The Glenn Beck Program - February 03, 2023


‘Sub-Optimal’: Biden Caves to China, Allows Spy Balloon to Fly Over Sensitive Nuclear Sites | Guests: Whitney Webb & Bill O’Reilly | 2⧸3⧸23


Episode Stats

Length

1 hour and 7 minutes

Words per Minute

154.27437

Word Count

10,485

Sentence Count

799

Misogynist Sentences

14

Hate Speech Sentences

8


Summary

Glenn Beck is back with another dynamic Friday program, this time featuring Bill O'Reilly, Arthur Brooks, and Whitney Webb. They discuss the latest in AI, the World Economic Forum, and the Chinese spy balloon that is over the United States.


Transcript

00:00:00.000 Oh, it's fantastic news. Great Friday program coming up for you. You do not want to miss
00:00:05.080 today's program, not a second of it. Let's start with our sponsor, Rough Greens. If you're a
00:00:11.220 regular listener of the program, you've heard me talk about Rough Greens. It really, truly changed
00:00:16.200 my dog's life. Uno was, I mean, he was never a good eater, never. And we used to have to stand
00:00:24.520 there and at times we would have to hand feed him. I don't know if anybody else has to go through
00:00:29.180 this. I know I get a lot of mail from people who are like, my dog is finally eating, so I can't be
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00:00:54.900 probably gained a couple of years and I don't have any proof of that obviously, but I really
00:01:00.240 believe, and so does Tanya, that this has changed him physically a great deal. Get your first trial
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00:01:12.600 833-GLEN-33, 833-GLEN-33, roughgreens.com slash Beck. The national radio program begins in just a minute.
00:01:20.380 We got no room to compromise. We gotta stand together, it's gonna survive. Stand up, stand and hold the light.
00:01:50.380 It's a new day, I'm trying to raise. What you're about to hear is the fusion of entertainment
00:02:02.040 and enlightenment. This is the Glenn Beck Program.
00:02:11.720 Hello America, welcome to the Glenn Beck Program. This is a dynamic program today. You don't want to
00:02:17.100 miss a second of it. We're going to talk to Whitney Webb about the latest in AI and the World Economic
00:02:25.000 Forum. It is truly terrifying stuff. That's coming up at hour number three. We also have Arthur Brooks
00:02:31.860 on to talk about what can we do to help our kids if they're suicidal, depressed, etc., etc. What's really
00:02:38.180 happening in America? And this hour we have Bill O'Reilly giving us the biggest stories of the day. And I
00:02:46.080 also want to talk about that Chinese spy balloon that is over the United States.
00:02:52.560 I mean, I want to live in the mindset of if they're using balloons, you know, I don't think we have a lot to
00:03:03.520 worry about. But unfortunately, that's not the case. What is it that they're really doing up there? We'll get
00:03:10.360 into that beginning in 60 seconds. So nothing lasts forever. And, you know, when you're trying to preserve
00:03:20.520 things, that's a real problem, especially old things. And old things now mean, you know, something
00:03:28.460 from 2010. That's a 12 year old car now. And if your car is out of insurance or warranty, I should
00:03:36.440 say, you're going to be screwed. I'm sitting here in my car barn. And behind me, you can see
00:03:43.460 a 1934 race car. Jay Leno has one very similar restored by the same people. He has a Spitfire
00:03:53.840 engine in it. It doesn't have warranty. I can't imagine. I need a part for a Spitfire. Because just
00:04:02.140 this is the way it was built for Le Mans. And if something goes wrong, I know I'm going to
00:04:08.660 hemorrhage money. Okay, that's that car. However, my cars are my trucks that I use on my ranch for
00:04:16.580 every day hauling around. They're 10 years old. I don't want to spend a lot of money on them. I just
00:04:22.520 want them to work. And I'll work until the doors fall off. The hood is removed. All the glass is
00:04:29.040 broken. I'm still want to drive that damn thing. Because I want to use every dime, get every
00:04:33.900 dime's worth out of it. But now it's the cost to repair a car is so expensive. You've got to have
00:04:42.080 some sort of insurance, if you will, medical insurance for your car. This is where car
00:04:47.660 shield comes in and you can save 20% on your plan. You will always be prepared for the unexpected.
00:04:53.720 You're not going to blow through your budget. Call them now 800-227-6100. Your car is going to break
00:05:00.080 down. Don't get caught without a warranty. Make sure you have some coverage 800-227-6100 or
00:05:07.760 carshield.com slash Beck. Well, let me say hello to our executive producer. That is Stu Brigier. Hello,
00:05:18.840 Stu. How are you? Glenn, how are you? Happy Friday. Oh, my goodness. Happy Friday to you. Now,
00:05:24.440 let me ask you something. If I'm not mistaken, yesterday was Groundhog's Day, right? Yes,
00:05:31.100 yesterday was Groundhog Day. And Groundhog comes out, sees its shadow. And what happens if they see
00:05:38.280 their shadow? Do you know what happened yesterday with Puxitani Phil? No, you didn't know. Okay,
00:05:45.880 neither do I. I don't really care. But I do want to ask, because I know it's like six more weeks of
00:05:53.100 winter if it sees its shadow or doesn't see its shadow. I don't remember. But what does it mean
00:05:59.240 if they're waiting for the groundhog to come out and then they go in because the groundhog's not
00:06:09.800 coming out and they find Fred the groundhog dead? This is what happened in Montreal, or I'm sorry,
00:06:22.280 Quebec yesterday. If Fred had seen his shadow, you know, that means six more weeks of winter.
00:06:31.580 If he didn't, you know, the opposite. But if he's dead, that doesn't seem like a good sign.
00:06:42.300 Maybe it's just me. Endless winter for all of us. Maybe nuclear winter. I'm not sure. But yes.
00:06:51.240 By the way, an update yesterday, we had the 1792exchange.com president on, Paul Fitzpatrick.
00:06:59.340 And it's a website that can help you figure out which banks, which companies are full in ESG
00:07:08.240 and which are not. We had them on the air. At first, their websites were crashed because of the volume.
00:07:18.920 Usually that happens on this program. Then they were attacked by a denial of service campaign
00:07:27.040 right after being on the show, which is odd. So they have it back up now. But it's amazing what
00:07:36.320 people are willing to do just to keep information about you keeping your money and keeping your family
00:07:44.360 safe. It's amazing how well coordinated this effort is. Let me talk to you about the spy balloon. Stu,
00:07:54.300 what do you know about the spy balloon? Well, apparently a spy balloon flying from a product
00:08:03.400 of China flying over our Western United States. It's over Wyoming. Alaska. Yeah. Wyoming now. It's now Wyoming.
00:08:10.880 Yeah. So I did have the question of when we have satellites and tick tock, why would you need a
00:08:20.020 balloon? I don't know. It does seem to be a little old timey, you know, it and it at first when I heard
00:08:27.100 that I thought they're down the hot air balloons. That's good. You know, that's good. But it's not good.
00:08:32.620 And and here's why. And I'm not hearing anybody talk about this. First of all, the the balloons current
00:08:39.840 path, it carries it carries this balloon over a number of sensitive military sites. OK, and they also say
00:08:52.200 the United States says they don't want to shoot it out of the sky because of falling debris. Really?
00:08:57.000 We don't have anything that would just obliterate that thing in the sky. Really? Hmm. So anyway,
00:09:03.340 it was over Canada and then it flies into the United States and it's flying over sensitive military
00:09:10.380 nuclear sites. And the Chinese foreign ministry said, you know, relax, America. Now.
00:09:21.520 I don't know about you, but. I'm China should be happy that we don't have a female for president
00:09:31.060 because females don't really like it when males say, OK, sweetheart, relax. And I think that's
00:09:39.640 kind of what China just said to us in a very condescending tone. Oh, please relax. It's just a spy
00:09:47.740 balloon. What are we going to get? Well, here's the one thing that. One thing that I that I wanted to
00:10:00.020 check when I saw this, the the balloon, they think, is in an altitude between 80 and 120,000 feet. Now, I am not
00:10:10.580 saying this is what it is, but I am saying if we don't shoot it down and make sure that our own airspace
00:10:18.620 remains sacred, we're out of our minds. Can you imagine Russia if we had a spy balloon and we told Russia
00:10:26.920 or China or China? Ah, relax. The balloon is at an altitude, they believe, between 80 and 120,000 feet.
00:10:36.180 The minimum altitude for an airborne EMP is 94 or 95,000 feet. So that's right in that range. I just want to
00:10:50.040 throw that out there. I don't think it's an EMP. In fact, I'm pretty sure it's not an EMP. However,
00:10:57.360 if they can fly things over our country and we do nothing about it and they're flying them over our
00:11:06.740 nuclear sites, I think that's a problem. I don't know about anybody else, but I'm not really relaxed
00:11:14.520 about it. How about you? Hmm? Sounds like a big problem. And, uh, you know, certainly I think
00:11:23.180 they will learn that they can do this if they want to do it. Yes, absolutely. That's what they're
00:11:29.140 getting from this. That's the intelligence that they're gathering. I really believe they are
00:11:34.500 gathering the intelligence of, will America even respond? I don't think they will. No, of course they
00:11:41.840 will. No, I don't think they will. Let's fly it over. Fly it into U.S. airspace and let's fly it over
00:11:47.400 their, their really sensitive military sites and see if they say a word. No, that's the intelligence
00:11:56.620 they're gathering. That's all we do though, is we said a word and they're, they're, they're talking
00:12:01.600 about how this is going to make a very uncomfortable meeting when I guess Blinken meets with them.
00:12:05.900 Oh, very uncomfortable. We might send them a sternly worded wet letter. Why not blow it out
00:12:14.180 of the sky? Sincerely. Why not blow it out of the sky? I'm just saying if it's a balloon,
00:12:21.340 I'm not so worried about shrapnel coming down. Are you, are you, I mean, well, I mean looking
00:12:26.680 at it though, I mean the, the, the pictures that seemingly are of this balloon, it doesn't
00:12:31.940 look like a balloon, like how you think of a balloon. It looks like there's a decent amount
00:12:38.080 of equipment on it. I don't know. How would you describe this picture? I mean, it looks
00:12:43.180 like almost like a, it looks almost like a satellite. Uh, almost like Sputnik. Uh, yeah.
00:12:52.060 So it looks kind of like a satellite. I wonder what equipment might be on it. And honestly, there
00:12:58.100 is nothing that a balloon can gather that I am aware of. And I talked to, you know, some
00:13:03.540 expert, uh, about this. There's nothing that I'm aware of that, uh, they can't, they can't,
00:13:13.000 they, they need a balloon for that. They can't gather just via satellite. They can, they can
00:13:18.760 watch us on satellite. We got that technology. So why launch a balloon? The only answer I and
00:13:27.700 others can come up with that I've talked to is, um, they're just testing whether or not they can
00:13:34.700 invade our airspace and we do anything. Now, why would they want to know that? It's just not good.
00:13:42.240 It's not good.
00:13:47.480 Just saying, I just leave it at that.
00:13:49.600 Your summary of the spy balloon. Do we get a headline out of that? Is that a clickbaity headline
00:13:54.020 that we can get? Yeah. Uh, uh, China flying mysterious balloons with equipment on it
00:14:01.360 over sensitive U.S. air, uh, U.S. sites. Suboptimal. Yeah. Suboptimal. Suboptimal. Suboptimal.
00:14:11.920 Yeah. Yeah. Emphasis on the sub. Yeah. Yeah. Which that can launch a lot of things. Anyway, um,
00:14:19.400 there is a new poll out and it's a record setting poll. And I think this is exciting. Only about a
00:14:26.500 third, 36% of Americans say they are satisfied now with a set of policy issues spanning all aspects
00:14:36.480 of government. Uh, it is among the lowest rated issues was the state of the economy, which our
00:14:43.180 president said is fixed, right? I mean, it's booming strong as hell. Glenn strong as hell. No joke.
00:14:49.380 I'm not joking. I'm telling you the truth. I'm shooting straight. It's strong as hell. A quarter
00:14:56.520 of Americans say, yeah, I'm satisfied with it. It had the largest year over year decline, dropping
00:15:04.700 eight percentage points. Satisfaction with gun laws also dropped sharply this year to a record low of
00:15:12.060 34%. Now this one, I'd like you to look into Stu. I'd like to know, is that like, yeah,
00:15:19.140 our gun laws aren't strong enough. You know, we got to be more like California, which well,
00:15:25.800 don't think about the stats on that one too much. Cause we already have the toughest gun laws in
00:15:31.620 California, but that's because of other States that we're having all these problems. Uh huh. Uh,
00:15:36.580 so the satisfaction of gun laws dropped sharply to a record low policies on abortion efforts to control
00:15:43.520 crime, quality of public education, and efforts to combat poverty and homelessness also remained at
00:15:50.480 near all time low points. So we're not in a good mood. Now they say there are things we can build on.
00:15:59.000 Sure. There's a rise of polarization and a decline in national harmony. Um, you know,
00:16:05.940 we've always had a baseline where, you know, people were generally content with America and, uh, now
00:16:15.700 people are not, I wonder what could have changed that. So the perception of overall quality of life
00:16:23.700 in the U S has dropped to a record low, uh, this year, as did perceptions of wealth inequality.
00:16:30.800 Less than a quarter of adults now say that they are satisfied the way income and wealth is
00:16:38.200 distributed in the U S less than a quarter of adults. So does that mean only a quarter of us
00:16:48.040 believe in the free market? Uh, is it that high? Is it?
00:16:55.300 I mean, think about it. Like you are crazy constantly beaten over the head with how much
00:17:03.840 this country sucks, how terrible it's been, how everything it does is wrong, how every police officer
00:17:09.320 is out to kill minorities, how, you know, I mean, it's on and on and on and on how every rich person's
00:17:15.560 trying to kill poor people for profit. Uh, every company's out to get you. You think about how that
00:17:21.960 has to wash over a population over multiple decades and what other ending can you come to
00:17:28.860 only if people are, they know their principles. Yeah. They, they absolutely know that. And then,
00:17:34.320 you know, just when you think things are, you know, horrible, the groundhog dies on groundhog day.
00:17:39.440 That's not, it's suboptimal. I'm going to leave it at that. All right. Our, our sponsor this half hour
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00:19:52.820 So the world economic forum held their annual meeting a couple of weeks ago. They said something
00:19:57.500 that caught my attention. Maybe it should catch yours as well. The, um, public private partners
00:20:03.720 at the world economic forum believe a catastrophic cyber attack is, uh, really probable and likely in
00:20:12.420 the next 24 months, strangely specific. Uh, but all the cyber war games that are happening with the bank
00:20:20.460 of England and the IMF and NATO all recently, everybody's conducting one simulating a global
00:20:27.240 attack on the financial system. Last time I remember global governments and elites being so
00:20:32.060 worried about something was 2019. They were worried about a pandemic and Oh my gosh, what a coincidence.
00:20:38.780 It never happens. It will not be like this again. I'll tell you that right now. Uh, but they nailed
00:20:44.440 that one and had everything ready to go. So now they're planning. What do we do in case of a
00:20:50.440 giant cyber attack specifically in the next 24 months? Okay. Well, here's what I'd like to tell
00:20:58.840 you. Prepare yesterday. We had somebody on, um, uh, that talked about this and my, my wife, I got home
00:21:05.600 and for the first time in a long time, my wife is like, okay, we need to take preparation seriously
00:21:10.240 tonight at 5 PM. We are going to show you, um, on our, our, our Wednesday night special, but it's
00:21:19.080 airing tonight because I haven't been able to get in the studio until today. So today the COVID blueprint,
00:21:25.480 the next crisis globalists are going to use to control you. That's Friday. That's today at 5 PM only
00:21:34.640 on blaze tv.com slash Glenn, please. We ask you to join us and be a member. I know your money, you, you work
00:21:43.240 hard for it and money is tight, but I think this is worth a cup of coffee, uh, you know, or a couple
00:21:49.280 cups of coffee, coffee and a half at Starbucks, uh, every month. We give you great information.
00:21:55.780 Join us at blaze tv.com slash Glenn. It is your membership that helps us, um, keep the lights on
00:22:03.060 and keep researchers employed, et cetera, et cetera. If you can't afford it, I understand. Just go to
00:22:08.300 youtube.com slash Glenn Beck. It'll be posted, uh, I think five 30 or six o'clock, um, after the live
00:22:16.120 broadcast at five youtube.com slash Glenn Beck. Don't miss that. Uh, Mr. Bill O'Reilly is coming up in
00:22:25.020 just a second. He is going to get his take on, on the Chinese balloon. Um, but also I really want to
00:22:34.000 talk to him about New York and Kathy Hochul's, uh, new budget. It is an absolute nightmare,
00:22:42.920 a nightmare. The taxes that are going up in New York, just more people going to be moving out.
00:22:50.860 Uh, Oh, and by the way, she wants to get rid of natural gas and natural gas stoves, but don't
00:22:56.800 worry about that. That's a Glenn Beck program. There's nothing to see there. Uh, all right. So what's
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00:24:28.600 This is the Glenn Beck program. Welcome. Mr. Bill O'Reilly is joining us today at an earlier
00:24:36.860 time. We appreciate his flexibility. A lot happening on today's show. And I really felt it
00:24:42.400 was important to get Bill's take on a couple of things. Um, first of all, your take on what's
00:24:49.940 happened politically with Ron DeSantis and Donald Trump, they have started to kind of fight against
00:24:56.820 each other. Is this the way it's going to be? And do you think that works out well for either
00:25:03.160 DeSantis or Trump? Well, first of all, um, Beck, you, you put me on early cause you just want to
00:25:09.240 get, get it out of the way. I know that. You know, let's, all right, here he is. Let's just get him
00:25:14.980 out of the way and then we'll do the rest of the show. You know, we know, um, yeah, I mean, look,
00:25:22.440 um, it's becoming fairly clear now that, uh, DeSantis is going to launch probably in April or
00:25:31.700 May, a formal campaign. Um, Trump knows that, um, Trump's campaign style is attack, attack, attack.
00:25:40.640 Um, DeSantis has to reply, but I don't think he's going to reply on the same level. He'll just,
00:25:47.500 yeah, you know, he'll just counter punch and hope that, uh, the attacks are so over the top
00:25:53.100 that, uh, it drives, um, Republican voters to him. So yes, it's, it's going to be a little bit
00:26:00.900 nasty depending on, you know, and Donald Trump's mood that day. Right. I mean, there's no filter
00:26:07.420 there. I know, I know, you know, Donald Trump, Donald Trump has, um, uh, has problems with,
00:26:14.020 uh, the COVID narrative, but I, I will tell you that he's the only one that has any credibility
00:26:20.980 of really almost any president, maybe except for Ronald Reagan in a way that has credibility on
00:26:28.400 stopping wars. I mean, he, it's clear he does not want America tangled into a war. He doesn't want
00:26:35.380 any of these things. Do you think if he won again, he could actually change the course of what's
00:26:41.900 happening now? I, you know, it's impossible to answer that question, but I can give you an
00:26:45.920 educated analysis. Cause I had Mike Pompeo on the no spin news, which I know you watch every day,
00:26:51.540 right out right after the blaze. And then Beck turns over the no spin news and, and Pompeo,
00:26:57.480 I said to Pompeo, I was look, um, you were secretary of state and, um, did Putin saber rattle?
00:27:05.540 Well, I mean, saber rattling means threading to do military action. That's what it means. He goes,
00:27:11.460 no, I said, well, um, do you believe that if Trump had been reelected that Putin would have invaded
00:27:20.720 Ukraine? And he goes, no, no. And I go, well, how do you back that up? And he said, because he didn't
00:27:27.560 do anything like that when we were in there and he was fairly reasonable in our discussions. And then
00:27:33.640 interestingly enough, he pivoted to Xi and China and said, where he was not reasonable. All right.
00:27:40.020 He was not. So to answer your question about, I tell you, Trump knows how to play these guys.
00:27:47.580 Well, we're afraid of them. Yeah. They're afraid of him. He knows how to portray power to these crazy
00:27:54.780 dictators. There's no doubt about that. Yeah. There's no doubt about it. They were afraid of
00:27:59.820 them, particularly Iran. Yeah. We're very, very afraid because Trump basically, and I know this
00:28:04.760 to be true, um, told them all is, uh, through Pompeo, you go out and continue. You haven't heard
00:28:13.780 anything about the civil war with the Houthis. Remember the Houthis? Yeah. Yemen. Remember that?
00:28:19.660 Yeah. Yeah. Okay. Well, he basically said to Moe, look, you continue this to stabling the Gulf
00:28:25.880 region and we're going to bomb all your ports and all what, take out all your ships and all
00:28:31.080 your planes. That's what we're going to do. You're going to have nothing. And then he told
00:28:35.660 the Taliban, you kill one more American. Yep. All right. One more. Yep. And we're going
00:28:42.100 to come in and just carpet bomb, uh, where you are. And they believed him. So he told me that
00:28:49.900 he talked to president Xi and said, you know, you do something like that and missiles will fly
00:28:54.480 to Beijing. And, uh, yeah, but that's different though, because she didn't believe that nobody
00:29:01.700 would believe it. Trump wouldn't have done that. But what Trump did do to Xi was make his
00:29:07.200 life very difficult economically. Yeah. Um, and that's, that was the cudgel there. Okay.
00:29:13.520 Let me, uh, let me switch to what you think the biggest story of the week is. Oh, Beck, thank
00:29:20.060 you. Thank you very much. I've been preparing this all week. Yeah. This is what is this Hunter
00:29:28.240 Biden lawsuit? Thank you. This is insane, but I'm not looking at it from an ideology. I mean,
00:29:35.320 the conservatives on, on television, they're actually taking it seriously. Okay. I don't
00:29:41.980 take this seriously. I know this Abby Lowell, but here's the main point on this Hunter's gone
00:29:50.160 rogue because the white house could never have sanctioned this ever in a million years. Could
00:29:57.380 they have said, yeah, go ahead, threaten everybody in the world with lawsuits. Okay. The white house
00:30:02.740 would never have done that because this brings terrible attention back to Joe Biden. All right.
00:30:10.360 So Lowell, uh, is the new lawyer and number one, your listeners astute, or they wouldn't be
00:30:16.840 listening to you back. They'd be somewhere else, but they're astute. You got to know that if a guy
00:30:21.880 like Abby Lowell is shrewd and he's been around forever does this, that means that action against
00:30:29.040 Hunter Biden is coming soon. So what is happening bill with the FBI going in again this week and
00:30:39.560 searching? I mean, I'm concerned. I can't believe I'm saying this in defense of, well, no, I'm saying
00:30:44.800 it in defense of the presidency. Um, you do not want a justice department that can just go in to a
00:30:53.600 presidential, uh, presidential house. It was bad enough when it was a former president. Now it is
00:30:59.520 the sitting president. Yeah. They gave him permission though, Beck. So this is a show. This
00:31:05.480 isn't anything legal. If it were illegal, they would have searched the Rehoboth beach house
00:31:11.080 two months ago. Right. Okay. So you don't, you don't let somebody, if you look at the documents,
00:31:16.960 you don't give somebody two months to clear them out. Right. Okay. I mean, it's the same. So all
00:31:21.700 this is, is a show for the, for the consumer. Oh, no, yeah. Now we're going to go over and we're
00:31:27.180 going to look at the Rehoboth. Wait a minute. Hold it. Uh, that should have been done in November.
00:31:32.100 Right. Um, and then they go, well, and we're going to go to Pence's house too. And, you know,
00:31:38.160 those of us who really understand the big picture know what all this is, is cosmetics for the folks.
00:31:46.180 It's just, yeah, well, we did our due diligence. Yeah. Yeah. But let's get back to the Hunter Biden
00:31:51.420 thing for just one second. So you, you assume now that there's going to be an indictment against
00:31:57.280 Hunter Biden. That's what I think this is. Abby Lowell thing is all about. It's going to be a
00:32:01.800 tax beef. Okay. That he didn't pay his taxes and it only paid him after all of this came out.
00:32:09.580 And that's a federal crime. And, and Hunter's going to have to plea it. And he will, he won't
00:32:15.560 go to trial. He'll plea it out. But in the meantime, to mask that, all right, to mask that big story,
00:32:22.020 because it will be big, Lowell goes on the offense and says, Oh, this is just a fishing expedition.
00:32:28.280 They had to come up with something. And the bigger picture is that my client, Hunter Biden's rights
00:32:33.620 have been violated, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. But it's less than two years. We're going to have a
00:32:41.480 new president and less than a year, we're going to have a presidential primary in New Hampshire.
00:32:46.240 So Biden doesn't want to continually have to be defending or even hearing about his son,
00:32:52.660 Hunter. And this extends the story to three months now. And so to me, I'm sitting here going Biden and,
00:33:01.640 and, uh, Susan Rice, who's running the country, by the way, now that Klain is gone, she's running
00:33:06.680 the country. I'm sure they had no idea this was coming down. And that's an interesting family dynamic
00:33:13.120 back. Okay. Let me ask you one more question on, um, this one is on Kathy Hochul. I,
00:33:19.880 what is her deal? She just, um, introduced a $227 billion budget. It includes higher payroll taxes,
00:33:30.180 plus a cap and trade program on CO2. Uh, so it's going to cost a lot more money. And then on top of
00:33:40.680 that, uh, let me see here. She, um, also wants to cap electric bills at 6% of income for households
00:33:49.520 that replace gas appliances. So the, the war on gas stoves is real. However, 45% of New York's
00:33:59.020 energy comes from gas. What the hell is she doing? Well, uh, you're going to have, uh, new neighbors
00:34:06.820 with, um, New York accents pretty soon down there in Texas back. Yeah, I know. I mean, you know,
00:34:12.240 look, Kathy Hochul is a, um, machine politician going all the way back to Tammany hall. New York
00:34:19.920 has always been a state that's been dominated from Chester Arthur, who I know, you know, very well,
00:34:25.660 Chester Arthur, um, on and on and on, uh, by the democratic party. And now the democratic party
00:34:32.600 is more radical left than ever before. And, uh, governor Hochul is not an intellectual genius.
00:34:39.480 She doesn't understand, um, unintended consequences of her action. You can put things in front of her
00:34:46.000 and say, look, uh, you raised taxes again, you're going to lose another 2 million people to Florida
00:34:50.800 and Texas and Tennessee and the Carolinas. And she goes, well, we don't really need them anyway.
00:34:56.080 Okay. Um, so it's a disaster here because it's like Illinois and California is what it is. The
00:35:06.220 progressives have hijacked the state and they're ruining it. And the people who can move are moving.
00:35:12.820 It's amazing. Um, Bill O'Reilly. Thank you so much, Bill O'Reilly. You can find him every day in
00:35:18.380 his no spin news at billoreilly.com. Uh, he's also the author of many killing books. Killing the
00:35:25.120 killers is the latest one that is out. Uh, all of his books, I think are, are must reads are 17
00:35:31.260 million books in the killing series in print. Now, Bill O'Reilly. Thank you so much. We will
00:35:36.220 talk to you again next week. All right, Beck. Thanks. You got it. Bye-bye.
00:35:42.280 All right, man, there's so much news going on that we're just not even going to get a chance to
00:35:47.460 get to. Let me tell you about our sponsor this half hour. It's a real estate agents. I trust.com.
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00:36:05.260 basement when the lights are off. Yes. Yes. And then there is also buying and selling homes.
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00:36:17.460 but it makes things a lot, lot better when you are dealing with real estate agents. I trust.com.
00:36:24.520 If you're considering buying or selling real estate, um, please consider just notifying,
00:36:31.680 um, real estate agents. I trust.com get a great real estate agent. The one we have vetted and found
00:36:39.620 in your area, somebody that is a listener and a fan of the program. So they think like you,
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00:36:53.420 when they go in and buy and sell a house. So please don't just get anybody, get the people that we've
00:37:01.700 vetted and really feel are the absolute best, and then do your own homework and, and interview them.
00:37:07.020 Real estate agents. I trust.com. That's real estate agents. I trust.com. This is the Glenn Beck program.
00:37:28.180 Welcome to Friday.
00:37:32.680 Stu, are you there? Welcome. Um, in the background, I've been getting emails, uh, on what the heck is
00:37:41.520 playing behind me. I'll have to turn it off. Uh, as I was doing show prep earlier this morning,
00:37:46.320 I was listening to, uh, kunk on earth. Uh, has anybody seen that on and off? Yeah, there you are.
00:37:54.520 Stu, can you, are you there? Okay. Uh, he can't hear me now. So, uh, kunk on earth is, um, this
00:38:03.000 really, really exceptionally funny, uh, and irreverent mockumentary, um, uh, starring Diane
00:38:10.840 Morgan. She plays Philomena kunk. Um, and it, it is, it's one of the funniest, uh, series I've seen.
00:38:22.280 I mean, at times belly laugh out loud. I don't know how she has the courage to do a lot of the
00:38:29.900 stuff she does, but she's doing a history. She's done, um, um, um, you know, kunk on the United
00:38:38.200 Kingdom, kunk on other humans. Uh, she's done several of these and she speaks to experts and these
00:38:48.460 experts have no idea. She is, you know, it's not a real doc. It's not a real documentary and you watch
00:38:58.240 these guys and she's just dumb as a box of rocks. It is honestly, it's like talking to,
00:39:05.740 well, it's like talking to a, you know, a, a, uh, uh, high school student in the most progressive
00:39:12.980 city in America. She knows nothing about what is going on. And, uh, it's just hysterical if you
00:39:19.380 haven't seen it, I think it's on Netflix, but BBC has, uh, has all of them, but, uh, Netflix has
00:39:25.580 kunk on, uh, on earth. Uh, all right, coming up in, uh, just a second, we're going to be, uh, talking to
00:39:34.360 a good friend of mine who I, I just think is remarkable. His name is Arthur Brooks. He is,
00:39:41.280 uh, then don't hold this against him. He's a Harvard Kennedy school professor, Harvard business
00:39:45.880 school professor. He actually is a columnist for the, uh, Atlantic, all things that would make me say,
00:39:52.660 I hate this guy. Um, but he is a free market guy. Um, and he has, he has lived around the world
00:40:03.040 and traveled the world and he sees what works and what doesn't. I mean, he spent a lot of time,
00:40:10.480 uh, just studying India and how capitalism has really helped, but he's also fascinated by,
00:40:20.000 um, by happiness and what causes happiness. And so I called him a couple of weeks ago and I,
00:40:25.960 I said, um, Arthur, I, you know, I think Americans are struggling with depression and
00:40:32.640 suicidal thoughts, unlike any other time. And, um, and the world is going into meaninglessness.
00:40:40.920 Can you help bring some light to this and shed some light on, uh, what the problem is and,
00:40:49.700 and, and what maybe some of the solutions are that we can actually apply in our life. So he's on here
00:40:57.940 in just a, in just a few minutes. And then in an hour from now, Whitney Webb is, uh, going to be
00:41:05.040 here. She has written the book, one nation under blackmail. She's a journalist. And I mean, I think
00:41:12.800 one of the best in the country, uh, or in the world actually, as a, um, investigative journalist,
00:41:19.940 I don't think she likes me all that much, but her information is really, really well put together
00:41:27.600 and solid. And she's going to be on in about 60 minutes. The Glenn Beck program. If you're just
00:41:34.760 joining us, thank you for listening. We had a massive power, uh, hit at our studio complex the third
00:41:41.180 time, uh, in the last couple of months. I don't know what's going on, but we'll get some answers.
00:41:46.900 Welcome leap, um, is a new program from Wilk welcome and they have ties to DARPA. And now I
00:41:56.680 believe with welcome leap, the ties are even stronger with DARPA. Tell me, tell me what's
00:42:02.520 going on. So welcome leap was created in 2020, but it didn't really become active until more or less
00:42:09.620 the latter part of 2021. Um, and essentially they described the vision as a global health
00:42:17.760 DARPA equivalent. So for people that don't know, DARPA is the, uh, advanced research or investigative
00:42:23.440 arm of the Pentagon. And they have historically been very involved in financing, um, research
00:42:30.560 related to transhumanist technologies. Uh, and, um, as a former DARPA director describes it, uh,
00:42:37.900 describes it fixing the technological mismatch between humans and machines. And of course,
00:42:43.520 transhumanism was all about merging man and machine. So that very director, whose name is
00:42:48.940 Regina Dugan is the person that was appointed to be the head of the welcome leap by the then
00:42:54.660 director and still current director of the welcome trust, Jeremy Farrar. And, um, Regina Dugan,
00:43:01.600 after she was, uh, left the, uh, her role as the director of DARPA during the Obama administration,
00:43:07.360 uh, worked for Google and then later Facebook and creating DARPA equivalents for those companies
00:43:12.500 where among other things, she created, um, a, what she called a digital pill that turns you into
00:43:18.240 your own authentication token, turns your body essentially into a digital ID, um, smart clothing,
00:43:24.040 um, being, uh, using a wearable on your body that can read your brain signals so that you don't
00:43:30.340 even have to physically type the device reads your brain signal and knows what you're going to type
00:43:36.160 before you even move your hands and things of, of that nature. So now she's been, uh, head hunted
00:43:41.560 essentially to run this global health DARPA. And this is actually, um, a model that was recently
00:43:47.620 created and enacted by the Biden administration and an agency called ARPA H where the head of the
00:43:53.980 CIA's DARPA equivalent, IARPA, um, or I don't know if she was the head, but she was, um,
00:43:59.460 she had worked there is now in charge of, of that particular agency, which is supposed to be a
00:44:04.900 health DARPA. Um, so this is a model that isn't exclusive to welcome week, but the people that are
00:44:10.240 there, um, including Ken Gabriel, who was, uh, the deputy of, uh, deputy director of DARPA under
00:44:16.000 Regina Dugan is again with her at welcome week, uh, to research a variety of programs. I think they're
00:44:21.120 up to seven now. Uh, some of them focus on, um, infants, uh, as young as three months of age.
00:44:26.960 Uh, some of them relate to, uh, fetuses in utero, uh, and some of them, uh, you know, are essentially
00:44:34.460 transhumanists in nature, trying to grow with the intention of implanting into people, human machine,
00:44:40.140 uh, hybrid organs. Um, I mean, all sorts of stuff are being developed here. So Whitney, hold on just a
00:44:48.500 second. I got to take a one minute break and then, um, come back. I mean, we, we, we have to focus,
00:44:53.820 uh, the woman who is running this when she was at DARPA, um, she was investigated and found that,
00:45:01.700 uh, she was actually profiting illegally, um, on her, her own tech firm. Uh, she's a woman that
00:45:11.100 doesn't seem to have an awful lot of scruples, uh, and she is running this, this DARPA, if you will,
00:45:20.300 with welcome leap. Um, and we're going to get into what are they trying to do with babies again
00:45:27.400 and the brain scans and everything else. AI is coming faster than you can possibly imagine.
00:45:35.400 And you need to pay attention. We'll give more on that. Just a second.
00:45:39.640 There's a reason why it's important. Your children learn about personal responsibility. It's not just
00:45:44.500 because you want them to be well-behaved. It's because you want them to be successful adults
00:45:48.860 someday. Um, and they are the next generation and this next generation is going to be the one that
00:45:54.180 saves us honestly from ourselves. If they have, you know, the, the correct principles. That's what
00:46:02.040 I love about Whitney. She is young. She is, um, eager and she is wicked, wicked smart. We need more
00:46:10.820 people like this that are out there fighting every day, fighting for the truth, fighting for the truth.
00:46:18.080 All right. Tuttle Twins, uh, has a, uh, a new book called 12 rules bootcamp. It was modeled, um,
00:46:26.160 after, uh, Jordan Peterson's book, the 12 rules for life, but it's for kids of all ages and it will
00:46:32.740 begin to help teach, you know, the valuable lessons that we are putting in the dustbin right now.
00:46:39.020 Tuttle Twins. Today is the last day you can get this book for free. You just pay for shipping
00:46:44.020 Tuttle Twins Beck.com. Get this book now for your family, for your kids or your grandkids or,
00:46:50.800 you know, people, you know, down the street, Tuttle Twins and the 12 rules bootcamp. Get it now for
00:46:57.000 free at Tuttle Twins Beck.com. Today is the last day. Tuttle Twins Beck.com. 10 seconds. Station ID.
00:47:04.920 So there is, uh, there's talk now, uh, from, you know, the stock market that by 2020, I'm sorry,
00:47:22.440 2030, Amazon will have more AI than it will have human workers. It's not just jobs though. What is
00:47:32.520 happening with AI is a really insidious, uh, way to control you, control everything, um, and know
00:47:44.820 exactly what you're thinking, what you're dreaming about. We're talking to, uh, Whitney Webb, um, about,
00:47:52.240 uh, the welcome leap. So can, can you, can you give us an idea of, uh, for instance, let's look at
00:48:00.740 what they're doing with the babies and brainwaves. What are they looking for?
00:48:06.340 Sure. So this particular program, uh, the way they describe it is about essentially leveling the
00:48:12.460 playing field for, uh, cognition, but in, in infants. So the program specifically targets infants,
00:48:19.680 uh, beginning at three months of age and goes about to three years of age. But when you actually look at
00:48:25.080 the different goals within this program, it becomes very clear. There's a lot more going on here than what
00:48:29.860 they, how they publicly pitch, um, the aim of this particular program. So essentially there's a
00:48:36.680 couple of different stages to this program. Uh, but how it starts is, you know, these children who
00:48:43.320 are essentially being, uh, used as tests of the subjects by welcome leap in this venture, um, would
00:48:49.380 have, uh, wearables on their bodies that monitor, um, their brain state that, uh, track how their eyes
00:48:57.520 move, eye tracking technology would be constantly surveilled in, uh, the environment they live in
00:49:03.440 and the way it's described, it's constant. So this means this child would be constantly surveilled,
00:49:09.020 not going outside, staying in this particular environment, having these things on their body
00:49:13.660 that, that count how many steps they take, how many turns they take and see how that, um, affects
00:49:19.060 their, uh, brain development. The goal for this as stated in the program is to develop what they call
00:49:25.200 an in silico model of the developing human brain, you know, for infants, three months to three years
00:49:31.760 of age. And this is essentially an artificial model, an artificial brain, uh, that would mimic,
00:49:38.560 uh, a growing human brain, uh, during that particular period of time. But then once they have that model,
00:49:46.720 what they hope to do is to subject children to screening, to see if their brain, uh, through certain
00:49:54.160 cognitive markers, they identify. Okay. I want to get back into this with Whitney in just a couple
00:50:01.520 of minutes program because just the eye tracking on, on children and infants alone is, should be
00:50:08.160 terrifying, uh, to everyone. Let me tell you about our, uh, sponsor this half hour. It is rough greens.
00:50:14.400 Uh, rough greens is something great for your dog. It's vitamins, minerals, has absolutely everything
00:50:21.360 your dog needs, uh, for a healthy and happy life. Get your first bag for free right now at
00:50:27.520 roughgreens.com slash Beck. It's roughgreens.com slash Beck. Don't forget tonight, five o'clock,
00:50:40.400 our special on the WEF and what's next.
00:50:53.120 Welcome back to the program. Um, if you're just joining us, thank you for listening. We had a massive
00:50:58.880 power, uh, hit at our studio complex the third time, uh, in the last couple of months. I don't know what's
00:51:06.400 going on, but we'll get some answers. Um, we have been talking to Whitney Webb. She is, I think, one of
00:51:12.960 the best journalists on planet earth today. Um, and you really need, you might not agree with everything
00:51:20.160 she says. I mean, I don't think she agrees with very much of what I say. Um, but you have to listen
00:51:26.880 to her. Um, she knows her stuff and what is coming and the connections to some of the most nefarious
00:51:35.760 people I think on planet earth today. So we've been talking to her about, um, this welcome leap.
00:51:42.320 Welcome is a company in, uh, or a trust, uh, kind of like the Bill and Melinda Gates foundation,
00:51:48.800 but they have their roots in eugenics. Like Bill Gates has his roots in Planned Parenthood. He still
00:51:55.840 kinds of thing. He thinks much of the same kind of stuff. Um, and we were talking about testing that
00:52:02.160 they're going to be doing complete surveillance on children, babies from three months old to three
00:52:09.600 years old and tracking their eye movements. Eye movement tracking is the most dangerous thing you
00:52:16.720 could ever give to somebody because they will know exactly how you think just from your eye movements.
00:52:24.560 And, uh, uh, uh, you don't ever want to hand that to, uh, to somebody. They're also,
00:52:30.640 um, doing total surveillance to treat depression, which I want to get into with, um, uh, Whitney,
00:52:36.560 but you have to understand a lot of these big, huge global, um, movements are all about controlling
00:52:46.640 the population, not about helping, not about making you healthier as a human, but making you
00:52:53.600 a better worker. And I don't think that's overstating the case. Whitney, would you agree?
00:53:02.240 Yeah, I don't think that's overstating it at all. So, um, I'm assuming you'd like to go back to the,
00:53:07.040 the ultimate ambition of this particular, um, yes, focused on, on toddlers.
00:53:12.560 Yes. And the ultimate, and then we want to talk about the depression, uh, treatments.
00:53:19.760 Right. So, um, as I was saying earlier, um, so they, they want to subject these children to
00:53:25.120 very invasive surveillance, uh, that's surveilling, not just what they're doing externally, but also
00:53:30.000 what's going on internally, uh, and to use that to develop an in silico model of a developing child's
00:53:36.400 brain. Then what they hope to do is, uh, the type of surveillance that was previously discussed,
00:53:43.600 subject that to 80% of children by 2030 with the goal of developing interventions. Uh, they say,
00:53:53.840 if any of, uh, these children being surveilled in this way are not, uh, their brain is not in line
00:54:01.040 with the model they developed. They will then intervene and make the child's brain fit the model
00:54:07.360 they develop as the ideal child's brain. It's essentially an effort to homogenize, uh, human
00:54:14.640 cognition, starting with babies and children. And at the same time, uh, essentially getting them
00:54:20.480 accustomed to living a life of complete invasive surveillance, which is, you know, you're familiar
00:54:25.520 with, uh, discussions at, uh, WEF, uh, annual meetings or people like you all know a Harari,
00:54:31.440 that is the plan for everyone. Yes. For Wellcome Leaf, you have, you know, uh,
00:54:35.760 DARPA directors tied to the biggest big tech companies in the U S and the Wellcome Trust,
00:54:40.560 essentially looking to have this, uh, foisted upon our children. And this is important because
00:54:46.400 the person behind Wellcome Leaf, Jeremy Farrar is due to become chief scientist of the World Health
00:54:52.400 Organization in a matter of weeks. At the same time, the World Health Organization is seeking
00:54:57.520 to expand its power through amending the international health regulations, uh, which
00:55:02.320 is a binding treaty among the World Health Organization and member states. So for example,
00:55:08.480 here's an example of how they could get to this 80% by 2030. Let's say that the World Health Organization,
00:55:14.960 if they obtain these new powers, uh, they can declare a public health emergency of international
00:55:19.840 concerns. We've seen over the past few weeks how the Biden administration is considering declaring
00:55:24.640 the lack of abortions going on in the U S right now, a public health emergency. What if the OMF or
00:55:30.400 sorry, the World Health Organization declares autism and emergency like that? Then Jeremy Farrar,
00:55:36.960 who came up with this program decides that, oh, well, this is the only way to decide if the child
00:55:42.160 would be autistic or not. And we can intervene in their brain at an early stage and prevent any
00:55:47.600 kids from ever being autistic again. Does that sound like something that people would do?
00:55:52.480 Oh yeah, absolutely. Absolutely. And, and you know, what's terrifying is people,
00:55:59.280 this sounds like sci-fi to most people. They have no, I'll talk to friends about it and they'll be
00:56:05.440 like, yeah, yeah, yeah. No, no, no, no. You're when I, when I said these things were coming 20 years ago,
00:56:12.320 it was because I was reading people like, you know, Ray Kurzweil who was talking about these things,
00:56:17.520 but it was 2030. So it was, you know, 30 years away. It's happening. It is happening. And in the
00:56:26.720 next couple of years, all of this stuff will be set into stone if people don't wake up. Let me talk
00:56:33.840 about the total surveillance to, to treat depression. Um, this is, this is just launched,
00:56:41.440 you said this week, according to this article. Um, and it's not really fighting depression.
00:56:49.600 It's not to make people happier. Can you explain? Yeah. So actually the, the article you're referring
00:56:56.480 to that I wrote, I actually wrote two years ago. So this program is two years down the line.
00:57:01.040 And it's the same case with the toddler program. Yes. It's, it's very, very, uh, unfortunate. So
00:57:07.760 this particular program is aimed at treating depression and the way they define depression
00:57:12.000 isn't the lack of, of the inability to experience pleasure. Instead, they define it as a lack of
00:57:19.120 interest in achieving, uh, uh, um, rewards, like work related rewards, like points accumulation,
00:57:25.600 and, you know, sort of like the same dopamine rush people get from, uh, Facebook and, and social
00:57:30.560 media, things like that. So it's allowing that to happen, but has no interest in, uh, restoring
00:57:35.600 the ability of someone who's depressed to experience pleasure, which if you've ever had depression or
00:57:40.320 know someone who has is arguably the most important part of the whole equation. And one of the ways they
00:57:46.160 want to go about doing this is developing, uh, a similar, um, uh, grouping of devices, sort of like
00:57:53.600 what was, uh, piloted or pitched in this, uh, child focused program, but for adults, including
00:57:59.200 technology that could be used according to them, be used to interrogate the current, uh, state of
00:58:04.480 someone's brain, um, their thoughts and, and things like that as a mean of, of depression and then
00:58:10.720 various, um, you know, uh, extreme, they were used the term interventions, but these are all things that
00:58:16.720 are meant to permanently alter, uh, your, uh, neurological makeup essentially. And this is,
00:58:23.680 you know, ultimately under the guise of treating a depression, but they want this type of technology
00:58:28.000 to be actively used in the workplace. And if you're familiar, uh, with what happened at, uh,
00:58:32.880 the World Economic Forum annual meeting just a month ago, there was a lady who spoke, who talked
00:58:37.680 about, oh, um, there's these air, uh, earbuds, uh, you know, headphones are going to be on the market
00:58:43.680 soon. And they'll be able to tell your boss, uh, whether you're paying attention or not,
00:58:47.520 what you're paying attention to, all of this technology is already here. And she made a case
00:58:52.640 to try and not get this technology banned because it had so many positive uses. Uh, but her main,
00:58:57.440 uh, pitch for it was this can not just improve productivity at the office. Um, it can help fight
00:59:05.200 crime. So again, there's been a longstanding effort to create a predictive policing or pre-crime
00:59:12.080 situation, including in the United States. And the antecedents for this were already established
00:59:16.800 by, uh, Trump's attorney general, William Barr, who established a program called deep that was
00:59:21.840 all about creating, um, uh, a means of, uh, essentially arresting people before they allegedly
00:59:28.480 are going to conduct a violent crime based on their social media posts. Some arrests have
00:59:33.440 been made in this program. And this, um, effort at the same time was being pitched by a Jared Kushner
00:59:40.400 to the Trump administration, among other people who wanted to create a health DARPA,
00:59:45.200 DARPA, they were calling it. Uh, and then, as I mentioned earlier in the program, this was actually
00:59:49.920 created by the Biden administration, the same exact entity, but they called it ARPA-H instead.
00:59:54.160 They just moved the H to the end. But the first program is being pitched. Um, you know,
00:59:59.200 in this period of time, they called it safe homes. And the idea was to data mine what you are posting
01:00:04.880 on social media and then run it through an AI algorithm that will identify if anything you
01:00:09.680 have posted, uh, presents neuropsychiatric warning signs of violence. And if those are identified,
01:00:17.920 then you have to go, you will be ordered by a court to go to a mental health official,
01:00:23.680 or you could be, uh, interned somewhere. Uh, you know, this was how the program was essentially
01:00:29.120 set up. And thankfully under the Trump administration, it was not put into force,
01:00:32.240 but the Biden administration has created it, but they described it as an institution
01:00:36.640 that was being created to fight cancer, but it's the same exact program and the same exact
01:00:42.160 architects of what was being pitched and was rejected by the Trump administration.
01:00:46.640 So, uh, this agenda is not exclusive to welcome leap and the Biden administration is going very far
01:00:52.480 and implementing that. And, um, I would say that the recently, um, removed, uh, chief science advisor,
01:00:58.720 Eric Lander, uh, to Biden was a very enthusiastic supporter of these types of policies. He was
01:01:04.880 actually, um, allegedly, at least according to Jeffrey Epstein, heavily financed by him. Um,
01:01:10.080 and has a lot of, um, own rather odd ties to people who have espoused eugenics related ideology
01:01:15.920 over the years. So this particular program being developed by welcome leap is also the same means
01:01:22.240 essentially you're being pursued elsewhere as well. So I felt like that was important.
01:01:26.400 So Whitney, uh, first of all, I want to thank you for coming on the program. I know you get a lot of
01:01:31.760 heat from people who follow you for being on my program. I I'm sure we disagree on a lot of things.
01:01:37.360 Um, but the, uh, the only thing is required for me, um, to, uh, you know, bring people into my bubble
01:01:47.440 is, do you agree with the bill of rights? Do you believe that those are basic human rights that
01:01:54.560 should never be violated or taken away from people? As long as you say that, and you believe that,
01:02:02.320 you know, we're going to disagree here and there, and we're all at a different place in our own
01:02:06.880 education on what's going on. This is all this stuff that is going on is new to so many people.
01:02:14.400 Um, how, how, how do we, um, cross these barriers and get people to understand, um, you know, this is
01:02:26.720 not a conspiracy theory. These are conspiracy facts and, um, and people have got to wake up because
01:02:35.120 the system is pitting all of us against each other. And, you know, I'm a different man than I was 20
01:02:41.760 years ago, just because I learn. And I, I don't believe the same things I did 20 years ago.
01:02:48.400 How do we get everybody involved in this? Well, um, it's hard to say exactly what,
01:02:55.920 you know, a short-term solution would be, but I would urge people to definitely educate
01:03:01.120 your communities and yourself about this current power grab that's, um, uh, in the works at the
01:03:07.200 world health organization, because one of the things you mentioned, the bill of rights.
01:03:10.960 So originally the international health regulation started off by saying that everything the world
01:03:16.080 health organization, uh, recommends to its member states, particularly in declared pandemics,
01:03:21.280 among other things, uh, is done with the full respect for dignity and human freedom and human rights.
01:03:27.680 And if this amendment is passed, they take that whole section out. It's no more dignity, no more human
01:03:33.360 freedom, no more human rights. None of it has to be respected at all. And they certainly, a lot of these
01:03:37.840 people, including Jeremy Farrar, who was an architect of, of most of, uh, us and UK, uh,
01:03:43.680 COVID policy has made it very clear. He doesn't respect those things at all. Uh, but instead the amendment is
01:03:48.640 all about equity and coherence of communication. That's the only thing they have to care about.
01:03:53.280 Um, if these are put through and what does that ultimately mean? We're all, uh, equally enslaved,
01:03:59.760 uh, by, by the system. And, um, so I would encourage people to look at that and, and raise awareness
01:04:05.360 about that, because if we can stop that, then we can hopefully at least lessen, uh, further power grab
01:04:11.200 attempts down the line under the guise of biosecurity, um, in the future, because historically, you know,
01:04:16.800 pandemics have been a once in a century event. And now we have people, uh, talking about like,
01:04:21.680 if it's going to be happening again in just a couple more years time, um, how convenient for
01:04:25.760 the people that benefited this last time around. Um, Whitney, uh, I truly believe you are one of
01:04:32.400 the most important voices in the world to be heard. I, I hope it doesn't, uh, it isn't so long in
01:04:38.000 between our conversations, because I'd like you to try to figure out ways to make this more bite size for
01:04:43.840 people of my audience. Um, uh, at least because I, I really think you're doing amazing work and I
01:04:51.360 appreciate it. Thank you so much. You bet. Whitney, Whitney Webb. Um, and I'm going to tweet out some
01:04:58.160 of her articles. We'll do that, um, here coming up in just a little while. So follow my Twitter.
01:05:04.320 All right. Let me tell you about, um, gold line.
01:05:11.920 Are you watching the Netflix, uh, show, uh, the last of us? I think it's called, um,
01:05:19.040 um, I just saw the first episode, Tanya and I watched it last night and, and, uh, the first
01:05:25.040 episode when they're leaving the cities, uh, I said to Tanya, man, it's coming. It's not zombie
01:05:31.000 stuff, but it's, it's absolutely coming and you have to prepare for the absolute unthinkable.
01:05:39.400 And when that comes to your money, you, there's going to come a time when you're going to need
01:05:45.720 to trade on something. I mean, the world economic forum says it's going to be a banking crisis.
01:05:50.680 That's going to happen in the next 24 months. And that'll mean you, all your money is, will be cut
01:05:55.360 off. All your money will be cut off. So what, what do you do for food? Do you have anything to
01:06:01.440 trade? Do you have any silver gold? When there's a banking crisis, I guarantee you the entire system
01:06:08.160 will be reset and your dollar will be worth a lot less. Please, please call and do your own homework
01:06:16.640 on gold and silver from gold line. Gold lines offering a huge special on their newest quarter
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01:06:41.260 866 gold line 866 gold line or gold line.com. This is the Glenn Beck program.
01:06:51.920 Welcome to the Glenn Beck program. It is, uh, it's, uh, it's a fascinating time we live in. Please,
01:07:03.700 please, um, don't listen to the urges to dismiss these things or to stop worrying about them. Um,
01:07:13.480 it's going to take us, you know, it's going to take us to stop it and save the Republic. Um,
01:07:19.560 tonight, if you're watching blaze TV at five o'clock, I have my Wednesday night special, which
01:07:24.400 I'm going to go in here in a little while for the five o'clock special. Um, it is, if you're a James
01:07:30.600 Bond fan, you're going to love it. I compare, um, specter from James Bond to the W E F. I think it's the
01:07:40.880 same organization. Um, but we'll talk about their next catastrophe that they're trying to prepare us
01:07:48.480 for, uh, which is a massive digital outage all tonight blaze TV and Glenn Beck YouTube back program.