He's.
00:18:28.340 There is not one chance, not a chance that he wins the Democrat nomination.
00:18:34.260 I no longer say things like this.
00:18:35.680 And if he did, I'll eat my underwear if he wins the Democrat nomination.
00:18:40.760 This is one where I can go out on a limb.
00:18:43.380 I just swore this off and said I'd never do this.
00:18:45.840 No, you got to do it again.
00:18:46.640 But Tom Steyer, I got to do this.
00:18:48.400 Okay.
00:18:48.540 For Tom Steyer.
00:18:49.160 So let's go back to the underwear review for Pat.
00:18:51.180 The first it was Elizabeth Warren.
00:18:52.720 Yeah.
00:18:53.000 Elizabeth Warren will not.
00:18:54.780 If she wins the Democrat nomination.
00:18:56.520 Yep.
00:18:56.960 I'd eat my underwear.
00:18:58.000 Didn't happen.
00:18:58.560 Didn't happen.
00:18:59.040 She didn't run.
00:18:59.720 And then the next one, I believe, was.
00:19:01.540 A little closer.
00:19:02.280 It was a little closer.
00:19:03.580 It was a little closer.
00:19:04.260 In fact, I was a little nervous election day.
00:19:05.700 The fact is.
00:19:07.420 With Beto O'Rourke.
00:19:08.920 Right.
00:19:09.440 Because a year ago, over a year ago, I said, yeah, come on.
00:19:12.720 No.
00:19:13.160 There's no way that Beto O'Rourke beats Ted Cruz.
00:19:18.200 And he came dang close.
00:19:21.220 Two and a half points, basically.
00:19:23.640 So, yeah, that was a close one.
00:19:24.760 So I didn't have to eat my underwear, though.
00:19:26.420 I feel confident.
00:19:27.380 And now I feel confident if Tom Steyer wins the Democrat nomination, I will eat my underwear.
00:19:33.440 He is a big-time climate activist, and he's announcing several town halls to go over his platforms of the five rights of pre-K education through college for free, clean air and water, an equal vote, a living wage, and the right to health.
00:19:48.860 Which I'd love to see how he solves that one.
00:19:50.660 We've got to flesh this out a little bit, maybe, coming up.
00:19:52.760 Uh-huh.
00:19:56.400 888-727-BECK.
00:19:58.620 It's Pat and Stu for Glenn.
00:20:01.660 You can also check out my show, weekday mornings between 6 and 8 Central Time, so 7 and 9 Eastern, and on Pat Gray Unleashed, and the Blaze Radio TV Network.
00:20:14.560 And, you know, anytime on podcast, if you can't get up that early.
00:20:17.360 We spoke about football a little bit earlier.
00:20:18.940 I think we have a clip from Moron Trivia.
00:20:20.880 Maybe we can play that today?
00:20:21.940 Oh, yeah.
00:20:22.360 From just past Moron Trivia?
00:20:23.580 Yeah, because tomorrow you have a special edition of Moron Trivia for Thanksgiving, right?
00:20:27.440 Right.
00:20:28.020 Yep.
00:20:28.460 Yep.
00:20:28.660 That's always a fun one.
00:20:29.740 And we're 9-2 on the season.
00:20:32.000 Which is one of the best years.
00:20:32.560 9-2!
00:20:33.360 Yeah.
00:20:33.820 It's one of the best years in the history of Moron Trivia.
00:20:35.480 I mean, in some of these weeks, I'm thinking, ah, it's not going to be right this week.
00:20:38.660 And then it is.
00:20:39.660 I don't...
00:20:40.340 It's so weird.
00:20:41.500 It's so weird.
00:20:42.720 It's a really good predictor of who's going to win the game.
00:20:46.360 I mean, I don't know of a better predictor.
00:20:48.800 I certainly wish...
00:20:49.860 I honestly wish I just moved to Vegas and just started betting more on trivia years ago.
00:20:54.920 You would have made some money.
00:20:56.680 Yeah.
00:20:57.020 You definitely would have made some money.
00:20:58.480 If you do have a clip, can we want to listen to this now?
00:21:00.480 Sure.
00:21:00.520 Yeah, we might as well.
00:21:01.140 Do you know what the setup is to this?
00:21:03.460 We're asking questions of store clerks.
00:21:08.600 Wow.
00:21:09.020 Yeah.
00:21:09.600 Really?
00:21:09.980 Yeah.
00:21:10.320 What made you do that?
00:21:11.060 Other than the entire rule of the game.
00:21:12.860 It's the rule of the game.
00:21:13.740 Okay.
00:21:14.140 Yeah.
00:21:14.400 Pretty much just that.
00:21:15.640 Okay.
00:21:16.340 Here's the clip from...
00:21:17.140 This is from last Friday.
00:21:18.720 Just last Friday.
00:21:19.500 Pac-Rae Unleashed.
00:21:20.160 Karen, hi.
00:21:21.540 Hi.
00:21:22.400 Name one country in the Middle East.
00:21:27.000 Pakistan.
00:21:28.800 What did she say?
00:21:29.680 Pakistan.
00:21:31.140 Idaho would have been a really good answer.
00:21:32.940 Oh, that's true.
00:21:33.840 There's a new movie coming out soon about the life of Ruth Bader Ginsburg.
00:21:37.580 What is Ruth Bader Ginsburg best known for?
00:21:40.660 A writer.
00:21:41.740 Oh, a writer.
00:21:42.820 Yeah, yeah, yeah.
00:21:43.180 A writer.
00:21:44.200 Ooh.
00:21:44.400 No, she is the woman who invented women.
00:21:48.140 She invented women.
00:21:48.920 Really?
00:21:49.620 Yeah.
00:21:50.160 The abbreviation GDP is short for what three words?
00:21:55.540 Whoa.
00:21:56.280 Easy.
00:21:57.880 I have no idea.
00:21:58.900 He didn't mean that.
00:21:59.340 Oh, yeah?
00:21:59.800 Yeah, I didn't mean it.
00:22:00.840 He's Creskin over here.
00:22:01.840 It's get down and party.
00:22:04.420 Really?
00:22:05.280 Yeah.
00:22:05.620 GDP is get down and party?
00:22:06.760 Yeah, get down and party.
00:22:07.300 A lot of people don't know that.
00:22:08.400 People...
00:22:08.920 A lot of people don't know that Pakistan's not in the Middle East either.
00:22:12.120 So, but Commissioner Jeffy gave her that answer.
00:22:18.680 Why do you still have him in that role?
00:22:20.420 No, I don't know.
00:22:21.320 We got to fire him as commissioner because he's terrible.
00:22:25.400 And then every time there's a flag on the field and we go to the flag on the field and
00:22:28.880 somebody makes a really good point.
00:22:30.560 It's like, yeah, okay, well, thanks for your concern.
00:22:33.700 Bye.
00:22:34.000 I mean, he doesn't even consider any flag on the field, no matter how legitimate.
00:22:38.960 He doesn't care.
00:22:39.940 No.
00:22:40.240 He just doesn't care.
00:22:40.980 He's already made his ruling.
00:22:42.140 He's already made his mind up and that's it.
00:22:44.160 Well, he's a bad person.
00:22:45.220 He is.
00:22:45.540 He's a terrible person.
00:22:46.680 The foundation of this problem is that he's not a good guy.
00:22:49.520 Right.
00:22:50.200 But if you want to hear more from the good guy, he's got a podcast.
00:22:53.500 What's it called?
00:22:55.180 Chewing the Fat.
00:22:55.680 Chewing the Fat with Jeff Fisher.
00:22:57.340 I guess listen to it or something.
00:22:59.100 It's available on our channel and I don't know.
00:23:01.580 And he'll join us again tomorrow for more on trivia as well.
00:23:05.980 Is he coming in today, by the way, for a segment?
00:23:09.260 Is he just not as easy to want to show up?
00:23:11.260 Well, that's understandable.
00:23:12.400 I mean, Jeffy, you have to understand, really prepares for Thanksgiving because he basically,
00:23:18.100 if you think of your Thanksgiving meal, that's four or five times a day for Jeffy.
00:23:23.020 So for him to expand to an actual Thanksgiving meal for him, he needs to prepare days in advance
00:23:29.120 and eat, you know, 10, 12 times a day, large meals.
00:23:34.340 So it's something about expanding his stomach.
00:23:36.440 He says it has to get even more expanded than normal.
00:23:40.480 And so that starts like, I think, six weeks out from Thanksgiving.
00:23:44.860 By the way, the Moron Trivia contestants, good cross-section of who Tom Steyer is going to
00:23:49.880 be going for if he's running for president, which it does appear he is.
00:23:52.780 Very true.
00:23:53.480 He's trying to, he tried to impeach the president last, the last couple of years.
00:23:57.340 And he spent a hundred million to try to do it.
00:23:59.460 So this is his, his, it wasn't about impeaching the president.
00:24:03.140 We should be clear.
00:24:04.340 He, yes, he wants the president impeached, but this is about his face getting in front of
00:24:08.940 the American people, particularly hardcore leftists to show that he's putting his money
00:24:13.600 where his mouth is.
00:24:14.460 And by the way, this is who I am because you have no idea who I am.
00:24:17.700 We did a, uh, remember we were doing these serials for a while, Pat?
00:24:20.420 Yeah.
00:24:20.640 And you put together a great one on Tom Steyer and we got to bust that back out.
00:24:24.180 I think it was a lot of those were making into, um, television episodes that are going
00:24:28.640 to be airing in the next year.
00:24:30.180 So, um, which is pretty cool.
00:24:32.180 And the Tom Steyer one had a lot of information I didn't know about the guy.
00:24:36.000 He's one of these up and kind of the new, some people would,
00:24:38.940 compare him to like a George Soros type where he's dumping a bunch of his billions of dollars
00:24:43.080 into stuff like climate activism and impeaching the president and things like that.
00:24:47.480 And I love the fact that he's such a climate activist because he made most of his money
00:24:51.000 in fossil fuels, oil, uh, in particular.
00:24:56.380 Of course.
00:24:57.120 I mean, right.
00:24:58.640 That happens every time.
00:25:00.480 George, every time George Soros made a lot of money in capitalist markets.
00:25:04.080 Um, yet what is he doing around the world?
00:25:06.240 Trying to shut down capitalism in so many ways.
00:25:08.680 Yeah.
00:25:08.940 Um, you know, it's not, not a huge surprise, I guess, but he, uh, is now, um, starting a
00:25:14.120 six figure web buy on, uh, Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, and Instagram full page ad in USA
00:25:19.000 today.
00:25:19.840 Uh, he is outlining his political platform.
00:25:22.780 He's revamping Tom Steyer.com.
00:25:25.800 Oh, and he's announced five, uh, town halls.
00:25:28.920 Do you go to, how often do you go to Tom Steyer.com?
00:25:30.900 Like three, four times a day or.
00:25:32.900 I'm there right now.
00:25:33.540 You are.
00:25:33.880 I'm soaking in it.
00:25:34.720 Okay.
00:25:35.420 Really?
00:25:35.860 Your skin looks really soft.
00:25:38.340 Thank you.
00:25:38.780 Um, it's Tom Steyer.com.
00:25:40.880 Yeah.
00:25:41.120 Okay.
00:25:41.500 Yeah.
00:25:41.960 That's what's doing it for me.
00:25:43.160 The first of the five town halls will be happening in South Carolina, which you may notice is
00:25:47.700 an early primary state.
00:25:49.140 Mm-hmm.
00:25:49.680 Uh, the first town hall is in Charleston.
00:25:52.340 It's the third or fourth, right?
00:25:53.600 Uh, Iowa.
00:25:54.500 Well, yeah, Nevada sometimes squeaks in there too, but it's usually thought of as Iowa,
00:25:59.100 New Hampshire, and, uh, South Carolina as the, the first big three.
00:26:03.160 Right.
00:26:03.480 I know California has tried to push itself in there as well.
00:26:06.120 He's going to California as well.
00:26:08.520 He is going to be talking about each of the five rights that you have.
00:26:13.540 Now there is something called the bill of rights.
00:26:15.840 That was, it's dusty.
00:26:17.000 Yeah, we had 10.
00:26:17.520 Yeah, it was 10.
00:26:17.920 That was pretty well outlined.
00:26:18.560 He's cut it to five.
00:26:20.000 So we only have five now.
00:26:21.480 How, now with 50% less rights.
00:26:24.760 That's a great campaign slogan for Steyer.
00:26:26.980 Now with 50% less rights.
00:26:28.880 I like that.
00:26:29.720 Um, here is his five right, uh, platform.
00:26:32.980 Uh, the right to an equal vote is number one.
00:26:35.560 We already have that, Tom.
00:26:36.500 Thank you.
00:26:37.160 Yes, that's already guaranteed to us.
00:26:38.880 And, and like, this is him basically saying, I'm going to side with the loser and the governor
00:26:44.680 race in Georgia, right?
00:26:45.940 Like this is her, his signaling.
00:26:47.940 And that is just so bogus.
00:26:50.060 You shouldn't have to bring your ID to the polls.
00:26:52.120 Yeah.
00:26:52.260 Like that's what we're going to say.
00:26:53.340 And we should talk about that a little bit in that, uh, we, yesterday mentioned Mia Love
00:26:56.900 who was leading in her race.
00:26:58.920 By 419 votes.
00:27:00.220 Now she's trailing by 1800, I think it is.
00:27:03.640 Is she really?
00:27:04.460 Yeah.
00:27:04.720 And the reason what it looks like, the reasoning for this is, um, same day registrations.
00:27:11.800 That's what all these late, late votes are.
00:27:13.740 People who register to vote the day of the election, um, for the first time.
00:27:18.260 Um, and then voted and then voted.
00:27:20.320 And so what they vote, I, my understanding of it, and you know, there's been some really
00:27:23.580 good, really good reporting on this one guy in particular from, uh, the Salt Lake Tribune
00:27:27.120 was all over this and, and kind of gave the signal that this might turn around and go to
00:27:32.700 the Democrat in, in this race.
00:27:34.440 Um, but my understanding of it is you can register the same day.
00:27:39.940 And then when you cast a vote, you're casting essentially a provisional ballot.
00:27:43.680 So there were tens of thousands of provisional ballots cast.
00:27:47.000 Why is it provisional when you register day of?
00:27:49.080 I think because they want to check and make sure you actually are able to register.
00:27:53.040 You are a citizen, you are in good standing, you have the right to vote, whatever the thing is.
00:27:56.640 So that takes some time.
00:27:57.680 It takes a couple of days for them to figure that out.
00:27:59.220 That's why this has taken such a long time.
00:28:00.720 Something that you can vote, you can register the day of, why would you do that?
00:28:03.580 And again, I, I, I made this point before, and I think like most people think it in America
00:28:09.500 would think this sounds terrible, but like, it's not a terrible idea to have some level
00:28:15.960 of awareness of what's going on in the world to cast a vote.
00:28:20.200 Now you have a right to do it.
00:28:22.600 If you know nothing, you have a right to do it.
00:28:24.660 You can do it.
00:28:25.440 You just shouldn't.
00:28:26.220 But encouraging people who know nothing about what's going on to vote.
00:28:30.720 Is not rocking the vote is a democratic tactic to win elections.
00:28:35.080 It's not a sensible choice, right?
00:28:37.200 Getting people who have never read a news article other than about a Kardashian to go
00:28:42.440 to the polls and cast a vote is not necessarily the right call.
00:28:46.360 No, it's going to kill us if, if we continue to encourage that and they're going to, yeah,
00:28:51.580 because it benefits Democrats almost every time, every time.
00:28:55.740 And, and, and, you know, they're, they're targeting as we've called them over the years,
00:28:59.760 low information voters.
00:29:01.160 And it's okay, by the way, for you to be a low information voter.
00:29:05.300 If you want to live your life and have no engagement with the political system, obviously our founders
00:29:10.940 warned against that as a trend, but as an individual, you absolutely have that right to
00:29:15.980 not vote and not care.
00:29:17.060 It is why our founders ensured that you had skin in the game in order to vote.
00:29:22.960 That's why you had to be a property owner.
00:29:24.700 That was the original way they did it.
00:29:25.820 Because you had skin in the game.
00:29:28.420 That way people aren't voting themselves your property.
00:29:32.800 They're, they understand what it takes to get property and keep property and pay for property.
00:29:38.640 And so they've got that knowledge and they're looking into the issues and they're understanding
00:29:42.680 how things work.
00:29:43.980 It, it just ensures kind of that you've, you've got some knowledge going on.
00:29:48.380 Indicates a level of engagement.
00:29:49.940 Yeah.
00:29:50.140 Now this is different from like, let's say a poll tax, which is completely wrong.
00:29:54.280 Yes, of course.
00:29:54.920 Um, and you know, that is like saying, oh, well, only people who have the money to vote
00:29:58.500 should vote.
00:29:58.980 And that's not a good idea.
00:29:59.960 No, that's bad.
00:30:00.660 At all.
00:30:01.140 Um, however.
00:30:02.020 That was just, that was a voter suppression.
00:30:04.300 It was.
00:30:04.840 Issue.
00:30:05.160 It was.
00:30:05.780 Having ID is not a voter suppression issue.
00:30:07.880 It's ridiculous.
00:30:08.560 Again, like over 80% of African-Americans support.
00:30:11.340 And Hispanics.
00:30:12.060 It's in the upper seventies or low eighties for Hispanics too.
00:30:14.960 It's, it's seriously.
00:30:15.940 And I mean this sincerely, one of the most popular, uh, proposals in our public debate,
00:30:21.120 in our public discourse.
00:30:22.920 People.
00:30:23.540 Nobody thinks it's wrong to have somebody prove who they are when they go to vote.
00:30:27.600 Nobody thinks that.
00:30:28.360 No.
00:30:28.740 Why?
00:30:29.060 Because they have ID as well.
00:30:31.760 It is racist to think they don't.
00:30:33.800 Of course it is.
00:30:34.320 Of course it is.
00:30:35.780 So beyond all of this, um, the issue in, um, Salt Lake City.
00:30:42.060 Uh, and, and with, with Mia Love and her election, um, a lot of last minute, same day registrations.
00:30:49.100 Wow.
00:30:49.460 If you are not, if you're not engaged enough.
00:30:53.080 To do it ahead of time.
00:30:54.280 To hit a normal deadline.
00:30:55.380 I mean, like, look, there could be ridiculous ones.
00:30:57.460 Uh, you register a year in advance.
00:30:58.860 That's probably not right.
00:31:00.100 Does anybody have that?
00:31:00.900 I don't think so.
00:31:01.480 I don't think so.
00:31:02.000 Um, but there are some that are a few months and I, I, you know, and, or a few weeks.
00:31:06.140 Again, there should be enough time that you have these, uh, registrations and who is able to vote.
00:31:12.420 Done before the election.
00:31:13.960 Yeah.
00:31:14.040 Here is what, what's, what's, why these votes are trickling in is because they're figuring
00:31:16.860 it out afterwards, which is not, it does not, it does not, it opens up to a lot of problems.
00:31:21.420 You should know election night who won.
00:31:22.080 Yeah.
00:31:22.700 Period.
00:31:23.120 It opens up to a lot of problems here.
00:31:25.500 It does.
00:31:25.900 Uh, and it could be abused at some point, but the, one of the big reasons why, uh, Mia Love
00:31:30.620 did not win.
00:31:31.520 It looks like, at least in this case is because of, they had the ballot initiative on marijuana.
00:31:36.720 And so the people were not registering last minute to vote for or against Mia Love.
00:31:41.880 It was about, they wanted to vote and say medical marijuana was, should be legalized, uh, which
00:31:47.800 it was right in, in Utah.
00:31:50.360 Um, it was, uh, but that was the, apparently the motivator and all those people voted for
00:31:54.880 the Democrat.
00:31:55.240 They're going for the Democrat.
00:31:55.960 Yeah.
00:31:56.080 They're potheads.
00:31:56.760 Of course they're going for the Democrat.
00:31:58.340 Duh.
00:31:59.600 So again, that is like a, you know, we have a right to vote.
00:32:02.780 It is equal.
00:32:03.380 The other reason she lost, uh, was summed up by her president.
00:32:09.100 On the other hand, you had some that decided to let's stay away.
00:32:13.100 Let's stay away.
00:32:14.180 They did very poorly.
00:32:15.460 Didn't ask him to campaign for him.
00:32:16.840 I'm not sure that I should be happy or sad, but I feel just fine about it.
00:32:21.200 So he's happy.
00:32:22.080 Okay.
00:32:22.880 Carlos.
00:32:23.860 Cabela.
00:32:24.480 Cabela.
00:32:25.240 Mike Kaufman.
00:32:27.040 Mike Kaufman.
00:32:28.300 And too bad, Mike.
00:32:29.760 Too bad.
00:32:30.820 But Mia Love.
00:32:32.100 Mia Love.
00:32:32.920 I saw Mia Love.
00:32:34.780 She'd call me all the time to help her with a hostage situation being held hostage in
00:32:43.140 Venezuela, in Venezuela.
00:32:45.720 Right.
00:32:46.620 And, uh, but Mia Love gave me no love.
00:32:51.900 So that's why she lost.
00:32:54.180 You didn't give President Trump any love.
00:32:56.480 So there you go.
00:32:57.400 That's, uh, that's sad.
00:32:58.600 Yeah, it is.
00:32:59.180 It looked like she was going to come back and win and now she's lost.
00:33:01.420 Now she's lost.
00:33:02.200 I don't know.
00:33:02.840 Let me give you the last four real quick and then we'll go.
00:33:04.880 It's clean air and water.
00:33:06.220 Like, I mean, come on.
00:33:06.980 Um, this is the five rights.
00:33:09.260 To learn, uh, with pre-k education through college, which is obviously a free college
00:33:13.320 thing.
00:33:13.560 It's not just learning.
00:33:14.600 All those things already exist.
00:33:16.180 Um, a living wage.
00:33:17.700 So you're talking 15 bucks an hour, probably more.
00:33:21.040 And the right to health.
00:33:22.600 Which, with that one, we need to get into more.
00:33:24.160 Because I don't know how you guarantee health.
00:33:25.960 How the government guarantees health, I don't know.
00:33:28.340 But maybe Tom has figured this out.
00:33:29.440 If he can do that, though, that's, I mean, that's a point in his favor.
00:33:31.940 I will say he'll probably win.
00:33:33.020 Yeah.
00:33:33.340 If he can actually guarantee health, I think a lot of people would vote for the guy.
00:33:36.360 I think so.
00:33:36.940 Uh, so there you go.
00:33:37.860 All right.
00:33:38.140 Triple A, 727-B-E-Z-K.
00:33:40.000 It's bat and stew for Glenn on the Glenn Beck program.
00:33:44.920 Glenn Beck.
00:33:46.400 All right.
00:33:46.760 Tom Steyer has eliminated at least five of the really annoying rights that all Americans have.
00:33:53.200 Because we have a bill of rights that's, uh, you know, uh, 10.
00:33:57.320 Original.
00:33:58.260 Uh, 27 now.
00:33:59.680 Well, he's narrowed it down to five rights in his platform.
00:34:02.440 And one that we really find interesting is the right to health.
00:34:06.180 I'm not sure how he's going to pull that off.
00:34:07.940 Have you seen any details on that yet?
00:34:09.820 Um, can he guarantee that we don't get cancer?
00:34:12.940 Yes.
00:34:13.740 Um, you know, I don't know if you know this.
00:34:15.620 Um, there was another candidate who ran a long time ago on, uh, uh, healing the sick.
00:34:20.180 Um, his name was Jesus.
00:34:21.920 One big, huge candidate.
00:34:24.240 Still popular today.
00:34:25.540 Yes.
00:34:25.780 Uh, did very, really well.
00:34:27.120 In fact, um, huge percentages of the vote.
00:34:29.960 And what he did is he would have people come in with like leprosy and stuff and he would
00:34:33.280 heal them and give them the right to health.
00:34:35.800 Right to health.
00:34:36.260 They had the right to health.
00:34:36.880 That was his first, the first leg of his platform.
00:34:38.640 So Steyer's going to do that.
00:34:39.800 Basically what he's going to do is.
00:34:41.480 Wow.
00:34:41.700 That hasn't been pulled off much since that particular candidate of which you speak.
00:34:45.600 Yeah.
00:34:45.760 It's so crazy because it works so well for him.
00:34:48.140 You know, he's, he's had a really good legacy.
00:34:50.440 Steyer's picking that up.
00:34:51.460 What he's going to do is like, if you have a strep throat, your kid has strep throat,
00:34:56.040 maybe you bring him in.
00:34:57.460 Tom will touch his, uh, his, his, his neck.
00:35:00.440 And it's over.
00:35:00.960 And it's over.
00:35:01.540 He'll be gone.
00:35:02.120 It's his right.
00:35:02.500 It's his right to health proposal.
00:35:03.860 That's great.
00:35:04.500 And I think it's going to work out well because the government does a really good job when
00:35:08.440 they take on things like this.
00:35:09.540 Oh, they're so good at it.
00:35:10.260 They're just really good at it.
00:35:11.500 If we just let them run everything.
00:35:13.100 Oh my God.
00:35:13.640 Things would go so smoothly, wouldn't they?
00:35:16.140 It would be so easy.
00:35:17.640 What a world.
00:35:18.400 Turn it over.
00:35:18.700 Do you want to do things like earn money?
00:35:20.680 No.
00:35:21.200 Give that to the government.
00:35:22.280 Let them pay you for, for just being alive.
00:35:24.940 Right.
00:35:25.180 And then you can go and you can do music and art.
00:35:27.580 Yes.
00:35:27.960 Paint on your own.
00:35:29.020 Yes.
00:35:29.320 Like Nancy Pelosi let us know.
00:35:30.700 I mean, this is, this is the future.
00:35:32.000 We need to embrace it.
00:35:34.400 Well, let's tell you about Relief Factor.
00:35:35.820 Relief Factor has been helping Glenn for quite a long time, alleviate some pretty severe
00:35:40.920 pain he's had and issues he's had with that.
00:35:42.980 There's a thing he does.
00:35:44.000 Like there's a little video.
00:35:44.920 Have you ever seen this, Pat?
00:35:46.080 Where there's like Glenn standing on like a farm and he's by a fence and he's like,
00:35:50.500 look, I just do a lot of hard work outdoors and get a lot of pain from it.
00:35:55.540 And you're just like, great.
00:35:56.520 You do?
00:35:57.380 No, no, you really don't.
00:35:58.400 I think Glenn loves the idea of hard work outdoors.
00:36:01.300 Yeah, he does.
00:36:01.940 I don't think he actually wants to do it.
00:36:04.060 Right.
00:36:04.620 But it's helped him when he actually has attempted the work.
00:36:07.680 He's not in a lot of pain anymore, which is a big deal.
00:36:10.360 This is 100% drug free.
00:36:11.580 It's created by doctors.
00:36:12.780 It's got four key ingredients that help your body's fight against inflammation, which is
00:36:17.200 where the pain is coming from.
00:36:18.560 They've got a three week quick start for $19.95.
00:36:22.040 This is an easy way to give it a shot.
00:36:23.400 See if it works for you.
00:36:24.100 70% of people, it does work for them.
00:36:25.620 They're ordering more.
00:36:26.900 Why not see if this is going to help you?
00:36:28.420 For $20 to find out if you can get rid of this issue that you're having with pain, that's
00:36:32.740 that's the easiest bargain you're ever going to find.
00:36:34.700 If you go to drug free and natural way to ease your pain, go to relieffactor.com.
00:36:39.300 It's relieffactor.com.
00:36:41.180 Glenn Beck.
00:36:42.580 With Pat and Stu today, for Glenn, he got an early start on Thanksgiving, 888-933-93.
00:36:50.460 I'm surprised about that, too.
00:36:52.740 You know, the holiday that's celebrated by the giant meal that he would want to leave
00:36:57.260 early for it.
00:36:57.980 Right?
00:36:58.380 Yeah.
00:36:58.860 I guess it starts.
00:36:59.500 It is.
00:36:59.700 He said he was surprised.
00:37:00.640 I was surprised to hear him endorse the 11-day Thanksgiving feast.
00:37:05.640 But he did.
00:37:06.680 But he did.
00:37:07.100 Yeah.
00:37:07.240 He wanted to make sure he was home the whole day.
00:37:08.780 Because if he had to separate three hours from the dinner table, I mean, what could happen?
00:37:14.040 He could die of starvation.
00:37:15.560 Easily.
00:37:16.040 Easily.
00:37:16.540 Quite easily.
00:37:17.740 So, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, man, is she setting the world on fire with her brilliance.
00:37:27.460 I mean, every time she opens her mouth, you think, wow, that is a bright young woman, isn't
00:37:34.020 she?
00:37:35.120 Hmm.
00:37:36.080 Here she is reminding us about the three branches of government.
00:37:40.380 This is, pay careful attention.
00:37:43.140 You might want to gather the kids around if they haven't had a civics lesson for a while
00:37:46.720 and just remind them.
00:37:48.160 Here's Alexandria.
00:37:49.080 The key is that should we, and if we work our butts off to make sure that we take back
00:37:54.400 all three chambers of Congress, or rather all three chambers of government, the presidency,
00:37:58.920 the Senate, and the House in 2020, we can't start working in 2020.
00:38:05.800 All three chambers of the government, the presidency, the House, and the Senate.
00:38:10.220 Just like our founders designed.
00:38:11.720 Yeah.
00:38:12.960 It's funny, because she actually corrects herself.
00:38:14.620 She realizes she's wrong and then corrects herself to something else that is also wrong.
00:38:17.880 To something even more wrong, really.
00:38:19.720 Because if you're just talking about the three branches of Congress, I mean, there aren't
00:38:23.700 three branches of Congress.
00:38:24.620 No.
00:38:25.340 The three things we vote for is kind of what she was going for, I think.
00:38:27.880 I guess.
00:38:28.460 Yeah, right?
00:38:29.040 I don't know.
00:38:29.700 House, Senate, and presidency are the three big elections.
00:38:33.980 I mean, you'd put governor in that probably level as well for most people.
00:38:38.380 But most people aren't necessarily focusing on local judicial elections.
00:38:41.920 These are the big things you're fighting for.
00:38:43.480 You kind of get what she's going for.
00:38:45.040 But again, all this stuff seems so unfamiliar to her, which is really what's interesting to me.
00:38:50.200 I think it is unfamiliar to her.
00:38:52.280 But, I mean, it's happened before with Democrats.
00:38:54.320 So, I would urge my Republican colleagues, no matter how strongly they feel, you know,
00:38:59.900 we have three branches of government.
00:39:01.580 We have a House, we have a Senate, we have a President, and all three.
00:39:04.400 I mean, the same thing.
00:39:05.700 We have a House, we have a Senate, we have a President.
00:39:07.940 The three branches of government.
00:39:10.380 Somebody should learn them some things.
00:39:12.960 Yeah.
00:39:13.420 Like, we're not a democracy, for one.
00:39:15.880 And then tell them what the three branches of government actually are.
00:39:19.320 That would be helpful to them.
00:39:20.840 Yeah.
00:39:22.620 Very true.
00:39:23.300 It would be nice.
00:39:24.160 I think it does reveal a lot about how progressives think about the world, right?
00:39:27.760 They think about, there are three things that matter.
00:39:29.880 The things that give us power.
00:39:31.220 So, how do we get to work on those?
00:39:32.660 Exactly.
00:39:33.140 I think that's how they look at it.
00:39:33.720 That's what it is.
00:39:34.300 Yeah.
00:39:34.840 And that's why it's the most important to them, because it's the way that they are able
00:39:38.260 to take more control over everybody's daily lives.
00:39:41.400 So, I'm not surprised it's a focus.
00:39:42.800 Again, Ocasio-Cortez is really an interesting phenomenon to me, because she is, not just
00:39:51.680 because, like, because I think it's true that she doesn't seem to be all that well-informed
00:39:56.520 about basic issues as it relates to government.
00:39:59.460 In other words, she's butt-stupid.
00:40:00.340 Well, some people would...
00:40:02.060 Is that what you're trying to say?
00:40:02.840 I don't, not exactly.
00:40:04.340 Oh, okay.
00:40:04.860 Again, I think, you know, she's a 28-year-old socialist, right?
00:40:08.160 So, like, is it surprising that she's not going to be particularly well-in-tuned with
00:40:12.080 what's going on in the world?
00:40:13.100 I mean, no.
00:40:14.300 It's not exactly a shock, to me, at least.
00:40:17.440 But I am surprised at the odd level of, like, this halo of protection around her, in that
00:40:24.200 she can't be criticized.
00:40:25.960 And she's very...
00:40:26.920 Every time someone says a word of criticism about her, she accuses them of being obsessed
00:40:33.500 with her, like, stalking her, essentially, on the internet.
00:40:37.200 Oh, Fox News is just obsessing over every video I put out.
00:40:40.960 It's like, I don't know anyone who's obsessing over her.
00:40:44.580 No.
00:40:45.140 At least on the right.
00:40:46.380 I mean, I think people are critical of her.
00:40:47.940 And she's sort of the face of democratic socialism, which is something, I think, worth some certain
00:40:52.740 level of obsession, you know, to avoid what they want.
00:40:55.740 I think it certainly deserves our attention.
00:40:59.520 And she's sort of the public face of it, fairly or unfairly.
00:41:02.700 I mean, Bernie Sanders is much more...
00:41:05.380 Like, Bernie Sanders is much more an ideological democratic socialist, in that he's very aware
00:41:09.760 of what's going on.
00:41:10.880 But again, he looks like Bernie Sanders.
00:41:13.000 Like, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez is a much better face for things.
00:41:15.780 Yeah, she doesn't look like Bernie Sanders.
00:41:16.840 She doesn't look like Bernie Sanders.
00:41:18.540 So...
00:41:19.060 I never mistake her for Bernie Sanders.
00:41:20.660 No.
00:41:21.520 And now she's making soup on the internet, and everyone's praising her over that.
00:41:26.220 Like, the best thing that happened on the internet is this Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez making soup.
00:41:32.120 She's made soup on Instagram.
00:41:34.380 It's like, okay, I...
00:41:35.780 And I think she's getting...
00:41:36.640 Who's obsessed here?
00:41:37.280 It's not me.
00:41:38.060 I'm not obsessed with her soup videos.
00:41:39.520 Not at all.
00:41:39.980 I'm obsessed with stopping her policies.
00:41:42.580 Like, I know I really don't want us to have an 80% tax rate.
00:41:45.920 So, yes, I really want what she wants to happen with our federal government to not occur.
00:41:51.800 But it's a personal obsession.
00:41:53.840 I don't know anyone who has a personal obsession with her.
00:41:56.220 But I think she gets Democratic protection because they're afraid of her constituency.
00:42:01.280 I think they're afraid that if she gets angry at the Democrat leadership, she will sick the millennial generation on them or something.
00:42:13.900 You know, maybe she sways her people who follow her every move.
00:42:19.000 Those are the ones who are obsessed with her, like the millennials, because she's so active, and she's so pretty, and she's a socialist, and she wants to give me free college, and I want free college.
00:42:30.020 You know, all of those things.
00:42:31.320 And so, I think that's how she escapes the ire of, say, Nancy Pelosi, even though she participated in that protest at her office, which could not have made her happy.
00:42:41.420 No, probably not.
00:42:42.440 Now, I know the millennial thing would explain, I guess, why, you know, Maxine Waters doesn't get this level of protection from the media.
00:42:52.980 Maxine Waters is just as socialist as Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez is.
00:42:56.740 Yeah.
00:42:57.060 If not more.
00:42:58.000 I mean, I think at least Maxine Waters has a little bit more of an understanding of what she's actually pushing for.
00:43:03.720 Very, again, we're talking very small degrees here.
00:43:06.700 But she, I think, is, she's been around a long time, she's fought for these things for a long time, and she doesn't get that level of protection.
00:43:14.060 When she says something dumb, people say it's dumb, generally speaking.
00:43:17.980 When Ocasio-Cortez says something dumb, people are like, oh, but that's my daughter, and she's just out of college, and it's okay.
00:43:23.240 Of course she doesn't know yet.
00:43:24.560 It's a weird thing to say about a congresswoman.
00:43:25.860 That she shouldn't be in office, though.
00:43:26.980 Right, like, that's not a, that's someone who should win an election.
00:43:30.280 Again, people get to have the right to vote for whoever the heck they want, but it is a strange thing.
00:43:35.840 She does not seem to have the basic understanding of the things she's speaking of, which is an issue.
00:43:42.500 Yes.
00:43:42.940 It's kind of an issue.
00:43:44.200 And it's gotten her into a little bit of trouble.
00:43:46.280 The things she said about Israel, you know, being the occupier.
00:43:51.420 Now, that's consistent with her.
00:43:52.960 It is consistent with her belief system.
00:43:55.200 But you better know the details of it if you're going to try to back it up.
00:43:58.840 Yes.
00:43:59.240 Which she doesn't seem to do.
00:44:00.400 And I don't think she has any idea.
00:44:02.520 We have this clip of her, too, talking about the opposition to Nancy Pelosi.
00:44:09.400 This is an interesting one.
00:44:10.820 These dynamics are very interesting to watch.
00:44:12.900 These little internal squabbles.
00:44:15.200 You know, we talked about football last hour, where, you know, Colin Kaepernick, Eric Reid is another player who is kneeling.
00:44:21.240 And Malcolm Jenkins, who's an Eagles player, was not kneeling, but, you know, friendly to the line of thinking of the protests.
00:44:29.880 And they actually got in the game, because he's on Carolina now, they got in a game, a fight in the game, like almost like a fist fight before the game.
00:44:37.720 Both of them, or at least Eric Reid, accusing Malcolm Jenkins of selling out.
00:44:42.400 Yeah.
00:44:42.800 Because he wasn't kneeling enough.
00:44:44.700 He made a deal or something with the NFL that if they, I think they donated some money to his cause, and so he stopped kneeling.
00:44:52.640 Right?
00:44:52.980 Isn't that...
00:44:53.340 I don't think he ever was.
00:44:54.260 He wasn't.
00:44:54.680 He was one of the, he put his fist up or something in the air.
00:44:57.660 Okay.
00:44:58.220 But, like, he had decided, instead of the Colin Kaepernick way of just bitching about it and acting like you're super important.
00:45:03.500 He actually got something done.
00:45:04.200 He got something done.
00:45:04.740 He got a bunch of money, and he's putting it towards the cause he believes in.
00:45:08.620 And, again, I don't agree with his analysis of the situation, but at least he's trying to do something about it.
00:45:13.820 But, again, those squabbles are always fascinating to me.
00:45:16.020 Listen to this.
00:45:16.460 This is Ocasio-Cortez about the Democratic group opposing Pelosi.
00:45:21.860 Listen.
00:45:24.920 If we are not on the same page about changing the systems and the values and how we're going to adapt as a party for the future,
00:45:31.380 then what is the point of just changing our party leadership just for the sake of it?
00:45:37.040 What I'm hearing from you is that you don't feel like there's an ideological or substantive sort of agenda-driven core of this objection.
00:45:45.120 No.
00:45:45.440 I mean, if anything, I think that what it does is that it creates a window where we could potentially get more conservative leadership.
00:45:52.560 And when you actually look at the signatories, it is not necessarily reflective of the diversity of the party.
00:45:59.260 We have about 16 signatories.
00:46:03.460 14 of them are male.
00:46:06.100 There are very few people of color in the caucus.
00:46:09.180 There's very few ideological diversity.
00:46:12.040 It's not like there are progressives that are signing on.
00:46:14.960 It's not like you have a broad-based coalition.
00:46:17.600 So, I find it, you know, I'm not totally bought into the concept.
00:46:25.960 That's interesting.
00:46:27.000 We've hit a little intersection here with Socialist Street and Racist Street.
00:46:31.440 If they come to a little intersection and someone's got to put the brakes on,
00:46:35.180 because it's okay that they can have socialist policies,
00:46:38.240 but if they're not the right color, then they don't matter.
00:46:43.160 Their obsession with what color people are.
00:46:47.500 And what sex they are.
00:46:48.240 And what sex they are is, I think, the real racism here.
00:46:53.480 Yeah.
00:46:53.960 That's all they focus on.
00:46:55.520 That's all they care about.
00:46:56.640 They are so obsessed with race and gender that, I mean, it's pretty clear that they're the ones
00:47:06.180 who are always focused and concerned and worried about it.
00:47:10.460 The rest of us don't really care.
00:47:13.160 I don't care what color you are.
00:47:15.040 What are your policies?
00:47:16.720 What's your ideology?
00:47:18.620 Are you trying to take more money out of my pocketbook?
00:47:21.240 Are you trying to steal from me?
00:47:23.040 That's what I want to know about.
00:47:24.340 I want to know why you're carrying a pocketbook.
00:47:26.540 I mean, as a man, typically, it wouldn't be the choice.
00:47:30.000 But again, are you showing your diversity?
00:47:33.060 Pretty much, yes.
00:47:33.740 Okay.
00:47:34.480 Yes.
00:47:35.140 It's interesting.
00:47:36.000 And my gender fluidity.
00:47:37.880 And it's great.
00:47:39.360 You can let us know next break which one you are.
00:47:42.000 All right.
00:47:42.440 Because right now, I'm not sure.
00:47:44.500 Right now, I'm questioning.
00:47:45.720 Okay, good.
00:47:46.140 Yeah.
00:47:46.520 I'm good.
00:47:47.220 It's interesting to see that happen because, first of all, there's a handy-dandy guide to
00:47:52.260 whether what you're saying is racist.
00:47:54.200 A handy-dandy guide for Democrats.
00:47:56.240 And it works really well.
00:47:57.500 If what you're saying, just reverse the color on what you're saying and then say it out loud
00:48:02.700 and tell me if it feels racist, like, here you're saying, well, there's not, there's
00:48:08.740 too many, if you're saying too many men, or if you're saying there's too many white
00:48:14.260 people, which is basically her point there, reverse that and say, there's too many women
00:48:19.000 in the caucus and there's too many black people in the caucus.
00:48:22.440 Does that feel racist to you?
00:48:24.040 If it does, what you just said is racist.
00:48:26.900 It's a really easy guide.
00:48:28.200 That's a really good rule of thumb.
00:48:29.400 Yeah.
00:48:29.780 I love it.
00:48:30.260 It works every single time, too.
00:48:32.160 And I think people would appreciate it.
00:48:34.200 Because if people would think about it that way, these statements are all racist.
00:48:38.480 All of them.
00:48:39.580 When you go into this, if what a determining factor as to what you vote for, who you support,
00:48:47.280 is race, then you are making a race-based decision.
00:48:51.200 A decision based on skin color.
00:48:53.600 Do you remember which side of the argument Martin Luther King came down on between skin
00:48:58.200 color and content of character?
00:49:01.200 He was a content of character guy.
00:49:03.480 Content of character guy.
00:49:04.540 He wanted it to be content of character, not skin color.
00:49:06.880 They've completely disowned that.
00:49:09.140 Yeah.
00:49:09.460 Completely disowned it.
00:49:10.620 And they've come to a point where the end of this solution is to get more, let's say,
00:49:16.760 black people or Hispanic people or whoever.
00:49:19.480 That's supposed to be, if you see that there's too many people, for example, in a particular
00:49:25.800 organization, that could be an indication of racism, right?
00:49:28.940 Like if it's all white people in an organization, that could theoretically be a basis of skepticism
00:49:35.520 to see if they are racist.
00:49:36.720 It can make you questioning, as you just said, Pat.
00:49:39.160 Right.
00:49:39.420 It can make you question whether they are racist.
00:49:40.960 However, if I were to look at the National Football League right now and see that 80%
00:49:44.920 of players are African-American, despite only 14% of the population being African-American.
00:49:50.640 Now, I guess I could theoretically say there's an indication of racism.
00:49:54.720 They're only hiring black people.
00:49:56.020 They're hiring them at a massive rate.
00:49:57.880 However, then I would maybe determine, well, maybe those individuals are better than the
00:50:01.800 other individuals who happen to be white.
00:50:03.720 Right.
00:50:03.920 What they have now done in Congress and people like Ocasio-Cortez have made the mix the end
00:50:11.380 game.
00:50:12.280 Yes.
00:50:12.360 Not to have fair treatment, but just have, do I have the right amount of people from every
00:50:17.500 group and that when we do, the problem will be solved?
00:50:21.120 And that is not, it's an asinine way to think about it.
00:50:24.920 The point is you're supposed to get the best people regardless of skin color.
00:50:28.340 If they all happen to, if it happens to be that 80% of the people in a particular organization
00:50:32.540 do the best job and they happen to be African-American, good.
00:50:37.320 That's not the Democrat party anymore, though.
00:50:39.080 Us whiteys should try harder.
00:50:39.960 That's what that says.
00:50:40.920 Yeah.
00:50:41.760 888-727-BECK.
00:50:46.780 We're just talking about the obsession with race, especially by Democrats like Alexandria
00:50:52.840 Ocasio-Cortez.
00:50:54.180 Michelle Obama was just at a recent function and her obsession with race was amazing.
00:51:00.480 And using the Stubergeert test where you flip what she said to be the opposite, you
00:51:07.440 know, where you change the color, change the color.
00:51:09.960 Yeah.
00:51:10.900 Imagine that in your mind as you hear her speak.
00:51:14.480 If we're trying to get anything done and we look around and we all look alike, we're all
00:51:18.900 sitting around the same table and we feel really comfortable with ourselves, we should question
00:51:24.580 that at any table that we're at.
00:51:27.620 And we should be working actively to mix it up so that we're getting a real broad range
00:51:33.900 of perspectives on every issue.
00:51:36.980 But I, you know, shoot, I would see that in Congress.
00:51:40.140 So again, contrary to what Martin Luther King said, don't judge people that are sitting
00:51:45.760 at your table by the content of their character.
00:51:48.280 Judge them by their skin color.
00:51:50.600 Yeah.
00:51:50.780 Do you have enough of the right colors of skin?
00:51:53.340 As if skin color would indicate the way you think.
00:51:57.640 Yeah.
00:51:58.000 As if the skin color has anything to do with the way you'd analyze a situation.
00:52:03.140 Now, look, our culture, our, the way we grow up has an effect on that.
00:52:07.140 However, it's not skin color.
00:52:09.260 Right.
00:52:09.500 Like percentage wise, you might find trends in that data, but it's not, that's not what
00:52:13.360 determines it at all.
00:52:14.460 Yeah.
00:52:14.820 And she had more to say about it, of course.
00:52:16.260 One of the most interesting points I told you about this, it usually at the State of the
00:52:21.480 Union address where, you know, you sit in the balcony and watch the State of the Union.
00:52:27.140 You know, like you do.
00:52:28.140 Yeah, like you do.
00:52:29.280 You know, you, you see it on TV.
00:52:31.020 I'm in the room.
00:52:32.520 You know, but when you're in the room, what you can see is this real dichotomy that on
00:52:38.520 one side of the room, it's, it's also, it's a feeling of color almost on one side of the
00:52:43.960 room.
00:52:45.100 It's literally gray and white.
00:52:47.620 Literally.
00:52:48.280 That's the color.
00:52:49.060 Okay.
00:52:49.260 Listen to how disgusted she is.
00:52:50.700 It's literally gray and white.
00:52:52.480 Like there's a lot of white people.
00:52:54.460 It's just despicable.
00:52:55.980 It's disgusting.
00:52:57.040 Like white people in gray hair.
00:52:58.420 Is that what she's saying?
00:52:58.960 I guess so.
00:52:59.780 Yeah.
00:53:00.620 On one side of the room.
00:53:01.680 On the other side, which by the way, isn't accurate, but the room, there's yellows and
00:53:06.720 blues and whites and greens.
00:53:08.880 Wow.
00:53:09.240 Physically, there's a difference in color in the tone.
00:53:13.160 Wow.
00:53:13.700 Because one side, all men, all white, all white on the other side, some women, some people
00:53:22.160 of color.
00:53:23.500 And again, if you were to say, look at the Democrat side, there's so many blacks and Hispanics
00:53:30.500 and women and women.
00:53:32.260 And on the other side, would that not be considered wildly racist?
00:53:35.260 Exactly.
00:53:35.720 Racist stuff.
00:53:36.600 One side, it's all gray and white.
00:53:38.060 One side, it's all brown and black.
00:53:40.560 Imagine someone saying that.
00:53:41.700 I can't.
00:53:42.540 Again, it's racist because the other thing is also racist.
00:53:46.000 That's why it feels racist to you to say that.
00:53:48.200 Because it is.
00:53:48.720 Because it is racist.
00:53:50.540 It's exactly, certainly by the definitions of today, to sit here and be largely, I mean,
00:53:57.820 again, she's advocating for it to end.
00:54:00.420 So think about this.
00:54:01.700 Oh, over there, there's all black and brown people.
00:54:05.600 That's got to stop.
00:54:07.740 And over here, on this side, it's all women and people of color.
00:54:12.820 That's got to stop.
00:54:14.960 That makes you a racist if you say something like that.
00:54:18.020 And similarly, if you just change a couple of words, like white to black or men to woman,
00:54:24.900 both sides of them are racist.
00:54:26.280 Both of them.
00:54:26.720 Yeah.
00:54:27.400 And I know, like people, everyone on the left views these things through that prism of oppression
00:54:34.220 and who's the oppressed class and we're supposed to judge, I guess, an oppressed class in their
00:54:40.440 eyes in a different way.
00:54:42.480 They get different breaks.
00:54:43.700 They are not supposed to be criticized.
00:54:46.480 I think that's Ocasio-Cortez.
00:54:47.700 She's a young, you know, female who is doing, you know, who is in that world where she's not
00:54:55.100 allowed to be a victim of more oppression because she's already a member of this oppressed
00:55:02.060 class or multiple oppressed classes.
00:55:04.940 You know, someone put, there's like a writer on some conservative site who posted a picture
00:55:09.000 of her and said like, I don't know, she looks like she's got pretty nice clothes on.
00:55:12.360 I don't think she's, she's doing that badly.
00:55:15.180 I mean, it's pretty nice for a socialist.
00:55:17.180 Like, this guy just got lit up.
00:55:18.880 And again, like you could say, well, it wasn't a great comment, but like they treated him
00:55:23.300 like he like endorsed the Holocaust.
00:55:25.420 It's like he made a quick comment about the way somebody was dressed.
00:55:28.980 It's insanity.
00:55:29.640 It really isn't.
00:55:30.060 She's had that weird halo of protection around her at this point.
00:55:33.180 I don't know how long that lasts, but for the moment, it's here.
00:55:37.960 With Pat and Stu today.
00:55:39.520 By the way, on Pat Gray Unleashed tomorrow morning, second hour of the show, we'll be
00:55:44.220 doing a special Wednesday edition of Moron Trivia.
00:55:47.540 Thanksgiving football.
00:55:48.840 Show.
00:55:49.360 Should be fun.
00:55:50.060 The Lions and Cowboys are always playing.
00:55:52.120 And then there's a, there's now a third game, which is kind of cool too.
00:55:54.900 I love that.
00:55:55.280 It's all day.
00:55:55.800 I just love it.
00:55:56.380 You got the morning, you got the afternoon, and you have the evening game.
00:56:01.680 That way you never have to talk to a relative.
00:56:03.840 That's pretty, that's it.
00:56:04.980 Which is a huge plus.
00:56:07.440 Huge.
00:56:07.880 So we were talking about issues of gender and gender equality and how important that is
00:56:14.200 to people.
00:56:15.180 There's a kind of an amazing moment has occurred here with the Women's March.
00:56:20.740 Now, you may know the Women's March as a really kind of terrible organization.
00:56:27.060 Not because women are terrible, but because, first of all, I think they started off on
00:56:33.220 the wrong foot because their first protest was literally the day of or the day after
00:56:37.600 the inauguration of the President of the United States.
00:56:39.640 So they didn't even give him a chance to be bad, right?
00:56:42.000 Like, they didn't give him a chance to be president and do something bad against women
00:56:45.140 that they could fight against.
00:56:46.380 They just did it the day after he entered the office.
00:56:48.580 They were like, we protest his choice on the drapes.
00:56:50.900 It was like, there's nothing to protest yet.
00:56:52.960 That obviously, like, they didn't like Donald Trump generally, but like, that is what the
00:56:58.040 election is, right?
00:56:58.780 You make your case there.
00:57:00.080 And then once the President becomes the President, just like we did with Barack Obama, by the
00:57:03.920 way, you give him a chance to do what he does.
00:57:07.200 And when he starts doing things like the bailouts and when he starts saying it's stimulus package
00:57:12.160 and cash for clunkers, he confirms what you previously believed about him.
00:57:16.620 And then you can say, okay, now we're protesting.
00:57:18.260 You know, the Tea Party didn't start the day after, at least to me, at least on this show,
00:57:24.120 it didn't.
00:57:25.040 The day after he was elected, it was until he started doing things that didn't work out.
00:57:28.420 It was 2010, that election, right?
00:57:30.000 Not 2000, you know, it wasn't hardcore.
00:57:33.220 And, you know, I think the first protest I remember about him was in April of 2009, which
00:57:37.100 I think at the time Glenn even said, it's too early.
00:57:39.700 He hasn't done enough yet on these issues, like taxes.
00:57:44.140 It wasn't until a little later that we really, okay, this is really happening.
00:57:47.540 He's really going for these things.
00:57:48.820 And then you got to be out there.
00:57:49.700 So that I thought was mistake number one for the women's march movement.
00:57:54.060 And then mistake number two was associating itself with really awful people like Linda
00:57:59.000 Sarsour, who is, you know, outwardly an anti-Semite and has all sorts of issues that
00:58:06.300 she's associated with.
00:58:07.560 She's associated herself with Louis Farrakhan and will not distance herself.
00:58:10.620 Same thing with Tamika Mallory.
00:58:12.560 These are high level people.
00:58:14.820 So this has just come out from Teresa Shook.
00:58:16.660 She is one of the founders of the women's march.
00:58:18.680 This is a remarkable statement.
00:58:21.820 As founder of the women's march, my original vision and intent was to show the capacity
00:58:25.020 of human beings to stand in solidarity and love against the hateful rhetoric that had
00:58:28.220 become part of the political landscape in the U S and around the world.
00:58:30.860 I wanted us to prove that the majority of us are decent people who want a world that is
00:58:34.840 fair, just, just, and inclusive of women and all people.
00:58:39.000 And all was capitalized there.
00:58:40.460 So she, you know, she meant it.
00:58:41.460 Like if, if it's, if she just had all A L L with all lowercase, like that's like just
00:58:45.720 a passing statement, but she capitalized the A.
00:58:48.360 That means all people, not just men and women, all the genders, all anyone, any, anyone who's
00:58:55.040 identifying as a person today.
00:58:56.960 And that just makes it so powerful.
00:58:58.420 It does.
00:58:58.940 With the caps or an exclamation point.
00:59:01.180 It's just, it's a little scary though.
00:59:03.420 Yeah.
00:59:03.740 Cause you know, they really are intense about it.
00:59:06.660 Sure.
00:59:08.260 We proved, they, they proved that they say on January 21st, 2017.
00:59:13.320 Now she writes, Bob Bland, who I don't know, Tamika Mallory, Linda Sarsour and Carmen Perez
00:59:18.540 of Women's March Inc.
00:59:20.360 Women's March Inc.
00:59:21.240 I love how they turned it into a corporation.
00:59:24.120 A corporation.
00:59:25.940 Have steered the movement away from its true course.
00:59:29.180 I have waited, hoping they would write the ship, but they have not.
00:59:33.520 In opposition to our unity principles, both capitalized by the way, which makes you know
00:59:37.940 it's important.
00:59:39.600 They have allowed anti-Semitism, anti-L-B-G-T-Q-I-A sentiment.
00:59:47.280 Wow.
00:59:47.540 They're missing a Q, one Q.
00:59:49.700 And a question mark, right?
00:59:51.280 Yes.
00:59:51.780 Or is that the other Q?
00:59:53.280 Yeah.
00:59:53.860 That's the other Q.
00:59:55.020 But they're also missing the two for two spirit.
00:59:58.120 For two spirit.
00:59:58.760 That's so discriminatory.
01:00:00.420 That you haven't included the two spirit people.
01:00:03.180 I think we came to the conclusion a previous time doing this show together, that we really
01:00:08.920 liked Quilt Bag.
01:00:10.240 Yes.
01:00:10.760 And Quilt Bag 2, Electric Boogaloo, would cover all of that, including the two.
01:00:16.180 So I do think-
01:00:16.720 You do throw in the Electric Boogaloo, though, at the end?
01:00:18.840 Well, there's going to be a lot of new stuff.
01:00:20.480 I got to assume most of it's covered by Electric Boogaloo.
01:00:23.340 So if you do Quilt Bag 2, Electric Boogaloo, then you know you're tolerant.
01:00:27.760 Yeah.
01:00:28.140 All right.
01:00:28.480 Okay.
01:00:29.040 But in opposition to our unity principles, they have allowed anti-Semitism, anti-Quilt Bag
01:00:34.380 2, Electric Boogaloo sentiment, and hateful racist rhetoric to become part of the platform
01:00:38.820 by their refusal to separate themselves from groups that espouse these racist, hateful beliefs.
01:00:43.000 I call for the current co-chairs to step down and to let others lead who can restore faith
01:00:48.760 in the movement and its original intent.
01:00:50.840 I stand in solidarity, and this is capitalized so you know it's important, solidarity, with
01:00:56.000 all the sister march organizations to bring back the movement to its authentic purpose.
01:01:00.060 As Women's March founder, I am stepping up to bring focus back to the unity principles,
01:01:04.180 and that's capitalized so you know it's important.
01:01:05.860 And I am stepping up to bring back focus to, and with all the support of those who march
01:01:12.300 and have continued to march, I pledge to support grassroots decentralized leadership, promoting
01:01:16.820 – decentralized leadership is an interesting thing coming from this group.
01:01:19.720 Why wouldn't you want it centralized?
01:01:21.180 I don't understand.
01:01:21.760 Central control is so great.
01:01:23.520 Promoting a safe worldwide community devoid of hate speech, bigotry, and racism.
01:01:27.100 This is something that we have on the right criticized the Women's March about, saying,
01:01:32.660 hey, if you want to be taken seriously in this movement, you've got to distance yourself
01:01:37.160 from people like Louis Farrakhan and the people who are working with them, like Linda Sarsour,
01:01:41.200 like Tamika Mallory, and we're getting our wish here.
01:01:45.600 She is – I mean, the founder of the Women's March is saying, this isn't right.
01:01:49.880 We're going in the wrong direction.
01:01:51.200 You even saw Alyssa Milano, who –
01:01:54.360 After she resisted that for a long time.
01:01:55.820 She did resist it for a long time, and then she also denounced them and what they were doing.
01:02:00.440 So there is some movement here.
01:02:01.660 I think they've finally been guilted into saying, you know, maybe your advocacy of the
01:02:05.480 position that Jews are bad isn't all that wonderful, and it's nice that they've discovered
01:02:10.820 that.
01:02:11.740 When it comes to the connection between gender and race and all these things that are so
01:02:18.540 important, you hear this all the time from Democratic politicians, largely, and also in
01:02:23.300 the media.
01:02:24.260 It's a constant focus.
01:02:25.420 This is how women will vote.
01:02:26.400 This is how African Americans will vote.
01:02:28.720 This is – you have to make sure you have this – a number of people on your – on
01:02:33.660 each group so we can show it's diverse.
01:02:35.720 That is so common, I even get the sense, I think, that that's reality.
01:02:41.740 That's how people are.
01:02:42.960 Most – like, there's a split between conservatives and liberals in which liberals, you know, the
01:02:48.080 left sees this as, you know, vitally important diversity for diversity's sake, skin color for
01:02:53.840 skin color's sake, and conservatives see it as, like, what about the merit of the person?
01:02:58.120 Like, that's been a – I feel like a debate.
01:03:00.280 It's not really the battle lines, though.
01:03:01.800 This is fascinating.
01:03:02.680 This is a poll, and this is in the Huffington Post they wrote about this.
01:03:06.580 Would you say that you share a lot of common interests and concerns with other people of
01:03:12.340 your gender?
01:03:13.800 Or would you say it's not really irrelevant?
01:03:15.240 Now, in my mind, Democrats are going to say it's 80% really relevant, and Republicans
01:03:23.600 are going to say 80% not relevant, and in the middle, like, you know, maybe it splits out
01:03:28.320 a little bit differently than that, maybe in the – you know, somewhere in the middle
01:03:30.840 among independents.
01:03:32.520 It's – that is not – this is not the case.
01:03:35.840 In fact, it's really only true with female Democrats, and it's still to the – not to the
01:03:43.060 scale that we're talking about.
01:03:44.000 Listen to this.
01:03:44.600 Female Democrats, do you believe you have a lot of common interests and concerns based
01:03:49.320 on gender?
01:03:50.700 Female Democrats say yes, 50%, no, 34%.
01:03:55.180 Now, even that, to me, is not nearly as high as I imagined it in my head.
01:03:59.360 Based on the debates we see in politics, in the media, I would not – I would have said
01:04:04.080 it would be much more dramatic than that.
01:04:06.700 Female independents, 29% say, yeah, I have a lot of – I'm a woman, I have a lot of – a
01:04:12.480 lot in common with other women.
01:04:14.000 Only 29%, 45% say no.
01:04:17.580 Among Republicans, only 27% of females say yes.
01:04:21.300 They have interests with – same common interests with other women.
01:04:25.720 63% say no.
01:04:27.320 So you kind of get the general split there, but not nearly as dramatic as you'd expect.
01:04:32.920 What's even more interesting, I think, is males, and of course, obviously, as a sexist, you'd
01:04:39.740 expect that out of me.
01:04:41.040 Male Republicans, only 24% say they have something in common with other men.
01:04:46.560 In other words, you're thinking of yourself as part of a group, and we're all in this together,
01:04:49.800 and we all have the same concerns because, you know, that's what – instead, you think
01:04:53.740 of people as individuals.
01:04:55.600 Only 24% say yes.
01:04:56.840 61% say no.
01:04:58.680 Among male independents, it's actually lower.
01:05:01.660 21% say they have something in common with their gender.
01:05:06.940 50% say no.
01:05:08.660 So 24% of male Republicans say yes.
01:05:11.900 Male independents, it's only 21%.
01:05:13.560 But maybe the most shocking thing of all, the lowest support out of all these groups,
01:05:19.120 male Democrats.
01:05:20.840 Male Democrats say – now, maybe that's because they're saying, oh, well, it's because women
01:05:25.220 are the important ones and not us, or whatever.
01:05:27.520 Only 21% say they have a lot in common when it comes to basing things on gender.
01:05:33.760 That's kind of a fascinating thing.
01:05:36.180 When you look at some of the other findings, 52% of all Americans who identify with a political
01:05:41.820 party, including half of Democrats and 55% of Republicans, say they share a lot in common
01:05:46.620 with their party.
01:05:48.560 Now, that's one you should share a lot in common with, right?
01:05:51.760 Because this is an ideologically based organization in theory, right?
01:05:55.380 Like, you should have the same concerns as other Democrats.
01:05:57.920 How would you answer that question, though?
01:06:00.280 Would you say you have a lot in common with the Republican Party?
01:06:03.120 Right now, I'd probably say no.
01:06:04.260 No, I'm not a Republican or an independent, so I wouldn't necessarily – and neither are you,
01:06:08.900 right?
01:06:09.060 I mean, you're not a Republican, registered Republican.
01:06:10.700 Although, you know, I certainly typically vote for more Republicans than Democrats.
01:06:15.260 I vote with a lot of Libertarians as well.
01:06:17.480 But again, if you're in a party – and I don't take that stance largely because I don't
01:06:21.380 believe in the way the party system works.
01:06:23.300 I don't like it.
01:06:24.280 So I don't join a party.
01:06:26.680 But if I'm going to join a party, what reason would you join a party other than the ideas
01:06:31.080 and concerns being similar?
01:06:32.780 Like, that number should be 100%.
01:06:35.000 Now, maybe there's people in there you could say, well, I disagree with what we're doing
01:06:39.500 and I'm fighting against it.
01:06:40.880 However, if that's true, like, there's also an argument to just find a new party, right?
01:06:45.380 Like, go to a party that's – like, the party is just supposed to identify your values and
01:06:49.080 try to push them over the line in elections.
01:06:51.220 It's not supposed to be a group you are aligned with your entire life.
01:06:55.520 We saw this a lot with, you know, people who were Democrats in the 50s, you know, and
01:06:59.200 they really love – they were, you know, 50s Democrats and they remained Democrats through
01:07:04.280 the 80s when the Republicans were much closer to their views than the Democrats of the 80s
01:07:10.220 were.
01:07:10.700 But they remained Democrats because they were loyal to that party and it was part of their
01:07:14.040 identity, right?
01:07:14.980 They saw it as part of their core, which is not what a party is supposed to do for you.
01:07:19.460 It's not.
01:07:20.240 I mean, they change all the time.
01:07:21.240 We see them change on positions all the time.
01:07:23.440 If you're changing with them, that's fine as long as you're leading that, not them.
01:07:27.700 They shouldn't be leading you to a new position.
01:07:30.520 Black Americans were split 38-34 as to whether or not they had much in common with others
01:07:35.140 who share their race or ethnicity.
01:07:36.840 Would you believe that?
01:07:38.000 Looking at the way – we are told that African Americans vote in lockstep.
01:07:42.020 They never disagree with each other.
01:07:43.760 All they do is care about racism.
01:07:45.640 The way the media paints the African American in this country is a crime.
01:07:50.220 They paint them as mindless people who just will always vote with Democrats and they don't
01:07:55.640 think for themselves and they can't get ID.
01:07:58.520 And it's like, who are these?
01:07:59.960 I don't know any African Americans like that.
01:08:02.100 African Americans I know think for themselves, just like every other race and every other
01:08:05.540 group.
01:08:06.800 You know, like it's insulting and somehow the media gets away with this.
01:08:10.180 And bleeding and acting otherwise is racist.
01:08:14.060 They're not – groups are – it's a terrible way to identify people.
01:08:18.540 You know, you are an individual.
01:08:19.920 And I know as conservatives we understand that.
01:08:22.200 The media just likes to lump everybody in groups so they can talk generally about them.
01:08:25.420 And that's a terrible idea.
01:08:26.740 It's actually the core of what racism was, right?
01:08:30.880 Yes.
01:08:31.180 When you think of people as groups instead of individuals, this is when you get – when
01:08:35.620 you have lots of problems.
01:08:36.660 It's how anti-Semitism exists.
01:08:38.840 Those Jews do X, Y, and Z.
01:08:40.920 There may be a person who is Jewish who does things that you don't like and that's okay.
01:08:45.160 The media should learn that about George Soros, who's, I mean, you know, really more of an
01:08:49.580 atheist at this point.
01:08:50.420 But still, the point is that, like, you can criticize someone as they do with Jared Kushner,
01:08:55.720 with Ivanka Trump, with Sheldon Adelson.
01:08:58.840 They're fine finding criticism there.
01:09:00.920 It doesn't make them anti-Semitic.
01:09:03.160 Of course not.
01:09:03.980 But when a conservative says something bad about, you know, Chuck Schumer, well, then
01:09:08.720 it's just because we're anti-Semites.
01:09:10.180 George Soros, oh, you're just an anti-Semite.
01:09:11.580 It's Jewish money you're criticizing.
01:09:13.880 It has nothing to do with it.
01:09:14.680 He is making decisions that we don't like politically.
01:09:17.740 And that should be okay.
01:09:19.620 30% of Americans younger than 30 say they have a lot in common with others their age.
01:09:27.020 A third of those, age 45 to 64, say that they agree with that.
01:09:33.320 So not a huge amount there.
01:09:35.680 But again, that's an interesting point.
01:09:37.600 And then when it comes to income, people making less than 50 grand a year, about a third of
01:09:45.620 them say they have a lot in common with people in their income group.
01:09:48.560 And it's lower when you get more wealthy.
01:09:50.620 59% of Americans who describe themselves as born-again or evangelical Christians say that they share
01:09:58.500 many interests and concerns with others of faith.
01:10:01.280 That one should be higher.
01:10:03.080 59% is the highest number on this poll.
01:10:04.960 But again, if you're in a faith, you should really consider yourself aligned with others
01:10:10.920 as far as concerns go.
01:10:12.960 Because, I mean, that's kind of the whole base.
01:10:14.720 Ideological groups, you should find a lot of the similar interests and concerns.
01:10:18.780 Skin color, you shouldn't.
01:10:20.580 Yeah.
01:10:21.300 888-933-888-727-BECK.
01:10:25.880 It's Pat and Stu for Glenn.
01:10:28.680 With Pat and Stu today.
01:10:30.220 Hey, we're going to tell you, coming up here in a few minutes, about the new nickname President
01:10:34.540 Trump has for Joe Biden.
01:10:36.000 It is, it's perfect.
01:10:38.340 It is a perfect nickname.
01:10:41.280 Also, Ivanka Trump is in trouble because she's got a private email server that she's been
01:10:47.700 sending out government business on.
01:10:49.280 And so now the Democrats are getting together and chanting, lock her up.
01:10:53.740 Isn't that adorable?
01:10:54.640 That's cute because the Republicans chanted, lock her up, when it was Hillary doing it.
01:10:58.860 And she was Secretary of State.
01:11:01.260 So they're just...
01:11:02.860 It's also sexist, if I remember right, from the media's perspective.
01:11:05.960 When they said, lock her up, it was sexist.
01:11:07.860 And now, now it's okay?
01:11:09.500 No, it's wonderful now.
01:11:10.580 Okay.
01:11:10.960 Yeah, now it's wonderful.
01:11:12.040 I understand.
01:11:12.720 All right.
01:11:13.080 That and more coming up on the Glenn Beck Program with Pat and Stu.
01:11:16.580 Our sponsor this half hour is Home Title Lock.
01:11:19.880 Home Title Lock is...
01:11:21.340 They actually showed us how they go and how the criminals can do home title fraud.
01:11:26.440 Literally takes them like 15 or 20 minutes to take your title.
01:11:30.000 Yeah.
01:11:30.540 And they can take it and borrow hundreds of thousands of dollars.
01:11:33.940 I've decided to stop doing radio and just go into business.
01:11:38.900 It was so easy to do.
01:11:40.600 I got to believe that I can probably get away with it.
01:11:42.780 I know all the...
01:11:44.060 You know, just go and you just start taking people's homes, barming against their equity,
01:11:46.940 and then spending the money on yourself.
01:11:48.460 Yeah.
01:11:48.760 That's what criminals are doing.
01:11:50.160 And they can find your home as well, especially if you don't protect yourself.
01:11:53.500 Might want to stop it.
01:11:54.340 Yeah.
01:11:54.540 You might want to stop it.
01:11:54.860 Go into HomeTitleLock.com.
01:11:56.240 Yeah.
01:11:56.640 HomeTitleLock.com.
01:11:57.480 It's pennies a day.
01:11:58.100 They put a virtual barrier around your title and mortgage.
01:12:01.660 And as soon as they find tampering, they're going to shut it down for you.
01:12:05.040 Find out if you're already a victim.
01:12:06.760 Get the $100 search free with sign up at HomeTitleLock.com.
01:12:10.420 It's HomeTitleLock.com.
01:12:13.220 Glenn Beck.
01:12:14.800 With Pat and Stu today, we're going to talk about Ivanka here.
01:12:17.240 But first of all, I just want everybody to understand that day after tomorrow,
01:12:22.840 there's going to be Thanksgiving and the Macy's Day Parade and all that.
01:12:24.900 It could be the coldest ever in New York City.
01:12:27.640 Really?
01:12:27.820 Which, of course, means global warming has kicked into gear again.
01:12:32.720 Global warming.
01:12:33.720 Is this weather weirding again?
01:12:35.000 It's weather weirding because it's colder than usual, which means global warming.
01:12:41.580 And when it's warmer than usual, that, of course, also means global warming.
01:12:46.160 If there's extra snow, obviously global warming.
01:12:49.520 And if there's no snow, that's global warming.
01:12:51.100 So just know that if you go to the parade Thursday and the balloons aren't able to fly
01:12:57.880 because it's so freezing cold and windy, and you're standing there shivering,
01:13:02.140 watching marching bands go by, it's global warming.
01:13:05.160 It's responsible for that.
01:13:06.640 Now, this is happening despite Kyoto Energy Park?
01:13:09.540 Yes.
01:13:10.320 Well, it's really happening because Trump pulled us out of the Paris Accord.
01:13:15.700 Otherwise, we'd have this problem fixed.
01:13:17.480 Yeah, it would be fixed by now.
01:13:18.520 I would assume, though, I thought Kyoto Energy Park was going to be enough
01:13:22.060 because Australia did this.
01:13:23.820 It was a shining example of renewable energy generation.
01:13:29.520 And it received fast-track state government approval a decade ago.
01:13:34.120 Now, look, they didn't really go all out on it.
01:13:37.340 They only gave it $200 million.
01:13:40.060 Now, what are you going to do with $200 million?
01:13:42.860 How much would have been going all out?
01:13:44.540 I feel like $600 trillion.
01:13:46.020 Okay, yeah, I think you're right.
01:13:49.160 That would be all out.
01:13:50.080 I'd prefer a quadrillion even.
01:13:51.660 Yeah, yeah.
01:13:52.240 But a $600 trillion investment, I mean, is that not enough for our future?
01:13:56.480 Is that too much for your kid's life?
01:13:59.480 Here's the thing.
01:14:00.320 Here's the question you need to ask.
01:14:02.440 Can you afford not to do it?
01:14:05.160 That's the question.
01:14:06.320 That's a great question.
01:14:07.420 Thank you.
01:14:07.780 So, it was initially intended to construct – it was going to construct a park in stages,
01:14:12.440 starting with on-site facilities, followed by wind, solar, and mini-hydro infrastructure
01:14:16.820 to show everybody, you know, Australia is green.
01:14:19.940 Like, we've got this whole thing wrapped up.
01:14:21.920 Project had experienced numerous delays, blamed on unfavorable government policies
01:14:27.000 and investor uncertainty.
01:14:30.420 Residents were advised in 2016 that work was due to start that year.
01:14:34.080 Now, remember, this was 2008, the funding was approved.
01:14:38.140 They decided to put it into effect.
01:14:44.140 Okay.
01:14:44.620 And now a cloud, however, is hanging over the $200 million project.
01:14:49.720 Oh, don't say that.
01:14:50.620 After the company behind it went into administration.
01:14:54.160 So, shockingly, the company behind it is now going bankrupt.
01:14:59.500 Apparently, this is not going to solve the climate catastrophe.
01:15:03.040 Oh, darn it.
01:15:04.280 I had high hopes for it.
01:15:05.780 I really did.
01:15:06.600 It did.
01:15:07.080 I mean, that's – it's sad.
01:15:08.660 Yeah.
01:15:09.020 Between the Energy Park and the Paris Accord, which, by the way, if you ever look at the
01:15:13.600 details of the Paris Accord, is absolutely fascinating.
01:15:18.040 None of the things they say about it are actually true.
01:15:20.680 It's like a promise.
01:15:22.840 They're like, oh, well, we're going to reverse this 0.7 degree temperature rise.
01:15:27.180 We're going to limit the amount of emissions in the atmosphere.
01:15:29.780 That's not what the Paris Agreement actually does.
01:15:32.060 What the Paris Agreement does is it has an agreement, non-binding agreement, to do one – I believe
01:15:39.160 it's one one-thousandth of what that goal is.
01:15:43.360 So, it's not the whole goal.
01:15:44.960 They've agreed in a non-binding fashion to go one one-thousandth of the way to the goal
01:15:52.260 they talk about every time they talk about the Paris Accord.
01:15:54.720 And you've heard Al Gore himself talk about the Paris Accord, right?
01:15:57.960 When he said –
01:15:58.680 If all 195 nations, not 194, met their targets, it still wouldn't have solved the problem.
01:16:04.780 That is correct.
01:16:05.880 That is correct.
01:16:10.180 However, it sends a very powerful signal.
01:16:13.720 Okay, so it would have sent a very powerful signal that we want to correct it.
01:16:21.880 We're not correcting it, but this sends the signal that we want to.
01:16:26.680 Okay, well, is that really worth screwing up our economies and spending trillions of dollars?
01:16:34.900 By their own admission, the Paris Accord does virtually nothing.
01:16:37.920 It really does.
01:16:38.500 Virtually nothing.
01:16:39.140 Nothing.
01:16:40.100 And that is what all of this is about.
01:16:43.240 It's all about signaling your virtue, right?
01:16:46.000 It's about saying – it's about throwing up a couple of – it's about driving a Prius
01:16:50.620 so everyone sees you in your Prius.
01:16:52.120 Yes.
01:16:52.400 You go back and look at the polling on the people who drive and buy Priuses.
01:16:55.780 First of all, they make over $100,000 a year.
01:16:59.140 They're some of the wealthiest people around.
01:17:01.280 So when it comes to subsidizing those purchases, this would not be what you're talking about
01:17:05.940 when you talk about the wonderful progressive goal of helping the poor.
01:17:09.400 You're helping rich people buy cars.
01:17:11.400 So you help rich people buy cars to make yourself feel good.
01:17:13.840 And then when you poll the people who bought the Prius, what they say is the most important reason,
01:17:17.860 the reason why they bought it is to tell – so that people know – because it says something
01:17:23.700 about them.
01:17:24.400 They're signaling.
01:17:25.120 Right, right.
01:17:25.860 The most important thing is because it says something about them.
01:17:30.760 Yeah.
01:17:31.240 It says they care.
01:17:33.040 And that's the important thing.
01:17:34.900 It is, right?
01:17:35.680 They care.
01:17:36.780 Doing something about the problem, if you think it's a problem, certainly is not the most important
01:17:41.300 thing.
01:17:41.680 No.
01:17:42.360 Uh-uh.
01:17:42.740 Doing – well, it's always – that's always their battle cry.
01:17:45.240 Well, we've got to do something.
01:17:47.320 They don't care about the right thing, doing the right thing.
01:17:49.500 No, we just do something.
01:17:51.960 Something.
01:17:52.660 And right now, one of the things they're doing is trying to pin Ivanka Trump with the same
01:17:58.360 problem that Hillary had when President Trump had everybody chanting, lock her up.
01:18:06.560 They're going to be able to drum her out of the picture in the White House?
01:18:12.140 Right.
01:18:12.300 Right.
01:18:12.500 Because, I mean, we have to go back and revisit the lock her up thing.
01:18:15.680 This was seen as a sign of sexism by Republicans who wanted to lock up Hillary Clinton with
01:18:21.760 no evidence, no trial, showed that they don't care about due process, showed that they just
01:18:27.340 wanted – now, of course, what we all know is it was a, you know, a little bit over the
01:18:32.500 top chant about saying we don't want her to be president of the United States, right?
01:18:37.900 It was like it was a dumb part of a political election, like locking her up.
01:18:41.440 Like, obviously, let's all be clear about this.
01:18:44.660 Obviously, Donald Trump does not think that she should be locked up because if he did,
01:18:48.000 he would do something about it.
01:18:49.160 He's president of the United States.
01:18:50.300 He controls these levers.
01:18:51.500 He's done nothing in two years about it.
01:18:53.160 He does not think she should be locked up.
01:18:56.020 He could say all he wants.
01:18:57.140 He wants her to be locked up.
01:18:57.880 But he was doing that as – it's basically a campaign tactic.
01:19:00.320 He has the ability to do something about this and hasn't done anything about it.
01:19:04.720 Now, who knows?
01:19:05.340 Maybe he will in the future if he thinks it's a positive thing.
01:19:08.900 But he said right after the election, look, I think we've done enough to her.
01:19:11.460 I think the family's gone through enough.
01:19:13.140 Yeah.
01:19:13.240 Now, that's not how the law works.
01:19:14.720 I don't know if anyone knows this.
01:19:15.440 When you commit a crime, we're not supposed to say, well, look.
01:19:18.620 Yeah, they've been through enough.
01:19:20.060 Look, his daughter –
01:19:20.800 You've got a lot of negative publicity.
01:19:22.380 Don't leave him alone.
01:19:23.420 His daughter lost the prom queen thing, first of all.
01:19:26.080 She didn't make the cross-country team.
01:19:28.880 And just because her dad robbed a bank, we can't do that to her as well.
01:19:32.080 Come on.
01:19:32.500 He doesn't need to go to prison for that.
01:19:33.780 That's not how that works, right?
01:19:34.800 If you commit a crime, you should be investigated for it.
01:19:37.500 And the idea that we're somehow embracing this idea that because she's a powerful political figure
01:19:44.520 who is probably close to, if not a billionaire, who has lost a political election,
01:19:51.180 so she gets out of whatever crime she committed, that's not a sensible way of dealing with this.
01:19:55.840 And I think the reality of it is, is when they look at it, like, you know,
01:19:59.900 could you go after her if you really wanted to?
01:20:01.940 Yeah, you probably could.
01:20:03.040 I mean, she did seemingly do things that were in violation of rules and probably illegal in some way,
01:20:10.200 but it would be difficult to prove.
01:20:11.700 It would be a very large undertaking.
01:20:13.620 It would cost a fortune.
01:20:14.760 It would be a massive thing that tore apart the country even more than it already is.
01:20:20.160 And for that reason, it's just not worth the hassle, I think.
01:20:22.520 It's probably not – she's not going to jail for 50 years over it.
01:20:25.140 But, you know, over the email thing.
01:20:27.160 And who knows?
01:20:27.940 Maybe she would have if we saw all of her emails, right?
01:20:30.880 But we didn't.
01:20:32.100 So that's a whole – that's the whole reason why that crime exists in the first place.
01:20:36.280 The Ivanka thing is a totally different story.
01:20:38.920 And what the media is doing – and it's fascinating coming from the media –
01:20:43.700 in that every single time you say, well, Barack –
01:20:47.100 what you're saying, you're complaining about Donald Trump separating kids on the border.
01:20:50.900 Well, look at these pictures from the Barack Obama administration.
01:20:53.620 And they'll say, oh, whataboutism.
01:20:57.160 Are you – is this more whataboutism?
01:20:59.500 What's going on right now?
01:21:01.260 What's important now?
01:21:02.940 So this is just blatant whataboutism.
01:21:06.060 You complained about Hillary Clinton in her emails during the campaign.
01:21:08.920 And now Ivanka Trump has sent emails from a private email address about work issues.
01:21:17.080 And now you don't care.
01:21:18.760 This is the same story, and we should all care about it the same way.
01:21:21.540 Now, stunningly, some actual sense, I guess, is coming from MSNBC on this issue,
01:21:27.700 who's separating the issue a little bit.
01:21:30.000 Here's the segment from their coverage this morning.
01:21:32.880 Listen.
01:21:33.020 In both cases, these women used private email accounts to communicate with government officials.
01:21:38.880 Both women used private attorneys to determine what emails should be reviewed and which should be retained.
01:21:45.160 And like Trump, Clinton pleaded ignorance of the rules surrounding email usage.
01:21:49.740 But there are important differences as well.
01:21:52.020 Trump's use of private email appears to cover about seven months, from February 2017 until last fall.
01:21:58.600 Hillary Clinton used it for all four years that she served as Secretary of State.
01:22:03.240 According to people familiar with an internal review that began last year,
01:22:07.420 Trump's attorney found less than 1,000 emails that discussed her official schedule
01:22:11.800 and fewer than 100 that discussed government business with other administration officials.
01:22:16.940 By comparison, Clinton's attorneys determined that about 30,000 of Clinton's emails addressed official business
01:22:23.120 and had to be turned over to the State Department.
01:22:26.080 According to the FBI, another 31,000 emails were deleted after Clinton determined that they were personal.
01:22:31.440 How many for Obama?
01:22:32.180 Trump's attorney says none of her emails were deleted.
01:22:35.920 Trump's attorney also insists none of her emails contained classified information.
01:22:40.220 And so far, none have been uncovered.
01:22:42.660 But we don't know.
01:22:43.720 We haven't seen the rest.
01:22:44.760 On the other hand, the State Department determined more than 2,000 of Clinton's emails included classified information.
01:22:50.940 And in some cases, they were marked top secret.
01:22:52.820 So it's the same thing, right?
01:22:54.560 Right.
01:22:55.220 Sure, in Hillary's case, it's like maybe 61,000 emails that had to do with sensitive government information
01:23:04.820 to maybe less than 100 of Ivanka's.
01:23:08.940 And you know that they, I mean, the Secretary of State is probably privy to some pretty serious information
01:23:14.640 that she could be sharing on these emails.
01:23:16.580 I'd also note the first daughter is not held to the standard of the Secretary of State.
01:23:21.260 Now, she is an advisor to the president, so she has some role formally in the government, I guess.
01:23:25.700 But, you know, and she has to follow these rules just like everybody else.
01:23:28.480 But again, 100 emails versus 30,000.
01:23:31.080 Deleted emails, it was zero versus 30,000.
01:23:34.200 It was four years rather than a few months.
01:23:36.800 I mean, all of these, like, the one thing I will say about it from the negative perspective
01:23:44.720 on Ivanka and others who have been in the administration who have done this is because
01:23:50.600 it was such a big deal during the election.
01:23:52.920 After all of this, you should know better.
01:23:54.660 After all of that, you should know better.
01:23:55.340 Yeah.
01:23:55.620 You shouldn't, you gotta, I mean, you just know this is going to be a problem because
01:23:59.300 of what a big problem it was for Hillary during the election.
01:24:01.780 And you should probably make sure you're just on government email all the time unless
01:24:06.400 it's private business.
01:24:08.360 That is, a lot of these wind up being, though, you know, tied together.
01:24:14.680 And Hillary tried to make this point with some of the things that she did.
01:24:17.880 Some of them were absolutely not this way.
01:24:20.220 But, like, if you're sending a, if we're saying, you know, tonight I'm going to Creed
01:24:23.360 2, very excited to go see Creed 2.
01:24:25.500 And if I'm in the government and I'm like, well, I gotta find a time, I'm going to see Creed
01:24:28.740 2, what time do I need to go?
01:24:30.140 What does my schedule look like?
01:24:31.240 And they send back my schedule.
01:24:32.640 Technically, that's government business, right?
01:24:35.060 But, I mean, I don't know.
01:24:36.640 Can that be on a private email server?
01:24:38.200 Sure.
01:24:38.880 Right?
01:24:39.080 Like, in theory.
01:24:40.340 The other point I would bring up, though, is that one.
01:24:43.180 There's a difference between a private email account and a private email server.
01:24:48.640 If you are doing a private email account, you open up a Gmail, you open a Yahoo account,
01:24:52.880 whatever you have, hotmail.com, a lot of people, H-O-T-M-A-L-E.com, a lot of people
01:24:59.020 on that.
01:24:59.360 If you're on hotmail.com, your stuff is all stored by Google or whatever else.
01:25:09.380 And if it needs to be seen, there's an availability to get it.
01:25:14.100 You can't delete all your emails out of your Gmail account.
01:25:17.520 At least there's ways that Google can get them if, let's say, they're subpoenaed, right?
01:25:21.760 I mean, Google will work within those legal restrictions.
01:25:24.620 If you have a private email server, there's a reason you do that.
01:25:28.780 The reason you do that is to pull all of that outside of it.
01:25:32.280 Google's free, right?
01:25:33.900 Like, if you want to go and send emails about cooking recipes, you can do that over Google
01:25:40.640 pretty safely.
01:25:41.240 When you do a private email server, you are launching intent.
01:25:47.800 Hillary Clinton knew she was going to run for president again, did not want all of her
01:25:51.140 emails to be public.
01:25:52.320 So she didn't send them on the government accounts.
01:25:54.720 And then when she set up her private server, she deleted 30,000 of them, knowing that no
01:25:59.260 one could recover them.
01:26:00.320 You most likely would not get away with that if you were on Gmail.
01:26:03.520 And they might have all been sensitive.
01:26:05.260 We don't know.
01:26:06.160 We don't know.
01:26:07.320 Because we haven't seen them.
01:26:08.960 We don't get the chance to read them.
01:26:10.680 Let's just say, Pat, you were going to send an email that was sensitive in nature, that
01:26:15.460 you knew if it came out would affect your future presidential campaign.
01:26:18.700 Yeah.
01:26:18.900 Okay?
01:26:19.560 And you had a choice whether to send it through, A, a government account, B, a public popular
01:26:26.680 Gmail type account, or C, your own private server that exists in your home that you could
01:26:31.300 light on fire if you want.
01:26:32.300 That nobody could see.
01:26:32.980 That nobody can see and no one has access to.
01:26:35.440 Which one would you choose?
01:26:36.840 That is a hard one.
01:26:37.980 And then when you knew-
01:26:39.200 Can I phone a friend?
01:26:39.940 You can.
01:26:40.540 Okay.
01:26:40.720 But let me give you one more piece of information because it's going to be hard for the friend.
01:26:42.920 If you had a situation in which you knew there might be one of these political controversies
01:26:50.420 coming up, and you were going to choose which ones to delete, would you say delete 29,500
01:26:58.200 emails that were just about cooking and 500 of the most sensitive, terrible things you don't
01:27:04.060 want in public?
01:27:05.180 Or would you just, was it just recipes?
01:27:08.480 If you had that opportunity to get rid of all those private emails about your grandkids,
01:27:12.440 and you could just throw in a couple of more slipped in there that happen to be the things
01:27:16.360 that make me look bad, which one would you choose?
01:27:18.600 Hmm.
01:27:19.200 Wow.
01:27:20.060 Do you want to phone a friend?
01:27:20.780 Let me give you the name.
01:27:21.440 Hillary Clinton.
01:27:22.600 Phone her.
01:27:25.340 Because she should know by now, right?
01:27:27.100 She should know better.
01:27:28.320 Everybody should, though.
01:27:29.380 Yeah, you should.
01:27:29.820 And so, yeah, just the appearance of it is unfortunate.
01:27:32.800 It's a political mistake.
01:27:33.980 Unfortunate.
01:27:34.320 We say that, like, Scott Pruitt was guilty of this occasionally.
01:27:37.120 The guy who was in EPA, initially in the Trump administration, did a lot of really good
01:27:40.920 things at the EPA.
01:27:42.160 But he was, once he got into this realm of, like, he was being talked about as this corrupt
01:27:47.320 guy who was doing all these things that he shouldn't be doing, after that, you can't
01:27:52.100 order the $1,000 pens.
01:27:53.880 Yeah.
01:27:54.060 Right?
01:27:54.200 Like, you shouldn't be ordering them anyway.
01:27:56.140 Is it a huge controversy, $1,000 in the government?
01:27:59.160 I mean, come on.
01:28:00.040 They, you know, they order that in catering five times a day.
01:28:04.440 However, when you know that you're already under that microscope, be careful with that
01:28:09.880 stuff.
01:28:10.140 And I think the Trump administration should learn that lesson.
01:28:12.480 They should know that.
01:28:13.180 They shouldn't give any of this material to the media.
01:28:17.400 But again, I give MSNBC some credit there.
01:28:19.200 They actually characterized that pretty accurately.
01:28:20.880 They kind of did.
01:28:21.580 Yeah.
01:28:22.020 888-727-BECK.
01:28:25.620 With Pat and Stu, by the way, check out my show, Pat Gray Unleashed, immediately preceding
01:28:31.920 this one every weekday, 6 to 8 Central.
01:28:34.980 It's actually 7 to 9 Eastern.
01:28:37.660 And tomorrow, it's a special edition of Moron Trivia as we get into the Thanksgiving holiday.
01:28:44.000 888-727-BECK.
01:28:46.300 I love this decision from the Trump 2020 campaign team.
01:28:54.760 They have apparently come up with some nicknames.
01:28:59.340 They're trying to give nicknames to all the Democrats who will potentially run against him
01:29:06.440 for president.
01:29:07.140 And so one of the people that they've been working on is Joe Biden, because Joe Biden
01:29:12.720 is, as you mentioned yesterday, Stu, what, like 20 points ahead of the second place contender?
01:29:18.440 Yeah.
01:29:18.600 A poll that was taken in October has Joe Biden at 33% among Democrats.
01:29:26.260 And I believe it was...
01:29:27.320 Elizabeth Warren or...
01:29:27.940 Elizabeth Warren or Kamala Harris was second.
01:29:29.560 One of the two, yeah.
01:29:30.700 13%.
01:29:31.100 That's amazing.
01:29:32.460 Big, big lead.
01:29:33.240 And then Sanders was behind that, I think, at like 12 or 11.
01:29:37.280 I don't think Hillary was in that.
01:29:38.780 So if Hillary jumped in, it might change things.
01:29:40.580 But anyway, right now, it looks like Joe Biden is the main candidate in the Democrat Party
01:29:47.160 that everybody thinks, you know, would have a chance to unseat President Trump.
01:29:51.600 So they, you know, Trump is really good at these nicknames, and it kind of sticks when
01:29:59.820 he starts calling people Crooked Hillary, Lying Ted, all of those things pretty much worked.
01:30:06.300 The name they have tentatively decided upon for Joe Biden if he runs is Creepy Joe, which
01:30:14.340 is pretty good.
01:30:16.200 He is very creepy.
01:30:17.160 Creepy.
01:30:17.460 He is...
01:30:18.240 We've talked about his creepiness before, where he's got this propensity for touching
01:30:22.440 women seemingly inappropriately, that he doesn't know, that he kind of hangs on them and hovers
01:30:29.600 around them and paws at them.
01:30:33.000 Yeah, another thing he seems to like to do, and this is something you'll notice if you look
01:30:37.200 at a bunch of pictures of Joe in these situations, is he likes to sniff the back of women's ears.
01:30:44.340 Yeah, you'll notice it.
01:30:45.660 Look at the pictures.
01:30:46.500 Just icky, and again, creepy.
01:30:49.080 It's Creepy Joe.
01:30:50.360 It's a good name.
01:30:51.340 It's going to stick if he uses it, and if Joe runs.
01:30:54.580 So just know that, Joe.
01:30:55.840 When you get in, you're going to become known as not middle class Joe that everybody calls
01:31:00.960 you.
01:31:01.280 Usually.
01:31:02.380 In the press.
01:31:03.940 Well, because you told them to.
01:31:05.660 But it'll be Creepy Joe from now on.
01:31:12.280 Look what the cat dragged in.
01:31:14.240 That was a big cat.
01:31:15.420 That was a cat the size of an elephant that dragged in Jeff Fisher.
01:31:21.340 Yeah.
01:31:21.880 It was just an elephant.
01:31:23.340 It was an elephant.
01:31:24.340 It was an elephant.
01:31:24.880 Dragged Jeffy in.
01:31:26.140 And in fact, it was a pack of elephants that dragged him in because just one wasn't enough.
01:31:31.120 Really?
01:31:32.960 It's good to see you too, Pat.
01:31:34.440 Really good to see you.
01:31:35.440 See you tomorrow morning on more on trivia too.
01:31:36.960 Can't wait.
01:31:37.720 Yeah.
01:31:37.940 It'll be fun, won't it?
01:31:39.260 It will be.
01:31:39.700 I know you're looking forward to it.
01:31:41.420 I love it.
01:31:42.460 Actually, we've had a great season.
01:31:43.920 You can hear Jeffy every day on this podcast.
01:31:46.320 Chewing the fat.
01:31:47.440 Available wherever free podcasts are sold.
01:31:49.520 When does that download, for instance?
01:31:52.020 When could I get the new one?
01:31:53.580 The new one would be at 4 p.m. Central, 5 p.m. Eastern, Monday through Friday.
01:31:58.280 All right.
01:31:58.780 Amazing.
01:31:59.380 Okay.
01:32:00.140 How wonderful.
01:32:01.120 I heard you talking a little bit about Thanksgiving and people preparing for Thanksgiving, but
01:32:04.460 really, people that think that you have to starve before Thanksgiving.
01:32:08.620 No, that's the wrong way to go.
01:32:09.740 That's the wrong way.
01:32:10.820 No, you've got to eat more to kind of stretch out your stomach.
01:32:14.840 You have to continue on.
01:32:16.380 You can't starve yourself.
01:32:17.280 Otherwise, you're no good on Thanksgiving.
01:32:19.680 You know how to power through these things.
01:32:21.860 You've taught us a lot about overeating, and I appreciate it.
01:32:24.840 I just want people to feel free to eat what they want.
01:32:27.280 No, I know you do.
01:32:27.920 Eat what they want.
01:32:28.420 Yeah, sure.
01:32:29.400 That's exactly it.
01:32:30.400 We appreciate your expertise.
01:32:32.020 Thank you.
01:32:32.620 Thank you.
01:32:32.940 There's a couple of stories, a couple of big-time females that are in a little bit of trouble.
01:32:37.860 Oh, no.
01:32:38.160 And I feel sad.
01:32:38.960 I feel sad for this particular person, Taylor Swift.
01:32:41.860 You know, she took a big heat for getting involved in the Tennessee Senate race, and people
01:32:46.940 were all wound up at her.
01:32:48.180 Agonizing.
01:32:48.340 Yeah.
01:32:48.680 And by the way, her candidate lost badly, too.
01:32:51.440 It was not good.
01:32:52.960 But she, and this is how bad it hurt her, she now is number two on the election.
01:32:57.280 The highest-paid women in music list, so.
01:32:59.700 Oh, good.
01:33:00.180 Man, I hurt her a lot.
01:33:01.280 Oh, is there any evidence that the two are tied together, or are you just making that
01:33:04.620 up?
01:33:04.660 I'm just making it up.
01:33:05.660 Oh, okay.
01:33:06.300 I kind of thought so.
01:33:07.900 I'm just making it up.
01:33:09.000 Because that's number one, what you do, right?
01:33:10.320 Right.
01:33:10.420 Like, you just make things up.
01:33:11.540 Who's number one now?
01:33:12.680 Katy Perry.
01:33:13.600 Oh, Clinton supporter.
01:33:14.620 So, yeah.
01:33:15.320 So, yeah.
01:33:15.620 That hurt them both.
01:33:17.640 The one who actually sang the Hillary Clinton campaign theme song.
01:33:21.440 Yeah, she's number one.
01:33:22.220 She apparently was not punished for endorsing Hillary Clinton, but Taylor Swift was.
01:33:26.240 Correct.
01:33:26.640 But Taylor will probably take number one again, because I know she just signed a new record
01:33:29.480 deal, too, for another hundred million.
01:33:31.460 So.
01:33:31.580 She is pretty unstoppable.
01:33:33.420 I will say, one of the craziest things, like, no one pointed out about that whole Taylor
01:33:36.420 Swift endorsement, which, by the way, I mean, she really did.
01:33:38.960 Blackburn won pretty easily in that race.
01:33:40.580 It was supposed to be close, but the craziest part about that is she waited till literally
01:33:45.940 the day after her tour ended to do it.
01:33:48.440 Right.
01:33:48.640 Like, she didn't come on.
01:33:49.380 She was on stage the previous night in Dallas, Texas.
01:33:53.240 She could have announced her big political views then, but apparently didn't want to do
01:33:58.320 that in front of a big live stage.
01:34:00.220 Another person in trouble, Stormy Daniels, and I know you'll be sad about this, but Stormy,
01:34:05.280 you know, she's been in the news quite a bit.
01:34:08.200 She attacked President Donald Trump, and, you know, now she says that because of that,
01:34:13.660 her pornography career is completely ruined.
01:34:16.860 It's ruined.
01:34:17.740 I disagree with that.
01:34:18.700 I thought it was over already.
01:34:20.540 Oh, I disagree.
01:34:21.980 I mean, you want to be in the forefront.
01:34:24.240 Yeah, I thought she was retired from porn stardom.
01:34:27.400 Well, it hurt her, right?
01:34:28.400 She had to go on tour, and she did some of the places were actually looking out for people
01:34:33.820 to touch her and arrest them and everything, which they normally wouldn't do, but because
01:34:37.600 it was Stormy, and it was, she was anti-Trumpet, shut down a lot of gigs.
01:34:41.380 Oh, so they thought that she could, they could touch her because of that?
01:34:43.960 Yeah, well, no.
01:34:44.860 No, the other way around.
01:34:45.580 Yeah, the other way around, yeah.
01:34:47.180 So that, you know, when you go to events, you sometimes reach out and touch the people
01:34:54.980 performing, and the performers may touch you.
01:34:57.480 It's just part of the...
01:34:58.560 Is that okay?
01:34:59.540 It's part of the performance?
01:35:00.940 Well, no.
01:35:01.780 Oh, okay.
01:35:02.360 No, it's not.
01:35:02.700 All right.
01:35:03.300 No, it's not, but most places, you know, may overlook that, but because it was Stormy
01:35:07.540 Daniels, the police were like, no.
01:35:09.540 So if you go in, let's say she's doing a gig in a, maybe a Trump-friendly area.
01:35:13.780 Correct.
01:35:14.100 The local authorities might pick that day to go and do a spot check.
01:35:19.720 Right, and spot check everything.
01:35:21.660 Now, I was reading that article, and it said something about her writing career in the porn
01:35:27.920 industry has been put on hold, and I didn't realize, I mean, I know there's complex storylines
01:35:33.160 in porn movies.
01:35:35.440 I'm glad you're aware.
01:35:36.360 It's interesting that she, you know...
01:35:38.860 Everybody can't do it.
01:35:40.120 She develops those complex storylines.
01:35:42.240 Well, everybody can't just write a porn movie.
01:35:44.020 I mean, the dialogue, no, the dialogue alone is so difficult to noodle out that...
01:35:48.640 Oh, it's you.
01:35:49.620 Come in.
01:35:50.680 Ding dong!
01:35:52.380 Pizza delivery.
01:35:53.900 Come on in.
01:35:54.820 We're just out by the pool.
01:35:57.940 Come on.
01:36:00.220 That's a really good plot, by the way, that you just came up with.
01:36:02.620 Thank you.
01:36:02.800 Right?
01:36:03.140 That was really good.
01:36:03.800 Complex.
01:36:04.260 Do you write?
01:36:04.780 No.
01:36:05.040 Are you a screenwriter in the industry?
01:36:06.720 Part-time.
01:36:07.460 Part-time, yeah.
01:36:08.480 Part-time.
01:36:08.760 Well, there is a lot of production that goes into these things.
01:36:10.320 There is all kinds of productions, and that's one of the things, you know, look, it has
01:36:13.100 been...
01:36:13.740 You know, when you watch a lot of the movies, you see them in the same place.
01:36:16.560 Oh, yeah.
01:36:16.880 The same house.
01:36:17.740 The porn industry will rent a house for a day and film, you know, 20 or 30 movies.
01:36:22.180 Oh, don't say that, because I did stay in a porn house once.
01:36:26.300 What?
01:36:26.640 Really?
01:36:27.420 In fact, our wonderful host, Glenn Beck, I was actually the one I would say was responsible
01:36:33.280 for this happening, because...
01:36:35.680 Oh, my God.
01:36:36.120 This is...
01:36:36.600 We were in L.A.
01:36:38.320 Gosh, it was...
01:36:39.120 Just a month or two ago.
01:36:40.160 No, it was a few months before.
01:36:41.300 It was six months ago, maybe?
01:36:42.240 Oh.
01:36:42.600 Is it that long?
01:36:43.360 Maybe not.
01:36:43.940 I mean, it was this year, though, for sure.
01:36:45.740 Okay.
01:36:45.900 So, we're in L.A., and we go to this house, and it's exactly what you would picture a house.
01:36:54.100 Like, what would a porn director think rich people have?
01:36:57.360 This is what it felt like.
01:36:59.020 So, it was very white and modern.
01:37:01.140 White open space.
01:37:02.540 Wide open spaces, lots of glass everywhere, kind of everything in, like, different floors
01:37:06.980 and, like, a big open pool, but protected, somewhat private, with really, like, nice
01:37:13.960 views.
01:37:14.540 And so, the way it was...
01:37:16.060 I don't know if it's, like, an Airbnb or something, but it was, like, all of us, the
01:37:18.680 whole show went out to this...
01:37:20.500 Instead of getting, you know, 12 hotel rooms, we had a bunch of people out there, because
01:37:24.440 we did the TV and radio show out there.
01:37:25.220 Yeah, I thought we did it when we went to the Super Bowl in San Francisco, too.
01:37:27.700 We played at the house.
01:37:28.560 Yeah, I didn't know that...
01:37:29.960 That one was not a porn show.
01:37:31.000 You don't know that, though.
01:37:31.740 A porn house.
01:37:32.260 Well, you don't know.
01:37:32.820 I'm going to find out pretty soon.
01:37:34.020 I'll tell you that.
01:37:34.580 Well, it was Nicolas Cage's house.
01:37:35.960 It was his old house, so it's possible.
01:37:38.240 It's possible.
01:37:39.160 So, when we pull into the house, one of the people...
01:37:42.320 I will not out this person, but one of the people who...
01:37:44.760 Who was with us, traveling...
01:37:48.080 This looks familiar.
01:37:49.240 Says...
01:37:49.560 And it wasn't Jeffy, shockingly.
01:37:51.060 One of the people says, wait a minute, I've stayed in this house before.
01:37:55.160 And so...
01:37:57.120 Will you stay in this?
01:37:58.700 That's random.
01:37:59.700 And then he says, and you know what?
01:38:01.440 It's a porn house.
01:38:02.880 Now, I didn't know there was such a thing as a porn house, but apparently...
01:38:05.960 Like, very commonly, the same, as Jeffy just pointed out, the same sets get used because
01:38:13.220 you can just rent the house for a day and film a bunch of stuff at the same time.
01:38:16.140 So, apparently, he had stayed in this house earlier with a previous radio show that I
01:38:21.160 won't name.
01:38:22.240 And for protecting the innocent here.
01:38:24.760 And while they were there, they were like, this looks like a porn house.
01:38:28.100 I bet this has been a porn house.
01:38:29.800 And they assigned one of the producers, find the movie that this house was in.
01:38:35.940 So...
01:38:36.340 Nice.
01:38:37.520 So, of course...
01:38:38.740 How many porn movies are...
01:38:40.860 I mean, every day, there's probably 7,000 made.
01:38:43.320 That's my...
01:38:43.820 At least.
01:38:44.220 I don't know, right?
01:38:45.060 At least.
01:38:45.440 So, how could you ever find it?
01:38:47.660 So, they stay at the house for like a week.
01:38:49.660 They leave.
01:38:50.880 Two months later, he gets a text, I found it.
01:38:53.720 So, he had done some research.
01:38:57.460 He had done a lot of research.
01:38:59.380 That's a good bit right there.
01:39:00.840 Wow.
01:39:01.300 And had sent a screenshot of one of the scenes.
01:39:06.260 My gosh.
01:39:07.060 That's great.
01:39:07.660 Out by the pool area.
01:39:09.180 Uh-huh.
01:39:09.480 Now, God only knows what else happened in this house.
01:39:11.740 I mean, I went immediately into emergency surgery to just...
01:39:15.840 Please, just dump like bleach into my body.
01:39:19.200 I know.
01:39:19.560 To disinfect.
01:39:20.720 I know.
01:39:20.940 That's icky.
01:39:21.200 Clean it.
01:39:21.780 That's icky.
01:39:22.300 You would assume they clean it.
01:39:23.600 Clean it.
01:39:24.100 Though, you know, I think potentially lighting it on fire is a better solution.
01:39:28.500 Yeah.
01:39:29.220 But, apparently, it was actually a porn house.
01:39:32.580 And God only knows how many movies have been made in this thing.
01:39:34.600 Because it just...
01:39:35.960 It's exactly what you would think, like, Ron Jeremy would think is the place to own it.
01:39:40.180 Right?
01:39:40.460 Like, it's that type of situation.
01:39:42.600 I love it.
01:39:42.780 I found it.
01:39:43.880 I love the F.
01:39:44.980 I found it.
01:39:45.280 I found it.
01:39:46.020 You gotta love the dedication of a young producer.
01:39:48.340 Yeah.
01:39:48.740 Just watching hours and hours and hours of porn to try to find...
01:39:52.180 To, quote, unquote, try to find the house.
01:39:54.620 By finding the house.
01:39:54.700 I was like, I've got a free pass.
01:39:56.160 It's work.
01:39:56.800 I swear.
01:39:59.200 So, that's...
01:39:59.920 That is fantastic.
01:40:01.380 Congratulations to Jim Acosta, too, by being back into the White House fray of things.
01:40:07.720 And the White House has now sent their rules for the journalists to go.
01:40:12.180 But this kind of goes to my theory a while ago.
01:40:15.560 And I thought for sure it was going to happen this time around.
01:40:17.660 And it's going to happen soon.
01:40:18.600 But I think Trump is just going to cancel the daily briefing.
01:40:21.680 Just cancel it.
01:40:22.520 Stop doing it.
01:40:23.260 We're not going to do it anymore.
01:40:24.460 Follow me on Twitter.
01:40:25.380 Shut up.
01:40:26.000 When there's something...
01:40:26.620 Catch me out on the tarmac.
01:40:28.080 Catch me on the way to the helicopter.
01:40:30.140 If there's something important, I'll call you in.
01:40:33.220 Other than that, we're done.
01:40:33.980 I mean, because he's not required to do it.
01:40:35.440 No.
01:40:35.700 You don't have to.
01:40:36.220 And I will say, Trump does way less press conferences than any previous president.
01:40:40.280 He does not come out and do formal press conferences very often.
01:40:43.080 But he catches...
01:40:43.760 He answers stuff all the time.
01:40:45.360 I mean, they're asking all the time.
01:40:46.640 But yeah, he does a lot of informal stuff.
01:40:47.960 And that's the way he deals with the press.
01:40:49.360 Which I think there's no problem with that at all.
01:40:51.340 I mean, I think sometimes there is value in the formal press conference with the president.
01:40:55.420 Because, you know, you're setting a date.
01:40:57.760 People are prepared to get their best questions in theory.
01:41:00.960 Like, it's...
01:41:01.960 You know, and he did one.
01:41:03.340 That one was one example.
01:41:04.980 He does them occasionally.
01:41:05.900 But very infrequently.
01:41:07.660 However, the daily press briefing with Sarah Huckabee Sanders, has she been doing them?
01:41:11.220 I haven't seen them anymore.
01:41:12.640 Is she still doing them?
01:41:13.800 As far as I know, I don't know.
01:41:15.120 She goes on trips with Trump, so she's still around.
01:41:17.940 You know what I mean?
01:41:18.480 There's been reports that she was on her way out.
01:41:21.760 Yeah, I don't think that's true.
01:41:22.860 I don't think that's true either.
01:41:23.820 I think she's still there.
01:41:24.220 But maybe the media has just stopped covering them every day.
01:41:28.260 Where, like, they used to...
01:41:29.160 Oh, that's possible.
01:41:29.860 They used to put them on TV every single day.
01:41:32.160 And then that goes to, well, just don't do them.
01:41:34.860 We just won't do them.
01:41:35.440 We're not going to cover them.
01:41:36.160 We're not going to do them.
01:41:37.140 That's fine.
01:41:37.640 Get out of here.
01:41:38.260 We'll call you.
01:41:38.780 I mean, the ER just shows.
01:41:40.640 And it's the...
01:41:41.880 This is the problem with the people like Jim Acosta, who is using that not to try to get
01:41:46.900 to any truthful answer to that question.
01:41:48.740 There's absolutely no care for that.
01:41:50.160 He's trying to, you know, make more people download his, like, you know, the Jim Acosta
01:41:56.140 future podcast that he's going to host.
01:41:58.200 Right.
01:41:58.460 And he wants to be on movie posters or whatever.
01:42:00.520 You know, he's trying to make a big deal out of himself.
01:42:02.020 He wants to sell his book or whatever.
01:42:03.940 No doubt about it.
01:42:04.480 Whatever this leads to, Acosta wants the attention.
01:42:08.440 Yes.
01:42:08.700 This is all about attention for Jim Acosta.
01:42:10.720 He's the most self-aggrandizing person in the media.
01:42:13.080 You know, you were talking earlier about Cortez making soup and we have how people are, you
01:42:19.900 know, just enamored with her making soup on Instagram and calling it the new fireside
01:42:25.820 chat.
01:42:26.400 And you saw that Beto O'Rourke, how they were all crazy about him making steak on his making
01:42:34.220 steak and cutting up steak.
01:42:35.600 And it was just a beautiful thing.
01:42:36.800 And he's so hot.
01:42:38.440 And so now, remember when he said that he wasn't going to be running for president in
01:42:42.520 two years?
01:42:43.080 Did you even believe him at all when he said that?
01:42:45.900 Nope.
01:42:46.220 Not a word of it.
01:42:47.040 Because now, you know, he's open.
01:42:48.860 Oh, is he already?
01:42:49.480 He's open.
01:42:50.040 He's already open to a run.
01:42:52.660 Wow.
01:42:52.940 It's been a full like week since he said he wasn't.
01:42:56.060 Yeah.
01:42:56.340 You know, I mean, look, it's a Democratic prime out there.
01:42:59.320 You know, it's possible.
01:43:00.340 It's possible.
01:43:01.640 Yeah.
01:43:01.980 What a surprise.
01:43:03.540 888-727-BECK.
01:43:06.140 Are you dreading that awkward Thanksgiving dinner conversation that inevitably turns to politics?
01:43:10.900 Hey, Susan, could you pass the brown gravy, please?
01:43:12.620 I don't know, Ted.
01:43:13.800 Can it cross your wall of bread without being turned back?
01:43:16.260 Oh, here we go.
01:43:17.940 Don't get trapped.
01:43:18.940 Get prepared.
01:43:20.400 By reading Glenn Beck's new book, Addicted to Outrage.
01:43:23.480 And you might want to pick up a couple of extra copies for your less enlightened family
01:43:26.860 members.
01:43:27.440 You know, immigrants built this country.
01:43:28.880 Oh, I'm going to vomit.
01:43:30.700 Addicted to Outrage.
01:43:31.820 The new book from Glenn Beck.
01:43:33.300 Available everywhere books are sold.
01:43:34.600 With Pat and Stu and Jeffy, whose podcast you can check out wherever podcasts are sold
01:43:43.260 for free, just like mine.
01:43:45.260 Pat Gray Unleashed, you'll find it there.
01:43:46.760 And then you'll find the Jeffy podcast should, for some reason, you want to.
01:43:51.060 And what's it called again?
01:43:52.380 Chewing the Fat.
01:43:53.700 All right.
01:43:54.160 Oh, okay.
01:43:54.540 Is there like a picture of you there?
01:43:56.960 Oh, on a steak, right?
01:43:58.180 Isn't there a picture of you on a steak?
01:43:59.460 That's correct.
01:44:00.520 That's correct.
01:44:00.940 That is priceless.
01:44:02.020 My face is branded on a steak, isn't it?
01:44:04.140 It's funny.
01:44:04.500 It's priceless.
01:44:05.060 Oh, it's funny.
01:44:05.260 Because it was chosen by someone else, if I'm not mistaken.
01:44:08.220 I was chosen by someone else.
01:44:10.000 It wasn't so funny.
01:44:11.260 You came up with a name, though, right?
01:44:12.680 That was not Pat.
01:44:13.340 Well, I came up with the name.
01:44:14.880 Yeah, from Pat Gray Unleashed, yeah.
01:44:17.080 And you thought about that because that's a common phrase to use.
01:44:20.560 It's a common phrase when you're having a conversation with someone.
01:44:22.860 And, you know, chewing the fat.
01:44:24.600 That's what you do.
01:44:25.160 It's an old phrase.
01:44:25.920 Yeah, it's an old phrase.
01:44:28.360 Is there any other meaning to it?
01:44:29.780 Is there any other alternative?
01:44:31.520 If there is, I certainly hadn't thought of it.
01:44:35.040 Oh, you mean the Jeffy's overweight?
01:44:38.840 Yes.
01:44:39.460 I see.
01:44:39.900 Oh, wow.
01:44:40.360 I just got that.
01:44:41.920 You could think of it that way, couldn't you?
01:44:44.580 I guess someone could.
01:44:45.640 Why?
01:44:46.500 Why would you?
01:44:48.480 That's a fair point.
01:44:49.300 Why would you?
01:44:50.140 Why would you?
01:44:50.720 Now, you don't go into politics all that much on the podcast.
01:44:53.440 No, not really.
01:44:53.920 I mean, look, that's for you guys.
01:44:55.420 It's an escape.
01:44:56.120 Yeah, a little bit.
01:44:56.460 That's for you guys.
01:44:57.220 And Glenn likes to, you know, the founding fathers, blah, blah, blah.
01:45:00.340 Who cares?
01:45:02.680 I love that attitude.
01:45:04.060 Yeah.
01:45:04.580 Founding fathers, blah, blah, blah.
01:45:06.500 Who cares?
01:45:06.520 What I care about is stories, you know, like the $1.5 billion Mega Millions winner has not
01:45:11.880 come forward yet.
01:45:13.180 What?
01:45:14.240 That money is still out there.
01:45:15.880 How long do they have?
01:45:18.200 He's got until April.
01:45:19.900 April 21st of next year.
01:45:22.180 But still.
01:45:22.760 Wow.
01:45:22.980 Well, do you take your time getting everything set up?
01:45:25.520 That's what they're trying to say, is that maybe that's possible.
01:45:27.860 But it's been a long time now.
01:45:29.020 Yeah.
01:45:29.500 It's been a month or so.
01:45:30.920 Over a month.
01:45:31.360 More than a month, I think.
01:45:32.520 I'll say, too, like you start getting to that risk of like, if you get hit by a car tomorrow,
01:45:37.320 your family doesn't get it.
01:45:39.060 It's in South Carolina.
01:45:40.260 So do you think, you know, maybe they lost it in the hurricane?
01:45:42.940 That's what I'm wondering.
01:45:43.600 Do they lose the ticket?
01:45:44.860 You know, it's possible or maybe you forgot you bought it and maybe, you know, six months
01:45:48.280 from now, you pull it out from between the seats of your pickup truck.
01:45:51.000 I mean, how bad do you feel then?
01:45:53.400 Pretty bad.
01:45:54.380 Pulling that billion dollar ticket out from between the seats going, oh, that's right.
01:45:58.120 I got to get news for you here, Jeffy.
01:45:59.420 You'd feel good if you pulled out a billion dollar ticket from between your seats.
01:46:03.440 I would.
01:46:04.420 As long as you can still claim it.
01:46:06.540 Yeah.
01:46:06.760 As long as it's before April.
01:46:07.680 If you find it in June, you're not feeling very good about it.
01:46:11.580 No, you're not very good because one day late.
01:46:12.800 Oh, you don't think they give you something anyway?
01:46:15.640 No, there's no leeway.
01:46:16.820 Really?
01:46:17.380 There's no leeway.
01:46:18.160 It's gone.
01:46:19.180 That's amazing.
01:46:20.060 Tick tock, tick tock.
01:46:21.120 What are they waiting for?
01:46:22.220 Maybe they're just getting all their financial planning in place.
01:46:25.860 I hope so.
01:46:26.360 Because what do you do with that money?
01:46:27.560 Almost 900 million.
01:46:29.440 By the way, we should also point out today, happy birthday to Pat.
01:46:33.060 Oh my gosh.
01:46:34.220 Happy birthday.
01:46:35.720 Thank you.
01:46:36.680 Big celebration of coming in and sitting with this guy.
01:46:39.240 32 years old today.
01:46:40.440 32.
01:46:40.920 I was starting to feel a little old.
01:46:41.960 Wow.
01:46:42.520 You're that old, huh?
01:46:43.760 I'm in my early 30s now.
01:46:47.720 What?
01:46:48.520 What are you laughing?
01:46:49.200 What?
01:46:52.360 Glenn.
01:46:53.240 Back.
01:46:53.580 Mercury.