Taylor Swift IS the NFL Now. Is Anything Sacred?? | Guests: Miss Kay & Korie Robertson | 9⧸29⧸23
Episode Stats
Length
2 hours and 4 minutes
Words per Minute
159.94717
Summary
Glenn Beck talks about the death of Sen. Dianne Feinstein and why she should have been the next president of California. He also talks about why Hillary Clinton should have won the primary and why her loss to Bernie Sanders was actually a good thing.
Transcript
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I told you years ago that if we can make it to 2024, the tides would start to change,
00:02:02.260
and some of this stuff would start to ebb back and then fall away because we're operating on a pendulum kind of system.
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It looks like that is finally starting to happen.
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Not how I choose to live my life, but who am I to judge?
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So we have some breaking news that Dianne Feinstein has passed away.
00:03:36.960
And so they're going to be looking for a replacement.
00:03:39.540
Gavin Newsom is going to be appointing a replacement.
00:04:00.460
What about if Newsom decided to ask the president,
00:04:08.480
Hey, what about putting Kamala in as the senator?
00:04:25.380
Well, maybe Gavin Newsom could be vice president.
00:04:54.300
Well, I know your justification to the media or to conservatives or whatever might be that.
00:05:05.020
But my question is, what is her incentive for taking this?
00:05:11.120
What was the incentive for Hillary Clinton to all of a sudden say, okay, Barack's the guy, not me.
00:05:23.640
There was a, there was a, there was a, there was an absolute deal cut.
00:05:30.060
But she was also, uh, she, that, that, that was a deal that was cut.
00:05:37.220
But, but, but, and maybe she did think that that was a better choice for some reason.
00:05:40.740
I, I think she just lost the primary, but still, this is Kamala freaking Harris we're
00:05:47.160
You're telling me she's going to step down from the vice, vice presidency.
00:05:50.000
Would that be the most, the weirdest thing you've seen in, let's just say the last five
00:05:56.820
No, the weirdest thing would be the Republican house approving Gavin Newsom as the next vice
00:06:03.160
president, which they would need to do in this scenario.
00:06:08.760
If that did happen, I would be surprised, but the Republicans would have to approve this.
00:06:14.380
And of course the Democrats know that this would not be something.
00:06:22.700
Oh, coming up with scenarios to get Kamala Harris to not be your next choice should be
00:06:29.200
a high priority for the Democrats, but I don't know how they'd pull this off.
00:06:32.120
And this is the problem with both Joe Biden and Kamala Harris.
00:06:35.140
Once they have the job, they're among the most powerful people in the world.
00:06:40.500
And it's really hard to get them out of those positions because they have to agree to it.
00:06:45.580
Joe Biden should, of course, not be running, but it's his choice at the end of the day.
00:06:51.280
And this is why I've believed since the beginning, when everyone said there's no way he makes it
00:06:57.780
through this first term, there's no way he runs again.
00:07:00.160
He has spent his entire life trying to get into this house.
00:07:09.380
If he just went away, none of this probably would have happened with Hunter.
00:07:18.360
I know he looks tired all the time, but he still does want this really badly.
00:07:23.600
He likes playing most powerful man in the world.
00:07:28.680
I think he stays in unless his approval ratings start hitting like the 20s and he's forced
00:07:33.560
out because they start saying, you know, OK, you're going to prison.
00:07:38.040
I cannot believe he's going to be the candidate.
00:07:40.800
He has degraded so much just in the last couple of months.
00:07:48.500
And I would not be stunned by any means if he had, quote unquote, health concerns or he
00:07:57.120
I still think the most likely scenario is that this this doddering old fool is their nominee.
00:08:03.400
I really I think that's the most likely outcome of this.
00:08:21.860
How could he possibly stand on stage and debate?
00:08:26.260
I think we've and I think we've advanced this a lot for a long time.
00:08:29.540
I would say 90 percent of the time we've done the show together, which has been far too
00:08:34.700
I would say we would have both said as part of our analysis, you can't skip to you can't
00:08:43.400
But look, we have in the primary Trump is skipping the debates with a, you know, a good
00:08:49.780
But also, I mean, a better example of this might be Katie Hobbs, who just skipped the debates
00:09:01.240
You know that Joe Biden is like, I'm not going to, I'm not going to lower myself to
00:09:10.040
He won't say this with this much emotion, but I will not show up.
00:09:20.780
He won't say it with that much emotion, but yes, he'll say something like that.
00:09:24.480
And the left will accept it and the media will accept it.
00:09:30.520
So anyway, I mean, we just went over to politics right away.
00:09:38.040
What, what the Senate part of this too is important.
00:09:44.600
If you think Menendez is stepping down anytime soon, I have news for you.
00:09:48.620
They're not, there's no way they're going to give up control of the Senate.
00:09:52.280
I don't care if they have him on video murdering children.
00:09:56.400
He will not step down until they name a new person in California.
00:09:59.200
Gavin Newsom is going to, oh yeah, you're saying.
00:10:04.100
And also I don't think they're going to risk going 51 to 50.
00:10:13.440
And then beyond this, of course, is the disgusting display we have witnessed with Dianne Feinstein over the past, what, two years where they have wheeled her in to press buttons and vote and call out the wrong vote over and over again.
00:10:28.360
And a just, just a disgraceful, almost beyond what you believed was possible as a low for the Democratic Party, almost yet they achieved it wheeling in a woman who had absolutely no awareness of her location.
00:10:54.680
Do you think there's a chance somebody sitting next to her would just would have gone, hi!
00:11:07.760
Let's say she's in the cloakroom 10 minutes before a vote.
00:11:28.660
It was not really a success, but everyone remembers it.
00:11:43.480
But if the budget were going to be in the Senate, they'd wait for the vote to be at midnight.
00:12:03.520
What if she had events she had to attend over the weekend?
00:12:11.980
But she still made it with the heroic effort to get down to the floor.
00:12:20.580
By the way, this is not, we're not making fun of her or her death.
00:12:24.840
We are, we're honestly trying to speculate on how low would the Democrats go?
00:12:37.080
Was she surrounded by all those she loves, the interns?
00:12:44.940
They didn't give her a year, two years, five years of enjoying her final days with her family.
00:12:52.760
None of that got to happen because this group of people that surrounded her were horrible.
00:13:00.620
And look, we can look back at Dianne Feinstein's career as a senator.
00:13:05.180
People will, of course, make it to be this magical thing and all the things she fought for.
00:13:09.220
I, of course, thought she was a really bad senator, right?
00:13:12.600
But she lived long enough to go from a radical in her party to the right wing of her party.
00:13:20.340
I mean, she was to the point where, like, she was saying relatively positive things about Republicans and being trashed by her own supporters party and online.
00:13:32.060
She lived all the way to become, essentially, the right wing of the party from California.
00:13:41.740
Just because she was a radical Democrat in, like, what, the 60s, and she, that radical Democrat in the 60s is now, doesn't, barely even fits in the Democratic Party.
00:13:57.860
They would absolutely call John F. Kennedy Hitler.
00:14:01.500
I'm going to share that with you in just a second.
00:14:03.220
First, if you're a shooter, I'm sure you've noticed the ammo prices and the availability of ammo.
00:14:12.480
You might as well just take your wallet and just take a blowtorch to it.
00:14:20.180
I am the, I'm the cheapest out-of-control spending rich man you've ever met.
00:14:26.260
Little things like ammo drive me out of my mind, but I'll be like, wait a minute, the all-in-the-family set, that's available?
00:14:37.140
Anyway, Mantis X, I don't like going to the range right now because I think ammo is precious, but I've got to keep my skill up.
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00:15:32.060
Okay, I just, I told you at the beginning of the hour that, when was it, I don't know, 10, 15 years ago, because I read the pendulum and the fourth turning and everything else, I felt that we were going to start coming back.
00:15:56.420
That pendulum is going to start swinging back to sanity around 2024.
00:16:08.280
San Francisco Democratic Mayor London Breed recently proposed mandatory drug testing and treatment for any receiving welfare.
00:16:22.140
His initiative would require those suspected of substance abuse problems who want to receive funds through the county adult assistance program to undergo mandatory drug testing and treatment programs.
00:16:35.140
Those who refuse testing and treatment interventions would be ineligible to receive county-funded cash assistance.
00:16:49.840
According to K-Run TV, approximately 8,000 homeless people reside in San Francisco.
00:17:14.320
This is the progressive mayor of San Francisco.
00:17:25.820
This is the top law enforcement analyst at CNN.
00:17:31.240
They're talking about, you know, Philadelphia and what happened in Philadelphia and the riots.
00:17:39.460
The CNN analyst, John Miller, he's chief law enforcement analyst.
00:17:44.740
He said the situation in Philadelphia is endemic of a larger problem striking Democrat-controlled cities.
00:17:52.280
The problem, he said, is that looters exploit protests using, quote,
00:17:59.040
sophisticated communication networks to organize mass crime sprees.
00:18:04.100
They're emboldened by progressive criminal justice reform that seeks to decrease the penalty for property crimes,
00:18:16.460
suggesting the litmus test for such reform is to see where organized property crime is occurring.
00:18:25.500
I mean, shoplifting and organized retail theft happening in places like New York, Los Angeles, Philadelphia.
00:18:32.700
If you look at where the targets closed nine stores yesterday, four stores in San Francisco, stores in Seattle, Portland and New York.
00:18:43.720
These are all the places where bail reform laws, criminal justice reforms have taken the inside of a jail cell out of the equation.
00:18:53.340
So shoplifting is a crime where a judge can't set bail and quote.
00:18:58.980
All right, so we may be slipping back into a worm on this, sucked back into reality.
00:19:08.000
But now we have the San Francisco mayor and a CNN analyst actually, you know, wising up.
00:19:20.560
From New York, New York City announced this week that it plans to hand out flyers to migrants,
00:19:31.160
discouraging them from seeking shelter in the sanctuary city of New York City and instructing them to go elsewhere instead.
00:19:40.900
So now you have the city, a sanctuary city, finally admitting that this is a bad idea.
00:19:50.340
We can't afford to be a sanctuary city for all that come in.
00:20:17.020
That we cannot take on all of these illegal aliens, all these migrants, because it's overwhelming the system.
00:20:30.620
What makes New York City different than the United States of America?
00:20:48.040
By the end of Joe Biden's first term, we'll have a population of illegals in this country
00:20:55.060
that will equal the population of what would be the 11th largest state out of all 50.
00:21:05.860
What they're saying is what we've been saying forever.
00:21:10.840
You have to have order and assistance and a system.
00:21:15.140
You have to take people in and balance what you're doing because you can't just, you can't sink the lifeboat.
00:21:26.860
That's what's happening in New York, and they're finally admitting it.
00:21:30.600
This is pretty similar to what Democrats used to say as recently as the mid-90s.
00:21:36.500
You know, this is not a crazy view for the Democratic Party to hold.
00:21:48.780
You know, Michael Schellenberger, who we've had on the show many times, he wrote a book called San Francisco a year or two ago.
00:21:55.480
And he was pointing out a lot of these same things, particularly about California.
00:22:02.020
And he, at one point, London Breed had signaled maybe some efforts of sanity earlier.
00:22:08.080
And it seemed like she was going in the right direction.
00:22:09.740
And then I guess got, you know, criticized by her left flank and stopped.
00:22:14.960
It will be interesting if she sticks with it this time, because you could really make a difference with.
00:22:19.380
Look, there's a lot of things I'd like to do in California that are never going to happen that I think would improve things.
00:22:23.700
But even just taking basic steps to sanity, you could improve it a lot.
00:22:44.820
Being able to lock in a price on something, on anything, when everything around you is jumping up and up and up in price.
00:22:51.960
And if they don't close the government this weekend, if they just sign on for a continuing resolution, you're not going to see a stop.
00:23:02.320
You will see a speed up of of higher rates for loans, which will crush the economy.
00:23:10.240
And you will also see higher prices everywhere.
00:23:14.400
So what can you do where you can lock in the price?
00:23:16.960
Well, if your car is no longer covered by a warranty, how about CarShield?
00:23:22.700
When you enroll with CarShield, you're getting protection plans.
00:23:42.040
No matter how many claims you file, how many miles you put on your car, nothing.
00:23:56.340
Go to BlazeTV.com slash Glenn and use the promo code Glenn.
00:24:09.160
So here's what we have to do this weekend, beginning tonight at midnight.
00:24:14.120
If we don't sign the CR and continuing resolution, which will just give us just a buttload of money,
00:24:21.260
just keep spending exactly like you were spending last year and no real accountability for any of it.
00:24:31.760
If we don't sign that by tonight, we got to shut the government down.
00:24:43.020
Well, Stu gave me a suggestion because I was confused when I came in.
00:24:53.480
If the government, now this is in the eventuality of a government shutdown.
00:24:57.880
Are you well-read enough to give a recommendation?
00:25:01.120
I mean, I wouldn't – I would be concerned if I was going to be held to some legal stand on it.
00:25:09.900
But I was thinking you could continue living your life exactly the same way.
00:25:26.240
And again, it's a fictional scenario at some level.
00:25:37.660
And the things you weren't going to do, don't do those.
00:25:44.540
Here's what – this is what's really going to happen, okay?
00:25:47.680
Okay, this is from the OMB, the Office of Management and Budget, and they have now released the contingency plans.
00:25:59.280
Now, please don't panic, but economic indicators like the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the Jobs Report, could be delayed this month.
00:26:12.700
The Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service, which is charged with promoting labor management cooperation –
00:26:29.460
They won't close, but they'll have to cut back in some of the things they do.
00:26:34.740
And this all amid the strike with the United Auto Workers.
00:26:37.380
What are the unions and the plants going to do without federal officials?
00:26:50.260
And the thing is, we're so used to high efficiency from the government.
00:26:55.600
And when we lose that, I don't – we're not – society could probably go sideways.
00:27:00.440
I'm going to throw everybody a bone here so you don't panic.
00:27:03.080
The Federal Reserve activity will be unaffected.
00:27:07.280
So they could still raise the interest rates on November 1st, no matter what happens.
00:27:14.520
The Federal Trade Commission, however, would stop the vast bulk of its competition and consumer
00:27:25.900
They would have to – the vast bulk of them would just stop.
00:27:40.180
The Security and Exchange Commission will not review or approve registrations from investment
00:27:46.740
advisors, broker dealers, transfer agents, rating organizations, investment companies,
00:27:54.880
They're not going to be able to – if you try to register –
00:28:02.020
For a new fund or something, a new rating agency?
00:28:10.660
They still do not have all of it because they're scrambling for this information now.
00:28:14.900
They didn't see this coming even though everyone saw it coming.
00:28:16.900
Again, to give you some good news, the IRS has not released their plans for this potential
00:28:24.440
However, previous plans have said that the IRS would use funds from Joe Biden's Inflation
00:28:31.320
Reduction Act to keep employees paid and working.
00:28:36.200
And a union representing the IRS workers has said, new plans are being discussed that would
00:28:44.900
However, businesses and individuals who requested that six-month extension for your tax return
00:28:50.180
in April, you will still be required to file by April 16th.
00:29:01.120
Yeah, emergency relief is going to be a problem.
00:29:04.700
A shutdown would create an increased risk that FEMA, their relief funds, could be depleted.
00:29:14.900
So there's a risk that their funds could be depleted if large additional catastrophic disasters
00:29:27.260
Now, of course, they would very easily pass funding for that almost immediately.
00:29:31.980
But still, we should deny that that would happen.
00:29:36.340
And we'll deny that not any of these people are going to get their money afterward.
00:29:39.240
We all know they're going to retroactively pass something to pay all of this stuff anyway.
00:29:43.560
It will just basically be an unpaid vacation for many people.
00:29:50.640
For those of you concerned about, hey, what about my energy?
00:29:54.960
This is what this draconian shutdown is going to do.
00:30:02.140
The Interior Department, which does all of the designing for the Capitol building and the
00:30:07.540
interiors and pick out the – oh, no, it's a – okay, apparently it doesn't do that.
00:30:13.460
The Department of Interior will retain limited discretion to use permits for energy projects on
00:30:21.540
federal lands and waters when user fees are attached.
00:30:24.560
So they'll retain just limited discretion to issue those permits, you know, for drilling
00:30:38.540
A funding lapse would paralyze other work to develop required environmental analysis for
00:30:45.340
all energy projects, highways, and other infrastructure.
00:30:49.820
The EPA may be able to continue some IRA-funded activities as well as other attempted work such
00:30:59.560
as settlement-funded cleanup at some Superfund sites.
00:31:04.780
Now, the White House is warning most EPA-led inspections at hazardous waste sites, as well
00:31:10.300
as drinking water and chemical facilities, is going to stop.
00:31:15.020
So your drinking water could go completely – it'll stop.
00:31:23.160
The Energy Information Administration, which publishes snapshots of the U.S. oil inventory,
00:31:30.000
it will continue to collect and publish data on schedule.
00:31:34.180
But they say at least initially, at least initially, our nuke sites are going to be maintained.
00:31:41.780
Nuclear Regulatory Commission, however, will stop all licensing of new nuclear facilities.
00:31:50.660
Because, I mean, we did the last one in 1978, and then –
00:32:02.440
This was the week it was going to happen, and now –
00:32:04.360
This was the week, and now, thanks to you MAGA Republicans –
00:32:11.620
Travelers could face delays as air traffic controllers and transportation security administration officers
00:32:23.360
I mean, they're really not, because they will be paid.
00:32:31.700
However, Amtrak, they're going to keep transporting those 12 passengers.
00:32:37.960
Is Ange going to continue to tell stories about how many miles Joe Biden has traveled on the train?
00:32:45.560
Even in death, as he was when he told the story to Joe Biden?
00:32:55.420
I thought those were going to be delayed, but they're not going to.
00:32:58.480
Efforts to defend the nation and conduct ongoing military operations will continue.
00:33:07.120
Burials and tours at Arlington National Cemetery will continue.
00:33:12.560
Did anyone doubt they were going to stop burying the bodies?
00:33:15.940
They're just going to pile up until we open up the government again.
00:33:19.200
COVID-19 response research, including vaccine and therapeutic development by the U.S. government
00:33:28.140
The National Institute of Health might have to postpone clinical trials for diseases like
00:33:36.800
cancer or Alzheimer's, according to the White House.
00:33:43.180
We were so close to him coming through with his promise of curing cancer.
00:33:50.680
We can actually check that at any point if you just go to HasJoeBidenCuredCancer.com.
00:34:03.860
Food stamps for low-income people, the disabled, and others could be delayed.
00:34:13.800
That is just to trot out the downtrodden, the people, and just say, look at what's happening.
00:34:20.220
If the IRS can stay open, food stamps can stay open.
00:34:25.420
Social security checks will be delivered, applications for benefits processed.
00:34:31.140
However, people will not be able to verify benefits or replace Medicare cards.
00:34:39.840
The Smithsonian and the National Gallery of Art may close.
00:34:47.300
Cemeteries, monuments, visitor centers worldwide, housed under the American Battle Monuments Commission,
00:34:56.020
So are they going to, and you said the national parks are going to close.
00:34:58.660
That means that these, many of these open field areas will not be open?
00:35:04.700
Yeah, they're going to put, they're going to build some fences around those things.
00:35:08.920
I don't think, we don't seem capable of building fences.
00:35:14.920
And you know, I tell you, you know that they are big on the blue.
00:35:19.360
They're just going to be, they'll be telling the blue, you make sure you're out there and
00:35:25.400
Don't you got somebody coming into the national park?
00:35:41.400
Sometimes, at least for many, many, many centuries.
00:35:45.060
The Capitol Police will not get paid under this.
00:36:07.500
Except for them, unlike thousands and thousands and thousands of other federal workers, they
00:36:15.140
Most of the federal workers that are going to get laid off are going to get all their
00:36:18.100
money and then not have to do their job for several weeks or however long this takes,
00:36:33.320
I mean, I think 15 days to slow the curve of spending.
00:36:40.860
Let's meet again in 15 days and see if we can open the government up.
00:36:44.540
We'll probably need another 30 days at least at that point.
00:36:48.620
Let's just 15 days to slow the curve of spending.
00:36:54.460
After the 15 and then the 30, we might need another 18 months after that.
00:36:58.320
I don't know if the government will survive that.
00:37:06.640
Of course, the American people did it for a year.
00:37:13.300
So can I also say, too, like, we talk about these big government cuts that we want to do.
00:37:19.020
We think there's things that we should we should do to make the government smaller, more like it was supposed to be.
00:37:29.980
You know, haven't they unintentionally identified all of the cuts here?
00:37:35.160
Haven't they just said, hey, whatever, we're just going to stop doing the unnecessary parts of the government that can just shut down.
00:37:45.800
The non-essential stuff we just stopped doing and the essential stuff will keep going and we'll go from there.
00:37:51.240
We'll talk about, hey, maybe we need to add this back in.
00:38:08.480
I mean, you know, we're we're we're talking about really.
00:38:12.700
We're we're talking about things like the Interior Department.
00:38:18.980
Just having limited discretion to issue permits.
00:38:22.800
So they're still going to be issuing permits, but they're going to have limited discretion.
00:38:27.080
Maybe we shouldn't be doing so much permitting.
00:38:30.240
Maybe people should just be able to do a lot of the things that they want to do.
00:38:33.200
But if there are certain needs for certain permits, then the limited permitting might just cover that.
00:38:40.720
Well, we're all drinking poison by next Wednesday from our drinking just from our taps in our home.
00:38:47.640
Well, sludge, nuclear waste syringes not pouring out into our kitchen sink.
00:39:18.920
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You really need someone who is not only knowledgeable about the whole process from beginning and end, but also works hard and has your best interest in mind.
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We connect people like you to exactly that kind of person every single day.
00:39:41.920
I was seeing in the news today that the housing market is getting really, really bad.
00:40:21.400
I don't know if you've heard this, America, but Taylor Swift may be going to a football game.
00:40:30.100
Because she's dating some, I don't know, unknown football player.
00:40:36.220
Yeah, he's not now because he's dating Taylor Swift.
00:40:44.320
He's one of the greatest tight ends of all time.
00:40:48.740
But I'm telling you, he is going to be legendary.
00:40:56.880
Again, I find your proclivities here to be strength.
00:41:04.520
Because they knew he was going to be dating Taylor Swift.
00:41:06.860
Imagine what ticket sales are going to be like for that team that he's on.
00:41:11.400
Even I'll know what team he plays for and what he does.
00:41:26.260
And they actually truly believe that if we don't start making things in America, we're going to lose our place.
00:41:41.140
We've got to have put the pride back into building and making something here in America and making it with quality.
00:41:49.560
Guy who started this is just a just a remarkable man.
00:41:54.080
And he is challenging Levi's and everybody else.
00:41:57.500
Just make 5% here in America and you would change the world.
00:42:13.760
You're looking for jeans, pants, shirts, blouses, sweatshirts are fantastic.
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What you're about to hear is the fusion of entertainment and enlightenment.
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I'm telling him this, you know, that Taylor Swift might be going to a football game.
00:43:36.640
Certainly, whoever, you know, she's dating, that guy, he's going to be wildly famous.
00:43:43.040
And, you know, Stu has just been thinking about the Roman Empire every second of the day.
00:43:56.080
Also, what happened in Washington and what is coming this weekend.
00:43:59.440
We are one day, 14 hours, 9, no, 14, 9 minutes, 32 seconds away from the, well, now it's, now it's closer than that.
00:44:13.440
I'm just, I'm just looking at it up on the CNN screen because how many hours do we have left before the entire world caves in on us because the United States government closes.
00:44:26.180
But the good news is Taylor Swift's going to a football game.
00:44:34.540
Inflammation, even just the word sounds unpleasant.
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There's a lot of people in the world who suffer from frequent pain and inflammation is usually the thing causing it.
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Inside your body, joints can begin to swell and the next thing you know, you have pain radiating outward from the sources in your body that are all, you know, inflamed.
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Hundreds of people talk about this over the years.
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I know from my own personal experience, if you can get rid of the inflammation, you can get your pain, at least into a manageable level, if not gone.
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About a million people have bought Relief Factor's quick start, and about 70% of them go on to order more.
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That's ReliefFactor.com, 800, the number four, relief.
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I mean, there are going to be so many people at that stadium because Taylor Swift is going.
00:45:43.200
They could charge $300 or $400 a ticket just this weekend.
00:45:59.340
Most of the seats are going to go for far more than that.
00:46:04.740
They just, they, people just knew there's a chance she's coming this weekend.
00:46:09.720
This is infuriating, and you're making it worse as usual.
00:46:12.560
I don't, I don't know what you're talking about.
00:46:16.040
Why, why does every football broadcast have to either be some idiot kneeling or some Taylor Swift in the audience?
00:46:26.920
Why can't it, why can't it, why can't I just watch games?
00:46:40.760
Taylor, reports, Taylor Swift may go to the Chiefs game this weekend.
00:46:48.300
They, it was on a, they were doing an interview.
00:46:53.980
About Taylor Swift's possible attendance at a game.
00:47:03.740
But they were, they were discussing an outside report about her possible attendance at a game.
00:47:11.540
And that's going to make that player guy famous.
00:47:23.180
He's, uh, earlier, uh, he could have, I mean, the guy could be an absolute legend.
00:47:29.780
Because he's dating Taylor Swift, that's how you become a legend.
00:47:35.160
He is probably the best pass-catching tight end in NFL history.
00:47:49.780
I want you to know, by the way, I want you to know the sacrifice that I, it's practically lent.
00:47:55.920
The sacrifice I made when you said, why is it that it's either some moron kneeling or, I mean, I have a great line for that and everybody can, I'm sure, figure that out.
00:48:15.840
I mean, it's probably one of the biggest sacrifices of comedy I've ever made.
00:48:21.240
Because it was so easy and fit just, I mean, it would have, but, I sacrifice for you.
00:48:32.060
With all things, including baked goods, but, is that a fat joke?
00:48:41.960
I was thinking, just for the show, that I might lose some weight so I could date Taylor Swift because then I'd be famous.
00:48:52.340
There's so many, I believe just saying that by you is a Me Too violation.
00:49:02.060
I came into this angry about the situation and now I feel defensive of Taylor.
00:49:09.400
Okay, see, I don't get, I honestly, I do not get the Taylor Swift thing.
00:49:13.260
I know, I mean, she has done a remarkable job with her fans.
00:49:20.060
She has always treated her fans right and they pay her back for that.
00:49:27.420
She has a great, tight, tight relationship with her fans.
00:49:39.100
If she ever says, let's go into the jungles, I've got something for you to drink.
00:49:50.780
She's obviously like, her business run here is.
00:49:56.140
Legitimately one of the most amazing things I've ever seen in my life.
00:50:03.520
I don't think it's crazy to say that this is the best year for any pop artist in history.
00:50:34.160
And like, I did say pop music, but I think you'd say that probably was pop music at the time.
00:50:47.560
Like, and I think, but it's probably a top five year.
00:50:52.340
But that's, I mean, but all of those kind of made sense.
00:50:58.920
I mean, I wasn't, you know, I wasn't alive for the Elvis thing in the 50s.
00:51:03.780
You know, I was like, I don't know, four for the height of the Beatles.
00:51:08.940
You know, Michael Jackson, you know, that was probably, you know, the prime of my, you know, youth.
00:51:27.180
Like, I don't, I'm not a fan of Taylor Swift's music at all.
00:51:39.800
No, actually, Taylor, I want you to know I'm happily married.
00:51:42.700
And no matter what you're throwing down, I don't want any of it.
00:52:02.660
If she does start dating you, we'd start getting CNN reports.
00:52:08.280
And we'd all have to listen to insane people strategizing on her weekend plans.
00:52:14.320
You know, the most impressive thing I have heard about her is, who was it that just bought
00:52:25.680
And so she said, she said, he's not going to own my library and get rich off of me.
00:52:36.660
So she went out and she recorded all, re-recorded all of her hits.
00:52:41.880
And her fans went back and bought her new versions of all of her hits so this guy wouldn't make
00:52:55.600
I mean, there has been speculation that this whole Travis Kelsey thing is maybe not as
00:53:00.020
serious as some have speculated in that, like, she does also have a giant concert movie coming
00:53:19.020
I'm going to be going in a lab coat, you know, because I've just.
00:53:27.320
Look, look, she's so I'm not a lot of people find her attractive.
00:53:40.840
I mean, there's nothing wrong with looking like a cat.
00:53:49.860
I'd rather look like a cat than a Gila monster.
00:53:52.360
But like you have to admit she's at least 45 percent feline.
00:54:15.760
That's separate from her success, which has been legitimately remarkable.
00:54:22.420
She had this thing where she recorded a song with some other artist.
00:54:53.580
It was something like, I don't know, my dopey breakup story with Lord.
00:54:59.860
And so her comments on like some message board from other some of her fans were like, I can barely hear her there.
00:55:11.040
When we do a new theme song on this particular program, eight trillion of you write in and say how much you like the last one better.
00:55:20.060
Everybody complains about every new thing, right?
00:55:22.720
So she goes on the message board, sees this complaint a few times, calls up Lord or whoever else it was, flies them in, has her re-record the song with her.
00:55:33.820
They remix it, and then she re-releases it as like, my dopey breakup song with, in parentheses, with more Lord.
00:55:42.320
I mean, to do that for your fans on a message board is freaking impressive.
00:55:51.040
It's, I think that is, again, how she scored that is, well, I mean, she's Taylor Swift.
00:56:02.440
They're doing investigations on whether Ticketmaster had a good on sale for her.
00:56:18.200
We've got congressional investigations going on over this nonsense.
00:56:21.960
I saw a tweet last weekend from Joe Biden who said one of his new spending things that
00:56:28.460
he wants to do is to make sure that you have the proper access to concert tickets.
00:56:38.500
What if we have, I'm throwing this out there, because I don't want to pay for it.
00:56:42.980
What if she does one show in Ukraine and that covers like two or three years of this war?
00:57:02.460
Why is she letting children go hungry in Africa when all she'd have to do is just do one big show?
00:57:15.120
As soon as you start doing that, then all they do is target you all the time.
00:57:18.740
As soon as she's as soon as she is on the bubble.
00:57:26.500
Her operation is is like Harvard Business School.
00:57:35.980
I mean, I don't think it's almost it's almost impossible for her to do all the things that she does on her own.
00:57:41.700
But I mean, the general, you know, you can't be that much of a fraud.
00:57:50.080
I think there's a lot of it that's authentic and then she deserves credit for it.
00:57:53.340
But I have one part of life that she's not in every obviously music.
00:58:01.240
She, by the way, point out she was in cats to back up my theory.
00:58:19.300
She just walked in the front door was in the movie.
00:58:24.080
Why are you so angry at her when she's making a player that you apparently like much more famous?
00:58:35.120
She took over politics a few years ago because I had to hear about her stupid opinions about what liberal is going to be elected.
00:58:41.760
And now I have to hear I have to watch her celebrate every touchdown.
00:58:46.600
I don't think they're going to show the plays this weekend.
00:58:48.820
I think they're just going to show the box and wait for her to react and then show you the replay of the play.
00:58:58.760
Can I, for one second, watch a sport without Colin Kaepernick kneeling or without Taylor Swift's celebration?
00:59:13.220
Hey, Heinz is now releasing a new product based on the way she ate her fries.
00:59:30.800
I want to sit down on a Sunday and just spend 14 straight hours not talking to anyone.
00:59:48.460
Tired of not only paying far too much for your mobile phone service,
00:59:52.020
but also knowing that some of your exorbitant amount of money that you're shelling out every month
00:59:56.820
is going to support causes that you don't believe in.
00:59:59.560
In fact, you're against Patriot Mobile offers dependable nationwide coverage.
01:00:04.960
Now that Taylor Swift is talking about maybe possibly getting it, you know, I mean, owning it,
01:00:12.720
then now it's going to be very famous and people are going to love it, even though if she had it, that all they'd reverse all all the things they do.
01:00:22.580
So, but Taylor Swift, you could say, I have Taylor Swift's phone thing right now.
01:00:30.020
So if you're putting stock into the, you know, into the company, I can't guarantee you that Taylor Swift is going to own it soon,
01:00:42.400
You're going to be sending the message to yourself and the rest of the country.
01:00:46.380
You believe in supportive free speech, religious freedom, sanctity of life, the Second Amendment, our military, all of the things.
01:00:52.820
These are the things they're taking some of their profit, a large portion of their profit, and investing in you
01:02:21.300
Otherwise, I was going to do a dramatic reading.
01:02:36.580
And if she would have known what a magnum opus was, she would say that as well.
01:02:42.860
Oh, I can't even talk to my kids about this anymore.
01:02:52.420
Yeah, 100 most important or influential people in the world.
01:03:10.600
And so we're sitting there and we're wearing the little,
01:03:17.060
And she comes up and she said, in front of Elton John,
01:03:29.220
Love songs are really just poetry set to music.
01:03:40.020
And I got yelled at by all the girls in my family
01:03:53.840
looked at me and said, dad, she was like 17 at the time.
01:04:08.140
No matter how hard she tries to ensnare me into her bed.
01:04:16.500
Kibble dog food comes in all sorts of flavors these days.
01:04:27.060
But while it might come in a bunch of different flavors,
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unfortunately, it doesn't have much nutritional value.
01:04:33.020
They have to cook it so long at a very, very high temperature.
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Naturopathic Dr. Dennis Black came up with something called Rough Greens.
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The folks at Rough Greens are confident that your dog is going to love it.
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They're going to send you the first trial bag for free.
01:05:23.280
Use the promo code Glenn and save $10 off your subscription to Blaze TV.
01:05:41.920
We want to give you a piece of information that will help you navigate finances and your investments to some degree
01:05:50.520
to make sure you're putting your money where it's doing its best to save the country.
01:05:57.500
Paul Fitzpatrick has been on the program several times before.
01:06:02.000
He is the president of the 1792 Exchange, and they've added something new.
01:06:14.800
Well, first of all, for anybody who doesn't know what the 1792 Exchange is, explain that.
01:06:20.300
Well, Glenn, we are a nonprofit engaging with corporations to try to help them move back towards neutral to protect freedom.
01:06:27.140
That's freedom of religion, freedom of speech, and free enterprise.
01:06:36.060
Well, on our website, we have come up with a database.
01:06:45.380
And your listeners have gone to our other database before.
01:06:47.640
This is, first, it discloses how state pension funds, their assets are being voted by their asset managers.
01:06:57.240
Two, it describes and shows over 100 asset managers of how they are voting the shares of the states.
01:07:04.500
And then third, it's a directory of the 2022-2023 kind of most egregious ESG shareholder resolutions.
01:07:22.380
Last year, the Employee Retirement System of Texas voted for a shareholder proposal at the Bank of America to adopt, quote,
01:07:29.260
a fossil fuel lending policy consistent with the IEA's net zero-2050 scenario.
01:07:39.600
If passed, it would have restricted lending, Bank of America's lending to the oil and gas industry.
01:07:45.860
Let me, other examples, some of them are forcing companies to incorporate climate goals into the retirement plans,
01:07:52.880
for example, at Amazon and Comcast, or forcing companies to evaluate the risk of pro-life legislation on their employees.
01:08:02.360
Over 30 resolutions would have forced companies to do racial equity audits.
01:08:09.940
Even Citigroup faced a resolution that would force them to ensure the rights of indigenous people who work for the company.
01:08:18.260
And some of them are just really out there crazy, but some of them are insidious from the perspective of they really harm the businesses,
01:08:30.160
So your service, when you go there, you can click on to find out your corporate bias rating.
01:08:40.340
You can just look them up, and you'll see, for instance, Adobe, a high risk.
01:08:48.480
You'll see, let's see, something that Affleck, medium risk.
01:09:01.220
What it means is these companies are, if they're a medium risk,
01:09:05.820
they do some things that are not, you know, so great for freedom,
01:09:10.620
and if they're lower risk, you're not saying that they're safe.
01:09:16.700
Well, you're right, Glenn, and that's the first database, the corporate bias rating.
01:09:21.060
That's the first one we have, and you're right.
01:09:22.740
That one is, in essence, showing how politicized corporations are.
01:09:30.020
but these are companies that are using their dollars and their brands to push ideological agendas,
01:09:37.900
They're canceling, debanking people, deplatforming.
01:09:41.060
So we want folks to know who they're working with.
01:09:43.960
And so when you go to the state pension funds, you see the proxy ranking.
01:10:05.740
You know, I will say there are fewer anti-ESG resolutions.
01:10:11.580
So for your folks to know, in our database, we've got roughly 550 ESG resolutions, pro-ESG, anti-ESG.
01:10:20.320
Most of them are pro-ESG, and that's from 2022 and 2023.
01:10:28.180
There are very few of the anti-ESG, but you're right.
01:10:30.940
We should be seeing those red states voting highly and aggressively for the anti-ESG.
01:10:46.160
And yet, they are the fourth, because there's a tie at the top, fourth worst state.
01:10:59.200
We're going to update our database in the coming months to have 23 data.
01:11:02.580
But in last year, half the time, Alabama's dollars were voted for ESG resolutions.
01:11:11.240
And when I say the dollars, they get the pension funds.
01:11:15.380
So we've got, you would think, let me give you some other states.
01:11:32.160
So when the 23 data comes out, we believe Florida and several other states are going to hold up better.
01:11:37.540
And that's important for your folks to know, state legislatures have started to wake up, and what we need to put pressure on them, for example, Kentucky, Arkansas, Kansas, Montana, Florida, all passed laws to make things better.
01:11:54.760
Even just by putting the pressure on pension boards, you're going to see, when the data comes out for 23, they're going to be better.
01:12:03.040
But, yeah, listen to these states that are worse than California, Oregon, and Washington, Tennessee, Alabama, Kentucky, Idaho, Montana, Mississippi, Ohio.
01:12:17.160
It's a dereliction of duty of state legislatures that are allowing the pension funds and the pension boards and the pension staff to hand off dollars to asset managers who are then weaponizing and politicizing those assets in ways that undermine the economies and the values of those red states.
01:12:39.380
The best one in the entire country, and I don't even think it's even close, is it, is South Dakota.
01:12:48.540
And part of the reason South Dakota is the best is they and Georgia are the only two states that, in essence, took everything in-house.
01:12:56.340
But South Dakota really has taken control, and that's one of the reasons.
01:13:00.700
But the other thing is, interestingly, number two state is Delaware.
01:13:03.780
Delaware is a liberal state, but they actually apparently understand their fiduciary duty better than many red states.
01:13:11.440
And Georgia, I will say, is also doing very well as well.
01:13:17.840
But what we need, Glenn, for your folks to do is, you know, go to 1792exchange.com, go to our site, find out how your state is doing, call your state legislators, tell them to act.
01:13:28.160
If they pass the law, pass it, improve it, if they didn't get on them, you also need, remember what happens on these boards.
01:13:36.340
Historically, you know, maybe the governor's buddy is appointed to the board.
01:13:40.880
And many of the folks appointing, whether it be governors or AGs or state, the Speaker of the House appointing their buddies and their campaign donors to these boards, they're not vetting them ideologically.
01:13:55.440
And ultimately, we need to have the pensioners speak up, the people who are retirement.
01:14:01.440
Their retirement security depends on these assets.
01:14:04.580
We need them to speak up and tell the boards to make decisions only for financial reasons.
01:14:12.040
I was going to say, finally, taxpayers, because ALEC, American Legislative Exchange Council, just came out with a report saying state pension funds are underfunded.
01:14:21.120
Underfunded, they face unfunded liabilities of almost $7 trillion.
01:14:25.260
The taxpayers are going to have to bail them out.
01:14:29.100
So, let me go back to ESG, because they're now saying, oh, everybody's getting away from ESG.
01:14:44.960
It's a bit of a President Reagan's trust but verify motto.
01:14:48.620
For example, because lots of folks, AGs, treasurers, legislatures are pushing back on BlackRock and State Street and Vanguard, many have changed their behavior.
01:15:01.860
But when I say behavior, there's two different ways to look at it.
01:15:06.180
Yes, they're voting far less often for ESG shareholder resolutions.
01:15:11.920
For example, in 2021, BlackRock voted 47% of the time for ESG resolutions.
01:15:23.340
They only voted 7% of the time for E and S resolutions.
01:15:30.400
The other side of the coin, though, is BlackRock is still part of alliances, these net zero alliances, and they're forcing us to, in essence, decarbonize, which will put us back in the Stone Age and starve people.
01:15:44.400
And they're also still, they brag about what they call engagements, which means Larry Fink and his team sit down with CEOs and say, we own 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10% of your company.
01:15:56.640
We're not going to vote for it, but you're going to do it.
01:15:59.480
And these CEOs facing these assets, and these pension funds are part of the assets used.
01:16:19.220
And you look up your pension fund for your state.
01:16:23.800
You're exactly right when it comes to who's going to bail these people out.
01:16:30.220
They are not making the kind of return that they need to make on your investments for states.
01:16:37.060
So look your state up and make sure I would call your treasurer as well, but your legislatures and your treasurers and push them.
01:16:46.340
I mean, you know, you look at some very conservative states that are supposed to be against this stuff.
01:16:59.060
And I would say, final point, Glenn, I'm sorry to interrupt, is, you know, lots of folks listening here have their own IRA or maybe they're in a company's 401k plan.
01:17:08.100
You've got to look at our, go to view the votes.
01:17:13.620
Find out who is the asset manager managing your 401k or your IRA.
01:17:17.900
See how they're voting and call them and say, don't vote my shares that way.
01:17:20.960
And then ask if you can, and if you can, move your funds to an asset manager who's more neutral and only focused on financial returns.
01:17:39.420
If you thought times couldn't get worse, well, yeah, oil prices nearing $100 a barrel.
01:17:46.560
Looks like the housing market is kind of stuck.
01:17:50.320
The only people really moving are the people that have to move.
01:18:00.700
So with oil prices going up, you know, to $100 a barrel, gee, you know, if you happen to be Russia or Saudi Arabia, that's good.
01:18:13.380
Our government is flat out wrecking our economy.
01:18:17.260
So what happens when your pension fund is in ESG stuff and it's not performing?
01:18:24.220
What happens when they print too much money and the inflation keeps going up?
01:18:35.520
You right now, if you call Goldline, you can ask them for a portfolio to find out what's right for you.
01:18:44.240
It may not be right for you to have any money in precious metals.
01:18:47.700
I can't imagine it, but it's right for me and I'm not somebody you should listen to about investing.
01:18:52.400
I would just call and get all of the information from Goldline.
01:18:57.120
And for every full ounce of fractional Gold Eagles purchased right now, you're going to receive a free 110-ounce platinum St. Helena Trust Series coin.
01:19:11.020
They're not going to hassle you or anything else.
01:19:16.840
And then you do your homework and find out if it's right for you.
01:19:42.920
There's a couple of movies that are out that you should know about.
01:19:55.520
It is actually the Duck Dynasty guys, Phil Robertson and Miss Kay, their story.
01:20:07.220
I think we've cracked the code now for real Hollywood blockbuster-style movies.
01:20:16.060
I saw another one last night called The Creator that I was pretty excited about.
01:20:35.720
One of the better movies I've seen in a long time.
01:20:37.960
However, the more you watch it, the more you realize this is going to be an international blockbuster.
01:20:55.000
And it is one of the most anti-American messages made by Americans.
01:21:08.560
And at this point in our history, globally, I think it's dangerous.
01:21:26.140
I mean, I walked away from that movie last night thinking, when in our history could a movie ever be made like this?
01:21:35.800
And people just go, huh, that's a really good movie.
01:21:40.980
I mean, if you walk out of that movie and you don't have an anti-American bias, it's probably because you caught on.
01:21:52.660
But I don't know how many people are going to catch on.
01:21:55.100
They're just going to go, yeah, that was a great movie.
01:22:09.460
It's just I can't explain without giving away everything.
01:22:13.040
But the villains are all America, the United States of America, the U.S. Army, the military and like really bad.
01:22:22.820
Like I've never seen our military portrayed before like this.
01:22:29.060
Usually when you see the U.S. military portrayed, it's because, you know, of of the agency or the corporation.
01:22:41.340
The United States of America doing horrible, horrible things.
01:22:54.040
I mean, my wife will not let me clean the guns in the house.
01:22:56.960
She's like, you know, I could paint this on a kitchen table.
01:23:03.380
Uh, so, uh, it's a pain in the neck and, uh, usually, you know, just cut up some T-shirts and then clean the barrel.
01:23:20.680
But, uh, it's a 3D cylinder made of polymers and it doesn't leave behind any residual particles.
01:23:28.560
It actually goes in, it buffs the interior surface clean, um, made here in the United States.
01:23:41.340
This is the fastest, easiest, and best way to do it.
01:23:49.200
We rejoin the national broadcast in just a second.
01:23:58.560
We have no room to compromise We gotta stand together, it's gonna survive
01:24:14.760
Stand up, stand, and hold the line It's a new day, I'm trying to rise
01:24:27.440
What you're about to hear is the fusion of entertainment and enlightenment.
01:24:41.320
If you like the Robertsons, uh, Duck Dynasty family, you are going to understand them in
01:24:51.040
Um, you are, you're going to hear one of the most heart-wrenching and yet glorious tales
01:25:08.780
I don't know how the family even made it, honestly, but I'm glad they did.
01:25:12.780
Miss Kay, uh, and Corey Robertson joining us to talk about the new movie that came out
01:25:25.200
First, next time you go to the gun range, don't load any ammunition into your gun.
01:25:30.220
Just point the barrel at your target, say bang really loudly, and then guess how close you
01:25:35.920
Um, here's the solution to the really expensive ammo.
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It is a high-tech, easy-to-use system that is widely used by the military now.
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It started with the Marines, and I have Marines that work for me, and they help me shoot,
01:25:55.780
and it's like having one of, you know, one of them standing next to me saying,
01:25:59.300
okay, no, you're pulling the gun down, you know, your, you're, you know, your, your trigger
01:26:04.480
finger is, uh, is pulling it one way or another, and sometimes they'll, I'll say, what did I
01:26:10.640
And they're like, I don't know, I wasn't looking.
01:26:15.680
20 minutes of using Mantis X, and 94% of shooters improve.
01:26:20.100
You put it on the barrel, whether you're dry firing or you're active, uh, live fire,
01:26:24.160
uh, it will, it will show it on, through Bluetooth on your phone or on your iPad,
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and you'll see exactly what you're doing and the way to fix it.
01:26:35.380
It's so great, and it's going to save you a lot of money.
01:26:49.020
It is so good to have you, and, uh, Corey, welcome.
01:26:57.180
I know you guys are busy doing kind of a virtual tour here for the movie, which came out last
01:27:02.320
I have to tell you, I, I think, I said this when I watched the movie, officially, I think
01:27:10.000
we have broken the code of good, conservative, and Christian movies.
01:27:19.100
This, I think, is the, the straw that breaks the camel's back.
01:27:27.580
So, um, Miss Kay, I, I, I have to tell you, I, I mean, I don't know how Phil could sit through
01:27:53.240
It's about his alcoholism, you know, uh, affairs are alluded to and everything else.
01:28:00.020
I mean, he, he, he looks like a really bad guy in this.
01:28:07.500
And, uh, yeah, he said it was just so embarrassing now to look at it, but we did the whole thing
01:28:14.340
to help people and we're already have words of coming back up, uh, things that are happening
01:28:23.580
And I know of one marriage that was supposed to be in divorce and they now have, uh, decided
01:28:35.520
to save their marriage because they sell our movie.
01:28:38.120
Well, I will tell you, I think, cause as I was watching it, it is, I think it's easier
01:28:47.160
It's easier for somebody who's living the life of a dirt bag.
01:28:54.720
Um, and you know, the goody, goody two shoes people come up to all the time and they'll
01:28:59.680
say, you know, it doesn't have to be this hard.
01:29:03.460
But somebody who has really been at the bottom to be able to say, no, it doesn't have to
01:29:10.260
And everything you believe about yourself and the world, it's not true.
01:29:14.780
It's a lie and all you need to do is just surrender all of that stuff.
01:29:19.740
Uh, I think this is going to do remarkable good, um, in, in the world.
01:29:26.280
Um, so who, how was this formulated and, and who, who wrote it?
01:29:40.680
Well, yeah, at the very beginning, it says, it starts out saying, this is a true story
01:29:48.980
It's actually a true story because Bill and Kay are alive and we were able to just have
01:29:54.020
them tell their story and they told it over and over again throughout their life.
01:29:57.720
And we've seen the impact of them telling their story on people's life from just sitting
01:30:02.040
on the couch around the dinner table and how it has actually transformed people with the
01:30:06.920
story of Jesus because whenever God came into this family's life, everything changed.
01:30:12.120
And that exactly what you said is really the message is that there's no one that's too
01:30:17.080
And I do think people can discount themselves and think, oh, I'm out because my life looks
01:30:22.180
But this is a message that like, no, like God can come into your life and everything can
01:30:26.680
If you, like you said, surrender, there is kind of a thing throughout the film of
01:30:30.260
still searching for freedom in these places when he realizes and experiences true freedom.
01:30:38.420
And he said, I had to come to the end of myself to find the beginning of God.
01:30:43.260
And that's available to everyone, no matter how far you've gone down that road of self-disruption,
01:30:51.300
But yeah, so our partner in our project, Chico B. Tread Lively is Zach Dasher, who's actually
01:30:55.700
a cousin, and his mom was portrayed in the film as Aunt Jan.
01:31:04.660
And we actually show at the end of the film a picture of her and that she said from day
01:31:09.800
one, she said, if you convert Phil, if Phil turns to Jesus, he will turn thousands to Jesus.
01:31:16.260
She believed in him even when he was at his worst.
01:31:19.460
And so Zach is our production partner and that's his mom.
01:31:23.620
So this is as much her story as it is only Kay's story.
01:31:26.640
And we just kind of came together to tell great stories and tell stories of hope and
01:31:30.880
faith and pity in this world and wanted to tell this first.
01:31:38.600
Miss Kay, your first breakup with Phil, describe that.
01:31:46.420
Well, first, you know that I lived in this life for 10 years, is how long he was the bad
01:31:58.120
And but what what I try to tell everybody, it came a lot because I lived as much with my
01:32:05.340
grandmother as I did at home because my parents were in the grocery store and they were working
01:32:11.580
And my grandmother continually told me lessons, lessons of marriage, fighting for your marriage.
01:32:32.540
And when she said, you're married, I said, well, I'm not going to have to do that.
01:32:39.380
I'm going to pick out a good man, you know, and here we go.
01:32:45.860
And it's really funny because I only told Phil this recently that the first time I ever saw
01:32:50.600
him, I thought, you know, that's who I'd like to marry.
01:32:54.400
I never told him that my whole life, but I told him recently that I did think that.
01:32:59.260
And as it came out, and we actually didn't even, another girl set us up kind of on a
01:33:08.620
And while we were walking each other off the football field, and she just set it all up
01:33:14.220
like she told him that I wanted him to walk me off.
01:33:20.100
And she told him that the little cheerleader, my name, wanted to walk me off the field.
01:33:26.400
And vice versa, she told me he wanted me to walk him off the field.
01:33:33.480
This girl, older, upper class, decided we belonged together.
01:33:46.840
When did you realize that Phil had a problem with alcohol?
01:33:52.760
Because you guys were, I didn't know this, you were childhood friends and sweethearts.
01:34:00.700
He had a football scholarship to Louisiana Tech.
01:34:07.720
And what happened, most of the college athletes were not married.
01:34:15.020
And what they would do is take them and put them in the dorm.
01:34:19.100
And they would actually live in the dorm for like a month at a time.
01:34:22.760
Because they wanted all their concentration to be on football.
01:34:26.720
And what happened was Phil would run around with the unmarried college football players.
01:34:34.880
You know, as I'm watching this spiral and the way that you handled it with such grace and
01:34:58.120
It was God and my grandmother, thank you, it was.
01:35:05.940
She talked to me about things were not going to be good all the time.
01:35:17.860
When, you know, the main theme of this, which I think is so great, is forgiveness.
01:35:26.600
And forgiveness comes from God, and we don't usually deserve it.
01:35:37.720
This is, uh, this is Phil on a podcast recently.
01:35:42.280
Now this is years, decades after all of this stuff happened.
01:35:48.500
He was an atheist up to the last two or three months of his life.
01:36:11.020
I mean, here he's, he's crying about transformation.
01:36:15.680
Um, many people have a hard time forgiving themselves, even if God has already forgiven them.
01:36:22.320
But there are tons of people that have been wronged by people.
01:36:26.600
And your story, oh my gosh, wronged over and over and over again.
01:36:31.060
How do you forgive the person who has wronged you?
01:36:41.940
I feel like that my grandmother taught me how to forgive.
01:36:46.360
And she taught me so many lessons about it, that it just, for me, I just knew, I, I didn't
01:36:55.580
understand why I seem to be a person that could forgive so much easier than other people.
01:37:03.320
But the only thing I can tell you is, you know, the Bible tells about older people telling
01:37:10.940
Listen, I know that the lessons she talked about, the things we talked about, I think
01:37:16.200
that really helped me because she told me about hard times she had and how, and I said,
01:37:24.880
And she said, because I knew that I had to forgive to go on.
01:37:30.080
And there were just so many lessons she taught me.
01:37:39.100
Nobody's perfect, but I did understand from her so much about forgiveness and so much about
01:37:53.920
And she said, you don't think it will be anything but that.
01:37:57.480
And I said, well, other people talk about, and she said, I know.
01:38:04.740
She called it the D word, not the cuss word, but, you know, the words.
01:38:14.000
You just have to say, this is a vow to God for life.
01:38:20.080
I was 13, I was 11, 12, 13, 14 years old when you told me all this.
01:38:30.180
I will tell you that that is the words that my wife gave me when I asked for a prenup.
01:38:39.660
And she said, because I'm not going to plot the end of my marriage.
01:38:45.740
We marry, we're married forever, and we work it out.
01:38:53.760
Corey, real quick, because the movie is so well done.
01:38:58.260
And I know that you're the co-owner of Tread Lively Productions.
01:39:02.700
What are you going to do with this production company?
01:39:11.940
I think Duck Dynasty kind of opened our eyes to the power of entertainment and the way it's shaping our culture.
01:39:17.600
It was, you know, we had people come up, because we had this little prayer at the end.
01:39:21.120
And people come up and saying, like, oh, our family sits on a place together because of your show.
01:39:26.060
Or, you know, my husband goes to church because he sees real men who love God.
01:39:31.040
Or just the impact of that little thing that we did on that show.
01:39:34.300
And also the fun, you know, the joy of the show and the fun of family.
01:39:42.440
We kind of realized the impact for positive and then also the impact for the other side as well.
01:39:47.540
And how entertainment is shaping us and shaping our culture.
01:39:50.140
And we just felt like, you know, God put us in this space.
01:39:53.740
And so we should be a light in this space and the darkness that may be the entertainment world.
01:40:05.520
But ultimately, all of our projects, the hope is, it's just that it's uplifting to culture.
01:40:15.960
And I just think we need more of that in the world.
01:40:19.400
Well, I will tell you, I think you have unlocked something here in the blind.
01:40:38.040
I told Miss Kay before we got on that we were the number one movie last night in the nation.
01:41:23.700
And they've been promising to do good and never forget the sacrifices of America's greatest heroes.
01:41:29.200
And these are the people who put their life on the line for us every single day to protect our country and to protect our communities.
01:41:36.480
Whether they're soldiers or they're police officers.
01:41:40.480
I want to tell you about Sergeant Dustin Del Monte.
01:41:46.900
He left behind two children and a wife that was pregnant with their third child.
01:41:53.520
Tunnel to Towers paid the mortgage on the Del Monte family home, helping to lift their financial burden.
01:42:04.300
And they were welcoming the miracle of a newborn child into their family at the same time.
01:42:12.480
The last thing you want to have them worry about is where are we going to live?
01:42:16.760
Over 95 cents of every dollar donated goes to these programs.
01:42:23.320
Donate $11 a month to Tunnel to Towers at T2T.org.
01:42:32.180
Oh, didn't you see, uh, I think there's a, um, uh, the movie you saw, the, what was it called again?
01:42:54.640
Is there like now going to be this AI, is every movie going to be about AI?
01:43:00.960
Do you remember like in like the mid nineties, every movie was about the internet?
01:43:06.480
And I think, uh, I think it's going to be about AI and soon it'll all be created by AI.
01:43:14.740
Well, I wanted to ask you about that because the, it's interesting.
01:43:21.060
And a lot of people have been saying, well, they know the electric car thing is coming and this is going to change the way that's all done.
01:43:28.440
And they're trying to protect their workers, their usefulness, essentially their, their jobs.
01:43:33.060
Um, is it the same thing true with, with the writer's strike in Hollywood?
01:43:42.260
The electric car is being jammed down everybody's throat.
01:43:46.200
The faster you change things, um, the harder it is for people to adapt.
01:43:52.260
And with the government just jamming this down the throat of the auto companies and then offsetting their costs, printing more money, which causes inflation, and then pushing to have the auto workers make an extraordinary, get an extraordinary raise.
01:44:09.560
That will put the company out of business, which will then, we'll have to print more money to save.
01:44:16.440
And we're printing more money because nobody wants the EVs right now.
01:44:21.060
So that's different than here comes AI and people are going to change.
01:44:30.780
Whether there are some negative consequences to that desire is another story.
01:44:35.160
But, but Hollywood has slid its own throat over and over and over again.
01:44:41.560
Look at, I used to go to, you know, this we've worked together for 30 years every Friday night or Saturday night, every Friday night, my wife and I would go to a movie every, every time.
01:44:56.560
I mean, I, and it's not, it's just because it's not in my, it's just not off the top of my mind anymore.
01:45:04.820
And there, and I'm always like, is there anything you want to see?
01:45:08.000
You feel like you're really reaching a lot of time to find something in the theater.
01:45:15.700
They're slitting their own throat where the government is slitting the throat of the automobile industry.
01:45:33.460
She found out she was pregnant in fear and in anger.
01:45:42.160
She didn't think she could go through with having a baby.
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And there's nobody there in her, in their life to help them.
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By the grace of God, Natalia's partner's family was praying and she was led to a pre-born network center.
01:46:05.100
Once she saw her baby on the ultrasound and heard the heartbeat, she was overwhelmed.
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She chose life, has received ongoing love and support from pre-born ever since then.
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If you have the means, would you consider a leadership gift to save babies in a big way?
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Your tax-deductible donation of, let's say, $5,000 will sponsor pre-born's entire network all across the country for a full 24 hours.
01:47:16.580
And I get down on my knees and thank God for giving me the day.
01:47:36.780
I mean, people come to me and ask me all the time, Glenn, tell me about rap.
01:47:46.380
But I am not somebody who is, I know this is going to come as a shock.
01:47:55.840
A good friend of mine, he said, you have to hear this song.
01:48:37.120
So he came into my office and I invited him on the show.
01:48:48.280
And you, not too long ago, were not singing about this kind of stuff.
01:49:02.740
Like I knew, but like it was like turned against.
01:49:07.260
Even though I could, it was like calls and whispers that I felt like I was not doing what
01:49:17.720
But for a long time I was fighting it and depressed and like.
01:49:24.880
How did you, I, I, I remember I got fentanyl, you know, before fentanyl was cool.
01:49:30.080
I got fentanyl in the hospital after an operation.
01:49:37.100
I went into withdrawals from the after four days.
01:49:46.080
Or it's like, and what, like the street version is even more, it's not, it's not regulated.
01:49:53.820
It's like super potent or just, it's dangerous.
01:49:56.940
So how, how, how, how did you survive that and how did you get off it?
01:50:05.240
I was for years for like four, for years I was doing Percocets for that.
01:50:09.820
We were doing Perc thirties and it was like, like there was a lot of opioids just going
01:50:15.720
And, uh, so we were got to that point and then every once in a while in the street, there
01:50:21.180
would be no way to get them because it comes from a lot, like a doctor.
01:50:25.380
So then you have to turn to things like fentanyl, huh?
01:50:29.920
So then you got to turn to things like fentanyl.
01:50:31.840
And it was like, from that day, my life just was horrible, terrible life.
01:50:37.680
And eventually after four years of that being homeless and having no, like having to find
01:50:43.000
money and do all these schemes and lie to people to get all this money.
01:50:46.880
I ended up overdosing and like that day I was, I chose, I made the decision.
01:50:54.620
I could either continue, continued on this path, which would be rough.
01:51:00.120
No matter what, I'm going to end up dying is what's going to happen.
01:51:02.640
Or I can go through like the, the Phoenix from the ashes, you know?
01:51:07.280
And I just, that's when God, like I really, really just gave my life to God and was, I
01:51:14.100
knew I didn't have control over things and all I could do was just try and just have
01:51:17.700
And so you were, I'm trying to understand, cause you came into my office and you were
01:51:21.820
like, oh man, I can't believe I'm standing here with you.
01:51:27.680
I mean, we're, you know, again, I know I'm big in the rap.
01:51:36.760
But how did you go from, from that and a leftist to here, by the way, this may be the death
01:51:49.460
I think, I think it's going to be the opposite.
01:51:51.160
Everyone I've spoken to is like, they're psyched.
01:51:54.880
They're going crazy that I'm on here right now.
01:51:56.840
But so my mother was super, not political, but just automatically default liberal leftist.
01:52:04.740
Like, because that's what it is in black households.
01:52:06.960
So my whole life growing up, I like kind of was like virtue signaling, like a lot of
01:52:11.980
people and like, swore I cared about all these different things that actually weren't
01:52:22.880
It's like, I was like going through poverty, but it wasn't like I didn't watch my back outside
01:52:28.080
So my whole life entitlement, all that just made me believe that I was just like going
01:52:33.180
through all these terrible things that I wasn't going through.
01:52:36.400
And so I got on drugs and all this and I met my girlfriend and she, her family is on,
01:52:43.520
So that was the first time I ever saw you was I went into the house, into their house and
01:52:48.360
And like, I was like, this guy is like, like, cause you're, you're so like animated and
01:52:53.020
I'm like, this dude is like, it was like entertaining just to see.
01:52:56.120
And it was total opposite of anything I believe, but I didn't really believe the things that
01:53:01.420
So just listening, just actually having the conversations, things like that.
01:53:04.680
If it wasn't for my girlfriend and her family, I would have never came out of it because
01:53:08.700
they were like, when, when Trump got in office and all this, I was like legitimately scared.
01:53:18.840
But then once I started really seeing what it was, it just got better and better and
01:53:23.060
And then I was like, first time I ever voted, I was like, I got to vote for Trump because
01:53:28.720
I've never felt anything like this where I feel, I feel like I'm like, I have hope for
01:53:33.540
So what is your, tell me about your process with your lyrics and what are you trying to
01:53:41.600
I rap first, but then I, I like retired because when I got on drugs, I just wasn't, I didn't care
01:53:47.180
So for years I stopped doing music and then I started doing YouTube videos where I just
01:53:53.260
And I would just critique music and be like, this is, this is where I think they were coming
01:53:57.000
from when they wrote this and why they said this the way they said this.
01:54:01.860
It grew like, I got like a hundred, 117 K subscribers in like 10 months.
01:54:09.320
So I, uh, eventually just as I was doing this, I just like was in such a good place in my life.
01:54:15.300
And I'm like, I should just try to start recording again.
01:54:18.000
And I recorded a couple other songs and Grateful happened because I reacted to an Eminem
01:54:24.000
song and I was taught cause it was called rap God and he was talking about all these
01:54:28.280
And I was like, he's just referencing a bunch of pagan gods basically is what I said.
01:54:31.680
And someone's like, you think your God's not the pagan God?
01:54:34.460
And I'm like, by definition, he's not, but he's actually not by definition.
01:54:40.460
And that comment made me like, it was just stuck in my head.
01:54:43.580
And I usually make music on Mondays and I just played a beat and that was the first
01:54:51.200
So I was sitting in front of the mic, like trying to just come up with a rhyme and I
01:54:54.040
was like, thank, uh, and I get down on these and thank God for giving me the day promise
01:55:01.720
And then like, from there I was like, people don't want to hear me rap about God.
01:55:05.600
So I'm going to, I can make the reference and I can like kind of go into my life.
01:55:10.340
And I was like, but I could think of another bar about God.
01:55:13.700
And I was like, I'm just going to lean into it fully.
01:55:20.500
It's, it's amazing how, when the spirit moves you and then you start to go, well, wait,
01:55:27.360
I can calculate how it just falls apart on you.
01:55:30.940
Try to, if you try to, if you think, you know, better than God, it doesn't work.
01:55:36.580
I think it was like, it was, it was a thing that was meant to happen because I also didn't
01:55:41.220
Like the people that I know, Garrett, uh, from normal world, he really liked that song and
01:55:47.720
And then from there, people just like started sharing it and it went crazy.
01:55:54.740
I was listening to it again on Spotify this morning.
01:55:57.280
Uh, and I just think it is really, that's like big words.
01:56:05.580
So if you don't like rap and that's, that's like, that's crazy.
01:56:30.420
Uh, can you just tell me the flawed Zilla thing?
01:56:34.860
So it goes back to, my name was Marcus Black before that.
01:56:47.420
So I eventually was like, I need to change my name for content because people are only
01:56:51.280
going to know me for music, even though no one knew me.
01:56:53.520
Like, so just looking at my life and everything I had been through, I was like, I'm ready
01:56:57.760
to basically accept exactly what I said, accept all the things I'm ashamed of in that song
01:57:06.780
So I have to either use my future where I end up in the future as like a proof that you
01:57:14.140
can come from a flawed beginning to like ultimately, cause you don't know anyone.
01:57:20.580
Like if someone gets really famous and really, and you're like, oh, I love this person.
01:57:23.220
You have no idea what their life is, but you could idolize this person and be like, they
01:57:28.480
But I think that you can turn, you can turn things around and actually influence people
01:57:33.880
because everybody has things that they're, that are flaws that they can't change, that
01:57:38.180
they're ashamed of, that they're insecure about.
01:57:40.480
And I have to tell you, um, the, the whole thing about redemption is the, the most incredible
01:57:48.420
thing is the thing that you are most ashamed of that you are, you have fought to hide for
01:58:04.380
It's all of a sudden you're like, wait, I, this is doing what?
01:58:08.900
It separates you from like the, the Sims, like the bots where people are all trying to
01:58:13.320
be the same thing because it's what works and what everyone likes.
01:58:16.540
The thing that really is going to set you apart is a thing that you don't want to show
01:58:25.880
Uh, flawed TV, uh, is, um, is, uh, what you do?
01:58:37.900
YouTube.com slash flawed TV and, uh, rumble.com slash flawed TV and Twitter.
01:58:54.060
Garrett, he is a part of like another show that I'm on with, uh, Adam Kriegler called
01:59:00.860
And through that, me and Garrett linked up cause we both live in Texas.
01:59:06.520
He was like, after I made grateful, he was like, come on a road trip to Vegas.
01:59:11.100
We drove for 19 hours in a car to Vegas and like had conversations and bonded.
01:59:16.340
And he was like, you want to be the first person on normal world, the first guest on normal
01:59:19.980
And I was like, I'd never done anything like that.
01:59:27.280
No, no, that was the, that was like for the opening.
01:59:41.880
Either it's a vehicle delivering you to and from places you need to go, or it is the world's
01:59:46.420
biggest, uh, paperweight because something happened to it and then you can't afford to fix it.
01:59:50.980
And it just sits there and you're wondering, how am I going to make ends meet?
01:59:55.860
Look, with everything going up in price, it is already expensive to fix your car, but God help you.
02:00:04.260
If it's something, you know, made in China, um, it used to be, Oh, it's made in China.
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When you enroll with car shield, you're getting protection plans that start as low as a hundred
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Let me just play a Democratic representative from the great state of Texas and what she
02:01:34.400
was saying about Joe Biden and what he's actually guilty of.
02:01:39.120
On because he's got 91 counts pending right now, but I will tell you what the president
02:01:45.100
He has unfortunately been guilty of loving his child unconditionally.
02:01:48.960
And that is the only evidence that they have brought forward.
02:01:51.540
And honestly, I hope and pray that my parents love me half as much as he loves his child until
02:01:58.800
We need to get back to the people's work, which means keeping this government open so that
02:02:03.160
people don't go hungry in the streets of the United States.
02:02:11.900
Loving your child unconditionally does not mean that you turn a blind eye to what they're
02:02:21.680
And when I explained that to them when they got old enough, what I said to them is, if you
02:02:28.000
break the law, I will be the first to turn you in.
02:02:31.500
But I will do that because I do love you so you can learn and nothing will ever change the
02:02:44.600
If you're in prison, I will come to prison to visit you because I love you.
02:02:49.880
That's unconditional love when you cannot remain indifferent on what your children do.
02:03:09.300
What about using your position in life to continually bail your child out of any consequences they
02:03:18.420
Do you get a cut of things or can you spread it around the whole family?
02:03:22.480
I mean, they're going to at least take 10% for the big guy.
02:03:27.760
And you should make them pay you about 50% of their salary.
02:03:30.360
But other than that, that's unconditional, right?
02:03:33.680
You know, listening to reports, again, they're still on this kick where there's no evidence
02:03:37.640
And they are highlighting this one quote from Jonathan Turley, who testified yesterday.
02:03:42.540
Where he said, you know, I don't think we've hit the standard of an impeachment yet.
02:03:49.160
In the context, what he was saying was we have reached the standard of an impeachment inquiry,
02:03:56.140
He said, I don't believe the evidence currently meets a standard of high crime and misdemeanor.
02:04:03.740
But, uh, to emphasize what this hearing is not, we are now searching for the truth.
02:04:13.560
And he said they did hit the standard of the inquiry, which is what they're doing.
02:04:18.360
There is enough evidence to launch an impeachment inquiry.