Only Morons Believe Trump Is Selling Classified Documents | 9⧸7⧸22
Episode Stats
Length
1 hour and 58 minutes
Summary
Rough Greens is the new dog food, and it s full of vitamins, minerals, probiotics, and other stuff you should probably eat more often. Pat and Stu talk about the Democratic candidates running for the U.S. Senate in 2020.
Transcript
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today. Conditions apply. Let me tell you about Cheryl. Cheryl, Pat, you're a little bit in the
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shot again, just so you know. Thank you. Yeah, that's good. Okay. Cheryl wrote in about her dog's
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slash Beck. Pat and Stu in for Glenn today on the Glenn Beck radio program. Starts in just a second.
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What you are about to hear is the fusion of entertainment and enlightenment. This is
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Pat and Stu for Glenn on the Glenn Beck program. 888-727-BECK. We've got some close races going
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on around the nation. We're going to fill you in on a couple of them and show you some of
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the candidates that are available that really going to, I think, really going to do a good
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job in the U.S. Senate, especially. We'll get to that. And KJP had some fascinating things to say
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yesterday. All of that and more coming up in 60 seconds.
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Welcome to the program. It's Pat and Stu in for Glenn today on the Glenn Beck program. He's on vacation
00:04:21.640
back next week. And I think many, many, many brains on the Democratic side are also on vacation
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as you see them attempt to speak. This has been an interesting trend I've noticed lately, Pat,
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that none of the people on the left seem to be able to talk and or and or tell a story in any way.
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Keep a train of thought. Yeah. Like I was fascinated by the Kamala Harris story
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from the other day where she claimed to have never eaten a grape. Oh, I missed that. You did.
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She claimed to never have eaten a grape? A grape. And I thought to myself, weird. Why would anyone
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tell another person they had never eaten a grape? And you think... I've never eaten a grape. Why,
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Pat? Let me... This is interesting because if you haven't heard this story... I have not. I would love
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to hear your guesses as to why she told people she had never eaten a grape. Why would you want
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people to know that information? Now, I might say because, you know, I've never had fruit before
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and I'm not healthy. Right. That's one answer. But I don't think the Kamala would say. Allergic.
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I'm allergic to grapes. She's allergic to grapes. That's a great answer. No, that's not why. No.
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Because there's no political gain in telling people that you're allergic to grapes. Right? Right.
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There's no political gain in saying you don't eat healthy. Oh, Republicans like grapes?
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Republicans like grapes. And so I've avoided them my whole life?
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You're pretty close. Really? It's close. No. Apparently,
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the unions boycotted grapes back in the day. What?
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And so she said she never ate grapes because she would never cross a picket line.
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You've got to be kidding me. Now, some people decided to say, you know,
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normally I would just believe Kamala Harris. Did she drink wine?
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Nine and nine. That's great. You know she drinks wine.
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Uh-huh. Has there been a day that has gone by in the past 25 years she has not had eight or nine glasses of wine?
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I doubt it. I do too. And just so everyone knows, grapes are in wine.
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Yeah. Yeah. In case you're wondering, like, what's that magical juice made out of?
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Like, it's grapes. So, no, the reason why is they boycotted. Now, people were like, wait a minute.
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Normally, I would just trust Kamala Harris with whatever she says because she's so trustworthy.
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But there was apparently one person, probably only one, who said, you know, I'm a tad skeptical of that claim.
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How dare they be skeptical about anything Kamala Harris has to say?
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Right. Now, there was a union boycott of California grapes.
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Not all grapes, as far as I know, but California grapes.
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Did they not have any unions in the grape industry?
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Apparently, they were anti-union in the grape industry at some point.
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All the claymation money went there and they didn't have any money for the unions.
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But this period, she said she had, she never had a grape until she was in her 20s, is what her claim was.
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However, the period of the boycott lasted from before she was 20 until she was 36.
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Do you remember the story when she said she smoked pot back in 1986 listening to Snoop Dogg?
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And then we all found out that Snoop Dogg didn't release an album until 1993.
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I mean, maybe he was just in a room singing to her.
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And it's interesting, you look at the left right now, it seems like all of them can't communicate for different reasons.
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You know, Kamala Harris can't tell any true stories.
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Joe Biden can't speak because he seems to be going senile.
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Nancy Pelosi can't speak because she's drunk all the time.
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John Fetterman can't speak because he had a stroke.
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You're taking a shot at a man who has just been ill.
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Well, because there's no shots taken of Donald Trump after he had COVID.
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Remember that wonderful period of the Donald Trump presidency right before the election when there was no criticism of him?
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Because he was getting over being ill, and that's why.
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But he should get better in a place that isn't the Senate.
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Now, of course, if he is fully recovered, he also should not go to the Senate.
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And he was brilliant during his campaign stop and this speech.
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And I can champion the Union way of life in Jersey.
00:10:01.220
And when I leave tonight, I got three miles away.
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And vote for me because I only live eight minutes away.
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If you're in walking distance, you've got my vote.
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If I can walk to your house within 20 minutes, I'm going to vote for you.
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If John Fetterman moved into my house, then I would definitely vote for him.
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I mean, you know, if there's a rent situation, I might consider it.
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No, he stopped when he was 50, which was ancient times, like three years ago.
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I mean, and obviously, he's having some issues there.
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I laugh at his reasoning that the only thing, look, I don't think Dr. Oz was the right candidate
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But like, there seems to be enough to criticize about Dr. Oz.
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I mean, honestly, do you know any of his positions?
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And I don't know him well enough to believe if he's, you know, conservative or Republican
00:11:45.640
But John Fetterman, the only criticism he seems to have of him is his address.
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He has a big house, lives in Jersey, and he's successful.
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Don't vote for this man, because he has a big house and he's successful.
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He keeps pointing out the only things I like about him.
00:12:07.180
And you've never had a job, really, that could support you or your family, and that your parents
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That does seem appealing now that you put it that way.
00:12:21.280
As long as he's wearing a hoodie, then I would vote for him.
00:12:27.180
I'm wearing my Philadelphia Eagles hoodie today in honor of John Fetterman.
00:12:34.220
And I think there is a- there's an odd, odd thing going on here.
00:12:42.260
Now, he has- this is different than not having an ideology.
00:12:52.020
He is as far left as any candidate in the United States.
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He- just because he wears a hoodie and grunts a lot and is large does not make him any different
00:13:32.160
Which, again, like, I feel bad when someone has a stroke.
00:13:38.840
I've had family members who have had all sorts of physical ailments.
00:13:42.840
Never did I think, you know, that qualifies them for the Senate.
00:13:47.140
Like, if anything, you'd say, hey, something that is messing with your cognitive abilities
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is something that would disqualify you from a high-profile role-
00:14:03.780
If you are compromised mentally, that's fine with Americans.
00:14:14.980
Joe Biden, for sure, is a great example of this.
00:14:18.860
I mean, Nancy Pelosi is super compromised as well.
00:14:22.080
I think Kamala Harris is compromised in some ways.
00:14:24.860
To listen to her speak, it's like, I don't know if she's just stretching so much because
00:14:30.160
she's not intellectually capable of making a point.
00:14:37.580
With Kamala, it feels like she's always calculating what she should say and cannot say.
00:14:45.160
To not to reveal too much or what's the most beneficial thing at the time.
00:14:49.520
She's constantly making calculations and her brain doesn't work that fast.
00:14:54.020
Now, maybe a really smart person could do something like that.
00:14:57.640
So she winds up talking to her, you know, talking herself into stories about how she's
00:15:07.000
Like that, where I don't think that's what Nancy Pelosi is doing.
00:15:13.140
She's got at least a dash of the Joe Biden issue.
00:15:19.460
I think she's very close, if not 80, maybe even 81 right now.
00:15:23.120
You see, there's reports now that Nancy Pelosi, if the Republicans take the House, and she
00:15:27.600
doesn't want to lower herself to not be Speaker of the House anymore, she'd be a minority
00:15:33.520
And she now is entertaining the idea of being named Ambassador to Italy.
00:15:46.660
Finally, we've got a former Speaker of the House who's now Ambassador to Italy.
00:15:51.680
But the other, a lot of people have pointed out, wasn't this the place she was just on
00:16:00.060
I mean, we have to all acknowledge those were really attractive.
00:16:03.900
There's nothing like an 80-year-old in a one-piece, of course.
00:16:09.340
But, you know, is it possible that Nancy just wants free trips to Italy all the time?
00:16:24.660
But the amount of corruption that leads to Nancy Pelosi being in Italy all the time and
00:16:32.140
Sometimes you have to acknowledge corruption is wonderful.
00:16:34.400
And in this particular moment, having Nancy Pelosi constantly on vacation in Italy is something
00:16:44.480
We should pay for all of her vacations so she stays in Italy forever.
00:17:03.360
I mean, I know she loves, she seems to really like dig that Mussolini period.
00:17:07.020
Whatever she's doing over there, go over there.
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It's Pat and Stu for Glenn on the Glenn Beck program.
00:18:32.240
Interesting piece in Vogue about Jennifer Lawrence.
00:18:36.120
She, you know, the actress from Passengers, for one.
00:18:45.000
You never, of course, you're not into sci-fi, really.
00:18:49.280
What did you say, like, the Hunger Games would be the thing?
00:18:55.120
When you're talking about Jennifer Lawrence's career?
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Probably better known for Hunger Games than Passengers, although Passengers is more recent.
00:19:05.700
Maybe you go Silver Linings Playbook because it was an award-winning film.
00:19:16.240
It was a pretty good movie, mainly because it was Philadelphia Eagles-themed, which is
00:19:20.960
But it did win, I feel like, multiple, or was at least nominated for multiple awards.
00:19:24.980
Eight Academy Award nominations, Best Picture, Best Director, Best Adapted Screenplay.
00:19:30.920
Lawrence won the Academy Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role.
00:19:35.080
So, I mean, those are the two, I would say, highlights of Jennifer Lawrence's.
00:19:37.700
If you're going to name moments, I would not name Passengers as even, I mean, is it on
00:19:45.280
I don't know that you're going to, you're probably too, her iPhone was hacked before
00:19:51.520
But, yeah, no, I think maybe you go Hunger Games.
00:20:04.340
Anyway, she had some interesting revelations in that article, including one that she has been
00:20:11.580
troubled and has spoken to her therapist about her recurring nightmares she has about Tucker
00:20:22.920
And my guess is she's never even watched an episode of Tucker Carlson's show.
00:20:29.620
No, but if Tucker Carlson does not start his show either last night or tonight with Jennifer
00:20:34.560
Lawrence's dreaming about me, I will be very disappointed.
00:20:40.200
If anyone watched Tucker Carlson last night, if he did not, because what did the story come
00:20:48.000
So, if he did not, I will be very disappointed in Mr. Carlson.
00:20:51.020
I mean, would that be the greatest thing in your life if Jennifer Lawrence admits that she's
00:21:00.480
You know, maybe she's tortured by how attracted she is to him.
00:21:06.160
That is the first thing you list on your resume from now on.
00:21:10.500
That is how she, he should have that on his lower third instead of Fox News host, is
00:21:14.920
in Jennifer Lawrence's dreams, because I don't know, you don't get a better anecdote than
00:21:21.600
But Vogue also noted to her that her family, I guess, voted for Trump in 2016, which was
00:21:31.540
So, she said, I just worked so hard in the last five years to forgive my dad and my family
00:21:49.300
And maybe you should apply that to yourself, too, because I'm guessing, again, she's never
00:21:54.160
She's never looked into an alternative publication to the New York Times or Los Angeles Times.
00:22:02.140
You know, she's getting all of her information from CNN and MSNBC.
00:22:12.100
But I think she, because she grew up, I believe, in a Republican house, she may have some familiarity
00:22:19.080
with it and has, you know, rebelled against her parents over the years and decided to
00:22:24.440
I mean, it happens from time to time, especially when you're in Hollywood.
00:22:28.660
But this idea that you have to forgive your parents for their political beliefs.
00:22:38.860
I could try to convince them, persuade them, perhaps.
00:22:41.800
They haven't done any, they haven't permitted a crime.
00:22:45.380
If you believe differently than they do, it's actually a sin to them.
00:22:49.320
Because climate change and all of these things are their religion.
00:22:55.700
So she was asked about political exchanges with her family members.
00:22:59.500
And she said, I broached the subject in the sense that I unleashed text messages.
00:23:08.320
And then I'll feel bad and send a picture of the baby.
00:23:13.520
Nice, though, that her parents just let it lay.
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At some point, you need to make a calculation of what's good for your life.
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And responding to Jennifer Lawrence over and over again on text messages about politics is not good for your life, to be clear.
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Beginning at 6 Central, 7 Eastern, Pat Gray Unleashed.
00:24:49.420
Pat and Stu for Glenn on the Glenn Beck Program.
00:24:58.940
We've been reviewing the illustrious career of Jennifer Lawrence.
00:25:05.160
Because Stu took exception with my pointing out that she was in Passengers.
00:25:22.660
I don't have the budget of it, but I wouldn't be.
00:25:25.460
Don't bog us down with, did it actually make money?
00:25:34.240
However, you don't get all the money that comes into the box office.
00:25:46.120
I think you're going Hunger Games, where she's made billions of dollars in the box office.
00:25:49.820
She's also in a bunch of the X-Men movies, which I didn't see any of.
00:26:29.000
But yeah, no, she's not had a huge hit in a while.
00:26:33.020
I mean, Passengers was probably her most recent moderate success.
00:26:41.280
You know, she's been getting her iPhone hacked.
00:26:49.600
Like somebody broke into a bunch of iPhones and leaked naked pictures of celebrities.
00:26:56.380
And she was, I would say, the most prominent one.
00:27:04.140
Again, I don't understand the fascination of taking pictures of yourself naked.
00:27:08.880
Maybe if I looked like Jennifer Lawrence, I'd feel differently about this particular topic.
00:27:12.120
That'd be really weird if you looked like Jennifer Lawrence.
00:27:20.060
I know because women and men are exactly the same.
00:27:22.580
Is there time, Martin, to dump that comment by Pat Gray to save his career?
00:27:28.360
Because if it is acknowledged that he believes it would be quote-unquote weird, strange, if I looked like Jennifer Lawrence, as I could easily identify as a woman at any moment.
00:27:45.080
But I would never accuse you of looking like Jennifer Lawrence if you do.
00:27:50.680
I don't think I'd be that attractive of a woman.
00:27:54.160
I just don't think that necessarily her politics rise to the level of her appearance.
00:28:06.460
You know, I feel like, can I draw out an analogy here?
00:28:14.140
Corinne Jean-Pierre is sort of like if you take the average Hollywood actress and put her in the role of press secretary.
00:28:21.200
Corinne Jean-Pierre, I think, she seems pretty.
00:28:29.980
Like, her appearance seems to be outside of her main three qualifications.
00:28:40.500
Those are her three main credentials for the job.
00:28:42.580
But I think the fourth one is like she kind of just has that way about her.
00:28:49.980
Like, it's not like, you know, if I were to talk to you about some topic in deep astrophysics,
00:28:54.940
astrophysics, you might be like, I don't even know what you're talking about.
00:28:58.280
Where with her, like, she's, she's, like, been on Twitter and seen these topics mentioned.
00:29:04.600
Like, she knows that, you know, she knows who won the 2016 election.
00:29:10.960
She doesn't know much about it, but she knows who won it.
00:29:13.220
Oh, actually, that's the one thing she doesn't seem to know.
00:29:15.700
That was a bad example because she actually said it was stolen.
00:29:18.440
But generally speaking, she knows the general topics about politics.
00:29:27.380
She knows that maybe Democrats want to relieve some of that student debt in some way.
00:29:31.880
She's familiar that the topic exists in conversation.
00:29:35.300
But that seems to be the limit of her understanding.
00:29:45.080
And then a lot of times she doesn't realize that what she's reading doesn't answer the question.
00:29:49.960
And also she apparently gets caught at times when people realize she was tweeting that elections,
00:30:03.380
We're all in agreement that it is incorrect to say the 2020 election was stolen.
00:30:14.280
I'm not going to go back to where we were or what happened in 2016.
00:30:30.760
Well, if you don't want to look back at the 2016 election, then you shouldn't need to look back at the 2020 election.
00:30:35.540
I should point out to everyone, man, but a lot of people don't seem to understand this.
00:30:39.500
Donald Trump is not running for office currently.
00:30:41.740
He is not on the ballot in any state for any job.
00:30:49.660
No one thinks he's going to be on a Senate ballot anytime soon.
00:30:54.980
He may run for president in the future, but currently is not running for president.
00:31:00.840
So the idea that you're going to make him the focus of this campaign, which is clearly what they want to do, is an interesting political bit of gymnastics.
00:31:14.900
Talk about the candidates that are running for office.
00:31:21.600
So, Corinne Jean-Pierre gets asked this question because this is not just her.
00:31:26.500
This is her saying a stolen email, stolen drone, stolen election.
00:31:37.560
And, you know, this is her in 2016 saying the election was stolen.
00:31:42.380
She said the election was stolen in Georgia as well.
00:31:51.620
You can say, if you want to have the position that you believe it's wrong for Donald Trump to say that the election was stolen, okay, but you don't also get to say all of the elections you lost were stolen.
00:32:02.160
You can't criticize someone else for saying the election is stolen when you've claimed multiple times that the election was stolen.
00:32:09.920
It's just, you can't have both of those things.
00:32:14.680
I don't think the American people are going to go along with that.
00:32:22.140
Just in trying to understand the new attention on the MAGA Republicans, you tweeted in 2016, Trump stole an election.
00:32:31.060
I was waiting, Peter, when you were going to ask me that question.
00:32:46.280
That comparison that you made is just ridiculous.
00:32:49.180
I have been, I have been, well, you're asking me, you're asking me a question.
00:32:54.160
I was, I was talking specifically at that time of what was happening with voting rights and the, what was in danger of voting rights.
00:33:05.540
I have said, Governor Kemp won the election in Georgia.
00:33:10.800
I have said, President Trump won the election of 2016.
00:33:16.820
What we are talking about right now is, let's not forget what happened on January 6th, 2021, when we saw an insurrection, a mob that was incited by the person who occupied this campus, this facility at that time.
00:33:38.240
I love the, the, the appeal to the emotions there at the end.
00:33:48.340
One other person who was a Trump supporter died that day.
00:33:53.280
But the others didn't die as a result of, I mean, even Brian Sicknick's family said he died from strokes.
00:34:01.800
They didn't attribute it to the mob that I've ever seen.
00:34:07.280
And the other police officers committed suicide.
00:34:13.760
It's just absolutely infuriating that they keep promoting that lie.
00:34:24.500
But they, they, they continually attribute five deaths to January 6th.
00:34:33.000
No, I mean, it was, that doesn't mean it was a good event.
00:34:54.660
Like, their nonsensical treatment of it has overwhelmed the things that all of us were concerned about.
00:35:02.340
And, you know, it was so, the reason why it stands out so much is because on the right, it's so rare.
00:35:08.220
You don't see us going to cities to burn things down and break things and break windows and throw things at police officers and hit police officers over the head with flagpoles.
00:35:29.060
Find, just find the area that, pick the federal building they're attacking that particular evening.
00:35:35.100
Go to a six-month period in 2020 where it happened every night in major cities all across the country.
00:35:43.020
Certainly, we see this happen every single time that one of these, you know, one of these things breaks out.
00:35:49.760
We see the same excuses from the media over and over and over again.
00:35:53.840
And it's a disgusting set of excuses, largely based upon, well, you have to understand, you know, they can't control themselves.
00:36:05.100
And like, I don't know about you, but every person I've met who would fit into any of the groups they're describing has plenty of control over themselves.
00:36:15.900
It's the left that doesn't expect basic civilization to hold up when something goes wrong.
00:36:23.180
And it's appropriate to call January 6th a riot.
00:36:26.780
It is totally asinine to call it an insurrection.
00:36:40.900
If you're, if you just flip into the channels and it's on, you have to stop what you're doing at any moment and watch the rest of it.
00:36:52.020
You might not like Tom Cruise, but man, is that a freaking good movie?
00:36:55.620
And it is the movie about a literal insurrection against Hitler.
00:37:08.280
They took over the government communication apparatus and communicated orders to underlings to stop listening to Hitler because he's dead and go with us instead.
00:37:20.160
An insurrection is not a bunch of people wearing horns on their head, walking in and putting their feet up at Nancy Pelosi's desk.
00:37:35.060
And, you know, that doesn't mean both of them are good or both of them are bad.
00:37:46.880
Now, they go through the communications of some of these people who actually were inside the Capitol.
00:37:51.800
And you can see there are a few of them that seem to have that on their mind.
00:37:55.540
But that is totally different than accusing the president of the United States of an insurrection.
00:38:03.140
There are thousands of people in America right now planning some sort of insurrection that likely will never even be attempted and certainly will not succeed.
00:38:10.660
That is something that has been going on forever.
00:38:15.860
It's totally different than what they present January 6th as.
00:38:19.260
And this is their whole campaign is relitigating January 6th.
00:38:24.880
And she's like, oh, we can't look back at the past.
00:38:30.140
That's that's the problem with this election strategy and why we should reject it.
00:38:47.480
Pat and Stu for Glenn on the Glenn Beck Program.
00:38:52.860
It looks like CNN may be considering firing another couple of people.
00:39:04.540
The only one who loves Jim Acosta is Jim Acosta.
00:39:14.500
He loves himself enough for all the rest of us.
00:39:25.260
Yeah, he thinks he's the smartest, the best looking, and just has the biggest, best takes
00:39:41.360
He's the man who knows it all, and he's not afraid to tell you.
00:39:50.420
Now, supposedly, they've been planning to do this for a really long time.
00:39:53.920
And then, finally, they did get rid of Brian Stelter.
00:40:00.220
I was talking to our very own Rob Eno here at The Blaze.
00:40:03.480
And I said to him, like, is there any chance this is, like, real?
00:40:07.600
Like, CNN is actually changing their ways and improving?
00:40:11.420
Like, I asked him, on a 1 to 10 scale, how would you rate the CNN transition from, you know,
00:40:17.120
and he's obviously a conservative here at The Blaze, not a fan of Brian Stelter, et cetera.
00:40:24.140
Like, it does seem like so far so good here with some of these changes.
00:40:29.380
Like, maybe they're actually going to – I know they're not going to do it.
00:40:31.940
Every time I get optimistic, I think, what are you doing?
00:40:35.260
This is just – they're just – Lucy is putting the little football down, and I'm going to miss it again.
00:40:45.440
But then they gave us another little inkling with this Acosta story.
00:40:54.160
That was a lot of wasted time until we got to now when you can get the flu shot and the COVID shot at the same time.
00:41:00.520
He wasted about 5,000 years on the two arms thing.
00:41:15.080
He's got the wipes that he says – I guess it's something like a seven days.
00:41:18.300
It somehow wipes out your sweat for seven days, which is incredible.
00:41:21.080
But every time I think of this product, all I can think about is Jeffy.
00:41:34.900
But he was also apparently given a lot of sweat glands, more than anyone else I know.
00:41:45.120
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00:41:48.400
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00:41:59.880
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00:42:32.680
What you are about to hear is the fusion of entertainment and enlightenment.
00:43:02.680
People are actually debating whether or not Donald Trump was going to sell nuclear secrets to the Russians.
00:43:16.860
We'll get into that and much more coming up in one minute.
00:43:27.120
Sometimes in life, the best thing you can do is learn the hard way.
00:43:31.540
Because you blow a real estate transaction, it can screw up your financial future for such a long time.
00:43:37.420
And you know if you've ever gone down this road and had a bad real estate agent, it can be the difference between a really great transaction and a great move for your financial future and the destruction of it.
00:43:53.420
And it's so funny how we pick real estate agents.
00:43:55.160
Usually, it's just like somebody I kind of know.
00:43:57.520
Somebody I kind of know has a relative who's a real estate agent.
00:44:01.500
And they do it kind of part-time from time to time.
00:44:06.160
You need to take time to figure out who the best agent is.
00:44:12.260
But that's why we have realestateagentsitrust.com.
00:44:16.440
Sorts through the real estate agents for the best performance in your area.
00:44:22.460
And then they will help you through the entire process.
00:44:32.840
Pat and Stu for Glenn on the Glenn Beck program.
00:44:41.380
Even on Fox News, there was a host over the weekend who was wondering aloud if Donald Trump was selling nuclear secrets.
00:44:54.500
You have to be a pretty big Trump hater to believe that he would sell secrets, nuclear secrets, to the Russians or the Saudis.
00:45:17.300
You know, there's a lot of things that I think the right will excuse on Donald Trump.
00:45:22.280
They'll give him a big break on his offensive tweets.
00:45:30.760
But if he was selling nuclear secrets to our enemies, you know what?
00:45:37.980
They have no, seemingly have no evidence of it.
00:45:41.060
And they are trying to make this the thing because they realize this scandal is silly.
00:45:46.860
I, you know, I do have some people around me who I've talked to who think it's a
00:45:52.620
And I can't wrap my arms around why it's a big deal.
00:45:57.840
I'm not saying Donald Trump did everything perfectly here.
00:46:03.160
We don't have the evidence or the knowledge to know that.
00:46:05.460
But, like, if what he did was have a bunch of documents that, as president of the United
00:46:18.100
And he brought those documents home and put him in a, what I guess is being described
00:46:22.580
as a less than perfectly secure closet, among other papers.
00:46:27.320
And you're going to, what, not let him run for president because of it?
00:46:36.160
I mean, I just, it seems completely ridiculous.
00:46:38.420
Because what is the implication that Barron is going to read some of those documents?
00:46:46.760
Well, his son could have gotten access to some of those documents and read them.
00:46:52.220
And then maybe Barron is selling those secrets to Russia.
00:46:56.400
Here's my question for any journalist who wants to investigate this.
00:47:18.340
See if it would be easy to accomplish stealing a Diet Coke from the bar.
00:47:24.680
See if you could pull that off before you start telling me how insecure these documents were
00:47:32.800
Like, I get that that is not how we should be storing high-level security,
00:47:40.200
I understand that that's not the technical process.
00:47:42.860
Did you know that the archivists were down there and directed him to do certain things
00:47:56.140
But I'm going to the worst-case scenario for a reason here.
00:47:58.620
Because I can't find why this is such a big story, even in the worst-case scenario.
00:48:08.840
The left legitimately pitched this as a reason for him to get live golf tour events.
00:48:13.760
Now, I guess if that were happening, it would be a big story.
00:48:21.840
It's completely ridiculous in every single conceivable way.
00:48:29.760
So unless you've got evidence of something like that, I mean, if you've got texts of
00:48:32.960
him being like, hey, Prince, bring the live golf tour, which, by the way, doesn't exist
00:48:39.720
Bring it to my golf clubs, and I'll give you these nuclear secrets.
00:48:43.360
If you got that, you're going to have something.
00:48:45.120
And I'm going to be eating these words in a big way.
00:48:47.840
But the fact they're like, oh, well, technically, this is not the process for storing these documents.
00:48:53.660
It's like, think of the scandals that Donald Trump has been accused of and survived.
00:48:59.880
You're telling me document storage is the thing?
00:49:02.620
You're going to take this guy down over document storage?
00:49:13.060
The brilliant Joy Behar yesterday suggested that he was actually selling secrets.
00:49:25.020
The former president of the United States of America, who loves his country quite clearly.
00:49:33.260
Why else would you put up with everything he's put up with over the last, you know, six years?
00:49:39.160
And now he's planning to sell nuclear secrets to the Russians?
00:49:50.560
Wasn't there multiple years of these complaints that turned out not to be true?
00:49:56.480
And yet we're still doing this and people are still believing it?
00:50:02.980
This is the way, like, I could understand if he was actually dealing with Russia in some way that, you know, they came out with evidence of this in the Mueller report.
00:50:13.400
If what the accusation here is that they just went in for this raid because he was storing documents and not telling them the truth about it.
00:50:21.460
Or maybe he wanted to keep things that they wanted back.
00:50:24.220
Like, all of these things, he has already seen.
00:50:28.440
This is not him breaking into some vault and taking something he didn't have access to.
00:50:36.300
Whether he has the documents in his hand or not, he's already seen them.
00:50:39.660
When you see something, it gets stored in your memory banks and you can recall bits and pieces of that information.
00:50:46.460
He could have, at other points, written down in a journal the things he wanted to remember from the documents.
00:50:53.140
We know he takes a lot of notes and apparently flushes them all down the toilet, which is also something we're told.
00:50:59.780
So, I just don't under, like, it's not as if he went in and took documents he didn't have access to.
00:51:07.440
He already, the reason you're accusing him of taking them is because he already saw them.
00:51:13.460
It's because he knew what they were because he put eyes on him himself and he had rights to do that as president of the United States.
00:51:19.600
It's just like, there have been scandals throughout Donald Trump's, you know, prominence as a politician that I thought, if true, were really problematic.
00:51:34.560
If you have an actual accusation that he's done something with these documents for his own political benefit, that's the line you need to cross if you're the left.
00:51:44.720
For this to have any relevance to anyone other than you.
00:51:47.580
Because if he misstored documents, no one's going to care.
00:51:53.020
If he was really reckless with the documents, and again, we have to focus on this because being reckless with the documents is not putting him in a private closet.
00:52:01.980
That is probably the wrong thing to do as far as procedure.
00:52:06.560
But, like, any single thing stored online is more at risk of being stolen than something in Donald Trump's personal closet.
00:52:14.300
It's hard to get next to the president of the United States' personal closet.
00:52:17.620
And in that context, why didn't they care about Hillary Clinton's emails?
00:52:23.960
And I think, like, if he was really reckless, let's just say he was printing these documents on the back of the kids' menus.
00:52:29.980
There was a maze on one side and nuclear documents on the other.
00:52:36.800
They're circling their grilled cheese on one side.
00:52:38.640
And on the other side is some high-profile North Korean nuclear secret.
00:52:43.240
If that were true, it might rise to the partisan scandal level.
00:52:56.420
I mean, it was really more of a conservative story with the exception of James Comey coming out 10 days before the election and kind of reigniting it,
00:53:04.620
which made it have real impact for the election.
00:53:07.240
But, like, the right is not going to care if he was a little reckless in the way he stored documents that we have no evidence were taken.
00:53:17.780
Again, if they were taken, if they were stolen.
00:53:20.180
We know Hillary Clinton had all sorts of email issues around this time.
00:53:24.520
We know John Podesta, who they just put back in control of, like, global warming.
00:53:32.580
But the idea that he kept them in a reckless way and they might have been, at some point, at some future juncture, stolen is just not going to excite anybody other than the MSNBC hosts who already are excited about everything about Donald Trump.
00:53:51.560
You'd have to show that Donald Trump took these documents out of the White House to benefit himself financially.
00:53:56.880
Like, and the hurdle to clear, to prove a claim like that, is impossibly high.
00:54:03.840
I can't even imagine what you'd have to come up with, evidence-wise, to show proof of that.
00:54:09.520
And if they've got it, every single person in this audience would want Donald Trump to be in prison.
00:54:14.880
If he was actually doing this, we'd all want him in prison.
00:54:21.720
I mean, I feel confident enough to just go straight out there.
00:54:28.680
Are you going to give me $5 billion for this piece of paper?
00:54:38.240
I mean, just to make a really big impact in Donald Trump's life where it's going to be worth it for him to take some document and sell it to a foreign power,
00:54:52.600
It would have to be a big payoff for it to make a difference in his life.
00:55:03.560
If you are a charitable person, but you like to make sure that your money is going to the place that, you know, I don't know, is going to be responsible with it,
00:55:12.680
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00:56:03.960
But I will say, this is a really, really good organization, and they do a lot of good.
00:56:19.400
KJP, got more from her yesterday, which is fantastic.
00:56:35.980
She was asked a question about the pipeline, and I don't want to spoil it.
00:56:43.580
So, you've heard us say this, that what we see Russia's doing, and we've been very clear about this,
00:56:49.680
is that they're using energy, they're weaponizing energy, and it's choosing to,
00:56:54.880
one of the things that has been out there, they shut down the pipeline of Nordstrom 1.
00:57:05.440
Direct pipeline right to the women's lingerie section.
00:57:11.480
They shut down luxury goods at affordable prices?
00:57:32.580
That's just a place that, very predictably, Corinne Jean-Pierre probably shops at.
00:57:40.680
I think, is that, is that, is that, uh, anyone, and we don't have any fashion, uh, I thought
00:57:50.660
I would say she spends more money on her clothing than the average salary in the United States
00:58:02.980
I've literally never seen her in the same outfit.
00:58:06.880
Like, she's spending a lot of money on clothing.
00:58:12.980
That might be bargain basement for Corinne Jean-Pierre.
00:58:15.840
But she does seem to spend a lot of time on her appearance, which, again, is one of the
00:58:22.800
Now, she's obviously talking about the Nord Stream pipeline that they shut down.
00:58:29.760
Do we know, is it possible that luxury goods are coming through a pipeline somewhere and
00:58:36.580
And there is a Nordstrom pipeline that delivered luxury goods.
00:58:41.260
But this is a great example of what we were talking about earlier.
00:58:43.680
She's aware that there's a pipeline that sounds like Nordstrom.
00:58:50.940
She's not pulling, you're not pulling somebody off the street who's never read a news article.
00:58:58.580
So, like, to her, she heard Nordstrom pipeline and she just kind of assumed it was the same
00:59:04.140
I had a program director early on in my talk radio career who said, dude, you just got
00:59:16.760
Dude, you just need to be an inch deep and a mile wide.
00:59:19.960
So, you needed to know a little bit about a lot of different things.
00:59:44.980
She does need to be more than an inch deep on a few areas, though.
00:59:52.480
Don't you have people you talk to at the White House about these issues?
01:00:01.120
People come to her and they explain these things to her.
01:00:13.240
And he'll ask me about like a reference to sports.
01:00:17.020
Like, you know, some thing that, you know, he's trying to make an analogy.
01:00:25.400
He'll work through it with me before we go on the air.
01:00:28.380
And he can get to a point where he can talk like he kind of knows what happened.
01:00:43.000
He'll be like, well, it's like when Babe Ruth hit that free throw.
01:00:49.020
And it's like, it's things where, you know, I'll say.
01:00:52.380
I remember him doing one thing where I was talking about a pass interference penalty.
01:00:55.980
And, like, the way he said it, like, he had no idea which part of that to emphasize.
01:01:02.140
Because he had never really heard anyone talk about it.
01:01:05.100
He had just heard me say it two minutes before.
01:01:07.300
And he was trying to make an analogy of something he did fully understand and bring it to sports.
01:01:14.660
It's like someone has sort of talked her through an answer on some of these things beforehand.
01:01:19.700
She's sort of, she's read a couple tweets about it.
01:01:21.960
That she's sort of, like, has a surface understanding that it is a thing.
01:01:30.420
And she's trying to answer questions from people who have a much deeper understanding than her every single time.
01:01:39.180
You're putting this, I mean, it really is, it's unfair to her.
01:01:42.800
They're putting her in a position she has absolutely no chance to succeed in.
01:01:46.460
You know, it's like, I really do feel like Jen Psaki went to a PR firm and said, how can I make myself look good?
01:01:58.440
People will be like, oh my God, remember the amazing dream Jen Psaki was.
01:02:06.980
Again, at least she had read the full blog entry, not just the tweet linking to it.
01:02:14.940
She wasn't, but in comparison, it's like the difference is monumental.
01:02:37.280
Because you've got to be pretty bad to make Jen Psaki look like a Mozart character.
01:02:44.000
Like none of these people can play Beethoven, right?
01:02:47.640
However, like Jen Psaki has taken a few lessons, right?
01:02:53.040
Where Corinne Jean-Pierre has seen people play piano.
01:02:59.660
So she knows the fingers sort of move around on the keys.
01:03:13.840
She's improv-ing her responses to these things.
01:03:17.300
Unless she literally looks down at her script and reads word for word.
01:03:24.020
And I will say the one thing you could say about her is she can read.
01:03:26.820
She like literally can read words and, and say them out loud.
01:03:33.200
But it's her only qualification, unfortunately.
01:03:36.040
But that's what happens when you just, you're hiring special interest groups.
01:03:42.480
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01:04:57.160
Check out Glenn, Stu Does America, Stephen Crowder, and my show, Pat Gray Unleashed.
01:05:12.620
Pat and Stu for Glenn on the Glenn Beck Program.
01:05:23.560
Mike, you're on the Glenn Beck Program with Pat and Stu.
01:05:32.960
For 35 years, I handle documents like they're talking about now.
01:05:38.200
And prompt selling documents is the most ridiculous thing I've ever heard.
01:05:44.160
For starters, our enemies already have that information.
01:05:52.680
Right, because this is information about foreign countries, is the new act.
01:05:56.360
The latest round of leaks from the FBI says that these are documents about, let's say, North Korea's nuclear arsenal.
01:06:04.780
And it's like, well, is North Korea going to buy documents about their own nuclear arsenal?
01:06:09.380
I guess other countries might be interested, but there are our enemies.
01:06:12.580
So I don't think it's necessarily a huge problem that they might know.
01:06:18.840
I mean, this is a ridiculous conversation anyway, because the President of the United States was not selling nuclear secrets.
01:06:28.660
You know, because I look at stuff from top to bottom, you know, all the time.
01:06:33.460
And I'm thinking to myself, why would anybody want this?
01:06:45.200
I don't understand anything about this story, frankly.
01:06:48.480
I don't understand why it's as big a deal as it is.
01:06:53.940
We're coming up to an election and that might be related.
01:06:55.860
But like, let me give you this, the special master thing.
01:06:58.660
Donald Trump wants a special master to have someone unrelated, an independent source, look
01:07:03.680
through the documents and see what should be, you know, what these documents are, what
01:07:17.320
What is the, I know all the political arguments.
01:07:20.680
What is the justice argument that if we're looking to maintain the reputation of our justice
01:07:27.340
department and make sure that we all believe that the president, the former president of
01:07:31.220
the United States is either held responsible for some crime or treated fairly by the justice
01:07:38.720
But what is the argument against a special master?
01:07:43.600
That they've already, they've already reviewed all of the documents.
01:07:47.560
The FBI has already thoroughly gone through it.
01:07:51.060
First of all, obviously his complaint here is he's being treated unfairly.
01:07:54.820
So the FBI going through it would actually work in his favor.
01:07:59.160
But that's what I've heard them say is we're already done.
01:08:09.040
We need to get there in a more heightened fashion because it's just too important.
01:08:14.920
We need to get it right now, right now, right now.
01:08:17.240
Special master might delay things a little bit, but would be a more direct path to the
01:08:23.640
American people being comfortable with the outcome.
01:08:26.440
Right now what we're seeing is an unprecedented situation where they raided the home of a
01:08:40.520
If you don't see why that would be a notable piece of history, I can't help you.
01:08:47.020
But I mean, like it's a big deal whether he's guilty or not.
01:08:56.520
Half the country is going to believe anything you say that's bad about Donald Trump.
01:08:59.160
So why wouldn't you take an extra step to show, to have real transparency, to have an extra
01:09:05.760
person, an extra set of eyes on these things to make sure everything fundamentally goes the
01:09:14.080
And I believe I have an answer to this question.
01:09:34.240
And if they do not indict him before Friday, the unwritten rule of the FBI is to not take
01:09:42.240
major political impactful positions within 60 days of an election.
01:10:04.240
We saw that with even Bill Barr supported that rule.
01:10:10.140
It's one of those things that they want out of that window.
01:10:14.440
But I think part of the reason why you don't want a special master is so you can rush through
01:10:18.980
an indictment that gets through within a window that the DOJ is comfortable with and lines
01:10:36.560
So we are in that primetime area where they're not supposed to be announcing major indictments
01:10:46.060
But the special master has already been, you know, looks like that's going to happen.
01:10:55.760
And they may need to hold off an indictment if they actually believe it's coming.
01:10:59.340
I will say, like, the indictment is being promoted as it's this big thing.
01:11:02.280
But it's like, if the indictment is basically he had some documents and didn't return them
01:11:09.180
The same people who care about every little twist and turn in the Donald Trump saga will
01:11:14.040
And the same people on the left who care about every little accusation and believe every
01:11:19.220
little thing are going to make it out to be a very big deal.
01:11:22.200
And the people on the right who don't care about anything that Donald Trump does aren't
01:11:31.000
You know, like, oh, well, you know, he's had all these big, these big, high profile scandals
01:11:35.620
that we've been talking about for months and months at a time.
01:11:37.720
We've spent millions and millions of dollars in the investigation.
01:11:42.600
That's going to be the big thing, that he put it in the wrong filing cabinet.
01:11:49.420
You know, it's not like he rented a, you know, a U-Haul or and dragged it to a public
01:11:59.960
Like, they act as if it's so, they're like, well, some people may have gone into this
01:12:09.580
But like, if you think you're holding on to your job and not getting tackled by security
01:12:13.840
officers outside of Mar-a-Lago, if you try to steal documents from there, I mean, you're
01:12:21.140
And didn't Barack Obama have documents delivered to a warehouse in Chicago?
01:12:31.780
And he had all these documents, thousands and thousands of documents delivered to some
01:12:41.960
What was Obama going to do with all that stuff?
01:12:44.340
It does seem like there's arguments between the archivists and the former presidents every
01:12:51.940
They're always taking documents they're not comfortable with them taking.
01:12:56.700
Like, I don't really have, like, I never sat here and railed on radio about how Barack
01:13:02.160
I mean, like, it's just not, it's like, I'm not that interested in it, frankly.
01:13:04.940
The only one I can ever remember really making a big deal about was Sandy Berger.
01:13:35.740
And, you know, you bring up the point that we're only 60 days on Friday.
01:13:39.460
So we must be, what, 62 days from the election now.
01:13:51.540
Corinne Jean-Pierre would be reading it right now.
01:13:53.280
She'd be like, 60, hold on, let me get the calculator out.
01:14:03.460
Are you still optimistic about Republicans having a good chance to take the Senate?
01:14:12.640
Maybe we can go into this a little bit today at some point.
01:14:15.200
But there's this big narrative that there's huge momentum on the left.
01:14:22.660
This is part of my job to look at this stuff every day.
01:14:26.800
I just don't see this overwhelming amount of evidence that would suggest this momentum is there.
01:14:38.940
Now, there is some evidence that would support it.
01:14:44.560
And basically what the left is doing and the media is trying to promote are these special elections where you're seeing results that are disappointing for Republicans.
01:14:51.760
We've seen three or four of them since the Dobbs decision, in particular, the overturning of Roe versus Wade.
01:15:03.060
But the Palin one is a terrible example of this.
01:15:10.000
And, you know, what the reason why Sarah Palin lost in Alaska is because Republican voters, Republican voters voted for the Democrat.
01:15:25.120
Then a bunch of Republicans, 28 percent of Republicans that voted for the other Republican, a good chunk of them switched to the Democrat.
01:15:35.000
And a lot of that was resentment over her leaving the being governor early.
01:15:41.740
I'm not knocking Sarah Palin here, but she became a giant celebrity and was governor of the state and then just decided to leave in the middle of her term.
01:15:50.820
They didn't they didn't appreciate it that much.
01:15:55.980
But I think, you know, look, it's one of these things where that one I don't think is a good example of it.
01:16:03.160
There have been three or four special elections that have gone on since the Dobbs decision.
01:16:06.900
And probably the best piece of evidence here would be the Kansas abortion referendum.
01:16:15.080
Some Republicans still won, but they won by less than expected.
01:16:18.460
Some were, you know, purplish type races that went the Democrats way.
01:16:23.540
And so people are like, oh, gosh, that shows, you know, that the left is is animated by the Dobbs decision.
01:16:29.760
The right is incredibly animated by the Dobbs decision.
01:16:35.700
You don't get you don't get I got to go to the polls to support the thing we already have.
01:16:41.360
Like that is not what animates Republican abortion voters.
01:16:46.000
And in this particular instance, the Dobbs decision, I think, unleashed a period of this is a theory of mine.
01:16:53.240
So I want to this is not necessarily we don't know the outcome of this yet.
01:16:57.420
But this is what I believe the the Dobbs decision did animate Democratic voters earlier than Republican voters in this cycle.
01:17:04.560
So they got on board and got into election mode a couple of months earlier than Republicans, which have led to some of these special election results.
01:17:15.540
Republicans have not turned on their election attention yet.
01:17:20.160
And that will start this week and really kick into gear next week and the weeks after.
01:17:26.100
And with all that being said, you're still seeing polling in a lot of these Senate results that show tightening of these races.
01:17:36.120
Dr. Oz was down by 16 points three or four weeks ago.
01:17:45.280
We're seeing a huge lead in Missouri for Schmidt.
01:17:51.980
We're seeing a lot of things that do not line up with a Democratic bit of momentum here.
01:17:57.760
So I think what we're going to see is these races continue to tighten over the next few weeks.
01:18:03.180
You're going to see an election that I think the House is still a heavily favored area for Republicans.
01:18:11.500
And the Senate is, they may still even be the underdog there, but they definitely have a chance to win.
01:18:16.500
This idea that they really have a 25% chance to win, I think, is not correct.
01:18:22.920
If we're still looking at the same polls in four or five weeks, I will change my thesis on this.
01:18:29.820
I think right now the left wants this to be true, and they're desperately begging America to believe this momentum story so they can create the momentum that's not actually there.
01:18:39.840
And the media is going along with it, so it's starting to look like maybe they're right because the media is pushing that.
01:18:46.800
They're trying to start pushing this train down the tracks, hoping the engine goes and can start hauling all this very heavy freight.
01:18:55.920
But it's a lot to carry, and at this point, I don't think the evidence is there to support it.
01:19:01.140
Well, I'm going to go with that because I just feel better now.
01:19:10.340
Sign up for the free newsletter today at glennbeck.com.
01:19:25.920
Hello, it's Pat and Stu for Glenn on the Glenn Beck Program.
01:19:39.060
We were just noticing at the keksi.com website, what was it that you're concerned with?
01:19:50.100
This is at keksi.com where they have the world's finest cookies.
01:19:54.060
They are fantastic, but the box of 12 has how many cookies pictured in it?
01:20:00.860
So following that pattern, when you buy a box of eight, how many cookies would be in the picture of the box of eight cookies?
01:20:11.060
I don't know why you would think that's the right number, but you are correct.
01:20:17.880
And then you also offer a box of six, which you'd think, okay, if there's a box of six, wouldn't you use six?
01:20:25.780
You would think there's probably four cookies in there, right?
01:20:30.820
And I think it's because somebody's already eaten two of them in each of those boxes, but they haven't gotten to the box of 12 yet.
01:20:39.880
But yes, the box of six shows that there's four cookies in the box.
01:20:44.320
However, I think when you order it, you actually get six.
01:20:58.860
We've got to tell you about the Doomsday Glacier.
01:21:04.180
Why they call it that and what's about to happen.
01:21:13.220
How did a little candy bar that can't weigh more than a few ounces, how can that make you gain like five pounds if you eat one?
01:21:23.120
And if you would like something maybe a little bit more healthy than that, something that can put aside that sweet tooth a little bit, you've got to try Bilt Bars.
01:21:31.780
My wife, one, Lisa Page, of the Lisa Page Made Me Do It Instagram feed, she's the one that really discovered these things.
01:21:44.940
And then Tanya told you and tried to harass you into actually eating something healthy for once.
01:21:49.180
Bilt Bars have like 130 calories, four grams of sugar, four grams of net carbs, 17 grams of protein.
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The promo code is BECK for 15% off at Bilt.com.
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What you are about to hear is the fusion of entertainment and enlightenment.
01:23:10.340
Pat Grace, Stupor Gear for Glenn on the Glenn Beck Program, 888-727-BECK.
01:23:21.080
We'll tell you about it coming up in 60 seconds.
01:23:23.600
Stupor Gear for Glenn on the Glenn Beck Program, 888-727-BECK.
01:23:42.220
Join me for my show, Pat Gray Unleashed, immediately preceding this one live, every weekday, 6 to 8 central time.
01:23:54.920
You don't need to do anything else with your life.
01:24:06.320
Instead, just listen to our podcasts and make sure to subscribe to them.
01:24:10.260
And I will say, after watching the media and the way they're looking at the election and everything else.
01:24:15.720
We were talking about this a little bit last hour.
01:24:17.140
Where you need, we all need places like the Blaze that will actually talk about the truth.
01:24:25.160
Because you see the narratives develop before they even take hold.
01:24:28.400
You see what they're trying to do in the media.
01:24:30.040
They're trying to push you down so many different roads to believe all these things that aren't true.
01:24:38.920
And if you don't have places to push back, there's going to be an issue there.
01:24:42.440
So, you know, I'm thankful that the Blaze does this.
01:24:47.720
The promo code is Glenn there if you want to save 10 bucks.
01:24:49.860
But we do appreciate you being part of the movement and part on the effort to push back against mainstream media.
01:25:02.140
Antarctica has a glacier called the Doomsday Glacier.
01:25:05.980
It's nicknamed that because of its high risk of collapse and the threat to the global sea level.
01:25:13.280
It has the potential to rapidly retreat in the coming years.
01:25:18.160
That's according to scientists applying concerns over the extreme sea level rise that would accompany
01:25:27.040
It's actually named the Thwaites Glacier, but it's capable of raising sea levels by 16 feet.
01:25:47.120
It's eroding, though, along its underwater base as the planet warms in a study.
01:25:54.500
In a study published yesterday, or the day before, I guess, in the journal Natural Geoscience,
01:26:01.520
scientists mapped the glacier's historical retreat, hoping to learn from its past what the glacier
01:26:12.520
If it acted like this in the past, why are we so alarmed by that in the future?
01:26:27.920
You know, when melting ice, you've seen ice melt in a glass, right?
01:26:32.280
You've had a bunch of ice in a glass, and then it melts.
01:26:37.540
Raises the water level in your house by, you know, 10, 15 feet sometimes.
01:26:47.460
Because when the ice melts, obviously, it's going to overflow in the glass.
01:26:57.360
Well, so this glacier, because they talk about the ice melting on land, and then it flows into
01:27:08.800
But this, I mean, it's already in the water, right?
01:27:18.380
You know, it's like, I guess if, yes, if the ice melts on land, runs into the water, that
01:27:26.660
Though, I mean, the amount of ice would need to be significant.
01:27:40.000
Like, think of it, the biggest snowman you've ever seen would need to be bigger than that.
01:27:58.100
Like, they constantly act as if every one of these things is yet another-
01:28:05.240
Another critical situation that's going to have all of humanity running for the hills and not being able to adapt, of course.
01:28:15.300
Not being able to figure out a way to manipulate our surroundings to survive these things.
01:28:22.560
Now, you know, this happened through the heat wave here not that long ago that hit Europe.
01:28:31.220
We, how, you know, this is what could happen to places.
01:28:34.280
Like, they would have to deal with temperatures like this.
01:28:36.960
And I'm looking at the thermometer here in Texas and thinking, yeah, this, what you would do is build a bunch of air conditioners.
01:28:43.000
And they're like, well, they don't have air conditioners.
01:28:44.580
They would need to get some if this were to occur on a constant basis.
01:28:55.780
Like, less expensively than trying to control the global temperature.
01:29:00.600
What if we not only try to control the global temperature, but we paint all the rooftops white?
01:29:12.140
Because I've seen that kicked around a little bit.
01:29:22.260
I just don't understand how, like, we adapt to these situations all the time.
01:29:28.980
Countries all over the globe are in different situations and have dealt with every one of these issues individually on their own.
01:29:39.260
It's hotter here every year than it is in Europe during a heat wave, and yet we somehow survive it.
01:29:44.680
And so the answer should not be, how do we change the global temperature?
01:29:50.940
The answer should be, hey, like, let's come up with enough energy to supply the needs of modern civilization.
01:30:05.780
You have to be able to come up with enough energy to supply the needs of the human population.
01:30:14.580
The answer is not going to be putting a nest thermometer on the Earth and twisting it.
01:30:23.220
You can't even do the most basic things you're trying to do, like control inflation.
01:30:28.240
What if we put a heat screen between the sun and the Earth?
01:30:34.100
How would that be floated up there on spaceships?
01:30:37.700
Yeah, you would somehow, you know, hang it in space.
01:30:51.300
I mean, don't get ridiculous with a bunch of details.
01:31:03.500
So if we tinted the Earth, it would be a little bit cooler, right?
01:31:09.140
Just like your car when you put that screen in the windshield.
01:31:15.980
So the sun shield, you just do that in space so that the heat doesn't get here.
01:31:30.360
No, it was actually in an article about global warming.
01:31:40.640
And that was because of the evils of nuclear power.
01:31:44.840
Because now all of a sudden the environmentalists are like, you know what?
01:31:47.240
You're not going to believe what we've discovered.
01:31:56.220
And these right wingers want to stop us from doing it.
01:32:01.900
We've been saying we wanted nuclear power forever.
01:32:04.580
We've been saying that this would be a major solution.
01:32:09.740
So you don't have to worry about any of the problems.
01:32:13.760
Now, this only, this does not solve every problem that fossil fuels does solve.
01:32:18.580
And, you know, like they're, it's just, it's just an electricity solution more than anything
01:32:22.840
And that doesn't, you know, that's not necessarily the right solution for heavy transport and,
01:32:27.060
you know, industrial heat processes and lots of other different things.
01:32:30.720
But I will say it would solve a lot of our problems when it comes to electricity.
01:32:34.940
And I'm old enough to remember, just as an example, John McCain running for president
01:32:40.400
on a platform that advocated hundreds, if not thousands of nuclear plants being built.
01:32:48.860
Now, the green movement is saying, you know what?
01:32:52.160
What if we just count nuclear power as green, which it should have been all along?
01:32:56.780
We just act like we didn't protest it for the past 50 years.
01:32:59.700
And we now embrace it and say, that's ESG friendly too.
01:33:04.160
Now, that's a good development for society that they recognize that.
01:33:07.560
And it's good if we start building nuclear plants.
01:33:10.260
But it is so impossible to swallow the fact that they are now trying to claim that they're
01:33:24.620
Hey, guys, did you know the right wants to defund the police?
01:33:29.860
How could you possibly believe people are going to actually swallow that?
01:33:39.480
This bill came out and there was a line in there about funding a national police force.
01:33:45.240
It's like, well, yeah, that's a different thing than what we're talking about.
01:33:48.740
What we want is like stop burning buildings, arrest people when they break windows and
01:33:55.020
make sure that the police are there to stop crime.
01:33:58.020
You wanted them all to go home so that when all this stuff was happening, no one was able
01:34:04.780
And you also wanted the Second Amendment to go away so they couldn't even fire their own
01:34:13.560
You know, look, America can choose this if they wish.
01:34:29.320
Pat and Stu for Glenn on the Glenn Beck program.
01:34:41.280
Uh, they show how flawed their thinking is oftentimes.
01:34:46.040
Let me read these, uh, couple of points that they made in the article on this gigantic
01:34:56.740
They found at some point in the past two centuries, the base of the glacier dislodged from the
01:35:04.680
seabed and retreated at a rate of, uh, 2.1 kilometers per year.
01:35:10.960
Uh, that's twice the rate that scientists have observed in the past decade or so.
01:35:16.040
So in the last two centuries, it's been retreating faster than it is now, but it's, it's climate
01:35:23.640
The swift disintegration possibly occurred as recently.
01:35:27.880
I mean, this is as recent as they get the mid 20th century.
01:35:32.600
So in 1950, it was, it was, uh, disintegrating faster than it is now.
01:35:40.220
Well, and yet we're supposed to believe that we need to change everything we're doing, spend
01:35:45.940
a hundred trillion dollars and fix this climate change problem.
01:35:53.660
You know, I'm, I'm old enough as well to remember a time where Glenn Beck was constantly
01:36:01.200
Remember they used to say that like Stephen Colbert and Jon Stewart and those guys would
01:36:04.580
be like, Oh, he's, you know, Glenn Beck spreading fear, spreading, you know, all of this
01:36:10.040
cataclysmic, uh, fear mongering that, that Glenn Beck does in his doom room.
01:36:19.540
It's like 90% of your propaganda is related to the fact that we're all going to die because
01:36:24.840
of a 0.7 degree Celsius temperature warm over a century.
01:36:29.780
Despite all the evidence that shows that we've been able to adapt much quicker than, than,
01:36:38.300
Can you imagine if by the year 2100, which oftentimes that's, you know, for, for those
01:36:43.760
who, um, have some kind of common sense and realize that we're not going to be over by
01:36:50.540
the year 2030, the year they project a lot is 2100.
01:36:54.880
Can you imagine if in the next 78 years, we don't come up with something that helps us get
01:37:03.820
rid of CO2 if that's what we really, really need to do is, is, uh, lessen the CO2 in the
01:37:19.040
This is literally how they do these projections.
01:37:21.820
They literally, literally go through and say, what if nothing happens?
01:37:35.420
Like look at, you know, you go to, um, there's this big study that came out a while ago that's
01:37:39.700
talked about how many people would have to move from like Bangladesh because of the flooding
01:37:44.060
that comes from global warming over the next hundred years.
01:37:48.340
When you dig into the study, they literally, literally are figuring out if no one changes any
01:37:55.280
Now, why on earth would, if temper, if, if the sea level was rising, why on earth would
01:38:06.600
At the very least, they wouldn't just stand there and get, and drown.
01:38:09.680
If the sea level is rising 16 feet, I would think Miami residents would want to say, hey,
01:38:15.200
I understand Iowa's really nice this time of year.
01:38:18.220
And that's the, that's, if it happened so quickly, they couldn't do nothing about it.
01:38:21.940
Most likely what they would do is they would do what Holland has done, or they would build
01:38:26.220
seawalls, or they would, they would come up with other technological solutions like we
01:38:30.080
have done all across the globe to deal with water getting in the wrong places.
01:38:34.080
In 1900, with that technology, Galveston, Texas raised the city 17 feet.
01:38:43.500
Because of a hurricane that hit them and wiped out the town and maybe killed 10,000 people.
01:38:47.780
So they raised the city 17 feet clear back then.
01:38:56.060
With the technology we have today, what could we possibly do?
01:39:02.380
Like, we have faith in science to actually develop things that make life better.
01:39:07.820
I mean, think of the, the LED light is a good example of this.
01:39:10.280
You had a situation where, you know, this is George H, or George W. Bush, who, who did
01:39:15.600
this, but he, you know, I think it was Christmas Eve or something, passed through something that
01:39:22.760
And they banned them, basically, except for artistic uses and stuff.
01:39:28.120
And the thought was, well, we'll force everybody to use fluorescence, which sucked.
01:39:35.920
And LED lights, which work on a fraction of the energy of even the fluorescence, they last
01:39:45.160
They just outperformed everything else on the market.
01:40:00.280
And that is going to be how all of these changes happen in the real world.
01:40:05.620
You can put all these laws in, you know, we should go into California, maybe a little
01:40:08.940
bit coming up, because they're in the middle of a power crisis.
01:40:11.160
In the middle of a power crisis in which they are telling you, you can't charge your electric
01:40:24.420
You know, days after they banned gas-powered cars in the future, they can't.
01:40:30.280
They are going to their citizens and saying, hey, decades, a decade before, this is reality.
01:40:35.960
You need to, we can't even deal with the power or needs we have right now, let alone in the
01:40:42.640
That is, how Gavin Newsom could possibly be considered a presidential candidate is beyond
01:40:48.940
I mean, he's been a complete failure in everything he's ever done.
01:40:55.760
And during, under his tutelage, for the first time in its history, California lost population.
01:41:02.520
Because of the way he's screwing up California.
01:41:07.500
And you really don't want to have your wife near him.
01:41:10.060
Because he seems to have sex with a lot of the wives that his best friends have that
01:41:17.160
There's not, there's a lot to be critical of Gavin Newsom.
01:41:19.520
And now I guess for a Democrat, all this stuff adds up to presidential hopeful, but I can't
01:41:27.300
It does tell you the sad state of the Democrat party though, that they got nobody else to turn
01:41:33.640
Uh, even Hillary Clinton said she's not going to try it again.
01:41:37.440
I mean, she's never eaten a grape or at least not until her twenties.
01:41:49.520
It's Matt and Stu for Glenn on the Glenn Beck Program.
01:42:01.240
Uh, California is being forced into some interesting decisions here.
01:42:06.060
We were just talking about the, uh, climate change situation and how, uh, that's affected
01:42:14.800
Um, but they are making some laws and some regulations that are just not going to be advantageous for
01:42:25.720
Uh, for instance, right now they're in a situation where they've, they've goaded everybody into buying electric cars.
01:42:34.260
Uh, they've told their residents that you won't be able to drive gas-powered vehicles in 2035.
01:42:41.300
The only ones that will be available, uh, will be electric vehicles.
01:42:45.900
And then they tell the residents, oh, by the way, uh, yeah, we, we can't have you, uh, charging your electric vehicle
01:42:55.420
But other than that, other than that, this is a totally plausible solution to your transportation needs.
01:43:02.760
Just make sure you don't have to travel in that time period.
01:43:06.120
I mean, you know, it's only five hours of the day.
01:43:15.200
What if my, what if my shift isn't, uh, at three, what if my business isn't even open?
01:43:20.960
What, what, you know, one phrase that should come to your mind is being on time is being late.
01:43:42.700
And listen to the radio or whatever until the business opens.
01:43:46.320
Because then you'll have to charge your car between 4 and 9 on the way home.
01:43:55.560
I don't think people realize what this electric car situation is like.
01:43:58.820
And like, you know, for certain people in certain circumstances, there's nothing wrong
01:44:06.420
I mean, you know, they're not necessarily built to the specifications of what enthusiasts
01:44:20.080
Tesla Plaid is basically the fastest car ever built unless you're spending a million dollars.
01:44:24.360
And, you know, it's, you know, it's zero to 60 in, you know, near two seconds.
01:44:29.500
But even doing that, though, is going to just drain your power really fast.
01:44:36.600
Not if you're driving it like you drive a Tesla Plaid, then you've got eight miles.
01:44:41.560
You know, I mean, it's really, really drains the battery quickly.
01:44:44.640
But again, like if what you're doing is commuting 10 miles to work and back every day, you can
01:44:55.700
As you know, my car saga is still ongoing in some ways.
01:45:01.460
No, the one I ordered has now been over a year.
01:45:07.860
And they still, it's still on hold, sitting in a lot somewhere in Michigan without chips,
01:45:14.520
It's built, but not built because it doesn't have the chips it needs to run.
01:45:22.260
And this is after I removed features on it to get it built at all.
01:45:25.200
If I didn't remove those features, it would still not even be accepted for order at this
01:45:35.240
Make sure to remember it in November because this is the world you live in right now.
01:45:40.480
And, you know, so I started looking at some of the ones I looked at were electric cars.
01:45:43.520
And you think to yourself, okay, well, my life pretty much is a life that would
01:45:55.660
I no longer have the ridiculous commute I had in the Northeast.
01:46:04.160
I generally speaking, drive here, drive home, maybe a stop or two on the way home.
01:46:10.700
I don't have, take tons and tons of long trips, though I do take them sometimes.
01:46:14.560
And I would need to probably wind up renting a car for all of those.
01:46:20.680
Or I could sit around on the side of the road and hope a charger happened to work out
01:46:25.300
But, like, I don't take enough of them that it would be damaging.
01:46:28.620
And if we did it as a family, my wife has a giant earth-killing SUV that we could drive
01:46:58.520
So, our family is one that could adapt enough to deal with an electric car.
01:47:02.740
And, again, that should not be the thing you do when you purchase an automobile.
01:47:07.780
You shouldn't be like, how do I adapt to make this work for my family?
01:47:12.540
So, I started looking at some of them just to kind of check them out as I've done a lot
01:47:15.840
of research on a lot of different cars over a year.
01:47:21.920
If you bump into a fast charger and you can actually get one that works, number one, and
01:47:28.780
that is not one of the lower level fast chargers.
01:47:32.540
Usually, when you have a slew of electric chargers, only one of them will be the right
01:47:38.460
Some of them will be more like your home charger level, which takes a lot longer, as I'll mention
01:47:44.900
But if you go and you go to the fast charger, it might take 20, 30 minutes if you're lucky.
01:47:50.040
Now, that's not bad in comparison to what we're used to with electric cars.
01:47:58.300
I filled up from zero in two minutes in my car and was able to drive it away without
01:48:08.900
It's just an easy, quick, it's just a great process.
01:48:11.880
Even though I don't like buying gas, the efficiency of that process is really, really great.
01:48:18.760
Not to mention, it gives me an excuse to go inside and buy snacks.
01:48:22.200
Anyways, the electric car, if you have it at home, the most likely thing you'll do is
01:48:28.020
install upgraded electricity to the 240 in your garage, if you have one.
01:48:35.080
And if you have the opportunity to do that, you're probably looking at something like anywhere
01:48:39.260
from $500 to $1,500, depending on your situation, maybe even a little bit more in some areas,
01:48:44.540
where, especially these days, to get this installed in your home.
01:48:49.700
So, again, you're starting off down $1,000, let's say.
01:48:54.460
Then, I will note that this electricity is not free.
01:49:01.180
People think because they're not seeing the credit card numbers, you know, inserting their
01:49:05.900
card and watching the numbers go up, that it is free.
01:49:09.420
You will be charged for this electricity if they allow you to use it, as we're seeing
01:49:14.040
in California, if they allow you to use it, you will be charged for this electricity.
01:49:20.080
So, there's no magic electricity that flies out your butt into your car and charges it
01:49:28.340
I will say I've never tried to put the charger in my butt, but if it works, it's news to me.
01:49:40.760
I wouldn't have been the first one drinking out of a cow's teat.
01:49:45.780
You know, I wouldn't be number one in that parade.
01:49:51.080
You know, because a lot of delicious products came out of that experiment.
01:49:54.300
I'm not sure the same would be true with the electric cars.
01:49:57.920
So, you put this 240, you know, 240 in your garage.
01:50:05.400
And I thought that would be like, when I was looking into it, I thought that would be like,
01:50:18.480
So, if you upgrade the electricity in your garage, you can fill it with a full overnight charge.
01:50:29.600
If you plug it into your normal wall socket, three days.
01:50:40.240
Now, this is one particular car that I looked into.
01:50:46.180
So, basically, completely unusable in that format, right?
01:50:50.040
Unless you never drive it below, you know, 50%.
01:50:59.400
Like, it might work for, you know, for you if you are, you know, you're a company that,
01:51:05.240
you know, you maybe have a, you're going to a company that's a very limited amount of distance.
01:51:14.660
There's a lot of things that you just have to eliminate out of your life.
01:51:17.100
And what they're seeing is, which is really just absolutely adorable, is people buying electric cars to go back and forth to work.
01:51:28.680
And then keeping a third car that they use for longer trips.
01:51:32.540
Which, you know, again, if you have the means, go for it.
01:51:44.440
Anyway, so there was a, we went over this on Studios America, I think it was last week.
01:51:49.220
And we played clips from this one TED talk from this environmentalist.
01:51:57.800
It's really good because he's an environmentalist.
01:52:00.320
He, you know, is 100% on board with global warming and all the things.
01:52:03.160
This is the one whose thing was, yeah, but you got to look at the whole production of the car.
01:52:08.320
And see how unfriendly it is to the environment.
01:52:14.300
And you have to, you have to make the range equal.
01:52:18.500
If a gas powered car has 400 mile range, you can't compare it to 120 mile electric car.
01:52:23.720
Now there are some Teslas that are up there now, three and 400 miles.
01:52:26.680
But again, that means you're a lot more when it comes to the production of these cars.
01:52:32.600
I think the long range one, it's at least been announced.
01:52:39.420
I mean, this is a good, Tesla is a good company.
01:52:42.600
Like, I don't, this is the problem is it seems like when you're skeptical of these things,
01:52:49.480
I don't, I think there's a place for electric cars.
01:53:00.580
But this is before, the one we drove was before the Model S performance, which preceded the plaid.
01:53:07.200
So we were two generations ago and it was still breathtakingly fast.
01:53:15.760
It's so fast that it's almost, it's almost uncomfortable.
01:53:23.120
You did it too much and it, like, your stomach would be rattled.
01:53:29.480
I like the fact that they're innovating this way.
01:53:30.680
And in order to get the next two generations, don't you just download into the Tesla?
01:53:39.260
You can improve the car that way over the air updates.
01:53:55.960
In many ways, electric cars will outperform gas-powered cars.
01:54:00.400
Especially when it comes to just raw acceleration.
01:54:02.520
There's no way to equal it with a gas-powered car.
01:54:05.940
There's a lot of other things that you don't get out of them as well.
01:54:12.400
You know, it really is, I think for a lot of people, it's just not feasible.
01:54:18.020
And look what's happening in California, where days after they declared a statewide grid emergency, and they're facing the possibility of rolling blackouts, well, they've had to activate their gas-powered emergency generators to take care of it.
01:54:35.520
And now they are saying, by the way, the nuclear plant, they were so focused on taking offline, they're going to delay that closure for five years.
01:54:45.820
They're 5% of their cars are electric, and they can't even power them now.
01:54:49.480
What do you think's going to happen when it's 100%?
01:54:57.980
The only hope is they go down this road, and it's so bad, they stop.
01:55:04.840
They tried to force electric cars in, and it got so bad that they stopped.
01:55:11.900
But man, they're going down this road really fast.
01:55:32.100
We're talking about California's energy, well, the climate change nonsense.
01:55:36.700
And California may be the biggest subscriber to the climate change nonsense.
01:55:42.040
Ahead of Labor Day weekend, Californians were advised to set their thermostats to 78 degrees or higher.
01:55:56.740
Avoid using large appliances all day, of course, and charging electric vehicles only in the off periods.
01:56:09.400
What happens if you're somewhere where you need electricity to get to your next destination between the air hours of 4 and 9 p.m.?
01:56:26.040
If this had happened in 10 years, it would be embarrassing.
01:56:28.500
The fact that it's happening before they even implemented any of these rules is, like, how can the state be taken seriously?
01:56:35.660
How can Gavin Newsom be considered a presidential candidate?
01:56:39.120
It's been a nonstop catastrophe every minute of his life.
01:56:46.000
He's alive, which is more than they can say for most of their other candidates.
01:56:51.240
So between breathing and having pretty good hair, who else are they going to get?
01:56:56.620
They got friggin' Herman Munster running for Senate in Pennsylvania.
01:57:14.240
Didn't he have bolts on his neck, though, or something?
01:57:18.180
Now that's what you're saying, then, that John Fetterman has bolts on his neck?
01:57:24.560
I will say Herman Munster, much more well-spoken than John Fetterman.
01:57:38.380
Although, I will say, Herman Munster embraced the free market much more than John Fetterman does.