The Glenn Beck Program - November 18, 2019


Plymouth & the Pilgrims: Pioneering Freedom | Guests: Paul Jehle & Beth Perara | 11⧸18⧸19


Episode Stats

Length

2 hours and 5 minutes

Words per Minute

162.5132

Word Count

20,470

Sentence Count

63

Misogynist Sentences

13

Hate Speech Sentences

24


Summary

Join us live from a historic home in the sleepy town of Plymouth, MA where the first thanksgiving actually took place. We talk impeachment, impeachment, and some possible solutions to the problems we re all facing.


Transcript

00:00:00.000 um we are uh uh broadcasting obviously from a uh a different location pat is sitting in for stew who
00:00:10.160 i guess is sick i mean is the guy who always does he even work anymore it's like he's here
00:00:15.220 like three days every month he's like johnny carson now he really is i ed mcmahon didn't do
00:00:22.360 that no johnny did that it's my turn right turn first how are you pat i'm good i'm good
00:00:29.520 good you uh i'm great i've had an amazing amazing weekend uh and we'll uh tell you what we have kind
00:00:38.620 of up our sleeve a little bit uh today i was hoping to make an announcement from uh this location
00:00:44.400 today but we're gonna we're gonna push it off i think until after uh thanksgiving but we are gonna
00:00:50.040 i mean if you're smart you're gonna figure it out um but uh we're live from plymouth massachusetts
00:00:58.100 today in uh the laden house more in a minute
00:01:02.200 the fusion of entertainment and enlightenment
00:01:19.360 i never thought i would see the day when barack obama seemed moderate but barack obama has come
00:01:29.200 out and said to the democrats you got to slow down uh not everybody is into this revolution thing
00:01:35.440 uh and that's what the democrats have been talking about we'll talk about that plus what they're doing
00:01:41.200 with impeachment and some possible solutions possible solutions that we really need to focus
00:01:50.860 on here in the next few weeks we begin there in one minute this is the glenbeck program
00:01:56.640 well thanksgiving is next week christmas is right around the corner and if you haven't already thought
00:02:04.420 about it it might be time for you to consider uh preparing your home for holiday guests with brand
00:02:09.220 new blind shades or plantations shutters from blinds.com now if you haven't tried blinds.com
00:02:15.040 before now is the perfect time to try it here's uh one of the listeners uh has written in and said
00:02:20.660 i was skeptical making such a large purchase online they walked me through all of the measurements i
00:02:25.960 bought the plantations shutters boy that would have been scary uh they were uh everything went well
00:02:31.640 they are beautiful thanks blinds.com stew and his wife did the same thing they got the plantations
00:02:37.140 shutters and when they tried to order them the guy said you know can i send you a sample of something
00:02:43.000 else he said you've picked the most expensive one and he said honestly the ones that's just a little
00:02:50.100 cheaper he said they're better they ended up saving money and getting better plantation shutters those are
00:02:57.240 the kind of people that you're working with at blinds.com and 100 satisfaction guarantee means that if
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00:03:34.700 i am sitting in a very historic home i am sitting in uh the laden home
00:03:57.800 in um plymouth massachusetts and plymouth is this amazing town that i've never been to
00:04:06.300 um and i came here saturday and it was uh it was a it was a long trip this weekend uh because i
00:04:15.940 stopped somewhere else that we'll talk about later but i um i got here saturday and it's such a strange
00:04:24.960 place because everywhere you look everywhere you look something really important happened
00:04:31.760 um in this home that i'm i'm sitting in uh this is where the first peace treaty happened
00:04:40.620 uh the first peace treaty with the native americans the first election in america happened
00:04:48.480 in this room um this is the this is called plot number one and it's the first street in america
00:04:58.980 and the first home in america right out uh across the street looking out the windows i can see
00:05:09.400 plymouth rock from here it's literally a stone throws away from plymouth rock it is right on the water
00:05:17.260 and the front yard is where they think the first thanksgiving actually happened
00:05:23.520 kind of a historic place
00:05:27.340 next hour i want to talk to you about the pilgrims and what isn't being taught anymore
00:05:40.540 this is this town is i think like the rest of america except on steroids because the people who
00:05:51.420 are here who know the truth about the pilgrims are on fire they it is this group of people up here
00:06:00.140 that are holding down the fort for the pilgrims are truly remarkable people i i haven't been around
00:06:08.120 people like this in a very long time that really really know history know what they've been called
00:06:14.960 to do have a plan and are doing it and are so filled with love for other people and it's working
00:06:23.260 there's the other side of town that either just doesn't care maybe you've lived here for a long
00:06:31.540 time and you know i've seen it all and whatever yada yada yada pilgrims um or they are really
00:06:40.680 standing in the way of telling the truth about the pilgrims uh one of the guys who i was with who
00:06:49.040 we'll talk about a little later was uh was actually in holland he came here from holland because he was
00:06:55.660 doing some research on the pilgrims and trying to get a reason from the the pilgrim museum which
00:07:02.860 i think is like a phone booth uh uh you know from where they launched and uh and there's one guy who
00:07:12.860 you know was like oh my gosh somebody just ring the bell they came in they want to hear about the
00:07:18.600 pilgrims and so he he went over there and he was asking their experts why did the pilgrims come here
00:07:26.300 and the answers are crazy truly truly crazy well because there was an economic recession coming over
00:07:35.000 oh oh so it's to escape an economic recession they decided to go to a place to where they thought they
00:07:43.460 could be scalped and eaten oh okay that makes sense i know that's that's the first thing i do
00:07:51.560 hey there might be a recession let's get on to a rickety leaking boat and cross the ocean uh you know
00:08:01.080 where half of us are probably gonna die because that's the way it is it's not exactly you know a nice
00:08:08.140 tour ship that you're going on and then we're gonna go to a place where there's native americans
00:08:13.360 and uh they usually kill all of the people that are on the ship but at least we won't experience
00:08:20.200 that recession why did they come here and what has been lost and why is thanksgiving so important
00:08:29.520 and what are the people here doing they are holding the fort and they're actually making progress here
00:08:38.320 so we'll get into that here in a in a little while and tell you
00:08:45.160 uh something that i have felt for a while now i have um was supposed to do and uh so we are going
00:08:56.300 to be uh doing that and it involves next summer uh but it's really a year-long uh event and we'll
00:09:04.640 talk about that coming up in in just a little while pat gray is uh joining us uh because stew is
00:09:09.860 faking an illness i think uh he works uh he works less than johnny carson used to work when he was
00:09:17.640 doing the show uh and so pat welcome to the program how are you good i'm gonna start calling i'm gonna
00:09:23.000 start saying that uh stew is filling in for pat uh uh shortly um a couple of things pat first of all
00:09:31.500 uh nancy pelosi i think has i think they i think all of the republicans on this impeachment hearing
00:09:38.380 have really lost it i don't think they even know what reality is anymore um nancy pelosi um is now
00:09:48.220 saying that trump withheld the money from ukraine for putin could we play this audio please listen to
00:09:54.600 this
00:09:54.900 so uh for a long time just until the 24th of september it was when i called for a fuller expansion the
00:10:08.180 inquiry was going on but to proceed with the inquiry and that kind of changed our communication
00:10:15.480 until that day in the room when i said all rose mr president with you lead to putin whether it's
00:10:23.960 giving them a stronger foothold in the middle east by what you did with turkey and syria or what you
00:10:29.460 did by withholding a grant withholding aid to military assistance voted by congress to ukraine to the
00:10:36.780 benefit of putin 11 000 more like 13 000 by now ukrainians have died at the hands of the russians
00:10:44.360 they needed that military aid and with his disparaging remarks about nato and questioning
00:10:50.760 our commitment to nato that's to putin's advantage so we do have a shall we say a candid relationship
00:10:58.760 wow i don't think i've ever heard anything so dishonest um first of all nancy um the aid was
00:11:07.080 given in fact he sold what they were asking for they were asking for more of because the president
00:11:15.120 had already sold them those weapons and those weapons systems they had been begging for but it
00:11:21.640 was the democrats under hillary clinton barack obama and yes you nancy pelosi that refused to sell
00:11:28.920 them any of those weapons so for her to say that you know look he's just trying to help the russians
00:11:35.480 he hurt the russians here his policies towards russia not his language his policies towards russia
00:11:43.020 are much more fierce than anything that the reset team was trying to do with vladimir putin and when
00:11:51.880 it comes to ukraine he actually has armed them against russia and the democrats did not that's all part
00:12:01.480 of trying to make trump seem like a russian agent they're still trying to do that they're still
00:12:05.640 trying to make it it look they're trying to make the american people believe that donald trump
00:12:10.580 is a russian asset it's so dishonest it is it's so almost treason ish it's it's it's almost treason
00:12:23.920 uh so uh gian carlos sopo he wrote for the blaze this weekend leak focus groups results uh the uh
00:12:32.980 they reveal the democrats impeaching messaging plans uh weak legal case have you did you read this
00:12:38.800 article no so he says um what happened to quid pro quo as political observers noticed this week
00:12:46.100 the democrats have a new messaging strategy in their impeachment inquiry of president trump
00:12:50.800 accuse him of bribery the shift came after a focus group in battles down in battleground states by the
00:12:58.920 democratic congressional campaign committee showed that voters were less receptive to the latin legal
00:13:04.280 term quid pro quo uh they preferred the charge of bribery over quid pro quo the latter according to the
00:13:14.980 sources familiar with the focus group likely are to persuade swing voters so they changed it
00:13:20.660 from quid pro quo just based on a focus group what can we what can we use to get this guy
00:13:26.880 um as the washington post points out points out the house intelligence committee member
00:13:32.240 jim heinz democrat from con uh connecticut was the first to announce the democrats uh intentions to
00:13:39.920 require retire quid pro quo during an appearance on meet the press house speaker nancy pelosi began
00:13:47.100 accusing trump of bribery during the press conference on thursday talking latin around here
00:13:52.620 e plurus unum for many one quid pro quo bribery and all that is in the constitution and attached to
00:13:59.620 the impeachment hearing she said she noted a likely reason why democrats had replaced quid pro quo with
00:14:05.680 bribery is that the latter is one of the two crimes cited in the constitution again not true the reason why
00:14:12.980 they decided to change that is because people understood that and thought it was worse than quid
00:14:20.280 pro quo post also noticed that even heinz recognizes that while bribery may be a political useful term for
00:14:27.340 the democrats it's also in pride imprecise to describe the allegations abuse of power is not necessarily
00:14:34.900 a concept that most americans run around thinking about in this case the abuse of power was the same
00:14:40.740 combination of bribery and extortion it's also unclear what democrats argue is the alleged bribe in question
00:14:47.580 since democrats don't have any witnesses with direct knowledge of trump's state of mind during his dealings
00:14:54.340 with ukraine republicans were quick to point out the change in messaging underscores that democrats
00:14:59.980 don't have a compelling legal case against the president they're just trying different narratives to see
00:15:05.900 what would work and that brings me back to what nancy pelosi just said and what pat said they're just
00:15:13.180 doing everything they can they're throwing spaghetti up into the wall to see what sticks they don't have
00:15:19.720 anything they have quid pro quo doesn't work bribery doesn't work he's a russian agent doesn't work
00:15:26.720 when is america going to wake up to this well if you if you look at the what's the definition of
00:15:32.280 bribery persuade someone to act in one's favor typically illegally or dishonestly by a gift of
00:15:38.660 money or other inducement well so you have to get something for it what did we get for the money we
00:15:44.280 gave them nothing they never did the investigation even the guy who was supposedly bribed has said over
00:15:51.400 and over again we received nothing for the investigation by the way we didn't we didn't do an investigation
00:15:57.280 uh so the line that kept sticking out to me this weekend was uh the democrats saying that sometimes
00:16:04.180 hearsay is better than direct yeah that's amazing wow since when has hearsay been better than direct
00:16:12.760 evidence the the hoops that you intellectually have to jump through to be a part of this crazy train
00:16:20.160 is is truly remarkable new report out suggests that companies are underestimating the damage that
00:16:28.240 could be done if employee data is stolen and leaked to the dark web or wider internet employee email
00:16:35.080 addresses and uh and and information on employees broad entry point into a company's system they have
00:16:43.360 access to employees data it could lead to many security issues that businesses are worried about day to
00:16:49.220 day it's important that you understand how cybercrime is affecting our lives i've mentioned that before
00:16:58.660 somebody's identity gets stolen um you know everybody thinks it's fine every two seconds somebody's
00:17:04.820 identity is every two seconds somebody says yeah but i didn't think it was going to happen to me
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00:17:53.380 welcome to the program i'm glad you're listening so there's uh a couple of things um it's just i'm
00:18:11.380 gonna get politics out of the way today you see the uh buddha judge uh polls in uh iowa pat pretty
00:18:17.860 amazing pretty amazing what is your take on this uh i i think my take is that they they just don't
00:18:24.660 know who they like because they don't like any of them that much and i think anybody who looks fresh
00:18:29.860 and new is going to do well for a while and i think maybe buddha judge is the shiny new object
00:18:35.060 right right now in iowa for him to shoot up nine points like this and be nine points ahead is amazing
00:18:41.460 because there's i mean i i don't know what new policy he's proposed that is that has sparked this
00:18:48.400 but i just think it's because they're tired of biden they don't necessarily like warren and sanders
00:18:54.500 and so they're like well what about this guy let me explain let me explain my uh theory on this um to
00:19:01.940 anybody who has ever gone shoe shopping with a woman if you've gone shoe shopping with a woman
00:19:08.260 and and it's for a specific outfit they either go into the shoe store and they know exactly what
00:19:18.480 they're looking for they see it and they're like i know what it is i want that shoe they try it on
00:19:24.760 they walk around they walk out the store with that shoe in the box and then the rest of your life
00:19:31.240 is is spent listening to them bitch about how uncomfortable that shoe is oh i can't wait to get
00:19:37.640 home to take these shoes off honey we just got into the car to go to the event okay that's the
00:19:46.120 democrats okay sometimes they find the shoe they know exactly what they're looking for and then as
00:19:51.760 soon as it's on everybody is saying i can't wait to take these shoes off here's what's happening this
00:19:57.020 time if you've ever gone to shoe shopping uh gone shoe shopping with a woman and she doesn't know
00:20:05.140 what shoe she's looking for she will try on shoes and you'll she'll come out and she'll say what about
00:20:11.560 these and you'll say they look great they're great they're beautiful they're wonderful and she'll say
00:20:17.880 i don't know and she'll walk around in them for a while i think i really like these but you know i saw
00:20:25.520 another shoe over there i want to try okay so she goes and she tries on that shoe and she walks around
00:20:31.740 and she says what do you think about these oh i think these are great these are wonderful shoes
00:20:37.540 i think these are wonderful and she walks around i like these i think i like these
00:20:42.000 hell i don't know are they gonna and then she gets a third pair of shoes and a fourth pair of shoes
00:20:48.500 and then you end up walking out of the shoe store without a single shoe and you're like what
00:20:55.740 what what was wrong with any of those shoes they're all uncomfortable honey they were all black
00:21:01.680 they all were heels what exactly are you looking for i don't know i'll know it when i see it
00:21:09.000 right now buddha judge is just a pair of pumps that is uncomfortable and that they're trying on at the
00:21:17.280 store and all of us are like it's exactly like the other shoe i mean i don't know what you're looking
00:21:24.500 for i don't see the difference between the last one you were trying on and this one and they're
00:21:30.000 both going to be really uncomfortable but they're walking around right now in the shoe store going
00:21:34.920 i don't know these buddha judges i i think i really like these i'm not really and as soon as they see
00:21:43.960 something else they'll try that one on because none of them are what they're really looking for
00:21:49.640 and michael bloomberg might be that other one that they try on for a little while when he jumps
00:21:55.480 into the race and then they're going to realize no there i knew there was a reason i didn't like this
00:21:59.780 guy right that's going to happen to him and you know what they're going to go back and try other
00:22:05.200 shoes on yeah they're going to and what did they start with if this is right if this is really a tight
00:22:12.720 analogy what did they start with because when they have to make a decision they usually go back
00:22:19.600 to the first one they tried on which was uh what's his name joe biden yes and they'll be like you know
00:22:27.560 i think i'll just go with these they're not happy about it but they'll just go back to those and
00:22:32.720 you're like we could have left the store two hours ago you're listening to glenn beck
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00:23:59.500 welcome to the program i'm uh i'm so glad uh that you're um
00:24:29.060 you're with us uh pat is in for stew today i'm in uh plymouth massachusetts and
00:24:36.600 beginning to uh lay this out for you on why i'm here and where i'm at and and uh and i want to also
00:24:44.100 promote this parade that they have uh on thanksgiving they started this parade about 20 years ago and it's
00:24:51.960 just a group of people um in a church that started this and you can't even imagine what it's like to get
00:24:58.760 permits in new england and they got a permit to do a uh a pilgrim parade and really kind of tell the
00:25:08.340 truth about the pilgrims and they really went all out i mean this is not like a you know back of the
00:25:14.840 pickup truck local parade this is they've they've made these beautiful unbelievable floats they don't
00:25:21.560 have any sponsors it's all done with their own money and this just small little group and uh
00:25:27.080 they've done it now for 20 years this year they're expecting about a quarter of a million people
00:25:33.340 on the streets of plymouth mass to see this parade and it is the most wholesome uh it's it's it's almost
00:25:42.860 becoming the anti-macy's you know it's not about sales and gifts and broadway shows and you know
00:25:50.140 anything it's about the pilgrims and what they did and if you're anywhere in the area please uh come up
00:25:58.260 to this parade you will not be disappointed i i went into the float barns uh yesterday and it's it's
00:26:04.500 incredible what they're doing up here really is and all just people who are driven to do it they don't
00:26:10.080 get anything out of it nobody's making any money it's just it's it's yeah you want to talk about one
00:26:17.180 person deciding to do something and can make a difference that's what's happening in plymouth
00:26:21.680 maine um or plymouth massachusetts um did you see ford versus ferrari this weekend yeah i did you
00:26:31.660 did pat yeah yeah i did too what'd you think uh i liked it a lot i thought it was really good and
00:26:36.860 it's a story i don't think a lot of americans are familiar with necessarily how much did you know
00:26:41.260 uh well i knew the outcome and i knew uh i knew the general story but i didn't know the specifics
00:26:48.920 of their relationship and all that uh so if you don't know the shelby cobra uh is or the ford shelby
00:26:56.420 is the greatest race car um built i mean they're just they're amazing amazing cars and the shelby
00:27:05.260 cobra now an original self shelby cobra is is what three to five seven million dollars something like
00:27:11.200 that the ford shelby's the real ones are you know 10 million dollars and um built by a guy who's a
00:27:19.620 texan who is just this you know why can't we do it kind of guy and the the ford versus ferrari movie
00:27:28.700 is the relationship between the driver and shelby the designer and also the ford motor company
00:27:39.220 and the shelby motor company and ford does not come out looking good no they really don't no i
00:27:47.640 mean don't lee iacocca looks great in it doesn't he yeah he does um but it shows it shows how ford tried
00:27:55.780 to buy ferrari in a really intense scene makes ferrari look pretty weaselly too it makes enzo ferrari
00:28:03.460 look terrible horrible horrible horrible like really like a well i think i think one of the
00:28:09.900 lines was when uh lee iacocca came up you know he said no you don't understand this is we're going to
00:28:16.560 meet the mob uh it really was kind of mob like um but uh it is a i think personally it is a perfect
00:28:27.520 father and son movie every father and son should go see this absolutely yeah and it shows you the
00:28:35.360 rivalry between them because um ford was was like you said going to buy ferrari and ferrari was just
00:28:42.000 using ford to up the price of with fiat with fiat another italian company and that's what that's who
00:28:48.420 they wanted to go with all along and so uh henry ford ii didn't take very kindly to that
00:28:54.480 so he wants to beat him on the racetrack and he says i don't care what it costs and the and the uh
00:29:01.740 the in in two years they develop uh the um the ford shelby race car two years and uh that that should
00:29:14.140 have taken a decade to do and it wins at le mans in 66 67 68 and 69 and then ford decides they're not
00:29:23.100 going to race anymore uh and it's it's an incredible scene it reminded me of the old
00:29:29.320 i think steve mcqueen and paul newman movies right didn't yes when i was a kid in the 60s i barely
00:29:37.200 remember them but i remember my folks going to and my dad taking to me you know taking me to race car
00:29:43.880 movies uh with i think it was paul newman and and steve mcqueen was in some of those as well
00:29:49.640 and it really felt like that it was funny it was really really good yeah it really was have you
00:29:55.500 seen midway yet no and i'm not going to oh really yeah oh have you seen it yeah what'd you think uh
00:30:05.700 i i liked the movie until it came to the very end that's why i'm not going uh very end uh might
00:30:12.860 shock you a little bit because he explained he's not giving anything away yeah at the at the end of
00:30:18.540 the movie they dedicate it to all of the soldiers in the american army who fought in world war ii
00:30:24.100 and the japanese soldiers who fought in world war ii now that wait what you're also dedicating this to
00:30:32.280 the enemy that sneak attacked us at pearl harbor and two days before veterans day that's what you're
00:30:39.080 gonna and it's not only that it's the chinese the japanese were horrible they killed 250 000 chinese
00:30:47.000 civilians yeah they tortured our american troops they were much much worse than the germans were
00:30:52.940 with their experimentations and and everything else we we forget that no i was actually um more
00:31:00.000 concerned about the plot line didn't you notice that the plot line took a a significant turn to
00:31:06.040 china when it didn't need to it's like yeah what is yeah it was very china have to do with with midway
00:31:12.160 all of a sudden they're talking about china you're like wait what what just happened yes and that's
00:31:17.600 because there's chinese money in the movie so this is another thing like the nf the nba where they've
00:31:24.720 just sold out for the chinese money and so they they had to make midway some way or another to make
00:31:31.220 china look good and so they added all that extra plot line that is unbelievable i mean i that is that
00:31:40.360 going to win them fans uh loyal no we're number two now we're not the number one market now for
00:31:47.260 movies we're you're going to see all kinds of stuff starting to change for instance did you see
00:31:52.580 terminator no now i don't know what they turned it to this is this is coming from a friend of mine
00:31:59.460 but skynet it's either skynet or cyberdyne but i think it's skynet skynet is no longer the name of the
00:32:09.220 the evil system okay okay now why would you change some skynet everybody knows what skynet is right
00:32:17.420 why would you change that i was told that it is because again that has chinese money in it
00:32:25.640 and they're doing now i know the united states has a skynet thing that we use against terrorists
00:32:32.080 but apparently skynet uh in in china is something uh you know that has to do with their monitoring
00:32:42.620 system of the average person or their internet or something like that and so they didn't want to be
00:32:50.200 known as skynet you know the ones that have the terminator so because of the chinese money
00:32:56.200 funding the movie they rewrote part of they rewrote they changed yeah that's amazing isn't that crazy
00:33:03.660 yes i mean wow and and like you said if if they're going to continue to accept the money from china
00:33:13.520 that's going to change a lot of movies and a lot of plot lines and a lot of dialogue how how often is
00:33:19.360 this going to happen in american movies you're going to have a massive chinese influence now especially
00:33:24.840 as the united states becomes more and more unpopular we're not standing up for what we are
00:33:30.480 supposed to stand up for how long before the american stories are completely lost i mean as i was walking
00:33:36.840 around here in plymouth this weekend i thought honestly when was the last time you heard anything
00:33:45.620 really about the pilgrims really anything other than just a passing you know float or uh or a
00:33:54.820 poster in a store or something like that when's any time you've ever heard anything really real
00:34:01.500 about the pilgrims anything substantial not even at not even at thanksgiving do you do that anymore
00:34:07.960 no nothing and so here we are we're sitting here and we're erasing this history do you know who you
00:34:16.760 know who broke the treaty with the indians um woodrow wilson no no it lasted 54 years
00:34:25.120 it was the longest running treaty with native americans in the history of america
00:34:30.160 um so who broke it uh it had to be the british no it was the indians oh they did yeah the native americans
00:34:40.420 the native american chief changed it because um a lot of the native american tribes around here
00:34:48.120 were starting to find the christian god the white man's god and there was one thing that was really
00:34:56.340 changing their culture and that was they um they believed in not just killing your enemy they believed
00:35:05.600 in torturing your enemy uh while you were killing them so they would eviscerate you and then you would
00:35:11.120 hold your own guts uh while you were dying and so they made all death really really cruel and so many of
00:35:20.540 the native americans were the christian ones were like hey i think we're kind of cool on everything but
00:35:26.520 that one kind of seems like we shouldn't do that anymore you know i just think that might be a little
00:35:33.500 cruel and uh and so the the indian chief basically said you're destroying our culture this christianity
00:35:43.900 thing is destroying our culture we can't torture our enemies anymore and they got into a they got into
00:35:50.700 a war he broke the treaty and wanted all of the white men killed and it actually ended because other
00:35:57.360 native american tribes came to their defense to the to the white man's defense because
00:36:03.120 they had seen this is craziness what are we we're fighting to torture people this is not right
00:36:09.960 where's that story i've never heard it quite honestly i've never heard it it next hour i have a guy
00:36:17.680 up here who has studied the pilgrims his whole life um and he can tell you the true story of
00:36:26.460 thanksgiving and it's important that you hear this and so i'm gonna i'm gonna bring him
00:36:32.660 downstairs he's he's upstairs now um we're in the plot number one the first house in america
00:36:41.540 the uh the the room where that native american peace treaty was signed where the first election
00:36:47.700 happened in america somewhere around the front lawn of this house is where the actual thanksgiving the
00:36:54.900 first thanksgiving happened and um there's a reason why we need to know about the pilgrims a very
00:37:02.560 important reason and uh it's a reason that we found out from abraham lincoln as well and it changed the
00:37:11.520 course of the civil war and we'll talk about that coming up in just a second
00:37:15.880 hey if your budget's getting stretched a little thin as we head toward the holiday season uh you
00:37:24.340 should be saving money you know but that's easier said than done most times um life is always seemingly
00:37:32.580 getting in the way the unexpected medical bill the urgent car repair the little things that sort of
00:37:37.760 drop us on uh drop on us out of the clear blue sky especially around this time of the year
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00:38:11.760 loan pay it off when you were when you were planning on uh i caution you uh always on this program to
00:38:19.300 be fiscally responsible especially in these um you know kind of uh twisted times that we live in
00:38:27.380 so please go to american financing and get their opinion do your own homework you're smart enough to
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00:39:03.260 you're listening to glenn beck
00:39:07.860 i would finish this for
00:39:30.620 welcome to the program so glad that you're here um there's a couple things that are going on around
00:39:41.820 the world um it's not unique on what's happening here and it's it's really honestly by design uh if
00:39:50.140 you have not seen my special that we did uh last week the democratic hydra make sure you either are
00:39:57.460 a subscriber to the blaze or go to my youtube page and uh and see this it is um you know
00:40:04.940 six weeks ago we did the first thing on the impeachment on ukraine and it was the most watched
00:40:11.040 thing the blaze has uh has ever produced this one is is dwarfing that uh it is well laid out and it will
00:40:21.600 tell you what's really going on uh it's not a coincidence that all of these things are happening
00:40:27.360 around the world let me just give you this no room for compromise with the hong kong protesters
00:40:31.720 according to the china people's daily they are they're going to end up killing these people and have
00:40:37.680 you noticed that while things are getting stronger and stronger there the press is almost non-existent
00:40:43.520 on this how about this one iran's top leader warns thugs as protests now run in iran 100 cities
00:40:51.780 yeah are you hearing anything about that very little very little venezuelan march the biggest
00:40:59.520 anti-manure uh manure maduro uh protest it actually worked the same thing yeah yeah it is uh the biggest
00:41:05.960 the biggest protest this weekend in months again have you heard about these things why
00:41:13.420 is the media not covering the protests against hellish countries they're on fire and we should
00:41:22.940 be standing up for those countries where they're actually fighting for freedom the freedom of thought
00:41:29.500 the freedom of speech the freedom uh of economics which brings us back here to plymouth massachusetts
00:41:37.180 and we're going to go there tell you about the pilgrims and thanksgiving next
00:41:42.500 we're going to begin the program and really kind of tell you the significance of thanksgiving and why
00:41:57.960 it's so important coming up in just a second first our sponsor for a spotlight sponsor is uh is american
00:42:04.480 financing american financing wants to remind you that if you are stuck with a whole bunch of credit card
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00:42:56.360 all right show begins in just a minute
00:42:58.900 15 seconds
00:43:02.020 so
00:43:06.020 so
00:43:08.020 so
00:43:22.020 michelle obama was taken off of the campaign trail in 2008 because she said barack knows
00:43:40.240 if we want to make these changes we're going to have to change our language we're going to have to
00:43:46.380 change our traditions we're going to have to change our history our history has not been lost our
00:43:52.260 history truly has been stolen from us and it's that history that brought us together it gave us
00:43:58.380 the unum in e pluribus unum why did we come here as a people what were we trying to build
00:44:06.700 i'm in plymouth massachusetts today it's the 400th year 400th year in 2020 of the pilgrims arriving
00:44:17.980 here why is that significant and why is thanksgiving significant why we should sit with our family for a few
00:44:27.460 minutes and teach them the true history of our pilgrims in one minute this is the glenbeck program
00:44:35.660 so you go to a new chiropractor get an adjustment and your neck has been killing you and it's finally
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00:44:49.600 to make that really spooky you know where where you just adjust your neck real quick and uh it freaks
00:44:57.100 me out every time especially the first time that you're doing it with a new chiropractor now he's
00:45:02.420 got his head in your area your hand your head in his hands if you just happen to say hey how many of
00:45:09.280 you these you know how long you been doing this and he says oh it's my first day are you letting him
00:45:13.940 make that adjustment because i wouldn't oh i'm just part-time i just do this on the side no no no no
00:45:20.260 no thank you no thank you same thing if you're trying to buy or sell a house you need a real estate
00:45:24.740 agent that's not doing it part-time that is the expert is the one that's going to get your house sold
00:45:30.180 on time and for the most amount of money buying your home or selling a home is one of the most important
00:45:36.060 decisions you'll ever make and that's why real estate agents i trust.com is there to help guide you
00:45:41.760 every step of the way you want somebody who can help you create the most value for your home has
00:45:46.540 a long track record of success it's time to get moving at realestateagentsitrust.com that's
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00:45:54.320 paul jelly is a friend of mine and he's the pastor of the new testament church of cedar
00:46:11.640 will uh that i attended yesterday and uh he is also uh one of the guys you're not are you the
00:46:19.260 head guy of the plymouth rock foundation president president um and you tell me your story quickly
00:46:26.340 you you grew up here actually i grew up in new jersey but my father i was born in massachusetts
00:46:32.560 but then my father uh who was a pastor he uh moved us back here into uh new england and massachusetts
00:46:39.840 because you don't so i attended high school here in uh in massachusetts you don't have that
00:46:43.840 chowder kind of which is really heavy around here um so you um you got engaged with the the pilgrims
00:46:56.020 when you were young and i was thinking about this the other day we've almost lost everything
00:47:04.040 about the pilgrims i mean it's they're just their images now maybe maybe on a storefront or a
00:47:10.480 mcdonald's or something like that and even that image isn't necessarily accurate with the buckles
00:47:14.820 and all the black hats right um these guys they came over here uh for uh a couple of reasons and
00:47:24.620 they changed the world they really changed the world can you tell the story of of the pilgrims i mean
00:47:30.780 when i first when i first was uh given some primary source documents and books on the pilgrims by
00:47:35.760 my mentor my initial mentor john talcott here in plymouth i told him i don't really like history so
00:47:42.440 i no thank you yeah and then of course when he looked at me he said no you really should read this
00:47:47.680 then i started to read it and i think what amazed me was to read the literary prose of william bradford to
00:47:54.960 read the diary mort's relation to eventually then read good news from new england by edward winslow and
00:48:01.800 and these different books when you're reading this you're realizing gee this this is their words this
00:48:07.140 is exactly what they believed and it was nothing i'd ever learned in high school nothing i'd ever
00:48:11.680 learned in elementary school they were very learned people if i'm not mistaken william bradford brought
00:48:17.180 more books over than than were originally that started harvard right i mean they had they had
00:48:23.660 hundreds of books on and when you think about on the mayflower when you think of the small amount of
00:48:28.040 space you had to for your family right for clothes and think about it you're taking everything that
00:48:33.820 you're going to own over here and you can't take very much you have maybe a small spot and you're
00:48:38.840 going to bring a books and uh and books in latin and uh portuguese and spanish 400 books was an
00:48:45.340 enormous library enormous and the thing is and and here you had them uh very literate uh and they
00:48:51.640 were very ideological one of the things is they were really wrestling with ideas ideas that would have
00:48:57.260 tremendous consequences now like anyone else they did not probably they couldn't foresee what kind of
00:49:03.200 ideas would do in consequences but they knew they had to deal with those because ideas do have
00:49:10.320 consequences and they change history so they are over their english and they're over in england and um
00:49:17.680 the reformation is just starting where before you couldn't read the bible um yourself in your own
00:49:25.080 native tongue you had to go to a priest um it was the anglican church uh that was really a government
00:49:32.800 you know the the king or the queen is the is the head of the church right and um and heresy
00:49:40.360 anytime you were standing against you were burned at the stake so they leave and they go to holland
00:49:46.400 right right and you know the pilgrims the interesting part about it is they initially wanted to be able
00:49:51.760 to get along like anybody else and do the best that they could but even john robinson who became their
00:49:56.400 leader he was the pastor of an anglican congregation in fact he started to see his ideas
00:50:02.440 for following the scriptures just conflicted with the hierarchy and the whole idea of determining
00:50:08.280 whether someone is a heretic or not was all done by backed by the state and backed by this this whole
00:50:14.380 idea that you you had the terrible consequences if you disagreed and and here these ideas that would
00:50:20.540 eventually bring great liberty of conscience and civil liberty beyond just religious liberty and yet at
00:50:26.780 the same time um it would take years to do that so here you have these individuals wrestling with it
00:50:32.480 one of john robinson's big wrestling matches when he was pastoring an anglican church uh he said he
00:50:38.400 said why he used this kind of poetic language why the church is married to the state it's not married to
00:50:43.860 christ it has no freedom and he actually say that christ led the church right because it the king did
00:50:50.980 exactly and and the king and especially king james was very learned he said when i speak it's the law
00:50:57.340 i'm speaking i'm speaking to you by the power of the holy spirit and uh you know you have to be aware
00:51:02.260 when someone says they're speaking by the power of the holy spirit and they also have the sword
00:51:06.120 backing them up yeah yeah and and force and that's that's hardly voluntary usually the ones who speak for
00:51:12.980 the spirit are the the uh the ones like king or gandhi jesus somebody who's really really not a friend
00:51:22.520 of power exactly and and will eventually decentralize power correct and that's what is so threatening and
00:51:29.680 so you have these these pilgrims and they begin to wrestle with this john robinson when he debates
00:51:34.760 with the anglican bishops after he's even left and gone to holland and into eventually into leiden
00:51:40.580 he would reason this way and say wait a minute uh this is not the way it is the government actually
00:51:45.960 comes from the inside out it's actually self-government that's the rule and this is just
00:51:51.460 this is threatening the power and this is this is 150 years before we're around i mean before the
00:52:00.680 i mean this is the germ of the idea and you have to realize that now these pilgrims when they're
00:52:06.660 reasoning together and being taught by john robinson to think and reason from principle
00:52:10.540 it's uh they're only a small tiny remnant that's mocked and they're called separatists
00:52:16.060 because they're mocking them not because they're complimenting them uh they're the ones who would
00:52:20.140 separate from the church in fact uh the interesting thing when you read the bishop's writings and letters
00:52:25.020 to them he said why god has given you such grace and such benefit and and liberty granted to you by the
00:52:32.560 king why do you throw that all away and start original thinking and thinking on your own this whole idea
00:52:39.940 that to think and to reason to come up with ideas that others may not have held was just anathema so
00:52:46.500 it doesn't seem like they were thinking people because they they're growing in holland things are going
00:52:53.540 fairly well for them they have about 500 people you know 300 maybe 325 in their church in leiden okay so
00:53:01.060 they have you know that's it's it's growing yes uh and uh for some reason you know we had tim ballard
00:53:09.380 here this weekend and he was uh he just came back from leiden holland and uh was talking to the scholars
00:53:15.380 there and they said well they probably left because so you know there was a recession coming they didn't
00:53:20.580 come here for a recession why would you leave your home that was comfortable because of a recession even a
00:53:29.220 war when you were coming to america and it was almost certain death yeah you know you think
00:53:34.580 about the the reasons and bradford gives the reasons in his up plymouth plantation and they
00:53:38.580 talk about the truce was ending with spain and by 1620 and that was a big problem because uh they
00:53:44.660 were in leiden and that when that truce would end there would be more problems with the spanish
00:53:49.220 also not only was that a problem but they said their their children were getting on in their years
00:53:53.860 they were getting older but the the real crux of why they came bradford gives in this poetic phrase
00:54:00.500 he said lastly but which was not least in fact this was the most important a great zeal they had
00:54:06.340 of propagating and advancing the gospel of the kingdom of christ into those remote parts of the
00:54:10.660 world yea though we would be even as stepping stones unto others for the performing of so great
00:54:16.020 a work think about that phrase it's written later bradford writes it about 10 years afterwards
00:54:21.140 about 1630 probably a little later than that and yet you see the um the looking at this whole
00:54:27.940 situation they were coming for a motive to advance the gospel of the kingdom and it was different than
00:54:34.580 for instance there was an argument in the 1850s between uh those who said really jamestown was the
00:54:41.780 cornerstone of america and others had said it was plymouth and jamestown was a religious group as well
00:54:49.140 they had some they had some very strong pastors pastor hunt and others that came right had some
00:54:53.700 real characters on that right and it was it was a it was to come for god but also come for gold and and
00:55:03.700 everything else this one was not coming for gold well you think of the difference the difference because
00:55:10.020 we like to point out both the positive in both you both had you had a national experience with a national
00:55:14.980 religion being planted in jamestown you have something very local very personal and intimate
00:55:21.620 here in play beyond local it's a different familial it was it was all about families but also you
00:55:26.340 recognize that here in plymouth this was a church plant you see in jamestown it was a national plant it
00:55:32.580 was a replica of the the state church and though they did have the their assembly in 1619 there are a lot of
00:55:39.140 things that take place in jamestown prior to plymouth and they have a lot of firsts what we
00:55:44.020 have in plymouth is unique because um this is where this was a church plant without the leiden congregation
00:55:51.220 sending about 75 people over to the new world and not even 75 were able to come some returned when the
00:55:58.020 speedwell was springing leaks being over mastered by the captain and what at least what from what
00:56:02.580 bradford has written that they believe happened that um they came here so their hunger for religious
00:56:09.300 purposes and you have to look at the wider context of history at the time all the explorations that
00:56:13.940 are taking place at the time whether it's the portuguese spanish or anyone else is under this
00:56:19.060 doctrine of discovery which is basically you go in and you take over the land you take over the people
00:56:24.900 and then you dominate them make them your slaves and then introduce christ well this is this is now
00:56:30.580 because they're so dependent on you there was this this conquering mode where you have the the pilgrims
00:56:36.100 and robinson's teaching of them uh now they're not going to stop on any expo exploration like this
00:56:41.620 you're going to have some hotheads on your group you're going to right and there was a group on the
00:56:45.060 on the mayflower called the strangers yeah they were not part of the leiden congregation but
00:56:49.380 the leiden congregation is the one pioneering the motive for coming and that motive is to serve that
00:56:54.660 motive is to bless that motive is something that was uh trained into them it was a different it was
00:57:01.300 a remnant movement so i want to i want to take a quick break and then we're going to come back and
00:57:05.620 start there because this was a socialist idea at first it was a socialist idea and they had a ton of
00:57:13.540 firsts here in america that were really important that if we know about them today we can correct the
00:57:21.700 path that we're on we're um at the late the leiden house uh now in plymouth massachusetts and i i i'm here
00:57:31.540 for a reason and that is the 400th anniversary of the landing of the pilgrims is happening in 2020
00:57:38.900 there's some events going on that i want you to know about next week there is this amazing parade
00:57:44.340 put on by the uh plymouth rock foundation uh and uh it's it's history as it has traditionally been
00:57:54.980 told and is really uh being lost and they started this about 20 years ago and it has exploded there's
00:58:03.460 about a quarter of a million people now that come into this town little teeny town just for this parade
00:58:09.060 and if you're anywhere near the area next week you need to come we'll have more on this in just a
00:58:13.940 second let me break for one minute and talk to you a little bit about the uscca uh right now you
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00:59:42.820 so paul they the pilgrims land here uh in plymouth and um and it's a small little boat i mean it's
00:59:51.780 it's shocking there's no way you'd you'd never get me on that boat to go across the you'd be like
00:59:58.100 are you crazy right was that a big boat for the time not necessarily a big one probably an average
01:00:03.780 sized merchant vessel they remember they they bought another boat that was even smaller than that called
01:00:08.420 the speedwell right which is uh a smaller boat carried maybe 20 or 30 people rather than the 70 or 80
01:00:15.220 on the mayflower and then they lose the speedwell it has to be sold for much less than they bought it
01:00:21.140 and out of plymouth england they come and of course plymouth mass was not named after plymouth england
01:00:25.540 but the point is that because that had already been named by uh john smith and other explorers here
01:00:30.580 but the point is here they're coming over here and crammed on 102 passengers plus the crew
01:00:36.420 um a tiny tiny bunk bed small single bed for two people one person gets sick everybody gets sick
01:00:42.900 you got 66 day voyage it's rocking 20 to 25 degrees the mayflower was designed to roll water
01:00:48.820 off not keep water off the deck so you're you're getting seawater it's it's constant and so it has no
01:00:54.740 picnic and for women and children to go this is the thing that makes so many firsts you mentioned first
01:01:00.420 well here's here's a here's one of the first that you had women and children go on this voyage not just
01:01:05.140 any women these are wives and children these are families 24 family units that come on the mayflower
01:01:10.740 the idea that families are a part of this is what makes the story significant that's why we tell
01:01:15.540 people if you want something unique and come back in 2020 for this event we're doing june 28 to 30
01:01:20.660 there's events all year long uh sponsored by the town and others to come you're going to see family
01:01:26.420 family was so important to them these were covenanted families here's another first here's a church that
01:01:32.180 covenanted among each other accountability without state permission this is a church that existed because
01:01:39.060 individuals want to covenant and combine themselves together in their church and that's why they
01:01:45.300 covenanted and combined themselves into the civil body politic with the writing of the mayflower
01:01:50.340 compact another first and they coveted themselves not only to god but to each other like when they
01:01:55.460 first hired uh uh who was the milestone mile standish they they hired him right and then they got
01:02:05.060 together and voted to make sure right they wanted to vote because they wanted to make sure it was by
01:02:09.300 consent see another is this the house this is the house where they're near the site near the site the
01:02:14.740 property where that probably took place right where they voted yeah and the interesting thing is here
01:02:19.860 are people who are reasoning from the scriptures the best they know and they are coming up with new
01:02:25.380 ideas and they're saying you know this doesn't have to be done the way it's been done before everything's
01:02:29.380 just appointed from the top we can make those decisions not only that there's a not just a first
01:02:34.900 with a church covenanted group coming across the ocean covenanted families coming with women and
01:02:41.060 children and then drawing up their own government a self-government act on board the ship before they
01:02:47.620 land knowing they're off course but then you you have them land and even here now they're voting on
01:02:53.620 individuals and they're voting here's the interesting part about it we're talking about a jurisdictional
01:02:58.340 separation of church and state here you don't have to be a member of the pilgrim church to vote in
01:03:03.220 the commonwealth that's unheard of you know the puritans would tend and you can understand it i don't
01:03:08.500 criticize uh when you're outside the context of history it's easy to throw stones when you're
01:03:13.540 many years later but here these puritans it was very easy they had the king as the head of the church
01:03:19.540 well they didn't like that because there's a major persecution but a lot of puritan groups had come
01:03:24.020 to america and they just reverse it now the church is the head of the state and you get
01:03:27.780 persecuted if you're not a member of the church you can't vote you're disenfranchised well the
01:03:32.740 pilgrims had something unique here's this tiny group that's reasoning for themselves and there's
01:03:38.100 another first here you have the seed the germ of the first amendment no it's not in flowery form
01:03:44.100 you're not going to see all the all the bells and whistles so to speak that are going to come out later
01:03:48.420 but here among this tiny group because they're reasoning they're thinking together they are
01:03:52.820 um researching it's the tip of revival when you study revival you see a revival in england was
01:03:59.380 called the revival of hearth and home it was the revival of reading the bible around the fireplace the
01:04:05.780 geneva bibles published in 1560 first bible small enough to carry first bible cheap enough to own first
01:04:11.380 bible with chapters and verses study notes that the people are studying the bible we take it for granted
01:04:17.300 today we have five bibles six bibles in our houses we don't even read half of them but the point is
01:04:21.700 here there this is really important so in little huts in the wilderness they're reading the bible and so
01:04:27.380 these are the first that are pioneering events a peace treaty with the natives that was part of their
01:04:33.620 whole idea so we're going to get to the peace treaty and the the free market system which was developed
01:04:40.900 here and the peace treaty in this room but the fireplace you ever see the etching of that peace treaty
01:04:47.540 this is the fireplace we're sitting in front of that they were standing in front of
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01:05:15.140 because uh there might be somebody who's trying to steal that information might be somebody that's
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01:06:26.260 all right uh welcome back to the uh program i'm talking to paul uh jaylee he is
01:06:43.940 he is the pastor of the new testament church of cedarville and i i went to a couple of um
01:06:50.500 a couple of churches yesterday yours was one of them i just love your congregation and i love
01:06:55.300 your sermons are unbelievable um and it's just you're centered around service you know so many
01:07:03.700 gandhi gandhi said i i love this jesus of yours i just don't necessarily like his followers uh and
01:07:13.700 he also said i uh the bible is such a great book more christians should read it uh uh and it's kind of
01:07:24.020 it's kind of like that and we miss the fact that it's all supposed to be about service that's right and
01:07:29.300 i kind of want to talk to you about that but what you're doing here because you've changed this
01:07:33.220 community through service just loving people not preaching to people not trying to do anything just
01:07:38.900 love them um but let me first go back to the founders because i want to get the part not the
01:07:44.020 founders but the pilgrims i want to get the part that they came here the house next door to this one
01:07:49.940 this is plot number one this house and the first street really in america um and the house next
01:07:57.060 door or one up from that is the what they call it the common house or yeah the common house is just
01:08:02.740 actually one probably located a little bit further toward the waterfront no it's it's marked on that
01:08:07.300 house yeah it's marked on the wall of this house but of course the original sites are difficult to
01:08:11.780 determine but this is liars in the historic society no that so it's it's right here in this area
01:08:18.340 the critical thing to recognize is that when the pilgrims did come here they were seeking they
01:08:23.300 already had two documents on board of course giving them permission from england to come over here but
01:08:26.900 then they had their mayflower compact and then their the peace treaty that they desired to have peace with
01:08:31.940 the natives uh that's important to know but also they were they are also pioneers they they had they
01:08:39.220 were under this contract with the financiers and it's interesting to note that the puritans preached
01:08:44.500 against profit as a sin uh they said look if you want to make money that's kind of like a sin because
01:08:49.220 they had they had uh adopted the european way which was the common field now the common field in
01:08:55.460 england was simply the fact that if you own cows i own cows you own cattle i own cattle they all graze
01:09:00.180 in a common field it's not my field not your field it's our field it's it's kind of like grazing land
01:09:04.980 now with the government out west and the town squares which is very new england if you had if you had
01:09:12.260 if you had cows and you couldn't feed them you could go take them to the town but here's the
01:09:16.500 problem i found some cows eat more than others yeah and uh and oh that's weird people like that too
01:09:22.340 and so this common field was something they all inherited but bradford here he makes this comment
01:09:28.100 that he said boy when we got here we're starving and we were thinking we're wiser than god and this is
01:09:34.660 you had women have to uh uh go and wash the clothes of someone else's uh you know husband and because there
01:09:40.740 were only four women left after the spring after that first winter right yeah so four women how
01:09:47.780 many guys well you had you had a number of other probably 12 13 guys but you also had most of the
01:09:52.900 children that were alive right 80 you know you look at 80 of the children have survived whereas a very
01:09:58.740 small number of women survived that first winter and of course they had to stay on the boat much longer
01:10:02.260 and the women didn't survive because they were protecting their children yeah a lot of some of them
01:10:07.380 were protecting their children some of them are giving away their food certainly but you know
01:10:11.140 when you when you look at this you recognize of this the the travesty of that first winter
01:10:15.860 but now they're they're saying how can we grow more corn uh they the natives had were so friendly to
01:10:21.620 them and so gracious to them they would not have known how to grow in this sandy soil their the seed
01:10:26.340 corn they were brought from england wouldn't work so now they are working together and they're
01:10:31.220 realizing gee how can we do this and so bradford says let's set every man uh their own property in
01:10:36.500 particular okay now hang on just a second because that was against the compact not their compact
01:10:40.900 but the charge of the people who helped pay for it remember it was like a stock company so um it was
01:10:47.300 a joint stock company but of course the the people who are financing them uh they didn't believe
01:10:51.780 anyone else would get profit but they should right right because profit is just a survival so right
01:10:57.380 so they were they were they were all just pooling all of their resources putting it in the common
01:11:03.380 house and what people if i'm if i'm not mistaken what people mainly the young guys because you had
01:11:09.940 some old guys that survived that were not real healthy you had women then you had children
01:11:13.940 then you got these 20 guys you know these 20 something guys who are like look i'm building
01:11:18.420 all the houses i'm doing i'm chopping all the wood i'm doing all the work here right and i don't
01:11:24.420 get any more and what started to happen was these guys were saying you know what i'm sick today
01:11:30.500 i can't make it today and the bickering and the fighting and bradford even writes this
01:11:34.180 his journal he said even amongst the most godly because there's a and he said like we're going
01:11:40.180 against the order of god in other words if you don't have the right structure now you can look at
01:11:44.980 it in reverse they changed that structure they now are producing for themselves they begin to produce
01:11:50.500 immediately double the acreage then they triple the acreage in the next three years they go up to 180
01:11:56.260 acres in no time so now they're being very productive and now they recognize that they said
01:12:02.020 well the god began to blast this they were successful and they forgot god he bradford said
01:12:07.060 no we have to go back to prayer to ask god so here's these people that say no we can't just believe
01:12:12.740 in god and then have the wrong structure that's not going to work but we can't just have the right
01:12:16.500 structure and then pride ourselves that it's all because of us so you have these individuals that are
01:12:21.460 doing this and even a conversion of habamok the native american takes place at that next thanksgiving
01:12:26.420 1623 so we're looking several years down the road and this is what makes this group unique they're
01:12:32.980 thinking for themselves they're pioneering ideas this is this is the is this the first real free market
01:12:40.660 yes we would call that yeah a free market economy because you actually had a people able to set their
01:12:46.900 prices eventually without the control of government in fact they could have a business
01:12:51.140 outside the palisade walls so that was a kind of a symbol outside the control of the government in
01:12:57.380 the sense of setting wages and prices and that's where they had a free market trading post in 1627
01:13:04.340 down in the town of bourne the uptuxet trading post phenomenal place recreated on the original
01:13:08.980 foundation and here where they're trading with the dutch the native american and the pilgrim
01:13:13.540 and they're using wampum shells for currency i use this teaching economics to high school students
01:13:18.100 you can use it and here they're using wampum shells different colors and the native will get wealthier
01:13:24.020 because they can catch the quahogs a lot easier than the english can and a lot faster than the dutch
01:13:30.500 and so these this is the germ i'm gonna pretend that i don't know what a quahog is and how fast they run
01:13:38.020 uh they don't run they're in the ocean so you you are going barefoot in the slime and the muck and
01:13:44.900 you're you know you're going in and trying to pull those little shells out they're like clam shells and
01:13:50.900 then you have to shave off those those shells into beads which the natives were much better at than
01:13:57.940 and so you can come in with the beads you don't have to do just bartering and you have a free market
01:14:03.220 a free market economy birthed right here in the wilderness because they are reasoning from the
01:14:08.820 scriptures and from the bible but it's it's beyond that because what makes this different is again
01:14:14.980 it's the family that's correct they based it on don't tell anyone else what to do i'm here because
01:14:23.140 i want my family to be strong right that's right and that's kind of what we missed and it's right
01:14:29.300 it's amazing when you hear people talk about thanksgiving um in fact the owner of this house
01:14:35.620 was i think she was the one who said it to me yesterday is that this is when you talk about
01:14:41.940 thanksgiving everyone says oh it's my favorite i don't have to go out the store and buy anything you
01:14:48.260 know we just we cook but then we're just together as a family that this is supposed to remind us
01:14:55.220 about family right and what makes us a family and what brings the family together if you take
01:15:03.460 thanksgiving today and even thanksgiving in lincoln's time when it became a national holiday
01:15:08.260 and washington's uh thanksgiving proclamation at the end of the revolution while he was president
01:15:14.340 and you can trace it back a lot of things have changed of course most people illustrated they say
01:15:18.260 well the original harvest festival in 1621 probably in the month of october where 90 braves come as edward
01:15:24.740 winslow writes and you have only 51 pilgrims left and you have um and they they bring the deer the
01:15:30.340 natives brought most of the food uh because and all of that took place we don't know who invited whom
01:15:34.980 we don't know how it all happened but we there's a record that happened now they say well what of what
01:15:40.820 that's only a dim view of today well you look at several characteristics that are still they had
01:15:45.860 wrestling matches they had shooting matches there were athletics involved in that first thanksgiving
01:15:51.220 that first harvest festival probably patterned after the feast of tabernacles from the pilgrims
01:15:55.620 perspective which was called the in gathering or the feast of thanksgiving in the old testament well
01:16:01.540 you have that you have three days of feasting you have athletic contests you have friendly
01:16:07.540 relations it's a multicultural event i mean come on that is thanksgiving that is the heritage we have
01:16:14.020 in america uh yes it goes through all kinds of transformations over the years uh and it's not started initially but
01:16:20.820 when we're at our best we remember the original that's right you know george washington abraham lincoln
01:16:29.860 when we're at our best when we are about to heal ourselves uh we remember the first one right because
01:16:39.380 you know every event in history is going to have some negative because you have people and every event
01:16:44.500 in history can be positive when we remember those things that advance choice religious and civil
01:16:51.060 liberty and the rule of law all those things so when you look at the pilgrim store you see this composite
01:16:56.580 of course they're not perfect and no one's saying they were but at the same time we look at it and say
01:17:01.060 there are some positive things that we can emulate and think of today i look at these characteristics and
01:17:06.100 i say today what do we need we need people going to their neighbor doesn't matter what their background
01:17:10.500 is what their political stripe is and learning to love and serve people and that's why we love doing
01:17:14.740 what we do here in plymouth we want to serve people and bless them so talk to me about the
01:17:19.300 event that's happening this summer and as you will find out later um this event is going to play a very
01:17:25.380 big role in something that we're putting together that i will be announcing uh shortly in the next few
01:17:30.900 days uh what you can go to the website p-l-y-m-r-o-c-k.org plymouth rock foundation and you can go to the
01:17:37.220 events so you know plymrock plymrock.org and you can go in under the events page you can see
01:17:43.780 the event for 2020 shaping up three organizations are helping us put this on pilgrim progress which
01:17:48.660 reenacts the pilgrims going to church the leiden preservation group which is right here and also
01:17:53.940 jenny museum who you had leo on as well and here we are attempting to uh bring to the forefront
01:18:01.860 the faith of the pilgrims which brought them here the significance of the pilgrim story they came as
01:18:05.780 families they came as a church plant uh they are unique they have all these firsts we're gonna
01:18:10.100 have historians in town uh workshops to attend tours walking tours of plymouth on a regular basis
01:18:15.380 all kinds of beautiful town and and not only that but you have we have key events we're going to
01:18:19.780 reenact a pilgrim church service sing the actual psalms i'm going to actually articulate john john
01:18:25.620 robinson's farewell sermon to the pilgrims weren't you actually down at plymouth rock aren't you the
01:18:32.260 one that was arrested was taken away you were reading uh i actually wasn't arrested but what
01:18:38.260 happened was years ago back in the 70s i was dressed as a uh a pilgrim and i was reading from
01:18:43.540 william bradford and someone heard it and uh was upset that i was talking about god on state property
01:18:48.580 and uh so i wasn't arrested but it is funny you were picked up by the police i was not but what
01:18:53.620 happened is they said you better go to the police station so i went over because i wasn't on my own
01:18:57.940 property and so yeah it's kind of a funny story i walk in dressed as a pilgrim they knew me they just
01:19:03.220 said oh what are you up to now yeah and stuff and and it ended pretty quickly but the idea is
01:19:09.620 any town you can go into in america usually the town does not even appreciate its own history
01:19:15.140 it takes time for that you can go anywhere in america yeah tourists come in because they want
01:19:19.940 to hear the history yeah but if you live there that doesn't happen yeah so over the years we've seen
01:19:24.820 a greater appreciation for the pilgrims come we we give the credit to god not us but we we came
01:19:30.180 wanting to serve we said why don't we um we inherited a parade that was already going on the thanksgiving
01:19:36.100 parade but as we increased its awareness of the pilgrims of of areas and serve the town the town began to
01:19:44.260 appreciate more and more what's happening and it is such a a wonderful thing so you have the event
01:19:49.700 next year june 28 to 30 you can go on the website and learn about that but you can go to america's
01:19:54.100 hometown thanksgiving separately incorporated now america's hometown thanksgiving celebration
01:19:58.500 usathanksgiving.com and you can go on that and you can see this event coming up next saturday you
01:20:04.340 saw the floats behind the scenes yeah and the guys who are making it and i hope to have ollie stop by
01:20:09.860 before i leave but uh it's an amazing thing and uh hopefully i'm trying to convince the blaze to uh
01:20:16.740 come up and broadcast maybe next year because my family has been watching the macy's day parade we used to
01:20:21.700 when we lived in new york we would go to it yeah and we loved it but it is becoming i don't even
01:20:26.100 know what it is anymore you know it's it's it's just not but you know i could i could tell your
01:20:31.860 listeners some people around america as i travel around and i i get across america quite a bit
01:20:37.220 speaking about these things not just the pilgrims but america's godly heritage and i and i look at this
01:20:42.100 most people are saying gee what can i invest in what what could i do i mean it is amazing when you look at
01:20:47.700 this parade how large it is and what it is and yet how small the budget is but how much meat is still
01:20:54.900 needed unbelievable it's unbelievable a small number of people in those websites yeah plimrock.org or
01:21:02.340 usathanksgiving.com you could go on there there's places to donate you could even if you're in the
01:21:06.740 new england area come down volunteer yeah uh it's it's really worth it go to plimrock.org and just and
01:21:12.420 just remember that address if you can help it'd be great you will not regret it you'll not regret it
01:21:17.620 paul thank you so much thank you all right uh i want to talk to you a little bit about simply
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01:22:40.180 so i don't know about you but there are times that i just want a guide i just i just i need some help
01:23:04.500 you know uh and for thanksgiving you you you kind of try to tell the story but you need a tradition
01:23:12.740 that's the thing i love about uh the jewish sabbath is everything is traditional it it you know what story to
01:23:19.620 tell uh to keep that going uh how do we do that with thanksgiving uh there is a website i want you to go to right now
01:23:28.500 there's a little booklet on there that you can you can uh order it just it's a pdf file and you'll be able
01:23:35.220 to know exactly the stories to tell it's very brief very short it's great the thanksgiving kit you'll find
01:23:42.580 it at 400th.org 400 400th.org 400th.org go there now you're listening to glenn beck
01:23:54.500 pat you know what we missed this weekend there in dallas what the flat earth society convention
01:24:10.660 oh no yeah there were the flat earthers from all over the world all over the country that came
01:24:16.340 uh they gave all kinds of talks uh and uh you know that the earth is flat um there are about 600
01:24:25.700 people that attended yeah uh and um you know they they said we're a growing community now about seven
01:24:32.740 percent of the population of earth now says that the earth is flat seven percent seven percent now say
01:24:41.780 the earth is flat that's absolutely incredible yeah they but they're science lovers and they said
01:24:46.260 that uh the stars and the moon and everything is nothing but like a a truman a truman show dome
01:24:54.580 and uh and we don't move show dome please don't are you a science denier yeah of course it's a truman show
01:25:05.060 dome okay all right of course it is my gosh wow we'll talk about that and more from plymouth in just a moment
01:25:25.540 the fusion of entertainment and enlightenment
01:25:29.860 hello america it's monday from plymouth massachusetts the home of the pilgrims i know i know thanksgiving is
01:25:41.220 next week but i'll tell you really why we're here in one minute this is the glenn beck program
01:25:52.340 all right our sponsor uh this half hour which we're thrilled to have is omaha steaks
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01:27:42.740 omahasteaks.com all right so why am i up here well i think this story might explain it all you ready
01:27:54.900 a teacher here in massachusetts
01:28:01.620 was talking to one of their uh one of their students in a kindergarten class
01:28:07.220 five-year-old brought a bag to uh share with the teacher and the rest of the class uh it was a uh
01:28:15.380 it was a plastic bag decorated with spider-man and he brought it into his kindergarten class show and
01:28:20.420 tale he said um teacher you have to try this and everybody you have to try this just stick your finger
01:28:27.700 in it and put it in your mouth and you turn into spider-man well as it turns out it was a bag of
01:28:35.460 heroin uh and um you know the teacher didn't think it was a good idea to have everybody stick their
01:28:43.300 finger in it uh now uh the father of the boy uh has had a finger stuck someplace uh in him uh as well
01:28:52.900 uh as he went to jail for endangerment and of course uh uh heroin what are all of the things that are going
01:29:00.980 on in the world uh what is the solution and we can go to these really complex solutions we can we can
01:29:10.340 say we got to change the whole system we we have to we have to be socialist no no we've got to strengthen
01:29:17.540 the capitalism none of these things are going to work voting for this guy or that guy none of them
01:29:24.180 will work what we have to do is remember who we are and we have to decide are we christopher columbus
01:29:35.540 before he arrives here because before he arrives here he is on truly a mission from god he is
01:29:44.180 everything in his diary that he wrote at the time not after not revisionist but in his diary at the time
01:29:52.820 he is a humble humble man who is being led by god and he knows what his mission is
01:30:01.620 then he arrives and the minute he arrives he's bitten by gold the gold bug by the time he finally walks on
01:30:09.940 the actual americas he's so deeply down with the gold bug it's it's it's a horror show
01:30:17.300 but are we columbus after he arrives or before he arrives are we are we jamestown
01:30:27.700 did we come here for the gold and for the riches and for the fame and the titles and everything else
01:30:32.980 that would be bestowed upon us or are we here because this is a blessed land and we are a blessed
01:30:41.220 people to be living here and look at the things that we can create i'm gonna i'm gonna give you
01:30:49.220 a line from william bradford now william bradford was the head of the plymouth plantation and here's
01:30:55.780 what he said thus out of the small beginnings greater things have been produced by his hand
01:31:02.340 that made all things of nothing and gives being to all things that are and as one small candle may
01:31:10.900 light a thousand so the light here kindled hath shown unto many in some sort or or our whole nation
01:31:20.900 let the glorious name of jehovah have all the praise so what he's saying here is what happened
01:31:29.300 we didn't do we were just living certain principles that made all of these things work and we remembered
01:31:37.460 that we shouldn't get the glory for it that we're just the ones who just happen to be lucky enough and
01:31:45.460 loyal enough to those principles and those and and he who gave those principles to us
01:31:52.420 to be able to use those principles and make something out of nothing as he does
01:32:01.060 and that little candle will light up you'll become a bright shining city on the hill and if
01:32:07.540 if if you forget you become a byword if we forget and we have forgotten
01:32:17.460 i am um i've talked about this for years
01:32:22.740 but i don't think it's i don't think it could be any more important than this year
01:32:29.620 i'm here in plymouth massachusetts
01:32:31.380 not only because it's the 400th anniversary of the landing on plymouth rock
01:32:42.580 but next year it will be the sorry next year is the 400th anniversary in 2021 will be the first
01:32:53.300 400th anniversary of the first thanksgiving so they landed next year 400 years ago
01:33:00.100 and they struggled and they died and the and the native americans helped them
01:33:08.580 and they became friends and they worked together and they had great crops
01:33:17.060 and they weren't going to have another winter of death
01:33:21.220 and so they gave thanks this year it's important for us to remember who we are so in 2021 we can also
01:33:33.540 celebrate the 400th anniversary of the first thanksgiving by giving him thanks for the miracles that we will see in 2020
01:33:42.340 i don't know what those miracles are
01:33:50.660 but if you are a thinking person and you're an honest person you know that it's going to take miracles
01:33:59.700 for us to turn things around for us to just survive as a nation our history has has all but been
01:34:08.580 stolen from us our kids don't have any idea what real history is they don't know who people are
01:34:17.060 they don't know who the pilgrims were
01:34:22.020 i want you to go to a website 400th
01:34:26.260 for the number four zero zero th.org 400th.org
01:34:32.260 this is a place where you can start your journey and and look and see what you need to read at your
01:34:41.220 thanksgiving table you can get a pdf there and it it has everything that you need for your thanksgiving
01:34:49.380 table the stories that you tell it's very short it but it's packed full of all kinds of stuff but
01:34:55.620 start the tradition you must teach your children the truth about how we started we did not start
01:35:03.220 coming for gold we did not start coming for dominion over others we didn't in the room that
01:35:11.300 i'm sitting in right now this is where the first treaty with the native americans began in this in this
01:35:19.060 room on this spot and it is remarkable to me that most people don't know that that treaty was broken
01:35:28.020 by the native americans not the pilgrims we had a 54 year old treaty with them and peace with them
01:35:38.500 but we were changing their culture and the chief didn't like that because the part of the culture that
01:35:43.700 we were changing was getting rid of torture don't you're gonna kill your enemy don't torture them
01:35:51.940 and it wasn't us that said it it was the indians who saw the the pilgrims and learned
01:35:59.540 what they taught and realized that's not in line with anything good
01:36:06.180 and that's why the native american chief had to go to war with the pilgrims
01:36:13.700 but the native americans are part of our story and they are a part of the healing of our nation
01:36:23.940 and so i urge you to go to 400th.org and you'll see books about the pilgrims that you need to share
01:36:32.100 with your kids uh and uh and and and everything else and you are responsible for it because nobody else
01:36:39.780 is going to do it you are responsible they will not get this from school they most likely won't
01:36:46.900 even get it from church you are responsible for keeping this story alive
01:36:54.420 that explains why you're at plymouth today that doesn't explain what so why were you at
01:37:01.060 gettysburg over the weekend what was that about i wonder yeah i wonder i wonder what that was so let
01:37:10.180 me just tell you a quick story all right and and without answering your question
01:37:16.740 the first thanksgiving happened here right around the front yard of where i'm sitting this house
01:37:23.140 and uh and it was truly a thanksgiving for god and for others that we served and served us and helped us get
01:37:36.900 through this time of peril then we had george washington and george washington put a proclamation
01:37:46.500 together that was about thanksgiving and a covenant just as the pilgrims made a covenant
01:37:55.700 george washington made a covenant when he raised his hand to the square and he added the words so help me
01:38:03.060 god what happened before and after he took the oath of office he made a covenant we will be your people
01:38:12.980 and you'll be our god and that covenant is an if then proposition if you do these things then these
01:38:21.540 things will happen you can believe in god or not believe in god you can believe in that there's just
01:38:27.060 certain mechanics that that work what it's why socialism doesn't work it goes against the very nature of the
01:38:35.140 universe itself it goes against the human nature as man as an animal it doesn't work it goes
01:38:42.820 against the spirit of man because it closes down your spirit it actually it makes you
01:38:51.460 less likely to help others
01:38:55.700 so he made a covenant and then just when we needed it again
01:39:02.980 abraham lincoln made one at gettysburg
01:39:06.340 and we must renew the covenant if we're going to survive we must renew the covenant
01:39:18.980 and next year i will tell you part one this week and after thanksgiving i will tell you all of it and
01:39:27.060 and tell you how you can uh become involved and um but we're going to uh do restoring the covenant
01:39:38.740 and uh the part that we can announce today is we are going to be here in in plymouth massachusetts
01:39:46.180 uh in the last week of june of next year and we're going to be here for the last few days on that weekend
01:39:55.060 before the fourth of july uh and we are going to be participating in and enjoying some of the things
01:40:02.980 that uh the plymouth rock foundation are doing to get us prepared to restore the covenant to
01:40:09.620 have us understand true history if you're anywhere in this area next summer i invite you to come
01:40:16.900 to the 400th anniversary of the american pilgrimage in plymouth massachusetts it's june 28th through june 30th
01:40:27.220 2020 and join us here um that's all i'm going to announce today but i am telling you
01:40:37.460 this has been on my heart for a long time and the miracles that have happened recently in the last
01:40:43.300 six months to make all of these things come together have been astounding so join us in
01:40:50.260 plymouth massachusetts next summer um i don't know if i would make my plans quite yet just put that on
01:40:57.700 your calendar save the date uh because there's other things to follow that's june 28th through june 30th
01:41:04.660 save the date for next year more in just a second first i want to talk to you a little bit about my
01:41:11.700 pillow i stayed at a hotel here last night i had to use like 17 pillows it was uh had two beds in it
01:41:23.140 i had to use like 17 pillows because they were all like these ridiculous pillows i miss my pillow i miss
01:41:29.380 my pillow i miss my sheets from my pillow.com um you know i i talked to somebody who used to travel
01:41:36.260 with the royals the the saudi royals and they used to they still do they would bring their entire bed
01:41:44.260 on the plane and then take it to the hotel where they were staying and i was like that's ridiculous
01:41:49.540 oh my gosh if i had the money like they had i'd be traveling with my bed too don't kid yourself anyway
01:41:55.380 uh if you'd like to crack the code on sleep get a my pillow get their my pillow sheets and right now
01:42:03.300 they are doing something game-changing for the bathroom their six-piece towel set all made with
01:42:08.420 usa cotton extremely absorbent yet still incredibly soft you're going to get the two hand towels the
01:42:14.020 two bath towels the two washcloths for 30 off with the promo code beck that's promo code beck go to
01:42:19.620 mypillow.com click on the new radio listener specials get 30 off the six-piece towel set
01:42:24.980 uh and deep discounts on all other my pillow products enter the promo code beck 800-966-3117
01:42:32.180 get these radio specials right now mypillow.com we break for 10 seconds station id
01:42:49.220 uh welcome to the program do you have do you have like 10 minutes but you can okay good
01:42:53.380 so pat have you have you been to plymouth never no it is stunning it's like have you ever been to
01:43:03.780 nantucket or martha's vineyard no pretty much every weekend okay yeah no i know you've never been okay
01:43:10.820 so i've been and imagine that place without all the snobs really wow that's nice that's like this place
01:43:18.420 it is so beautiful i can't even imagine there was a nor'easter that blew in it's a little cold here
01:43:24.420 right now um but i can't imagine what this place is like in the summer it is it is really really
01:43:30.180 beautiful um and just a great little town right on the water what i can imagine is they came in
01:43:37.060 december the pilgrims came in december on this boat and they lived on that boat in the harbor
01:43:43.860 uh during the winter i can't i can't even i can't get my arms around the smell of that boat in the
01:43:54.100 first place oh man um but i also can't imagine living in the harbor on an open boat in this weather oh
01:44:03.380 yeah can you imagine our wives uh in under those conditions i mean if it's 70 degrees in our house
01:44:11.860 burr i'm cold it's cold burr if they if they had conditions like that oh man you know what can i
01:44:20.820 tell you something uh there comes a point in a woman's life where they stop saying that at least
01:44:27.940 temporarily really yeah like well maybe like every 10 minutes i'm boiling hot i'm boiling hot i'm boiling
01:44:34.900 hot then 10 minutes later it's i'm freezing i'm freezing yeah uh however uh you know
01:44:41.700 i enjoy those 10 minutes when she's not saying i'm cold yes how did how did these guys get women
01:44:48.340 on to the mayflower crazy you know how cold it's gonna be you know one question i do have and maybe
01:44:53.540 you know the answer to this pat why would they leave 60 days before winter took them 66 days to get
01:45:03.060 here yeah that doesn't make any sense at all i mean plan ahead a little bit what do you say we go in
01:45:07.060 april right yeah it would have been beautiful for them in april yeah i mean did they not get the
01:45:12.820 travel brochures did they not know about nantucket and martha's vineyard did they not see like we're
01:45:18.820 gonna have to we're gonna have to steer around that obama house but it'll be beautiful when we reach the
01:45:24.580 mainland yeah it's got crazy i mean it must have been you know because that was 1620 there was still
01:45:33.540 uh in fact that was probably the the peak of the little ice age era you know when it was actually
01:45:41.780 frigid cold winters in the northeast i mean worse than now by a lot yeah by a lot we were just coming
01:45:48.900 out of the little ice age and uh i i just i it amazes me that people would say that they came here
01:45:56.900 for any other reason this was insanity and the only people crazy enough to do that stuff or think
01:46:03.620 people that think they hear from god oh for sure you know what i mean people you know be because i
01:46:08.340 know because you know once in a while i'll feel like he talks to me like hey fatso put the fork down
01:46:13.860 and i'll be like no i don't want to put the fat you know that's that's when you know it's from god when
01:46:18.900 he's telling you to do stuff like stop eating so much you know that's when you know that's the only
01:46:26.260 reason why you get onto a boat and go cross the ocean in the middle of the winter is because god
01:46:30.500 said hey fatso you need to lose some weight you're going to be vomiting for 66 days get on the boat
01:46:35.540 all right back in just a second
01:46:38.820 this is the glenbeck program american financing corporation nmls 182334 www.nmlsconsumeraccess.org
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01:47:54.740 it's american financing 800-906-2440 800-906-2440 americanfinancing.net miss glenn's special last week
01:48:03.700 the democrats hydra well you're in luck you can watch it for free on youtube right now
01:48:24.740 this is the glenn beck program welcome to it we're in plymouth massachusetts uh not the place to
01:48:37.060 be necessarily be in the winter but i thank you for that um i want to introduce you to a couple of
01:48:42.500 people um first let me introduce you to ollie uh dimacito i met ollie yesterday uh and and i want
01:48:51.140 you to as you're listening in your car wherever you are i want you just to realize this this segment
01:48:58.500 is about the impact of two normal people just like you who just wasn't necessarily thinking big
01:49:07.140 they thought small what is it i'm supposed to do and the results are huge um i also want to
01:49:13.060 introduce uh introduce you uh to uh beth perera she and her husband uh owned this building that
01:49:21.460 we're in now this plot number one this beautiful home right across the street from plymouth rock
01:49:27.620 um and you felt compelled to do what you're doing first let me start with you ollie because you are i
01:49:33.460 went to these these float barns uh where you are building these floats and every year this this parade
01:49:41.860 tells a different story right exactly how long have you been doing this i've been doing it for
01:49:46.580 roughly 25 years pretty much and um and it uh you're right it started we kind of took it over at a
01:49:52.420 certain time but you know i've always had a passion for history you know but uh and i have a more of a
01:49:58.020 passion for america you know i immigrated here as a child so coming to coming to america when i was a
01:50:03.300 little kid it was like coming to heaven actually it was how we felt how old were you i was seven years
01:50:07.540 old and he came from cave verde which is on the west coast of africa these little islands they're
01:50:11.540 portuguese islands and uh and so it was a big deal for my family to immigrate here and i remember
01:50:17.620 getting on a ship and uh starting the you know the voyage over here and how difficult it was and
01:50:22.980 throwing up the whole way but uh but to us the opportunity that what everyone knew in cave red was
01:50:29.540 america was the place and and why why well because well first of all you only get four years of
01:50:34.420 education over there is very difficult you know for one of my older brothers to go to a different
01:50:38.340 island to get high school education was more than my father made in the whole month so it was impossible
01:50:43.060 so my mother's dream was to educate her children and so all of us have been educated college and so on
01:50:48.500 and we wanted the american dream like everybody else it's like my story's not unlike anyone other's
01:50:53.380 stories but i just you know i have a passion for why america is america and what america has represented
01:51:00.500 for so many uh for so long why is america america uh america is america because it's it's an idea
01:51:07.460 and it's an idea that not only for me as a christian i really believe that you know it was in god's
01:51:13.540 sight to see that america would be there's a reason for it there's a reason why america exists and existed
01:51:18.580 for so many things uh america has totally changed the whole makeup of the world the world's a different
01:51:23.860 play because america's existed and so to me and that's because the idea existed exactly and and
01:51:29.940 we've never accomplished fully accomplished the idea and the idea is all men are created equal and
01:51:34.980 endowed by their creator with certain inalienable rights among these right life liberty and the
01:51:38.500 pursuit of happiness we've never we've never completed that and it's crazy to think that the
01:51:45.540 arrogance to think you could come up with a better mission statement for a country than that
01:51:51.540 especially when we've not gotten close to even completing that yet that's because we're in the
01:51:56.500 we're part of that process and that's right that's what holds up most of the time right but uh but it's
01:52:01.220 a great idea like for us for my family was really we can go to a place where every dream can be realized
01:52:07.220 and i mean that sincerely i mean my dad didn't have anything my mom didn't have anything but we knew
01:52:12.180 that in america we had a chance and it goes deep with inside me i have a passion for what i do when we
01:52:18.420 celebrate the parade and we tell america's story because i believe that no one should forget why
01:52:23.860 america exists and why it continues to exist and we cannot forget so that we don't allow for what
01:52:30.740 why it exists to go away so other people and other generation can't be benefactors i want my children
01:52:36.100 i want my children's children to be able to know uh why their granddad you know or their great granddad
01:52:43.140 made the voyage to come here there was a reason i wanted to be free and at that time i didn't even
01:52:47.460 really understand what freedom was but i soon began to understand what freedom was and it wasn't
01:52:51.540 easy so you are we met at the parade barn or the the float barn where you are making these incredible
01:52:58.580 you were so funny yesterday because i drove up and i saw one of these floats that was out of the
01:53:02.580 barn that you're still working on and i said to whomever was in the car i said maybe it was you beth i
01:53:08.740 said uh look that that is that the golden spike and when i met you and you said and we're working on
01:53:14.580 some things and and and this is you know represents the golden spike i don't know if you can see it
01:53:18.660 and i'm like yeah it looks just like the picture dude i mean there's these two big trains that you
01:53:24.180 have built on the back of this float and you tell what is the theme this year with the parade well the
01:53:29.860 theme usually always with the parade it's prosperity but the theme with the praise always is telling
01:53:34.660 the great moments in history where the nation paused to give thanks thanksgiving so and i believe
01:53:40.980 anytime we had great accomplishment like we also having the apollo 11 this year when when this
01:53:46.260 nation has done great things we're doing d-day this year when we've accomplished things that are far
01:53:51.140 beyond what people can even imagine i think the nation said thank you lord that we've been able to
01:53:55.780 do these things i mean that was a big deal 150 years ago to have the west meet east you know there's
01:54:00.340 a huge right but this is not something that there's no corporation behind this there's no big money
01:54:06.260 behind this no there's no big people behind this it's just you and your church and some other and
01:54:13.220 it's like a real parade it's i mean it's like real yeah it's not one of these ah yeah we you know dressed
01:54:20.980 up the back of our pickup truck this is real no it's it's legit you know we're obviously the whole
01:54:26.420 nation has taken notice of what we do and i think what we do is that we're different because we do tell
01:54:30.820 a story and one of the things i've always enjoyed by you you're a storyteller and i'm a storyteller and i do
01:54:35.460 it with the stories though in the parade i let the people know the greatness of this land and why we
01:54:40.500 so appreciate it why so many appreciate it and we do it every year differently with different events
01:54:45.460 or different historic events or anniversaries that tell a wonderful story and it's knit together by
01:54:50.900 normal people you're right just like that there's like everybody there nobody's getting paid that's
01:54:55.380 right nobody knows who they are nobody knows their names half the time but the product is excellent
01:55:00.420 and the story is even better i have to tell you you i went through your barn and i what did i say
01:55:06.260 to you would you come and build a zeppelin for me because i can't get somebody that quality that you
01:55:12.180 have done on these floats is beautiful just beautiful so i know you have to go back to work and you're
01:55:18.100 you're lovely in that outfit thank you do you change you get a change i do my wife she puts up stuff
01:55:23.620 for me but sometimes i just i sleep in my clothes to get up the next morning and do it sometimes we go
01:55:27.620 through the night for the next day we're not done to complete it but it's it's when is the parade
01:55:32.180 is the parade this sat this saturday it's always the saturday before thanksgiving for the main reason
01:55:36.820 that we want people to still enjoy their their grandmas and their uncles on thanksgiving day we
01:55:41.620 don't want to be away from their family thanksgiving day so we do it the weekend before and you have all
01:55:45.940 the stuff and the excitement of it all but at the same time you get to be with your family okay i want
01:55:50.100 to introduce you to somebody else who was remarkable but i'm going to take a quick break because i don't
01:55:53.940 want to interrupt it so let me just change uh stations of and break a little bit early here
01:55:58.740 for you um i want you to i want you to meet somebody else who is just like you and realized
01:56:05.780 oh wow uh country's in trouble and i can do something and we'll talk to her in just a second
01:56:10.980 first relief factor some people are born experimenters um uh i generally am kind of like that except when it
01:56:18.740 comes to anything natural i mean look at me do you look do i look like somebody who believes in
01:56:23.860 natural remedies no david is from pennsylvania david found himself suffering from regular pain
01:56:30.180 in his shoulder in his foot uh he heard about relief factor early on he decided he was going
01:56:35.140 to give it a shot sure enough when he took it the pain went away shortly now most people wouldn't be
01:56:40.580 satisfied by that but he was like you know he's an experimenter so about a month into it he decided
01:56:46.740 to see what would happen if he stopped taking it and boom uh the pain came back into the shoulder
01:56:52.100 and the foot again david learned his lesson david does what i do now he takes it every single day
01:56:57.620 he got back on relief factor within a week his pain was gone again yours will be too for 70 of the
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01:57:13.620 for only 19.95 it's relieffactor.com that's relieffactor.com you're listening to glenn back
01:57:43.620 beth perera and her uh and her husband jerry uh owned this beautiful home that i'm sitting in
01:57:50.900 on plot number one in plymouth massachusetts it's right across uh the street from plymouth rock i had
01:57:57.620 no idea you even knew who i was when i walked up on saturday and it was such a nice greeting
01:58:02.580 um and the more i just love you and your husband the more i get to know you two you're not you're not
01:58:09.060 you're not people that you think of as these movement people i've been in the movement my
01:58:16.100 old life you're just normal people that realize there's something i have to do exactly and i would
01:58:22.340 like to thank you glenn for um all the millions of people that you've educated and inspired because
01:58:29.540 um you taught us long ago that um if you um looked for truth you looked for the good in others and if
01:58:39.140 you um did something with excellent we're not alone and that um when a project something like this came
01:58:46.020 along of um purchasing the side of the first house uh we did it and i was shocked when i found out the
01:58:54.660 i don't even know what you really paid for but the estimated somebody told me what this was worth and i
01:58:58.660 thought this would be worth tens of millions of dollars because of the historic value and where
01:59:05.300 it is and it says to me that there's not real appreciation for what this is what the street means
01:59:15.460 right you know it's the first street in america as you had mentioned and it's um the longest
01:59:22.340 continuously inhabited street in north america and i think um as we mentioned with 2020 coming up
01:59:28.900 i think the spotlight will be on plymouth and we have a wonderful opportunity a wonderful opportunity to
01:59:35.220 um to tell the story your husband is from sri lanka he came here at seven just like ollie yes he did how
01:59:44.180 much of that played a role in the mission with your family well my husband's dad brought him to america when
01:59:53.780 he was seven years old they immigrated and he learned that america was the land of freedom and
02:00:00.500 as our journey progressed we um are we found ourselves um 20 miles north of plymouth and heard of uh the
02:00:09.300 pilgrims and all that they had done to contribute to our the birthing of our nation and he um studied under a
02:00:17.780 gentleman who's now deceased but he had spent 50 years studying in the archives and jerry spent two
02:00:24.020 nights a week four hours a night um studying with this man charles wolf and what he learned was that
02:00:31.060 he was a pilgrim he was a pilgrim and that he loved america he had always loved america since he came
02:00:38.180 but what does it mean he's a pilgrim what does it mean to be a pilgrim to be a pilgrim is to embrace the
02:00:44.180 um the idea that the pilgrims had when they they came here they came here for religious and civil
02:00:50.340 liberty they came here knowing that all men were created equal in the image of god and to um make
02:00:57.220 the world a better place when you left so it allows you to worship god freely but it also allows others
02:01:04.180 to do the same i think um we're doing a show uh at five o'clock and and by the way um we're going to take
02:01:13.220 phone calls after this broadcast and you can call in at 888-727-BECK if you if you want to talk about
02:01:20.420 um thanksgiving um what to teach your kids for thanksgiving we really have to um we really really
02:01:30.500 have to pay attention this thanksgiving because i think and i think you would agree we're on the edge
02:01:36.580 we're on the very edge we are and um i think a lot of people are looking for um ways to teach that
02:01:44.260 and i think um we have materials to teach that about the pastor john robinson how he taught his
02:01:51.140 congregation what the mayflower compact actually said some of the psalms that um sing about the
02:01:56.980 praises and thankfulness of a people that you've put this you put this together in a small little pdf that
02:02:03.460 is easy to have you know just on your ipad or your phone at the thanksgiving dinner uh table just
02:02:09.140 read it it's it's not long um and you can read it and then break it up amongst your family to share
02:02:15.140 these messages but you can find that at 400th that's for the number four zero zero th four hundredth.org
02:02:25.140 um you can get videos of where we are at right now this amazing home what what do you use this for now
02:02:32.980 what it's it's used um for things like you're doing for filming it's used um where uh historians come and
02:02:42.180 speak here it's used um to uh tell the story uh we have we had visitors from um england uh last saturday
02:02:52.980 and they came just because they left southampton where the pilgrims originally left really and
02:02:57.300 wanted to step into this house and actually pray over us so every week is different uh it's
02:03:03.700 jerry said sometimes people just in the summer they'll just open up the front door in the living
02:03:07.860 room because they think it's like a museum they're like no no hello yeah it's our house yeah a lot of
02:03:12.900 filming is done here a lot of um guest speakers come in for the uh to speak on history um a lot of um
02:03:22.100 pastors come here are you a little overwhelmed at any time to i mean i own some i own washington's
02:03:29.060 compass i own some really amazing things um and i don't own them i keep them for the next generation
02:03:37.060 and whoever is going to be the steward the next time do you are you ever overwhelmed of what you're
02:03:42.660 the steward of at times i am and then i think well god called us to this stewardship and so i
02:03:51.060 um ask him in which direction i should uh go and it's sobering it is yeah because of the sacrifice
02:03:59.220 of the pilgrims if you really study them you fall in love with them and you think who had that type
02:04:05.380 of courage and passion and um perseverance and commitment to carry out what they did knowing that
02:04:13.620 half of them would would not survive i know i heard the story this weekend of the 14 women
02:04:19.780 or 18 women uh that made the trip and and lasted and got here and then by the end of winter only four
02:04:28.340 of them were alive and it was because they were shielding their children from the cold they weren't
02:04:34.340 eating themselves so their children could eat i mean the sacrifice of these people was amazing exactly
02:04:40.500 and this is the year of the woman uh so oh 1920 right they'll be honoring them um all throughout
02:04:47.460 the year and so we invite um good everybody to come and um i invite you to uh again um come up for the
02:04:56.740 festival you can come up for the parade which is next saturday here if you happen to want to get
02:05:02.340 involved or you can donate it all for the parade that's usathanksgiving.com usathanksgiving.com
02:05:09.140 uh you'll find out all the information there they are i mean these are just regular people that are
02:05:14.100 putting on this amazing event if you want to get involved great if not just come up also this summer
02:05:19.940 there is something you can find out about at plymrock.org p-l-y-m rock.org we will be up here next
02:05:29.140 summer uh and also 400th th dot org 400th th go to that website now and get the documentations get
02:05:39.940 the things that you should be sharing with your family next week at thanksgiving this is the glenbeck
02:05:45.460 program