The Glenn Beck Program - May 22, 2019


Robocallers, Scammers, and Spammers... OH MY! | Guest: Jeffy Fisher | 5⧸22⧸19


Episode Stats

Length

1 hour and 44 minutes

Words per Minute

203.83653

Word Count

21,199

Sentence Count

9

Misogynist Sentences

40

Hate Speech Sentences

22


Summary

In this episode of The Glenbeck Program, we discuss abortion, anti-abortion graffiti, and the current state of the pro-life movement in the United States. Pat and Stew return from their time off to talk about it all!


Transcript

00:00:00.000 this is the glenbeck program today it's pat and stew for glenn from the glenbeck program as stew
00:00:05.940 returns how was your time off good oh it was fantastic yeah all right good yourself how was
00:00:12.600 your day they were all fantastic we're all here it was great to continue to work i feel like i
00:00:19.420 heard uh from basically every conversation i had while i was off the air was about abortion
00:00:24.200 i mean at first you're like that doesn't lead to a lot of comfortable conversations per se
00:00:29.740 but maybe babies being alive is worth a couple uncomfortable conversations that's kind of what
00:00:35.380 i think yeah you know i feel like i have this weird urge to have babies be alive for longer periods
00:00:42.960 um maybe maybe babies could turn into children uh and if you know uh this pat children are our future
00:00:49.640 uh so that's important that's what i heard yeah uh also a lot of those children are going to be
00:00:54.820 women one day you think um so yeah do you have any evidence of that it does seem to be a women's
00:00:59.720 rights thing to me uh as well so we'll get into that and a lot more in 60 seconds pat and stew for
00:01:08.220 glenn on the glenbeck program uh he's back on i guess it's tuesday because monday's memorial day
00:01:13.320 already yeah that's right wow um uh church was uh defaced in delaware county which is is that is
00:01:21.600 that in pennsylvania delaware county it's in the philadelphia diocese i know that um vandals
00:01:27.460 tagged the church with abortion rights graffiti saying you do not have the right to decide how
00:01:34.480 others lives that is a fair point you know i've been trying to figure out when others lives for
00:01:41.040 many years and you don't have the right to decide now we know that i can i can decide out for myself
00:01:46.260 but i can't put onto others when others lives right and that is i think the distinction they're
00:01:50.900 looking for in the graffiti i mean when you're writing this uh i can understand it when you
00:01:55.840 screw up and speak it live to somebody but when you're writing it um i'm not sure it makes a lot
00:02:01.680 of sense to add the s there it makes a lot of sense to try to do a draft of each each project you're
00:02:07.080 going into in the graffiti world yes if you're gonna deface churches right go to it go to a bridge
00:02:11.640 first like under a bridge where no one can see it and try out your message there see how it looks
00:02:17.160 take a couple steps back you know turn your iphone flashlight on it make sure it looks right
00:02:22.020 then go to the church to deface the church right how many times have we seen you know white supremacists
00:02:27.040 screw up a swastika on on on a on a church and then look it's just embarrassing if you're gonna put a
00:02:33.140 swastika on a religious establishment it's important to understand which ways the lines go how do you
00:02:38.680 expect you know to join your terrorist group exactly you can't even you can't even spell live i honestly
00:02:45.380 think half of these church burnings are just because they screwed up the graffiti and then
00:02:48.880 they were embarrassed about it just burn the church down that's true it that's really embarrassing
00:02:53.160 i don't have science behind that one but i think that might be it might be to blame but i think it
00:02:59.420 might be onto something uh it you know even even at the churches now we're being attacked for for
00:03:07.540 believing in in life and you know it seems like life is something that would be okay to to believe in
00:03:13.940 the babies should be born to be be okay with most people and it apparently it's that's not the case
00:03:20.600 in the united states in the year 2019 uh it's not okay that you believe in life and want babies to
00:03:27.400 live yeah it was really interesting being off for a few days and talking to talking outside of these
00:03:32.800 walls because here we're we've talked about the life issue for a very long time and i'm sure you know
00:03:37.460 that if you listen but it's interesting how that's breaking through as far as the conversation outside
00:03:43.500 now i think it's it's one of the big political topics right now yeah which usually means something
00:03:48.440 bad you know like usually at the end of the day when you when a normal political conversation turns
00:03:55.140 into the conversation you're having outside in normal you know a normal person-to-person interaction
00:04:01.740 a lot of times what it turns into is a non-stop politics for i mean good example of this is uh the
00:04:09.640 trade issue you know like for years and years and years it was unions and democrats saying we need
00:04:17.300 tariffs and restrictions on trade and republicans saying we don't need tariffs and we don't want
00:04:22.280 restrictions on trade we want free trade and that was sort of the wonky sort of um think tank debate
00:04:29.140 that went on for a really really long time and then donald trump has come out and he's obviously much
00:04:35.500 more friendly to tariffs and trade restrictions and now it just now it just turned into teams
00:04:41.980 you see the same people who were arguing unions and we need we absolutely need these tariffs we got
00:04:48.760 to stop these this free trade stuff that's all this you know crazy voodoo economics and all the stuff
00:04:53.660 that's going on the other side and uh and then now it's like well it's just become people who like
00:04:59.680 trump back him on it and people who don't like trump attack him on it it's just people have just
00:05:04.580 switched sides and i think when you define especially with someone like trump who's so
00:05:08.820 good at like taking a an issue and owning it you know he just is so he has such an ability to be
00:05:14.600 able to just dominate a conversation and people you see it on on cable news all the time they can't
00:05:21.000 agree with anything he says no matter what it is even if it's a position they've held for 50 years
00:05:25.180 they can't agree with him right so it just turns into this team thing and i'm afraid at some level
00:05:31.480 that's happening with abortion here where again like if you look at the polling on abortion this
00:05:35.300 third trimester abortion which has been the general focus of this debate is 84 to 14 against the american
00:05:42.260 people despise third term abortion they always have everyone knows it's a horrific horrific thing
00:05:48.520 84 of americans don't agree on the sky being blue yeah we're really almost nothing credible uh number
00:05:55.560 of people to agree it's there's almost nothing in our political debate that is so universal you could
00:06:01.820 almost say that's unanimous that's every right thinking person in america yeah believes that late
00:06:07.620 term abortion isn't right and that's and that's not you know governor northam well after they're born
00:06:12.360 they'll make a decision on whether you keep them alive it's not even five minutes before birth
00:06:16.820 it's third trimester so you're talking you know what month seven you're like month seven that's that's
00:06:22.440 way earlier than the the types of things that democratic candidates are involved in and think
00:06:27.020 about this for a second you have an 80 of something that's unpopular with you know to the level of
00:06:32.940 84 percent and the democrats have pulled out 24 candidates and not one of them will say that that's wrong
00:06:42.920 which is not one of them that's staggering staggering i mean i there's an argument to be made and people
00:06:48.480 who are pro-choice do make it in that essentially it's a slippery slope right and and there's a
00:06:53.600 somewhat of an equivalency with like the second amendment argument like you there probably is
00:06:58.820 some sort of common sense restriction on guns that republicans could get on board on you every once in
00:07:04.100 a while you see like background checks and it polls really well however you know most people who really
00:07:08.440 care about the second amendment are like look i don't want those things because i can i know what
00:07:11.920 you're doing you're going to take you're going to ask for one inch you're going to take a mile and
00:07:15.420 you'll take 10 miles and you're seeing the entire globe and we're seeing it right now you're seeing
00:07:18.540 with beto o'rourke came out against all semi-automatic weapons like these are things that are way beyond
00:07:23.100 what they said they were asking for in the common sense realm just a few months ago so as the second
00:07:27.740 amendment guy and i'm not a huge gun guy but i'm a huge second amendment guy uh i am uh and i know
00:07:34.620 you're the same way i don't want to give one inch on any of this stuff because you know they're coming
00:07:39.560 for all of it so maybe that's the same thing with some people on the abortion argument they think
00:07:44.840 they're going to come for first you know first trimester abortion so they defend to the death
00:07:49.240 five minutes before uh you know birth abortions defend to the death being pretty appropriate here
00:07:56.460 um i just it's it's so incredibly unpopular second trimester abortions are also incredibly unpopular
00:08:04.780 to the i think it's a 37 point gap to the negative on uh second trimester whether they should be allowed
00:08:11.320 right they should everyone says second and third trimester abortions should be illegal
00:08:15.920 that's why the only one that pulls well is the first is the first trimester and it's it's slightly
00:08:20.260 positive however again like republicans in general and and alabama is a is a an exception here as they
00:08:26.660 were going after basically six weeks or so um most republican states are asking for 20 week abortion
00:08:32.800 bans that's the typical republican position uh position interestingly though this week there was a
00:08:38.360 poll uh that said 50 was it 55 percent of americans are are in favor of the heartbeat bills
00:08:45.840 that's that's not i mean that's amazing yeah really i mean it's but it's you wouldn't to listen to
00:08:54.680 these democrats you wouldn't think that anyone anyone would would be in favor of the heartbeat bill but
00:09:01.080 55 that's that's most americans that as soon as you know there's a heartbeat you can't have an abortion
00:09:09.900 uh that and and then you look at that and then you see the stance of all of these candidates on the
00:09:16.740 democrat side and it just doesn't add up it just doesn't make any sense they can't find one i mean
00:09:21.920 this is a party like you know one of the biggest abortion rulings in the supreme court was casey
00:09:25.600 um and you know this goes back to you know years and years ago now but now you have a democratic
00:09:31.100 senator all right named casey same family and they can't find one candidate one candidate to come out
00:09:38.220 i mean it used to be that there were pro-life democrats this used to be something and while like
00:09:43.260 it was always hard for us to understand because how can you be on the side of the party that's fighting
00:09:49.560 for unlimited abortions they still had them now we're at the point where like you i mean you can't you
00:09:54.740 can't even can you even enter this race if you happen to be pro-life i don't think so i don't
00:09:59.380 think you can even enter it i don't know if you can enter the democrat party if you're pro-life
00:10:03.340 anymore i don't see how there doesn't seem to be any place for a pro-life person in the democrat
00:10:08.180 party anymore yeah and you could say well it's just one issue i agree with them on these other
00:10:11.620 things and i i understand that instinct but when we're talking about live and how many millions 60
00:10:17.380 million uh like 62 million now 62 million people that should be living aren't right
00:10:24.720 because of this one policy it's a pretty big deal and if you believe it's it's not it it's a big deal
00:10:31.600 at some level if you're on the left right because you you think of it as a cultural issue you think
00:10:35.920 of it as well i mean i don't think many people actually believe it's women's rights but it's
00:10:40.260 at least a stand-in for women's rights right no one because no one cares what you do to your body
00:10:44.620 if it doesn't affect another life uh it's only a matter of if another person's rights are affected
00:10:49.240 but you know it's a stand-in for women's rights it's kind of a generic summary of of women's rights
00:10:55.280 and it's something that they say they need to defend so at some level it's important to the
00:10:59.040 left but it's really more of just a cultural issue to the right we're talking about people living and
00:11:03.020 dying and if you're saying that this is an actual life it obviously has to be the most important thing
00:11:08.440 right if if if the end of this is 60 million people that should be alive aren't what other policy
00:11:14.380 has that effect on anything i mean you know we've made this point before pat that we could probably
00:11:19.040 come in here every day and we would bore the hell out of you in the audience but we could come in here
00:11:24.860 every day and talk about abortion and our ratings would be like 0.004 however morally i could be
00:11:33.540 completely content with that i could be completely content with that because that's i mean there's no
00:11:38.480 other issue with the possible exception and it's a much larger and more difficult uh road of just
00:11:45.180 generally speaking capitalism right because capitalism really has ripped billions of people
00:11:49.240 out of poverty and you can make the argument that it's even more important i guess uh but when you're
00:11:53.300 talking about just a law that could be changed a ruling that could be changed that could just protect
00:11:58.700 millions and millions of lives there's just nothing that competes with abortion it's it's it's the
00:12:03.840 most simple road to keep tens of millions of people which are also will grow up to be women
00:12:09.540 will grow up to be minorities will grow up to be uh will have different sexual orientations well every
00:12:15.100 single men many of them probably you know just because of the fact that planned parenthood just
00:12:20.320 loves to target inner city neighborhoods probably most of them wind up voting for democrats like this
00:12:26.560 is an argument in which republicans are just on are saying please lord god let us give you more voters
00:12:32.600 right right how many of them would have been out of 62 million people could one of them have been
00:12:37.360 another einstein absolutely one of them have been another madame curie yeah could one of them have
00:12:42.440 cured cancer and many of them yes and here's the thing maybe 10 million of them would have been
00:12:48.400 awful right they still had they still should have the chance to be good right right they could all be
00:12:53.720 the most annoying they could all be the people who are programming the robocalls like i don't care if all
00:12:59.420 of them all 60 million got into the robocall industry they still deserve the right to life
00:13:04.180 but okay yes all right back in 60 seconds pat gray from pat grand leashed and uh stew back from
00:13:13.080 vacation for glenn this week uh kirsten gillibrand was talking about abortion yesterday um you know
00:13:18.640 basic civil rights uh here she was on msnbc what would you say to taxpayers out there who say look i support
00:13:25.540 everyone having their own freedoms but that when it comes to my tax dollars abortion isn't something
00:13:30.100 that i want to support you know uh we have a tenant in our constitution it's called separation of church
00:13:36.240 and state oh really and uh i do not believe that that is a valid argument i think that the high
00:13:42.240 amendment should be repealed and that we actually need to make sure that women regardless of their
00:13:46.840 income level have a basic right to reproductive care it's about our humanity and it's about our basic
00:13:52.400 civil rights a basic right to reproductive care well it's in the constitution pat uh-huh and when
00:13:58.240 i say in it it's i think it's on the back and a fold it's folded and on it so if you open up
00:14:03.280 invisible ink it is i think you have to heat it up like they did on uh on uh what was that what was
00:14:08.880 that nicholas cage movie oh national treasure yeah national treasure you got to take a blow dryer
00:14:12.920 and you got to be really careful though a little lemon juice on it yep and then the blow dryer and it'll
00:14:18.900 show up amazing the founders predicted the blow dryer right which is i thought pretty impressive
00:14:22.900 because they didn't even have a lot of electricity at the time i think some of them assumed you could
00:14:27.720 just do it with your hot breath but then other founders said no they're going to invent something
00:14:31.660 eventually where they can dry their hair really quick i think that'll do the job because uh the
00:14:37.420 separation of church and state not in the constitution not in the constitution it was in a letter
00:14:41.440 yes thomas jefferson in 1803 to a baptist minister in connecticut uh who was asking about uh you know
00:14:49.340 hey uh are we going to be in trouble here with the uh with the state because we're not of the state
00:14:54.460 religion and that's where that's where it came in so they were you've got to separate it's a protection
00:15:01.800 against the religion not the government you don't have to protect the state from religion that's
00:15:07.220 pretty incredible it's really the exact reverse the exact opposite of the way it's talked about now
00:15:11.880 um and the fact that a senator who's running for president is not aware that the separation of
00:15:17.460 church and state is in the constitution is or is not in the constitution it's pretty stunning
00:15:22.400 in a normal time with this field that's not stunning at all because they got i mean there are 24
00:15:29.800 candidates up there now bill de blasio getting in uh while i was on vacation you haven't even moved
00:15:34.560 him over on the board yet he's still on our on the fence list i think he's pretty hacked off about
00:15:38.700 that yeah yeah that was a big part of his initial press conference why am i why have i not been moved
00:15:42.920 on on the glenbeck presidential board uh but you know the fact that she doesn't even know that
00:15:48.300 and then you realize when they talk when people on the left talk about abortion you just realize
00:15:54.140 they're just saying things that that don't make any sense right like you know uh this sort of
00:16:00.160 prenatal like reproductive health care concept like there's a reason you have to make up a fake
00:16:07.460 term for it we all know it's not reproductive health care that is not what an abortion is
00:16:12.760 reproductive health care might mean making sure you have the right nutrients and vitamins if you have
00:16:17.220 there's an issue with uh you know morning sickness reproductive health care absolutely postpartum
00:16:22.580 depression reproductive health care i'm willing to go to any of those so i mean yeah that's that makes
00:16:27.340 sense uh obviously the the baby itself whether you're having a internal lady issue whatever they
00:16:32.580 whatever the issue just killing the baby is not reproductive health it is not that's not what it
00:16:38.700 is right because it's it's not healthy for the baby i don't know if people are aware of that that
00:16:43.260 that's not health care when you're killing someone no no i mean just like just like you know
00:16:47.960 assisted suicide comes around and it's like well uh should people be able to kill themselves we made
00:16:52.440 the point it's very difficult to prevent them to right it's really like you can make all the laws you
00:16:56.440 want saying you don't kill yourself what are you going to do afterwards you get find the guy you
00:17:00.320 going to give them a ticket after they're dead like i generally speaking it's difficult to stop people
00:17:05.400 from killing themselves but we the reproductive health care having a doctor come in and keep you
00:17:11.680 uh out of pain with certain drugs uh all that can be defined as health care actually killing the
00:17:18.020 patient cannot be defined as health care like that's just not health care it's not ending lives is not
00:17:24.720 health care it's not what it is it's something else and you might like it but it's still not
00:17:29.780 health care and they just say reproductive health care they say women's rights because these are
00:17:33.660 stand-ins for the terrible thing that they're arguing for also prenatal care is not something
00:17:38.020 that planned parenthood even does no they don't even do prenatal health care they don't do the
00:17:42.200 cancer screenings they don't do breast cancer screenings they can refer you to get one which is
00:17:46.820 really helpful but they don't they don't do mammograms and we hear that all the time well you're cutting
00:17:51.700 off people's ability and you get a mammogram they don't even do them you can't even get one there
00:17:58.020 and it's like planned parenthood is the only place on earth that does health care which they don't
00:18:04.740 really do at all and now it's the opposite they've put in the in people's minds that that's the only
00:18:10.760 place anybody can get it done yeah it's like uh i always make this argument with people who bring
00:18:14.740 up the health care thing if you ever go to a kfc and taco bell you know they they're combined there
00:18:21.400 there's no yeah and taco bell well and i love uh i'm a big taco bell guy let's say i'm against
00:18:26.800 kfc and i love taco bell well if they separated them into two restaurants i would just go to the
00:18:31.320 taco bell one right so if you're planned parenthood just separate all your wonderful health care things
00:18:36.300 from abortion and see how much people protest i'll give you a news not at all they're not going to say
00:18:40.520 one freaking word about the taco bell side of that they're just going to protest the kfc side of it
00:18:45.260 and that is the thing it's like if you stopped doing abortions you get all the funding that every
00:18:49.680 other women's uh health care clinic gets it's just about that and we all know for you it's just about
00:18:56.260 that as well pat and stew for glenn on the glenbeck program uh 888-727-BECK also uh sounding off
00:19:07.180 another one of the long list of the endless democrat candidates for president uh mayor pete
00:19:13.960 pete uh but a judge but a judge but a judge uh was asked by msnbc if he supports any abortion
00:19:23.160 restrictions at all you you can't pin these guys down on any restrictions here's what pete had to say
00:19:28.960 and you've been saying that it should be left to women to decide where to draw the line even
00:19:33.220 in the third uh trimester so i just want to pin you down on this are there any restrictions on
00:19:38.320 uh abortion rights that you support the framework for this is established in roe versus wade
00:19:44.000 early in pregnancy very few restrictions late in pregnancy very few exceptions and that has stood
00:19:50.720 as the law of the land for as long as i've been alive what's radical is the idea of banning abortion
00:19:56.360 outright the thought that a woman who is raped and seeks abortion care could find her doctor going
00:20:01.680 to prison for longer than her rapist what is new and what is extreme is the assault on roe versus
00:20:06.720 wade which has established the framework for common sense protections restrictions and exceptions uh that
00:20:12.620 have been the law of the land for as long as i've been alive and are now uh being overturned or
00:20:17.140 threatened being overturned by a radical agenda it's staggering that they're turning this around
00:20:23.340 on pro-life people being the radicals the extremists when they are seeking abortion all the way up to
00:20:29.820 including an after birth but but we're the radicals yeah the extremists i will say however
00:20:37.040 they're alerting say alerting the democratic activists who listen to this program and do
00:20:42.060 often uh if you're out there press mayor pete on that he's giving you an answer you are not
00:20:47.380 comfortable with very few exceptions in the third trimester he said you know he said and he's correctly
00:20:53.860 stated what roe versus wade says which is very early in the pregnancy there's basically no restrictions
00:20:58.560 and very late in the pregnancy there's basically no exceptions and meaning that you can't get an
00:21:03.340 abortion late in the in the in the pregnancy and can be absolutely restricted by the states
00:21:07.300 to to the point of it being completely illegal in all circumstances so uh that's an interesting
00:21:12.640 thing because roe versus wade is this thing that republicans and conservatives and people who are
00:21:17.520 pro-life look at as this really negative thing which of course it was a terrible ruling and we can go
00:21:21.520 over that and have a million times however it's a massive move to the right from where we are now
00:21:26.780 it is a cons it would be a generational shift towards conservatism to go back to just looking
00:21:33.880 at roe versus wade as the text stands because it's it that is not where we are now we're talking about
00:21:39.240 you know we're talking about we're having a conversation about whether a baby that is already
00:21:44.980 born should get any medical attention after it's born we're talking about whether a baby can be
00:21:50.060 aborted while the mother is in labor and about to pass the baby through the birth canal can you
00:21:54.940 abort it that's the conversation we're having now roe versus wade you can barely see that from where
00:21:59.740 we are if if mayor pete thinks he can get away in a democratic primary with 24 candidates i'm saying
00:22:07.320 roe versus wade is the way to go i hope some of the uh people listening to this program uh looking to
00:22:12.940 start a new boycott will get mayor pete called on that one because that is not that is not what the
00:22:18.740 democratic party says they want right now he says no restrictions no there's a lot of restrictions
00:22:23.700 in roe versus wade and really that's what's re-energized the pro-life movement was the
00:22:28.320 radicalism of the new york state law yep and what vermont just passed yeah and virginia which didn't
00:22:34.880 pass because of the controversy largely because of the pushback because people keep saying like well
00:22:40.060 it was one guy said this first of all new york and vermont are not one guy okay uh secondly yes northam
00:22:47.800 uh said this one thing where he said well look if if the baby's born and and it's there and and it
00:22:54.860 was supposed to be aborted and it survives the abortion well then the the woman and and the doctor
00:22:59.240 will have a conversation about what to do you know whether you treat it or not and yes that's one guy
00:23:04.060 however the question was asked because another question on this in the same vein was asked to the
00:23:09.920 assembly woman who designed the bill and she had to admit that yeah you could abort a baby that's in
00:23:17.180 while the mother's in labor so that was it was the bill the person who wrote the bill said yes that
00:23:22.500 was allowed under the bill it was not one person just blurting out and making a mistake about it
00:23:26.580 it was in the bill and we forget about that and now vermont has uh passed a law that says basically
00:23:33.880 all the way to birth and i'm just glad that these candidates are getting pushed on important issues
00:23:39.220 like this you know mayor pete he got he got pushed on it a little bit i think democrats need to come
00:23:43.520 back after him get him uh you know because he's not going to be able to win a primary here unless he's
00:23:47.080 saying you know unless he's legitimately shouting his abortion uh you know that is is basically the
00:23:53.520 place you need to be i mean i don't know did they have anyone asked kamala harris about this do we know
00:23:58.080 where she stands no but she was pinned down uh yesterday and she was yeah uh this is really
00:24:04.120 good because she her feet were in fact held to the fire uh yesterday on on cnn by allison camerata and
00:24:12.460 this is probably because allison camerata is a she's an alumni of fox news oh yeah so obviously
00:24:18.300 she's gonna she's gonna hold her feet to the fire okay here's what happened we have a little
00:24:23.980 fun kicker that we like to do with all of the presidential candidates that come on
00:24:29.260 it's called candidate mixtape that was the musical sting for it and we like to talk a lot about music
00:24:36.580 here on this program so what is your favorite musical genre wow oh i mean i'm i'm hip-hop and
00:24:47.560 reggae and jazz um those are those are some of my favorite band or favorite musician i'd say one of
00:24:56.940 my favorites is bob marley oh my good choice uh you can't go wrong with that that's a crowd pleaser
00:25:02.580 working on your mixtape what would be like your favorite three songs favorite three songs wow
00:25:08.460 good question okay let's see um i aretha franklin um uh anything aretha franklin this is terrible
00:25:17.760 she's not prepared for this i would say she is not prepared and then this might end her career right
00:25:22.460 here i don't know i love cardi b oh still not a single song enough as she says
00:25:27.840 um those are great thank you for playing along oh my gosh powerful good interview because i love
00:25:37.480 the idea that like instead of pressing around the abortion and like one second before birth
00:25:41.640 you're going after her favorite songs which i love however i gotta say her answers are so bad
00:25:48.360 they're terrible well what are the three genres i can list that have you can't criticize like if
00:25:53.060 you're gonna pick three it's gotta be hip-hop reggae and jazz and then well who's your favorite bob
00:26:00.780 marley all right like you have any knowledge of it like that's what i would say as a as a big reggae
00:26:08.380 fan myself visiting jamaica once i would say probably bob marley because other than ziggy marley i
00:26:13.800 couldn't pick anyone else that i know i couldn't either right and then what are your favorite three
00:26:17.580 artists your favorite three songs songs on your mixtape and she didn't name any songs she said bob
00:26:22.960 marley again cardi b which again it's just like that one should be controversial here's a woman
00:26:29.600 who has described herself how she would drug johns as a as a dancer and steal their money you want to
00:26:37.160 talk about a me too violation i mean that's like that's not controversial at all you could absolutely
00:26:43.260 just blurt that out as a presidential candidate no big deal cardi b and who was the third one
00:26:46.740 uh uh gosh i don't even remember aretha franklin can you come up with a safer answer than aretha
00:26:52.980 franklin no i mean like that is just i'm actually more angry about her songs than the abortion issue
00:27:00.640 like i am now a pro-life is now secondary i just have a constant jihad against kamala harris's music
00:27:07.980 choices but boy these these reporters uh these journalists really pin down these these candidates
00:27:14.220 you remember um one of them from the new york times uh jeff zeleny did the same thing to obama a
00:27:20.960 few years ago what has surprised you the most about this office enchanted you the most enchanted
00:27:26.160 serving in this office humbled you the most yeah and troubled you the most let me write this down
00:27:31.020 see but you remember that oh gosh and i don't know that he ever recovered from that brutal question
00:27:36.060 i think he was searching for his level of enchantment his entire two terms and he never quite got there
00:27:42.340 which is sad it's just it's it's amazing to watch uh these democrats be fond over and then you know
00:27:49.320 they practically bring weapons to a donald trump interview it's it's amazing yeah there's no
00:27:55.540 objectivity anymore at all we spent a decent time this hour talking about abortion and and it's
00:27:59.940 it's not only an important issue it's also the clearest example i think of media bias and people
00:28:06.620 talk about media bias obviously like it sometimes the fake news thing can be over overdone and you
00:28:14.080 know the media bias thing can be an easy thing for republicans to say all the time about every issue
00:28:18.740 right and it's almost universally true at some level but you look at this when someone like uh todd
00:28:25.360 remember todd aiken he ran for senate back in is he the one that was in 10 was it yeah and he said
00:28:30.200 something uh inappropriate about about rape i think he said that they don't usually legitimate rape or
00:28:34.940 like if it's a legitimate rape the body will reject the uh the pregnancy or something it was a very
00:28:40.240 strange comment and look aiken took a beating for it probably deserved a beating for it and lost the
00:28:46.540 election uh probably because of it however if it ended there it would have been fine right like you
00:28:52.700 could say if someone says something wrong whether you think that comment is right or wrong or you know
00:28:57.220 whatever the person who says it should be criticized for it right like that's how that debate should
00:29:01.700 happen but that's not how it happened with aiken every other republican candidate was forced to answer
00:29:07.240 for his comments he's forced with northam it's not like that at all democrats don't get their feet
00:29:14.860 held to the fire they don't have to answer for what he said or what many others have said they don't
00:29:19.800 get i mean every republican gets asked the question hey rape and incest hey uh life of the mother health
00:29:26.480 of the mother the most difficult decisions uh to be made about abortion no matter how you feel about
00:29:31.840 them right there these are the tough borderline ones that someone who's really pro-choice might have
00:29:35.700 or pro-life might have an issue with well you'd say the same thing basically about uh an abortion five
00:29:41.600 minutes before birth whether a baby that survives an abortion should get medical care you put yourself in
00:29:47.220 in the mind of a hardcore leftist that's where they're making their decisions right so wouldn't
00:29:53.860 it follow that every journalist every single time they had one of these democratic candidates on would
00:29:59.440 be forced to give me the day i want the minute that you have to you're able to uh to uh have some
00:30:06.460 rights as a as a quote-unquote fetus what is that minute when does it start is there any uh abortion
00:30:13.220 restriction you heard mayor pete get asked that question but with no follow-up i mean the fact that he
00:30:16.980 can just throw out well roe versus wade is good and we shouldn't overturn it is not an answer to that
00:30:20.840 question and republicans all had to answer that question they all had to answer it over and over
00:30:27.020 and over and over again even though they weren't the ones advocating any other policy and so you see
00:30:33.820 that real media bias there is that republicans are pushed to the most uncomfortable places in their
00:30:40.460 policy where democrats are given this sort of blanket well do you like women do you like do you like
00:30:45.940 rights how do you feel about rights do you think what about health care do you think women should
00:30:50.700 be denied health care and they get to answer these questions like that well you know of course that
00:30:56.380 is that's the the the subtle media bias it's easy to find things where they go after donald trump and
00:31:02.220 bash him uh unfairly and those things are absolutely exist they're all over the place but it's stuff like
00:31:07.720 that that these people will never have to make the uncomfortable unpopular statement because they're
00:31:12.640 never pressed on it and they don't go on shows like this they don't go on shows never like uh you
00:31:18.040 know ben shapiro or mark levin or steven crowder or any of them they don't they don't have to deal
00:31:23.040 with it the only time they'll ever go on fox news is when they're going up against like shepherd
00:31:26.120 smith and shep smith won't ask those questions because he's on their side on them so it's it's a
00:31:32.100 it's a very subtle thing that i think if a journalist from the outside might look at it and say well
00:31:38.700 both were asked about their abortion positions but how how are they asked about it you know it puts
00:31:45.160 it puts republicans in the most unpopular and you know unpleasant light as possible and puts
00:31:51.300 republic democrats in the exact opposite they get the nice you know morning sunshine oh they could
00:31:56.560 just answer give you a nice flowery answer like i mean like buddha judge's answer is pathetic you
00:32:00.900 know roe versus weight is the law of the land but we shouldn't overturn it that's not an answer to
00:32:04.680 that question at all it is not 888-727-BECK it's pat and stew for glenn on the glenn beck program
00:32:10.760 pat and stew for glenn on the glenn beck program uh let's go to tom in north carolina uh hey tom
00:32:16.260 you're on the glenn beck program with pat and stew good morning gentlemen how are you good
00:32:20.720 um listen i i this popped into my head in the car and i haven't fleshed this idea out at all
00:32:27.900 matter of fact that's why i'm calling i want you guys to help flesh out this concept that might
00:32:32.140 bring the liberals around uh on the uh issue of abortion okay so i thought if we started referring
00:32:39.380 to the unborn as the undocumented that that might give them a different take on the issue that's
00:32:47.600 true because i mean you don't get your birth certificate until you're born right i mean
00:32:51.340 start talking about that like they're their papers uh-huh and they're just on the other side of the
00:32:55.720 border we just need to get them over here and get them documented yes you wouldn't kill them on the
00:33:00.900 other side of the border right right so yes i knew you guys they're undocumented humans i'm fully on
00:33:08.080 board on this idea thanks a lot tom that's a genius idea because you can't build a wall essentially that
00:33:14.720 prevents them from coming to this side right that's right that's well that would be immoral
00:33:19.280 your wall is a wall yes it's a wall preventing them to come from one side of the birth canal to the
00:33:24.780 other and that's that's actually not a bad idea at all it isn't and that documentation it's real
00:33:31.060 they're just not when you get born is when you get documented stunningly in this country we will just
00:33:36.980 not give documentation that's what someone should pass like an alabama should just be like we're going
00:33:41.560 to give the birth certificate when we when you find out about the pregnancy and then look you could
00:33:46.040 just if you want you're just going to have to crumple that thing up as you walk out of planned
00:33:50.800 parenthood uh if you want to uh but they will be documented and at that point you can't do anything
00:33:55.880 to someone who's documented i mean it's i mean undocumented protects you that's great yes it does
00:34:02.860 i think i like it i think it'll i think it'll work they'd just bail on that if it actually did come
00:34:08.820 true they would just bail on that part of their policy but they'll do anything to protect abortion
00:34:12.420 anything it's weird isn't it it's like it's a religion to them it is absolutely a religion that and
00:34:17.180 climate change are their two strongest religions uh i don't know why i don't know how it brings
00:34:23.600 them money or power uh but for some reason they worship at the altar of abortion there's there's
00:34:30.060 no question well the climate thing can bring money and power to anything yeah that's why they like the
00:34:34.780 climate thing because it's all encompassing it controls the entire economy the abortion thing is
00:34:38.720 is different i mean it is uh it's a weird one dark church man yeah that's a dark church to be in
00:34:43.460 this is the glenbeck program today with pat gray uh in for glenn uh and you can catch my own show
00:34:52.660 pat gray unleashed which happens weekday mornings right before the glenbeck radio extravaganza with
00:34:59.120 glenn and stew and stew is back today uh welcome back stew thank you pat i appreciate that uh we got
00:35:04.880 to get into this uh there's some legislation now to try to stop tech companies from tracking us online
00:35:10.400 there's also something going on that the fcc where they might allow phone companies to not
00:35:16.560 complete phone calls from scammers which i am all about that we'll get into that coming up in about
00:35:23.600 60 seconds pat and stew for glenn this week legislation is uh passing through congress right now
00:35:30.720 to stop tech companies from tracking our online uh surfing and it's getting some momentum i guess
00:35:39.520 as congress is trying to crack down now on big tech's privacy practices on tuesday senator josh holly
00:35:46.640 unveiled a do not track bill with some tough penalties for companies who break the protections
00:35:53.560 and that revives revives a debate over whether users should be allowed to opt out of the tracking
00:36:00.000 and data collection uh i think you should be allowed to opt out in fact you should have to opt into it
00:36:07.440 i hate the opt out thing because a lot of times you don't know what you're opting out of you didn't
00:36:13.100 even know you needed to opt out of something yeah i i had an issue with um my yahoo mail accounts that
00:36:19.940 i started for my children yeah so i started them when they were born i started email addresses and i was
00:36:24.820 emailing them little pieces of advice and videos and pictures of like things that we did when they
00:36:29.480 were too young to remember that is adorable i am adorable and i know this like that um however it
00:36:34.520 was less adorable when they just deleted the accounts for no reason um and i lost all the
00:36:39.180 stuff that i sent oh wow now i say all and everyone wow points this out on social media and i i appreciate
00:36:44.040 you coming to my rescue here there are some that i can save because i sent them from my sent accounts
00:36:49.080 however it wasn't just me who was doing it was other relatives and things i mean it's really annoying
00:36:53.940 and and just to try to repurpose it all back together it'll be better than nothing
00:36:57.420 um did you ever find out why that happened yes i did yes i did it's just there in black and white
00:37:01.640 uh-huh it was there in black and white that's what that's what the customer service representative
00:37:04.680 told me it's there in black and white okay in the uh the very lengthy agreement that i signed on to
00:37:11.440 when i opened the account except when i pressed accept and did not of course read it because no
00:37:16.840 human being on earth has ever read one of these documents uh the terms and conditions did apply to me
00:37:22.700 and because i didn't log in frequently enough now of course it's not my it's an account from
00:37:27.400 my kids not for me right and i i signed up with and they had to give you a say hey if we need to
00:37:33.000 contact you uh what are your other email addresses what's your phone number i put all that information
00:37:37.680 in thinking that if there was an issue i would get an alert came to the other account and said hey uh
00:37:42.660 you know you haven't logged in in too long of a period of time or whatever is in this agreement you
00:37:46.300 signed you got no such no nothing so they just they just deleted them all and and this is the thing
00:37:52.100 like you you you probably can opt out of it and the way you opt out is not using them
00:37:57.060 right like that is that is the current thing if you don't you don't have to as you would know pat
00:38:01.880 you don't have to use facebook this is something that americans now believe that is a requirement of
00:38:06.180 their life you can get through it without facebook without twitter without instagram it's possible to
00:38:11.120 live it is possible and i do think that makes me a little nervous when we talk about new legislation
00:38:17.260 and controls on these companies in that you know there's a difference between what is a right
00:38:24.940 and what is just awesome and the internet is like one of those things that's just awesome it's not
00:38:29.380 your right to be on the internet it's not you want to pass a constitutional amendment that says it is
00:38:33.580 go ahead try it you can you might might even get it through i mean i think probably republicans and
00:38:37.540 democrats would probably agree that access to the internet should be some way should be a right
00:38:41.960 maybe they would be able to get that through but for right now a company can essentially say if you
00:38:46.180 want to do business with us you live by our rules and we're going to track you and we're going to
00:38:50.840 track you and that's that's the reason why this service is free like it's almost like they should
00:38:55.100 say if you want to pay 9.95 a month for facebook then we won't track you at all and that actually
00:39:00.840 might be a place that makes sense in the middle because you know i wouldn't pay 9.95 for facebook
00:39:05.280 because i don't care about it however if i did care about it i might do that to avoid the tracking
00:39:10.900 i might say you know what fine i'll pay 9.95 a month and don't track me problem is so many
00:39:16.040 other things are tracking you anyway you know and i understand so i understand this approach
00:39:20.000 google right doesn't google keep track of virtually everything we do online yeah i mean if you use
00:39:25.760 their browser i know i love that because people are like well i i i i'm able to block this because
00:39:30.440 i'm but i'm using they're using google's i don't use any glenn used to say this i don't use any google
00:39:34.960 products i don't use any gmail or any of that i don't use google maps none of it because i know
00:39:39.280 i don't want google tracking me what browser do you use chrome yeah how do you search uh google
00:39:46.060 but in fact i don't even call it search i call it googling and really what are you going to search
00:39:51.400 with lycos ask jeez it's always ask jeez man i mean here's a nice guy you know who promises never
00:39:57.900 to track you he's a butler jeez doesn't care about where you're going online he's just a nice guy
00:40:03.220 he's not trying to sell you a bunch of stuff yeah and i will say before before you do it uh duck duck
00:40:08.700 go is another is a thing that uh that will search for you and and apparently not track you however
00:40:14.080 if you're using it on chrome you may have an issue right yes but yes duck duck go is is the big one
00:40:20.360 the privacy-based search engine that a lot of people will point to and it does seem to work
00:40:24.200 actually pretty well it's not like it's not like ask jeez which i'm sure is great there's still no
00:40:29.180 search engine really that can compete with google right even bling is or bing or whatever that is
00:40:35.460 i mean bing i've tried it a few times and it's just it's not oh yeah it's just not google and are you
00:40:40.960 really that excited about being tracked by microsoft instead of google like it's not really get you
00:40:44.960 that's get me hot i'll say that and so you know it's like you want someone you have to almost go
00:40:49.720 with a privacy-based one that's doing it just for that and even then yeah you're still getting
00:40:53.700 tracked at some level by somebody else your ip company uh you know it's funny because they they've been
00:40:58.680 talking about the way these things develop and so so many of them are you know are able to skate
00:41:05.440 through all of these rules yeah i mean as the as the technology develops it's developed so quickly
00:41:10.460 they they can't keep up with with with all the rules now that's a good reason why it's been so
00:41:14.920 great that's why the internet has been so great they haven't been victimized by the business regulation
00:41:20.180 that every other business it's been largely left alone yeah it's kind of the wild wild west still
00:41:24.740 and the negatives do exist at the trackings there there there are some negatives to that but
00:41:29.280 overall i don't think it's a pretty good experience yeah um and maybe you know because these are private
00:41:34.740 companies maybe i shouldn't want the government to get involved in uh cracking down on their tracking
00:41:40.300 um but i do want them to it's just one of those things that's annoying enough it is to just want
00:41:48.200 and the other thing i want is for them to stop the robo calls on my cell phone it it used to be that
00:41:56.320 your cell phone i thought was like sacrosanct in in that regard that they couldn't they couldn't call
00:42:01.980 your cell phone and i think that's when it cost you money when people call you uh when they called but
00:42:07.380 that doesn't seem to be the case anymore so uh that opened up the floodgates of robo calls and
00:42:13.540 and spammers and scammers and they're trying to the fcc is about to allow the phone companies
00:42:21.520 to not complete those calls which would be fantastic now will some dolphins get caught up in that tuna
00:42:29.120 net where some people that want to complete a call to you are not able to uh i'm sure that'll happen
00:42:34.700 yeah there's like debt collectors they're all upset about this whoa we we gotta get a hold of our
00:42:40.380 debtors and bother them well okay but um uh maybe you shouldn't maybe you shouldn't be placing that
00:42:48.460 many calls uh at a time that that the uh that the software thinks you're a you're a spammer um i don't
00:42:54.840 know maybe maybe leave people alone a little bit well how am i going to collect my debt i don't know
00:43:00.240 but i want the spam to stop i just i don't know how to fix it for the debt collectors but i want the
00:43:06.220 in fact i got a couple examples um that i've had just recently on my on my cell phone and they do
00:43:13.140 leave messages if you don't answer they'll they'll leave you messages um and a lot and sometimes it's
00:43:18.660 in chinese have you ever gotten the calls the spammers from in chinese i have not had that no
00:43:22.540 i get these all the time though and my god i get something something about a warranty they want to
00:43:27.960 give me for my car you get that one all the time people drive me out of my mind i'm not gonna fall
00:43:33.360 for this but i know but of course this is the type of thing that they don't need
00:43:37.680 a person who's listening to talk radio to fall for it they need the person who's who barely knows
00:43:43.040 how to press buttons on their phone to fall for it the person who's 75 or 80 and doesn't really
00:43:47.200 understand the uh how it works with spam and scam calls yeah and when you get this kind of call
00:43:54.920 sometimes it can be scary to people and once it get expired after that you will be taken under
00:43:59.740 custody by the local police can you believe that they were going to take me under custody oh my
00:44:04.020 gosh by the local police in my area in my local area they were those police now they didn't bother
00:44:10.700 to tell you what area that was they didn't tell me what because you know it you're you're local
00:44:14.360 so you know the local area i know which police office is go is which department is going to come
00:44:19.960 after me right i know as there are four serious allegations pressed on your name at this moment oh my
00:44:25.380 four serious allegations pressed on my name how many allegations do you have pressed on your name
00:44:30.960 i would assume it's not four it's not four it's got to be one or two maybe pressed against my name
00:44:35.620 i've conducted so much illegal activity that there's four allegations pressed on my name so we would
00:44:42.000 request you to get back to us well yeah that we can discuss about this case before taking any legal
00:44:47.680 action against you oh that's scary number to reach us is five one eight six one five seven nine eight zero
00:44:56.160 i only encourage everyone to call that
00:44:57.920 only everyone she's they're going to repeat it so if you missed it the first time okay good five one eight
00:45:06.560 five one eight six one five six one five seven nine eight zero seven nine eight zero so they
00:45:13.060 they want you to call so i would and then there was there was uh this particular call just this
00:45:18.520 very time sensitive and urgent that i do hear back from you before we proceed further with suspension
00:45:24.340 of your social and assets can you believe they're going to suspend my social your social is going to
00:45:29.440 be completely suspended suspended oh my gosh and my assets now i i don't know what social of mine
00:45:34.700 my twitter account uh my facebook what's social my social security number you suspend a social
00:45:42.420 security number just my social so my direct call back number is three eight six three eight six
00:45:49.160 two four three two four seven eight six five again seven eight six five she's going to say
00:45:54.060 three eight six three eight six four three seven eight six five i would say here because look they
00:46:00.720 are soliciting calls to this number but there's a reason they're soliciting calls so that's right you
00:46:05.460 may not want to not you may not you may not want to call uh because it's not going to annoy them it's
00:46:09.940 going to wind up putting you on a list and then you're going to get these calls so so you may want
00:46:14.280 to hesitate before you actually call some way that they get that they scam money out of you when you
00:46:19.560 do call yeah there's i can't remember what podcast it was one of these podcasts that looks into strange
00:46:24.980 things and technology i want to say it was reply all but i don't remember which one it was anyway they
00:46:28.860 looked into these robocalls and tried to track the source of them which was pretty interesting um
00:46:35.100 because there was one guy who's working at a company um and i want to say it was i want to
00:46:41.200 say it was trip advisor or yelp okay it was one of those like review companies and they were having
00:46:46.680 issues because legitimate resorts were like getting terrible reviews on i think it was trip advisor
00:46:53.700 and they were getting these reviews because spam people like this were calling with robocalls and saying
00:47:00.300 you should call us back and and book your free vacation to blank resort and so people would hear
00:47:07.540 that well would call and of course it was a scam they just redirected them to try to buy some
00:47:11.720 expensive vacation to another crappy resort completely unrelated it was they were using a big name resort
00:47:17.580 to cover the fraud and then the real company was getting the bad reviews because people were thinking
00:47:23.720 they're oh they're just screwing me wow so they went to try to find this and they tracked it down
00:47:27.460 you know to these companies in mexico and in central america that were using like one guy
00:47:34.620 in like his living room in the united states to make like hundreds of millions of robocalls
00:47:41.000 wow and you know the guy wound up getting in a lot of trouble uh because he did violate all sorts of
00:47:47.580 laws and seemingly just acted his excuse was essentially i didn't really know you know sorry no i didn't
00:47:55.920 that doesn't work with me no is he on death row yeah i don't think he is was he he didn't get the
00:48:01.100 death penalty he did i don't think he got the death penalty that's wrong almost it was close
00:48:05.000 it's just people hate those things man oh more in 60 seconds pat and stew for glenn triple eight
00:48:12.720 seven two seven beck so the guy who was responsible for all those hundreds of millions of robocalls you
00:48:18.680 found out what they he did not get the death penalty no right he's not on death row i believe he was
00:48:23.860 fined 120 million dollars though oh that's a good start which is a significant amount that's a
00:48:28.700 that's a significant amount of money a notable amount of money yes um this is it was actually
00:48:34.100 now that i'm remembering it it was a story from wired.com perhaps the best part of the story is
00:48:40.800 the guy who uncovered the giant robocall scam his name was fred garvin if you know fred garvin
00:48:47.100 male prostitute from the saturday night live yes fred garvin male prostitute uh that was dan
00:48:53.440 ackroyd's bit in like the 70s yeah uh maybe 80s was it his real name uh it's his real name i guess
00:49:00.360 okay it's or i think it was fred garvin no maybe it wasn't his real name i can't remember they
00:49:04.940 because he's this guy's become like the the robocall hunter because he found this the this one
00:49:10.100 particular guy but he had made over a hundred million phone calls robocalls and was fined 120
00:49:16.260 million dollars was dragged in front of congress i'll tweet the article out uh while you're being
00:49:20.940 tracked by your uh all of your technology yes you can now be tracked to look at a an article with a
00:49:27.100 guy whose name is the same as a male prostitute so i don't know what that's going to do to your
00:49:30.800 future employment prospects but read it anyway it's really fascinating because i mean you just
00:49:36.060 you realize that like it's almost impossible for them to stop it because you're talking they can
00:49:42.140 create number fake numbers they can you know they can yeah they roll over i mean as soon as you
00:49:47.540 as soon as you uh block one call it just rolls over to the next yeah and the way they had to do it was
00:49:53.240 the guy signed up for like as many shady lists as he could with his cell phone and then hoped he would
00:49:58.060 get robocalls and started recording the robocalls so that he could try to track them because it could
00:50:02.240 give you legitimate numbers you can call which then forwards you to some offshore you know phone bank
00:50:09.000 where they don't even know necessarily where the call came from they don't know that you were told
00:50:12.860 that you're going to get some marriott resort they just know sell them this timeshare right like they
00:50:17.980 they it's like there's all these disconnected pieces not everyone knows uh which part is which
00:50:23.540 the guy at the end of the the road might not even know if what he's selling is real or not
00:50:28.940 and they might not even be in the country so how do you even track it down it's just it's one of
00:50:33.440 these things that i think like it feels good for uh legislators to try to come up with a rule to stop it
00:50:38.460 because it's so freaking annoying yes it is in the end of the day though are they going to be able
00:50:43.720 to stop someone in you know bangladesh and that's the thing so many of them are overseas yeah so many
00:50:49.500 of them are out of the country and you can tell when they say things like and once it get expired
00:50:53.740 after that you will be taken under custody by the you'll be taken under custody local police by
00:50:58.960 local there are four serious allegations pressed on your name when they say things like they're going
00:51:03.580 to be four serious allegations pressed on your name you know they're probably not english speakers
00:51:08.300 so it's coming from somewhere else it's funny though and you can disregard it they say that uh
00:51:13.860 you know the whole scam when it comes to um the nigerian prince situation you know and i don't if
00:51:20.680 you're in the middle of a negotiation with a nigerian prince i don't want to i don't i mean maybe yours
00:51:25.740 is real i don't know like i usually though the nigerian prince did not just fall out of power and
00:51:31.600 have a hundred billion dollars who wants to split with you really yeah it's usually not the way it
00:51:35.020 works um and and a lot of times you get those emails and you read them you're like how could
00:51:40.300 anyone fall for this like they're not even spelling the words right they're not in the right order
00:51:45.040 you know like i get the idea that like he's supposed to be a nigerian prince so maybe he wouldn't
00:51:49.360 have perfect english uh but you get you get the thing of like if you're going to make a multi-million
00:51:54.540 dollar transaction with someone you've never met perhaps they should know the language a little a
00:51:58.400 bit perhaps perhaps yeah and so you think why do they why can't they even take the time to spell
00:52:04.600 the words right why can't they even take the time to understand the language well enough and there's a
00:52:09.340 very specific reason why they do that is because anyone with any sense is not going to fall for this
00:52:15.960 so the the the calculation by the people in doing the nigerian scam they don't need to right speak
00:52:22.700 perfect english right well and more than that they actually intentionally will not speak perfect
00:52:28.620 english they intentionally will spell words wrong because only a person who would think a multi-million
00:52:34.060 dollar transaction is about to happen with a guy who can't spell half the email correctly only that
00:52:40.380 person who's gullible enough to think that is going to actually go through with the whole scam
00:52:44.420 the person who is smart enough to say i'm not going to answer this because they can't even spell the
00:52:48.800 words right that person isn't going to fall for the scam so they wind up wasting their time
00:52:53.440 true sorting out people who are interested or are trolling them or are uh just you know
00:53:00.960 interested enough to make that first outreach but not interested enough to go to their bank account
00:53:06.620 and give bank account numbers out they need the person who's gullible enough to think well this
00:53:11.000 nigerian prince out of nowhere emailed me unsolicited can't speak the language can't spell the words
00:53:16.720 however let me give them my bank account number that's the person they need because that person
00:53:20.860 is the person who's going through with the whole thing and it's fascinating because i think a lot
00:53:25.180 of that happens with these robocalls too they're so bad but if you hear someone saying you're about
00:53:29.000 to get arrested by local police or excuse me uh you're under what was it under uh let's see
00:53:36.180 and once it get expired after that you will be taken under custody under custody under custody
00:53:40.960 take it under custody yeah maybe those are the people that actually fall for it
00:53:44.160 patent stew for glenn on the glenn beck program 888-727-BECK uh let's go to gene in pennsylvania
00:53:54.740 hey gene you're on the glenn beck program hi hi um i just wanted to make a comment about the
00:54:00.780 robocalls i've been getting them about a year ago i started getting calls that same creepy voice
00:54:07.180 telling me that the licensing key on my computer was going to expire
00:54:11.220 and of course i blew it off and they kept calling well one day i can't get on my laptop
00:54:17.000 so i called the number and they said uh your key has expired and it's going to cost two hundred
00:54:23.300 dollars to renew it and i said i'm paying two hundred dollars what are you talking about
00:54:28.480 and he said pay the two hundred dollars or lose your computer and he hung up on me so i i got on my
00:54:34.580 ipad on facebook and i said hey has anybody heard of it and somebody said well you've been hacked
00:54:39.680 just take the battery out and i did my computer works fine now i'm getting the calls again i have
00:54:45.400 a landline because i don't have a cell phone um signal at home so i'm using i'm on my landline
00:54:52.240 i get a call three times within about 20 minutes caller id was my landline number
00:54:57.160 telling me that my computer key is going to expire again so these guys are pretty crappy but that would
00:55:04.040 cost me two hundred dollars jeez so you just removed the battery though and that reset everything
00:55:09.640 and and then your computer worked yes it did and he uh my friend actually told me to press a couple
00:55:16.460 of keys but i didn't need to he said when you put the battery back in just press these keys i didn't
00:55:23.400 need to it came right back up yeah and if i hadn't done that i would have what i had done
00:55:27.940 on a new computer yeah yeah right probably and gene it's interesting because you're the exact
00:55:32.480 person these things don't work on the person who's who's willing to actually go onto facebook
00:55:36.680 or post about it like actually learn about it before just paying the money that's why they
00:55:41.060 hang up on you because they they probably detected you were too smart for their little scam and it's
00:55:46.080 not going to work and you know anyone could be a victim of these things i don't want to say it's
00:55:49.700 just it's not intelligence per se but it's it's not it's a lack of awareness about these types of
00:55:54.500 things and you can get anyone could be a victim but it's the second you show any pushback there's
00:55:59.460 no there's no point they no longer it no longer works for them anymore yeah uh i some of them are
00:56:06.060 pretty bold um my daughter was having a really bad day once and she was over at her house and she got
00:56:11.600 one of these calls and i heard her crying in the other room so i went to see what the deal was and it
00:56:15.900 was somebody claiming to be from the irs and they were threatening her with um with all manner of
00:56:22.880 stuff like they were gonna they were gonna take her home from her and i got on and argued with the
00:56:27.660 person and she acted as though she was legitimately from the irs and swore up and down that this was
00:56:34.680 an actual official phone call i mean sometimes they'll really they'll really fight for their
00:56:40.200 scam they're pretty bold uh and it can it can scare the crap out of you if you're not really
00:56:45.460 you know thinking about it you're not really paying attention you're not really sure what they're saying
00:56:51.380 to you and uh you don't really understand the circumstance like if somebody else does the bills
00:56:56.680 and they're telling you that you didn't pay your taxes you know sometimes they can fool you
00:57:01.100 uh dave in florida hi you're on the glenbeck program on all these robo calls i just call them
00:57:07.860 while i'm on hold for you okay uh i'm 69 oh i'm 65 and i told the guy that she called on that car
00:57:15.100 thing starter motor well i was a diesel mechanic all my life and i went off on her about the car being
00:57:20.200 underwater and i'm suing you i'm pennsylvania state inspection mechanic and i am a federal
00:57:25.580 inspector and i can testify perfect or witness program for vehicle crashes and they were almost
00:57:31.900 crying oh really i was trying to get a new cadillac i've got a cadillac
00:57:36.400 but the one with a cop if you tell her oh i am so glad you called i have been going cross country
00:57:43.340 now for 15 16 years and i've killed 27 people and i wish i had somebody to talk to oh my god that
00:57:49.820 poor woman she was she says well where are you i says well i'm i was gonna come to your house i think
00:57:54.920 i have your address and phone number and i never get called back they never called back i got nothing
00:58:01.020 else to do man i'm bored i'll have a computer i don't do it's a little track phone and i got nothing
00:58:05.200 to screw around with and i got nothing to cut the grass and i said that's all i got to do
00:58:08.820 all right thanks dude have fun with him yeah there's some people have written books about it
00:58:14.020 where they've gone back and forth with scammers and like like you can navigate their entire
00:58:17.940 journey about they keep holding that little a little bit of a you know uh carrot out there and
00:58:23.800 hoping that they'll they'll come and and and you figure that if you're wasting the time of a scammer
00:58:28.900 at least other people aren't getting scammed while you're wasting their time it's a lot of time
00:58:32.820 though it's it's it's a big ideas yeah i'm not that uh dedicated to not usually not either i don't
00:58:37.720 really care about humanity that much right you know look if you're gonna get fooled by these
00:58:43.520 things i'm not gonna be able to stop it mike in north carolina hi you're on the glenbeck program
00:58:48.460 good after good morning i should say uh yeah i've been scammed about three times uh once they they
00:58:57.300 keep on calling me about uh my extended warranty is uh is going over and stuff like that and it's been
00:59:04.220 from cars that i have let go 10 years earlier i says well i said i said yeah i said i hope it's
00:59:13.200 almost gone because you know i says i hope i don't pay for it anymore yeah and then you know i get i get
00:59:20.420 another one that says oh um well you know your your credit card has been compromised and uh we need
00:59:29.400 this information and data for so that we can uh restore your uh uh uh your your credit up to the
00:59:37.040 where it should be and um i said so i you know i says well i says i'll tell you what i says i'll call
00:59:42.520 my bank and i says and and when i get the information i says i'll oh well your bank won't know this stuff
00:59:49.360 yet because we're you know we're i said well i says it's not legitimate then i says um can i get
00:59:56.080 my callback number so that i can uh call the fcc and have you arrested well immediately hang up yeah
01:00:03.480 of course yeah yes yeah and then i get then i get the irs scam yeah they call they says oh yeah you're
01:00:10.500 uh you know you're you're ten thousand dollars uh back taxes and stuff like that i says okay well
01:00:16.460 i was a tax preparer for a while i says oh i says okay i says uh what year exactly was my
01:00:23.360 tax well well i don't have that information right here it just says that you're ten thousand dollars
01:00:29.080 i says well you have to know that if you're from the irs they should at least fake the year yeah you
01:00:35.540 know yeah really yeah yeah and tell me which year so that i can you know i i can give you what i made
01:00:41.260 that year and stuff because i know all this stuff i've got it all recorded uh well well
01:00:46.340 yeah well it just says here and you know we need you we need your uh uh information so that we can
01:00:52.560 uh uh start uh collecting on this uh yeah i says no thanks yeah thanks mike it's interesting i think
01:00:59.660 one of the things uh because some of these are awful like like he's talking about where they don't even
01:01:04.000 know have any information but if they can get a customer list of let's say you know your visa card
01:01:09.700 and they can describe what what uh you know kind of type of card you have you get that call and you're
01:01:16.040 like okay well they're saying i have a you know uh you know a city bank visa card and i do have a
01:01:21.000 city bank visa card so let me call them back and see what's up biggest thing you could do to whenever
01:01:25.500 you get a call like that and i do this every time is i always make the call to the number that i know
01:01:29.680 is right so like if i'm if city bank calls me up and says hey uh you've got an issue here and you
01:01:35.440 need to call us back i always go to the car my credit card and i dial that number not the one they
01:01:41.040 left on the freaking voicemail yeah i call or i'll go on on the city bank website or whatever and get
01:01:46.580 that number and then you call them back and say hey i got this call is was this you guys half the time
01:01:51.280 they say no no no you don't have any problem like there's no there's no fraud alert like that's
01:01:57.340 another one they do is fraud alerts yeah which is like hey you've got a fraud alert on your card
01:02:01.420 call us back it's like well you're a fraud you know you're you're the one that does this i got
01:02:07.200 one of those from from somebody claiming to be from city bank once and i it almost tricked me and
01:02:11.360 then i thought wait i don't even have an account at city bank hold it that's that's not even my bank
01:02:18.680 minor issue so yeah yeah what could they do to me yeah um i don't bank there i recently had an
01:02:25.240 issue uh where i i was uh drunkenly apparently parking in miami oh wow do you ever do this you
01:02:31.620 ever go to like a hard rock stadium in miami and park your car unknowingly this happens to me all
01:02:36.680 the time yeah i spent forty dollars on the parking which first of all not a good value for parking
01:02:41.380 no it's not okay number one then you should drive just a block further yeah and you would
01:02:45.220 have gotten a better deal i think i could have a better deal number two i'm a little disappointed
01:02:48.960 to myself because i am not a smoker uh-huh however i spent four hundred and forty eight
01:02:54.000 dollars at a smoker's lounge wow at like four in the morning which i thought was a terrible decision
01:02:59.480 by me in miami especially and i you know hopefully my wife's not listening to this because she would
01:03:05.460 know that i apparently took a midnight trip to miami somehow right uh on a night that i was with her
01:03:11.180 for most of the night but you know after she went to bed i must just got up and flew to miami
01:03:15.020 which i have no record of the plane ticket which was weird but then the really the big mistake i
01:03:19.380 made was the seven thousand two hundred and eighty two dollars i spent on tickets to a rap festival
01:03:24.440 now that's not a typical not a typical way i would spend my money i'm not it was a natural thing yeah
01:03:29.740 and this really happened to me just a few weeks ago there was a concert uh in miami i think at one
01:03:35.520 of the one of the stadiums i think it was hard rock stadium and they wow it was a um i thought
01:03:40.860 initially i thought it was a rolling stones concert but it was actually some rolling something else
01:03:44.600 it was and it was like it seemingly was a a festival of uh rappers and r&b and such not
01:03:50.140 necessarily my genre i'm not kamala harris my three favorite genres are not hip-hop reggae and jazz
01:03:55.440 uh so i did not want to go but i was like seven thousand dollars for tickets that seems like a lot
01:04:02.720 pretty extensive but you know what they've done now now i this i obviously did not buy any of these
01:04:06.520 things i was not in miami on the in the night in question um however now my credit card is holding
01:04:12.000 this you know close to ten thousand dollars of my credit line uh hostage because until they
01:04:20.100 finished their fraud investigation which of course like i mean i assume i'm gonna win
01:04:24.200 you know i mean i really was not there it was pretty easy to tell i was buying things in another state at
01:04:29.160 the same time uh but like that's a you know if if that was a my only credit card and i didn't i i would
01:04:35.880 get shut off so somebody did actually yeah someone just did actually like use the number just used
01:04:40.200 your credit card i don't even understand like how do you go and buy like if you have a credit card
01:04:45.000 like steal my card off off the table of a restaurant and go somewhere i can see people not checking the
01:04:50.220 signature or not you know whatever like that stuff happens all the time but how do you buy tickets how
01:04:55.220 do you buy parking with just having the number memorized right like if you stole the number how do you
01:05:01.180 how do you buy parking with that how do you buy tickets with that how do you go and pay at a
01:05:04.400 restaurant a 448 smoker's lounge with just the credit card number buying something online i could
01:05:11.080 see but going in person has that been resolved yet i mean it's still still in quote in the middle of
01:05:17.800 their fraud investigation which luckily will only take 30 to 90 days so i only have this giant
01:05:23.300 $7,000 yeah amazing that's crazy i mean it really is because we used to talk about this and we've talked
01:05:29.380 about this with a sponsor that we have called home title lock and it's like a new home title fraud is
01:05:33.540 this new sort of crime where they go after your equity and it's a big deal um and it's been really
01:05:38.600 over the the past 10 years where it's even been a thing and home title lock it does protections for
01:05:43.620 this um but uh i remember reacting the same way back in the day when like life lock came out and they
01:05:50.240 were like oh you gotta protect yourself from identity fraud and i remember thinking to myself
01:05:54.440 identity fraud like that's not gonna happen to me like that is the most ridiculous thing i'm not
01:06:00.400 gonna bother with that uh and this is none of this is not a paid commercial um it's just one of those
01:06:05.160 things where you just thought it wasn't gonna be a big deal until now we're like if you don't have
01:06:09.020 one of those things now yeah this stuff can happen to you constantly even you know like you can get hit
01:06:14.060 with this stuff from your credit card side luckily you're protected from from that uh usually um but
01:06:20.480 some of the stuff they can go after you and really damage your life they can really go after you and
01:06:25.560 and destroy because if this stuff happens to you even if you get your money back you're talking
01:06:30.260 about a lot of times years you're talking about uh massive legal fees sometimes it takes hundreds
01:06:36.200 or thousands of dollars to wrap it up yeah and you're talking about having to deal with like local
01:06:40.160 governments which are not always the i mean if you ever gone to the post office that that's a nice
01:06:44.500 example of how local governments look as well uh you know it's not easy to navigate that stuff
01:06:49.000 it really is wow it's one of those things where you're lucky you weren't taken under custody
01:06:54.060 oh my gosh you're right yeah yeah that would have been with all those charges pressed on your
01:06:59.240 name i mean you are really fortunate
01:07:01.260 pat stufer glenn on the glenbeck program i've been talking about these these scams and the
01:07:09.300 government may be cracking down first of all on online tracking that companies do to us and then
01:07:15.400 secondly the fcc may allow phone companies to put a stop to these robocalls um let's go to tom
01:07:23.840 in pennsylvania hey tom you're on the glenbeck program hey thanks a lot pat i want to let you
01:07:28.620 know that uh my dad was a uh prominent businessman his whole life he was a well-respected community
01:07:35.200 leader board of directors on the credit union board of directors in a hospital and his health was
01:07:41.540 failing and at age 75 he gets caught in one of these things and we uh the three kids just stood in
01:07:51.580 horror and told him over and over and i said you're getting scammed and before it was all over
01:07:57.520 and the only reason it was all over is because he died in the middle of it oh wow and uh he'd sent
01:08:04.680 them twelve thousand dollars and it was that he'd won a million bucks in jamaica at some lottery
01:08:12.740 and that he hadn't entered that he hadn't entered yeah but what they did they groomed him and the
01:08:22.000 people that the woman there was one single woman that would call him as his friend and i think he was
01:08:29.660 so lonely that she would call up and ask about the kids ask and call them by name knew the church he
01:08:39.380 went to wow uh knew the singing group he was in and with that how's the singing group doing
01:08:47.160 and things like that really sad just you know what i'm saying and they scammed him for twelve thousand
01:08:52.580 dollars over a period of about four months but i thought i had it cut off at the beginning i had
01:08:59.060 no idea that he kept going and then three days before he died a woman called me that knew me from
01:09:05.920 walmart and said uh i just want to let you know that your dad was down here trying to wire to make
01:09:12.620 the twelve hundred dollars and i wouldn't let him and i said i can't tell you i'm i would get in
01:09:16.980 trouble don't tell anybody i called these walmart employees appreciate that tom are getting really
01:09:21.600 good at helping people on that yeah i've heard that multiple times yeah it's great to hear because
01:09:26.920 they try to get you to to do the prepaid card and send it to them and i think walmart employees are
01:09:32.360 kind of watching out for the elderly um and trying to help them out and say yeah it's probably a scam
01:09:37.920 might want might not want to do that this is the glenbeck program pat and stew for glen on the glenbeck
01:09:47.000 program we have more promises from uh more democrat candidates there's what 76 now i think 76 candidates
01:09:55.860 for president 100 yes 7600 7600 candidates yeah and they're all good there are actually nine
01:10:01.820 democrats now that are not running for president are there really that many this should be down to
01:10:07.740 four by the end of the week though so all right we'll get into that and uh much more uh coming up
01:10:12.840 in about one minute pat and stew for glen on the glenbeck program triple eight seven two seven b e c k
01:10:19.300 uh and stew back from vacation um so you're you're pretty excited about uh some of elizabeth
01:10:25.660 warren's new plans yeah i mean here here she is she's actually doing fairly well in the poll she's
01:10:31.720 doing better than i would have expected her to do yeah she's getting into that she went away and now
01:10:35.360 she's kind of had a rebirth a little bit yeah and she's kind of positioning herself as like the policy
01:10:40.580 wonk of the candidates the person who's actually got a plan for everything yeah yep and that is
01:10:45.620 legitimately what she's trying to do which is not a terrible idea i mean she's not good at
01:10:50.460 she's not a good politician she's not relatable she's not likable so why not write a lot of long
01:10:57.040 white papers for people to read and hope that works and it may i don't i don't know i mean she's
01:11:01.700 reprehensible but she's got a plan yes and maybe that'll work i don't know she just basically her
01:11:06.440 plan is here's a new policy proposal and a 40 page you know sort of white paper that discusses why
01:11:12.440 this group is evil you know rich people white people men whatever it is that she's just basically
01:11:17.920 saying every group that is not you know a wonderful native american woman like herself
01:11:23.620 is there is the cause for all the problems in the world and here's how we're going to take their money
01:11:27.580 and pay for other things so she's got it there's a detailed explanation of what they're saying this
01:11:32.340 stuff cost in the washington post today and it's pretty interesting and i would say uh aggressively
01:11:38.680 conservative on cost uh she's saying that uh the universal child care and pre-k is going to cost
01:11:46.520 707 billion dollars uh now it's going to cost a lot more than that but she's saying it's 707 billion
01:11:53.680 dollars um this one is is completely ridiculous universal college only costing 650 billion dollars
01:11:59.440 there's no way that's true yeah eliminating college debt 640 billion dollars affordable housing for
01:12:05.840 all 500 billion dollars affordable housing for all is going to cost a hell of a lot more than 500
01:12:09.660 billion dollars um opioids another 100 billion some public land stuff 32 billion debt relief for
01:12:15.800 puerto rico is at 15 billion how are you going to pay for all this though that's that's where it
01:12:20.140 gets interesting because you know she's going to spend a lot a lot of your money you you just tax the
01:12:24.180 rich that's all you do yeah and you just tax tax the rich i kind of thought we were past the point
01:12:29.040 in which people would even try to claim that like you know every if you get a legitimate socialist on
01:12:35.240 on uh and you get them in the kind of the you get them in the truth hat you put a hat on them that
01:12:39.520 makes them tell the truth they will tell you look of course we're going to have to raise taxes on
01:12:42.820 everybody of course i mean this we're basically taking the entire middle class will pay yes of
01:12:47.220 course you're gonna pay more burden of course elizabeth warren's sticking with it and one of the
01:12:50.800 reasons she's sticking with it she said she's going to raise 2.75 trillion dollars
01:12:54.640 in a wealth tax now a wealth tax uh is two percent on all your assets above 50 million dollars
01:13:03.680 and one percent on assets above a billion dollars so she's really going after the super duper high
01:13:09.220 end here which is why you can get some decent polling on an issue you can get most people
01:13:14.420 in america to say ah that's somebody else i'm not going to worry about that i'm never going to be a
01:13:18.640 billionaire right i'm never going to have 50 million dollars that's fine go ahead and hit them
01:13:22.540 it's a terrible way to react terrible it's i mean it's a you know it's the same thing of i mean
01:13:27.360 there's been poems written about this in uh in in european nations first they came yeah for the
01:13:32.660 ultra wealthy but i mean it also was just like well you could make this argument with everything well
01:13:35.860 i'm not black i don't care what they do to blacks like what are you talking about like make it fair
01:13:40.060 for everybody yeah you know that's that's not you're not supposed to make policy decisions based on
01:13:45.020 well i am not that person i'm going to be affected by it so i don't care and beyond not supposed to
01:13:50.280 uh i think it's unconstitutional yes and that's an interesting thing is that most likely unless the
01:13:57.420 supreme court grants new rights that it's never you know the constitution is never held before
01:14:01.960 it is an unconstitutional tax and this goes back to the 16th amendment one certain group of people
01:14:07.880 is unconstitutional yeah and this the constitution was very careful to not allow taxation by the federal
01:14:15.520 government and you know that they of course had to pass the 16th amendment to get the income tax to
01:14:20.520 be a thing because our founders did not want the income tax they would have put it in there but they
01:14:26.860 fought about it there were a couple who were like interested in certain aspects but they did not want
01:14:31.220 an income tax so the you know this country who actually was able to get through a nice chunk of
01:14:37.480 its history without an actual income tax then put through a constitutional amendment allowing it
01:14:44.280 however when they debated that they very specifically said you cannot have uh this type of tax a wealth
01:14:51.080 tax where you can go in and just rip money out of i mean because you think about functionally how this
01:14:56.100 happens let's just say you own a bunch of real estate right and it's valued at you know 100 million
01:15:03.180 dollars and you might think well i don't care what happens to that person because they have 100
01:15:06.640 million dollars but if stop and think about this for a moment that doesn't mean you have the 100
01:15:11.020 million dollars right it's invested in properties so then you're at the point where you're now selling
01:15:15.560 off the properties to pay the taxes which is like you're forcing a person's hand you're basically
01:15:20.940 controlling their financial lives um in addition to that it's not constitutional the government does not
01:15:27.200 have the power to go tax your wealth that is not something it's a very specific type of tax that is not
01:15:33.180 allowed and you know going through history and people to the point of like james madison were
01:15:38.920 like no you can't do that that's not something you're allowed to do now they could pass a constitutional
01:15:43.700 amendment to allow it there's also some and i don't know where they get this idea pat there's some
01:15:49.300 belief that the new supreme court might just interpret it another way and decide that does exist
01:15:56.060 uh in the constitution which you know they seem to be doing a decent amount of lately right i mean
01:16:02.740 you're going to be surprised if john roberts comes out and says yeah you can we can tax wealth i mean
01:16:06.180 no one's going to be surprised by that and obviously people like ruth bader ginsburg are going to be on
01:16:10.480 whatever side is is most uh close to socialism so the idea that she's going to be able to do this is
01:16:16.940 highly questionable uh shouldn't be allowed in the constitution even a lot of left-wing sources are saying
01:16:22.360 yeah probably not probably not constitutional however there's a there's a strain of thought
01:16:28.360 that maybe you can kind of make it constitutional in a way and you say well maybe what they meant
01:16:34.260 because the language is like around direct taxes and all sorts of like terms that aren't specifically
01:16:40.340 defined but have been talked about and ruled upon many many times to make make it so you could not
01:16:46.200 have a wealth tax so i don't know if she's going to be able to pay for this she also wants to raise taxes
01:16:50.180 on uh seven percent tax on every dollar in company profit above a hundred million dollars
01:16:55.720 so a giant new tax there and a an estate tax she's going to raise 500 billion dollars taxing the dead
01:17:02.300 which is always nice that is just immoral i know it really is it's just immoral what why would you
01:17:08.220 why would you assess a tax on people's wealth once they die that doesn't make any sense they've
01:17:14.620 already paid all their taxes yeah and so now you're going to double and triple tax what they've made
01:17:20.140 and take it from them when the government has no right to their property or their money absolutely
01:17:26.420 no right and that's the thing it's like unless you're in chicago dead people don't vote so it's
01:17:32.320 easy to to tax dead people because they just don't have a lot of pushback you know they've lost the
01:17:37.960 ability uh to move they've lost the ability to get to the polls right in places other than chicago
01:17:43.960 where they make it all the time they've lost the ability to protest yeah so you're not going to see
01:17:47.800 them on a street corner right and of course like even if you do protest the family protests or
01:17:52.760 whatever you're just some evil rich person who wants to take money away from poor people and you
01:17:57.160 look horrible so people don't generally do it it's tough it's a tough stance and that's why you have
01:18:01.520 to have people who are acting on principle and not acting on just what feels good at the moment
01:18:05.220 um i want to focus though for a second on the on the college program from elizabeth warren this is
01:18:10.320 fascinating she says her plan will cost 1.25 trillion dollars over 10 years
01:18:15.480 think about the where we are i mean there used to be a time where if you were had a new spending
01:18:21.600 proposal and a new tax increase you would hide it now i mean elizabeth warren is basically
01:18:26.000 advertising it which i think is good at least she's saying it though she's advertising these costs um
01:18:31.360 much lower than they will be the urban institute which is not some right-wing organization said costs
01:18:36.960 for two uh free two and four-year colleges would quickly spiral beyond estimates because of course if
01:18:43.260 you're thinking about going to college and you're like eh maybe it costs too much maybe i won't be
01:18:47.860 able to afford it maybe i'll go to a cheaper college well if everything's free then you start
01:18:52.840 going for the best colleges only right yeah you go to the place that is most expensive and you know
01:18:57.420 who else realizes this colleges because they're going to say well we're caught we're charging thirty
01:19:02.980 thousand dollars per student a year now but we're keeping those costs relatively low because we want
01:19:09.180 to i mean that's not low but they're saying we're keeping them as low as we can because students have
01:19:13.480 to be able to afford it well what happens when they don't have to afford it anymore when if they
01:19:18.340 charge fifty thousand it's going to get paid and if they charge thirty thousand it's going to get
01:19:21.600 paid by the government so why would i charge thirty this is what happens with tuition and loan
01:19:26.340 guarantees this is why the tuition gets so high anyway so when the government steps in and says yeah
01:19:30.960 we're paying everything off i mean that is just it's going to be non-stop cash flowing to these
01:19:36.000 universities uh the warren campaign did not provide an analysis of how it estimated the cost of its
01:19:41.600 free college program which includes increasing pell grants and creating a 50 billion dollar fund for
01:19:46.780 historically black colleges and universities and minority uh serving institutions uh if it's i like
01:19:54.600 this breakdown it's a lot of money but if it accomplishes the goal of getting more people to go to
01:19:59.280 college and stay there for a longer time it'll be more expensive you're waiting for them to say well
01:20:04.640 it'll be worth it no it'll be even more expensive than 1.25 trillion dollars i love how the college
01:20:10.780 debt thing is like this big is a big issue now and one of the reasons why is a story that happened over
01:20:16.020 the weekend where a billionaire was making uh robert smith he is a big tech investor and he said he would
01:20:24.080 pay off all the student debt for 396 graduates graduates at morehouse uh college almost 40 million
01:20:30.420 yeah really cool thing first of all that a person would want to do that and it is giving uh him
01:20:39.240 all the annoyances you would expect it to give him because we live in america and the fact that you come
01:20:46.600 up with and a great thing where you're going to pay off a bunch of kids college is just something you
01:20:51.180 get punished for and now this billionaire who is the wealthiest black man in america is getting all
01:20:58.420 sorts of uncomfortable questions and so are other billionaires first you're getting the the idea of
01:21:04.440 like well i mean this billionaire did this why aren't other billionaires doing this yeah right
01:21:08.700 um then you get this this is a guy who uh his name is uh shaquille lampley uh he is going to this
01:21:16.380 college and so he's i mean think about this this is an awesome moment you're at your graduation this
01:21:20.420 guy's coming up he's giving you some speech you've heard these things a million times you're probably
01:21:23.560 half falling asleep and then he says oh by the way i'm paying off all your college debt incredible
01:21:28.440 so he says uh his his debt is about two hundred thousand dollars in loan uh in loans taken out by
01:21:35.640 his mother covering six years in school he says i am so grateful and still in shock about this gift
01:21:39.660 and now i have so many questions about how this will be processed for example are all student loans
01:21:44.840 included you think man probably yeah does the pledge include loans taken out by the graduates parents
01:21:50.640 so is it just the loans that the kids take out or if the parents do it is that covered what about
01:21:56.800 gifts from home equity loans if you borrow against a home equity loan then you're just paying off
01:22:01.540 someone's home equity loan does that count um will it benefit kids who never made it to graduation
01:22:07.600 because their debt forced them to withdraw before they earned a degree what about last year's
01:22:13.040 what about last year's students what about next year's students yes what about the kid that took a job
01:22:17.620 worked through college paid off half their debt uh-huh right and now because they did the right
01:22:22.380 thing for four years the person next to them that did nothing gets more money from this billionaire
01:22:28.100 than they do that's not fair people are now they're saying uh feeling a level of survivor's guilt
01:22:33.940 because they're the ones uh being targeted here and surviving it's insane i mean come on it's like the
01:22:40.420 oprah winthropy thing she gives everybody in the studio a new car right and it's like well what about
01:22:46.020 the taxes why have you paid their taxes what's that all about rat infested piles of rotting garbage
01:22:54.420 have been left uncollected by the city of los angeles sometimes for months
01:22:58.220 there is no explanation really as to why there are rotting piles of garbage in los angeles
01:23:05.740 i guess you just can't keep up with the garbage fast enough there's no as far as i know there's no
01:23:10.760 garbage strike um but it's leading to uh concerns about new epidemics in los angeles including uh
01:23:19.160 flea-borne typhus cases and uh bubonic plague uh the black death that swept europe and asia in the uh
01:23:27.380 in the 1300s and killed 50 to 75 million people just the 50 to 75 million but now there's i mean don't
01:23:34.000 worry about bubonic plague if you get it what there's antibiotics don't worry about it so everything
01:23:38.980 will be fine everything's fine this comes from the los angeles bureau of tourism uh which wants to
01:23:44.980 invite you to come visit and climb one of their giant mounds of garbage today exactly um and and
01:23:51.680 play with the rats because the rats are there eating the giant piles of garbage and they're carrying all
01:23:56.580 these diseases and they're fun to they're fun to just play catch with yeah you know fetch throw sticks
01:24:02.280 for them and they'll go get them and yeah you forget that this is what life is like i was in
01:24:05.920 new york over the past uh week or so and uh we did the show there for many years you remember living
01:24:12.000 i mean living near new york but working in new york every day and you just forget what it's like
01:24:17.720 the smell is is a great thing living in texas you forget the smell of new york you go walk over a
01:24:22.500 grate of the subway and you just remember oh my god i used to smell this every day right but like
01:24:26.520 walking down the street rats just run by your feet they just run by your feet that's just part of
01:24:30.960 your life you just run you got rats run by your feet now giant rats that if you if one was in
01:24:35.660 texas i mean and they have creepy animals in texas but it's not like that even when you're in a city
01:24:40.060 environment and then i also had the at the train station had the issue where guy is passed out of
01:24:45.240 course on the you don't even like recognize the guy just passed out completely on the floor homeless
01:24:50.140 guy just sleeping in the middle of like a walkway where everyone's just walking around him and he's got
01:24:55.140 his possessions strewn out around him and another guy comes up and bends down and starts poking
01:25:00.660 through his stuff and then takes a giant bag of sour patch kids and just starts walking away
01:25:04.540 with it now you're stealing sour patch kids from a homeless person this is your life wow that's
01:25:10.640 actually gets called out by some other guy and i actually said something myself like you got to put
01:25:14.760 that back dude you can't look there's a lot of things you can deal with in life someone's stealing
01:25:19.640 sour patch kids from a homeless person really like kind of not cool it's not cool and they've gotten
01:25:24.880 this big as much as i like sour patch kids yeah and i would be tempted gonna steal something that's
01:25:29.640 probably your target but i probably wouldn't take them from a homeless guy right and so like then
01:25:33.620 you're in this like fight between this guy who's robbing a homeless person of sour patch kids and
01:25:38.860 some other guy who's walking through a train station just pissed off about it and you realize that like
01:25:44.540 this guy is just gonna circle around and walk back and steal the sour patch kids again when you walk
01:25:49.180 away and that's life yeah that's just your normal everyday life in new york city and in los angeles
01:25:55.020 they're apparently getting worse and do you see any maybe commonality between let's say los angeles
01:26:03.700 san francisco where there's the poop piles to buy the hundreds of thousands piles of poop and they've
01:26:08.840 spent i think it was i just had the story and i don't remember the exact figure i think it was
01:26:13.220 something like 50 million dollars just this year trying to clean up poop piles this is also the place
01:26:17.080 where the the the light post crashed down on top of someone's hood and they later realized the reason
01:26:24.420 it crashed down and inexplicably because people had urinated on it so often it degraded the metal
01:26:29.260 oh my god actually fell over on a car oh my god i mean that was in san francisco yeah in san francisco
01:26:36.320 and then you got new york with the rats and the homeless and and let's see is there anything in oh
01:26:40.720 that's right they're all democrat-led cities for the last 60 years yeah i amazing does anybody else
01:26:46.600 see the connection there to the policies of democrats and how bad what what situation
01:26:53.940 these cities are all in which is incredible i mean you see this now every city that's run
01:26:58.700 by a leftist has has these problems we're now seeing the countries run by leftists like venezuela
01:27:03.900 completely collapsing around us and we're like hey we should try socialism yeah it sounds like a great
01:27:08.680 idea we do it really well and socialism is good it means equality yeah it means everybody's equally
01:27:14.840 poor and equally starving to death with no medical care and no jobs in venezuela so yeah if you want
01:27:23.240 that here i guess we could try it uh i mean i'm not shocked that a group of people would run towards
01:27:31.080 socialism because it's a very human thing you think oh well someone's going to do things for me and then
01:27:35.600 i don't have to do them and everything will be fine like there's a lot of people who have fallen for
01:27:39.460 that over the years but to fall for that in america which has basically disproved this entire analysis
01:27:45.920 yeah and secondarily to to fall for it in america right now when all around the world when you have
01:27:52.100 all the examples of how it fails yeah i mean north korea you know venezuela except cuba central america
01:28:00.260 there's a lot of different examples of this i mean the people who live in socialist governments in in
01:28:04.980 central america are creating a crisis on our border because they want to come here so badly
01:28:10.520 and we're like let's try their form of government it doesn't make any sense insanity it is it really
01:28:16.720 is pat and stew uh for glenn triple eight seven two seven beck joined by jeffy uh of chewing the fat
01:28:25.200 fame uh you got a podcast called chewing the fat i do as a matter of fact you can get that
01:28:29.860 amazing wherever free podcasts are sold or whatever yes you can was that did i get it right
01:28:36.240 absolutely 100 right good i don't remember ever saying uh but uh first of all first of all first of
01:28:48.400 all i want to get into this ben carson situation ben carson at hud the hud director yeah uh yeah the
01:28:55.220 main man because he's not surgeon general he's no look it up i'd also like you to get back to me
01:29:01.020 if you don't mind to explain the disparity in reo rates do you know what an reo is an oreo are
01:29:08.300 stop it for a second yeah i know what an oreo is it's a sandwich cookie it's got chocolate uh
01:29:15.900 the sandwich is a cream filling sometimes it's double stuff i know what an oreo is they eat them all
01:29:22.320 the time different seasons they have different flavors come out oh you're saying an reo yes i
01:29:28.120 love their music they were awesome in the early 80s i love reo they were really really good uh i
01:29:35.940 can't fight that feeling is one of my favorites i used to call him speed wagon but if you want to
01:29:43.520 call him reo that's fine that's fine all right what is it real estate owned is that what it stands
01:29:48.420 for yes uh she's about to explain i think but i think it is yeah all right go ahead r real estate
01:29:54.660 what's the o stand for the organization okay real estate that's what happens when a property goes
01:30:01.820 so he doesn't know call it an reo uh i mean that's the that's the usually you don't have the balls to
01:30:09.140 do that that's like trying to quiz the guy and then stand by it because i mean like look what's what
01:30:13.820 the purpose is not necessarily it's just it's not to fix the problem it's just to say ben carson
01:30:19.500 doesn't shouldn't have this job right like i think that's what they're trying to do you're
01:30:22.860 trying to embarrass him yeah trying to embarrass him yeah which is really like not because obviously no
01:30:26.700 matter what your expertise is someone can pull out an abbreviation that's going to stump you like it
01:30:31.300 doesn't anybody could do that you could come to us and say you could talk start talking about
01:30:35.220 you know situations with the transmitter towers at radio stations and and you know we're not gonna
01:30:40.200 we're not gonna know does that matter i mean no it doesn't it doesn't it doesn't it doesn't
01:30:44.020 we just have to dial in the finortner you know what that is i do love finortner's finortner yeah
01:30:48.720 it's at the it's at the transmitter tower yeah finortner you yeah it's just right there on the tower
01:30:53.520 yeah yeah yeah i know about that then there's the elo right yes you know what that is it all stands
01:31:00.440 for electric light you know what the organization organization orchestra yeah
01:31:05.800 i love it and then she was on msnbt katie porter from california was on uh msnbc talking about
01:31:15.680 you know that he doesn't even know what his federal agency does that fha is there to help people
01:31:22.640 in foreclosure like wait okay what that's a new definition of fha to me i didn't i know they give
01:31:30.180 out loans they do okay to uh low and moderate income people who are trying to buy a house
01:31:35.340 especially for the for a first-time buyer but are they there to help if you're not paying your
01:31:40.280 mortgage the fha they are if you uh if you were forced to take that loan out well a predatory lender
01:31:47.780 made you take out that loan from the fha i it's just bizarre these democrats that think that these
01:31:55.240 government agencies are responsible for every aspect of our lives i'm so i don't i mean maybe
01:32:01.720 you could show me where the fha's mission statement is to help people in foreclosure i've never i've
01:32:10.140 never seen that and it's a larger problem in that the government has prioritized giving money to people
01:32:15.080 to buy homes in the first place like right it's that's right the fha shouldn't even exist no especially
01:32:20.880 for that purpose i mean look loans are are something that you were not it's not a present
01:32:25.740 not a present from a bank to get a loan but it's a long-term financial requirement for you to pay
01:32:31.800 more money than you than you get student loans are looked at as a present now and so are fha yeah i got
01:32:37.300 the loan you don't really have to pay anything uh to get it yeah well wait it's a loan maybe you
01:32:43.540 recognize the word yeah as not gift but loan what's the o stand for because we just vilify
01:32:51.520 renting right we can make it seem like oh well you're not you haven't arrived in our society if
01:32:56.120 you happen to rent where you live which is you know this is a great example of well you're wasting
01:33:00.900 all your throwing your money away because you're not throwing your money away on giant amounts of
01:33:05.780 interest to banks for your loan that you bought quote unquote bought your home with you basically
01:33:11.460 i mean you're just paying rent for the first 10 years of buying a house anyway i mean really like
01:33:17.600 you're just like i was looking at this the other day on my uh stupid mortgage it's like well if i
01:33:22.940 make another 10 years of payments i still owe like 80 of the cost of the home that's the thing i was
01:33:30.720 looking at too and like i can't remember for what purpose we were looking at our loan but uh i noticed
01:33:37.700 that the principal's not really going down anywhere despite the massive mortgage payments i'm making
01:33:43.680 and it's like how can i still own that much because you were you were lucky enough to get a loan i was
01:33:49.880 lucky enough to get a loan to get a loan and so they're charging me about triple what i took out in
01:33:55.480 the loan yeah it's literally double and at least the fact that the government has created policies to
01:34:02.260 tell people they should go out and enter into this arrangement is really questionable i mean you
01:34:08.080 can certainly make an argument that buying a home is great depending on what you know what your
01:34:12.960 situation is but the government should not be prioritizing owning over renting and this is a
01:34:17.660 great example of what happened you know even with republicans when they have good intentions
01:34:22.340 and create all sorts of government policies well the ownership society people if people own their
01:34:27.560 homes you're going to care about them more and things are going to get better it's like well what you
01:34:30.760 did was create a gigantic financial crisis because of that because of this theory and the idea that
01:34:36.040 you can you know look i love obviously when it comes to tax time everyone likes you know deducting
01:34:41.020 their interest off of their off of their mortgages but i mean like that is something that is highly
01:34:47.840 questionable and i would say completely wrong that the government should be doing on that oh there's
01:34:52.680 been a there's been a years-long geod i will say it's true the interest you can deduct from your
01:34:58.840 from your home because you're just saying like you know it's a government making a giant one of the
01:35:03.000 biggest things i will say this it helps save me every year it does and of course every year which
01:35:08.240 is why of course you do it right why do people buy homes at numbers that they shouldn't even be buying
01:35:13.540 above the amount of of money they should be spending on a particular loan why do they do that
01:35:18.200 well the government tells them they incentivize them massively to do it yes they say we won't you don't
01:35:22.620 have to pay your other taxes if you just take out this giant loan like that is not a good policy is
01:35:28.720 the trade-off yeah it is kind of i mean we still pay him but not as much yeah well ben carson you
01:35:34.380 know i mean he does have a new suit and he's in charge of hud so it's good that he's in charge of
01:35:38.180 everything right because that's what that's i mean he was like almost like beto going to find out about
01:35:42.640 his turtle uh within the race when he went kind of disappointed when he dropped out of the race yeah
01:35:47.060 when he dropped out of the race to go get a new suit oh it was over that's right remember that
01:35:51.920 he left i forget where where they were on the campaign trail but he went home to get go back
01:35:56.860 to florida to get some clothes suit like wait is there no store in iowa they don't have stores in
01:36:02.340 iowa never forget that no because he's just gone after that certainly not a men's warehouse in in
01:36:06.740 iowa anywhere right no place to get close yeah no wonder he went home all right what else you have
01:36:11.920 well i know you were talking about uh the big robocall issue earlier and people are already
01:36:17.260 commenting online that they're concerned uh about me because they're they're saying that
01:36:21.280 pat has four allegations pressed upon his name they can't imagine how many allegations are pressed
01:36:26.700 against mine oh my gosh that's a good point you are correct and i am not going to comment on that
01:36:31.000 not one single bit it's got to be at least 400 allegations pressed on your name you do not want
01:36:38.620 things pressed up on your name no congratulations to uh washington state to becoming the first
01:36:45.220 state to legalize human composting uh i'm excited about that i don't know about you but i mean we
01:36:50.560 need natural organic method of bearing human remains so that you just become uh in the dirt
01:36:55.860 wow that's good news good that is good news listen you just mix your body with a little wood chip
01:37:00.920 and a little straw and in a few weeks you're dirt good to go and you're enhancing the soil
01:37:07.220 yes you are great yes you are environment environmentally friendly yeah well it's jay
01:37:12.900 insley uh by the way yes governor of the state who is on our board of 24 candidates now right for
01:37:18.800 you don't seem to give it much of a chance however i'm a little perplexed i know still he's got some
01:37:23.520 great programs where is insley on this board he's on the eh probably not probably not probably not
01:37:29.860 yeah yes that's our fourth best category to be in out of the five categories there's frontrunners
01:37:35.300 there's yeah they got a chance we need to move pete up pete budajeg up man i did move him up
01:37:40.280 actually he was in the eh probably not category now he's in the i mean if everything goes right
01:37:44.460 yeah and that's the thing with budajeg is everything's gone right so far so no one's
01:37:48.100 questioned him at all about anything no one said one terse word about him or any of his policies at
01:37:54.240 some point no the guy's practically perfect right at some point this has got to change perfectly perfect
01:37:58.640 first of all he's a veteran of at least one tour in the afghanistan war yeah uh he belongs to a
01:38:06.900 protected group um road scholar he's got a road scholar he's a smart guy he really is well spoken
01:38:14.080 i think the guy is is genuinely good at at speeches he's a mayor of a major city hand well um south
01:38:23.640 in indiana yes as major as it gets in that county um that's true that's a good way of looking at it
01:38:32.560 yeah so um but he's really well spoken and when you ask him questions he's good at not answering them
01:38:40.980 in a really in a smooth way yeah yeah he's a good politician yeah uh he's definitely and this is
01:38:47.040 love is his his partner husband yeah so they didn't i think they do yeah they probably do he's
01:38:54.500 gotten really good press yeah he has he's gotten great press yeah he's definitely part of the part
01:38:59.200 of the protected class of we're going to give you nothing but love right i do love there's something i
01:39:03.380 really adore about the idea that a guy you know look south bend indiana is you know it's uh it's not
01:39:08.680 the biggest town in the world and he's the mayor of it he gets to come in and he's the guy in like
01:39:12.420 third place in this race while de blasio can't even get like a 10 approval rating from new york
01:39:17.220 city like he's the mayor of new york city has no chance of winning but the mayor of south bend is
01:39:22.280 like yeah yeah that's a great i still don't think it's going to happen i mean i would not i would not
01:39:27.740 think even the nomination though i don't think buddha judge is going to be the nominee but i mean
01:39:32.420 he has put himself in a position where you have to say he has a chance far more than better
01:39:36.260 better is like done better he's got well he's on the wrong side of things he's doing so badly
01:39:42.140 now they're not even doing opposition opposition research on him anymore like i'm not gonna no
01:39:47.900 that's a waste of money it is a waste of money it is i mean pete had his town hall on fox and was
01:39:55.960 went over huge beto just had one on cnn did you know about it no yesterday well we had a clip because
01:40:01.620 he was he was going to ban semi-automatic weapons i think yeah yeah which is interesting that's
01:40:06.720 basically every gun right basically every gun i mean well weapons of war cannot be on the
01:40:11.860 street yeah semi-automatic weapon is not a weapon of war i mean it is used in war as is everything
01:40:16.040 else your fists and your hands are also used in war i mean that's such a dumbest like
01:40:20.560 weapons of war like every weapon when you're in war you'll throw a gun at you'll throw a rock at
01:40:27.180 people doesn't matter yeah that's what happens you're trying to win yeah um we all watch game
01:40:30.800 of thrones as you fight with anything you have yeah so i mean but when it comes to like a handgun
01:40:36.880 which the more most people would say is like a typical gun that an american has semi-automatic
01:40:41.620 they're semi-automatic many of them yeah um yeah so that's a uh that's a big thing and he's not
01:40:47.740 making much of an impact though i will say it does it does occasionally happen where where candidates
01:40:54.540 uh have a rise and are prominent and then fall apart and come back i mean mccain was yeah he had to
01:41:00.760 fire his entire campaign staff at one point in that campaign and he wound up winning in 2008
01:41:04.580 pat and stew with jeffy for glenn on the glenn back program uh all right you got anything else
01:41:11.760 for the chew and the fat file absolutely one one big one that's uh coming across the pond here soon
01:41:16.380 that's in europe right now the new uh viral challenge on the internet uh kissing cows uh kissing cows is
01:41:23.800 going to be kissing is the new viral challenge on the internet yes kissing or what reason are people
01:41:28.500 kissing cows just to prove that you can do it on the internet that's why i love the internet i mean
01:41:33.480 it's just a viral challenge now they're calling it they need to rename it actually they call it the
01:41:37.600 kukus challenge that's too close to the too close to the triple k challenge yeah you can't be doing
01:41:45.140 that in europe that's a bad name for a challenge what was the purpose of this it's just just to
01:41:49.400 prove that you could do it and kiss cows and uh prove that you can do it in austria now they're
01:41:54.080 warning people that not to do it because the cows could attack you if you uh you know if you were to
01:42:01.260 come between uh mom and her and her babies they could attack you i'm looking forward what does a
01:42:06.480 cow do when it attacks i've never seen forward to cow attacks to be honest with you i want to see
01:42:12.040 cow attacks glenn says said this on the air that because he has this ranch where he is now and like
01:42:16.720 that was like they actually will come after you they're pretty really yeah they're mean so i want to
01:42:21.620 see that i'm all for you had to chew cut all day that you probably wouldn't be very happy about it
01:42:25.860 either no ice cream no you know it's like you say i will can't you at least give me a burger and then
01:42:31.160 they do they just make you into a burger and it's not a good it's not the way that turns out it's not
01:42:37.860 positive no it's not have you invested in your uh in your uh meatless meat your impossible foods
01:42:42.300 i would have years ago unfortunately it's a private company i mean they've tripled now right i mean
01:42:46.940 now you're talking about uh it's going on they're putting meatless sausage crumbles on little caesar's
01:42:51.020 pizzas i'm very excited that stuff is amazing though it is amazing it's amazing and didn't you
01:42:55.720 say there's a shortage again yeah what restaurant was it that ran out of them uh red robin carries
01:43:00.500 them red robin that's a big chain of restaurants and it's gone they're gone for a week and a half
01:43:05.300 or they said a week and a half or two weeks i think according to the source of the waitress at
01:43:10.020 red robin whether she actually understands the impossible foods supply chain exactly it was unclear
01:43:18.740 sounds like she's got a good handle on it yeah grip on it yeah yeah there's a real shortage of
01:43:22.620 this stuff i like the uh i mean people are you know chopping it up i know they're going to have
01:43:26.680 a problem with calling it meat though you know they're having a big problem now that they can't
01:43:30.360 call the uh well since there's no meat in it yeah you would think they would yeah it can't be
01:43:34.320 can't be used in meat that's going to be a tough thing yeah they're fighting and they're saying that
01:43:38.200 that's not actually true i mean what's the definition right uh right because i mean if you have
01:43:42.440 the same chemical makeup as meat but it just wasn't from an animal is it meat oh that's their argument
01:43:47.640 and it's an interesting one i mean but it is i i will say it tastes delicious that's all i can say
01:43:54.160 you're listening to glenn beck