The BIGGEST 2020 Debate So Far? Let’s Play Bingo | Guests: Nick Di Paolo & Sujo John | 9⧸12⧸19
Episode Stats
Length
2 hours and 1 minute
Words per Minute
176.7645
Summary
Glenn Beck talks about the Google vs Microsoft case and how it could hurt the economy. He also talks about how the country is screwed up and how we need to fix it. Glenn Beck is a conservative commentator and host of the Glenn Beck Show on Fox News Radio.
Transcript
00:00:00.000
Thank you very much. I want to talk to you today a little bit about the economy if we if we have time. I'm concerned about the Google antitrust litigation. I'm I'm we have to do it, but I'm concerned on what it means for the economy because that's really one of the dot com bubble triggers was the antitrust against Microsoft.
00:00:24.040
So we have to pay attention to the economy. We have to pay attention to what's happening. Donald Trump. This makes me again very nervous. He says that he thinks the Fed should lower rates below zero. No, Mr. President, that will actually hurt us.
00:00:41.140
The investment is coming from overseas because we're the only ones with an interest rate above zero. Anyway, I have no idea what's coming. But if you are paying too much money for your credit cards, if you want to reduce the the the monthly payment on your loan, please do it now.
00:00:59.580
American financing, American financing dot net. Go there now. They will help you look at your debt and restructure your debt so it works to get you out of debt.
00:01:12.500
Americans home for home loans. American financing.
00:01:15.300
The fusion of entertainment and enlightenment. This is the Glenn Beck program.
00:01:34.080
Now, let me ask you something. If you think our country is screwed up, I would like to present to you the country of France.
00:01:46.300
It'll make you feel better about us. And you're going to need that today because the Democratic debate happens in Houston tonight.
00:01:57.360
All right. I love sitting in my ex chair. You sit here in your office chair every day. Are you comfortable? Does it support you the way it should?
00:02:13.300
A good chair is I mean, we spend more time in our chairs than we do in bed, which makes me really kind of feel like wasn't it?
00:02:23.160
And yeah, yeah. Yeah. OK, we really have to stop this. But anyway, documentary.
00:02:28.980
Yeah. Good documentary. Ex chair is a great chair. It adjusts 10 different ways to fit you and your body.
00:02:36.100
Go to ex chair Beck dot com and find out about their patented dynamic variable lumbar support.
00:02:42.100
The ex chair is what you need for a comfortable workday, whether you work at home or you work in an office.
00:02:47.480
Thanks to ex chairs 30 day. No questions asked. Guarantee of satisfaction. You have zero risk.
00:02:52.960
Now, most companies can't make that offer because, you know, they can't afford shipping it back and forth.
00:02:58.160
Nobody returns the ex chair because it is what I say it is. It's great.
00:03:03.040
Ex chair. Go to ex chair Beck dot com. Ex chair Beck dot com or call 844 for ex chair.
00:03:08.540
Ex chair Beck dot com. If you use the promo code Beck at checkout, you're going to receive a free set of new X wheels with your chair.
00:03:18.780
By the way, I have to tell you, use the promo code last night.
00:03:26.860
My wife and I were buying some blinds. We were on blinds dot com and she looked at the price and she's like, wow.
00:03:33.920
And it's 40 percent off. And I said, did you use promo code?
00:03:36.680
No, use the promo code back. She went she was a checkout.
00:03:41.440
She put promo code back. It went from like twenty two hundred dollars to thirteen hundred dollars.
00:03:46.140
Oh, my gosh. I mean, don't forget to use the promo code when you check out at places because it was a it was a bigger savings than I thought.
00:03:54.720
But it was pretty amazing. Anyway, I want to before we go to Houston, I just want you to feel better about where you live.
00:04:04.680
Now, imagine you're coming home, Stu, and you're coming from a business trip.
00:04:10.260
OK, you went you went someplace and you were there on business and you were like, honey, damn this corporation.
00:04:21.320
I, I, I, I, I, I broke my leg and I was working and you're like, where I mean, you're still you work in an office.
00:04:33.160
You sit behind it. I broke my leg and there was was on a business trip.
00:04:39.120
OK. OK. And then she found out that you were water skiing.
00:04:46.900
And my business isn't you're not. Your business is what you do.
00:04:50.620
OK. And there were no cameras or anything else.
00:04:53.360
You were just out on a boat with a group of people, hot people, water ski, hot people, hot people.
00:04:59.720
OK. She may be a little suspicious that something else was going on.
00:05:03.840
Right. And would she say, really, that's the company's problem?
00:05:11.100
And did the company ask you to go water skiing?
00:05:19.420
An employee died on a business trip and the family is suing the company.
00:05:26.700
And the courts just ruled, yes, that is a that that's a responsibility of the company to make sure that their people are protected.
00:05:38.360
He was an employee that had a heart attack while having sex with a stranger.
00:05:48.480
She'd have my wife would have more of a problem with that than the water skiing.
00:05:51.560
Yeah. Well, I didn't want to give you something so insane.
00:05:54.160
Right. I mean, my wife would have a problem with the water skiing.
00:06:01.020
And I, I, I, I, OK, I broke both my legs because we're having this crazy sex.
00:06:24.160
So, uh, the family said that they were entitled to compensation, compensation, uh, because that was a workplace injury.
00:06:35.140
And so the company said, no, that's not a workplace industry.
00:06:38.500
I don't know if you know, but he was in his hotel room at night.
00:06:42.020
We had finished work and he picked up a stranger in the bar and it was so good.
00:06:47.860
No offense to rub it in here, but it was so good that he had a heart attack during it.
00:06:52.660
Is it, uh, well, I mean, I guess he wouldn't have been at that hotel if not for the work assignment.
00:07:00.500
The employer is responsible for any accident occurring during a business trip.
00:07:05.920
He wouldn't have been there in a quote, extramarital relationship with a perfect stranger.
00:07:13.760
Had he not been asked to go on the business trip.
00:07:23.600
If you think we're insane, we're not fully there yet.
00:07:28.220
You don't think that could happen in the United States?
00:07:31.440
I just, I don't have, I do not have a case to bring to you, but we can look.
00:07:37.240
I'm trying to build myself up with a lot of hope and a lot of good things so I can watch
00:07:42.240
the debate and last maybe two minutes before my head explodes.
00:07:45.960
I'll say though, I think that it's a good idea to, if you're going to commit a crime in
00:07:51.180
Like if you were to go and murder someone, wouldn't the company be responsible for that
00:07:58.140
I was at a quality in and I just murdered somebody at the bar.
00:08:02.580
But I mean, if I wasn't working for this company, I would have never been at the quality
00:08:05.720
I robbed the bank, but I was only in town that one night because business told me to go
00:08:13.040
As long as you could show it's not premeditated, I think you're clear.
00:08:22.000
Just an extramarital robbery with another bank.
00:08:26.120
If the debate moderator today were to say, if a person were to go and have sex on a trip,
00:08:34.720
You have to believe at least eight of the 10 people are saying it's the company's fault.
00:08:39.440
I will tell you exact number of how many people, how many people would say yes.
00:08:55.700
Somehow or another, the banks would be involved if Elizabeth Warren was-
00:09:00.800
It would be the company, but really the companies were driven by the banks to do it.
00:09:10.120
But he'd put it in a way to where everybody would kind of go like, yeah, that's kind of
00:09:16.440
That's just the average, everyday Joe saying that.
00:09:20.580
Because he's not, to me, average, everyday Joe.
00:09:24.900
Like he's, he speaks in that way that, we've been in those meetings before with like those
00:09:30.500
high level consultants and they lay it all out and you're like, I don't think they said
00:09:34.680
I don't think that, like that was a lot of, a lot of syllables, but I-
00:09:46.280
He's good at, he's good at just talking around things where you're like, I don't know.
00:09:50.480
I don't know what he said, but I kind of feel good.
00:10:00.460
He's in because Bob Frank is in ultimate campaign desperation mode and will say anything.
00:10:06.080
If he doesn't say the F-bomb on the stage tonight, I'll be shocked.
00:10:14.080
They're all so proud of themselves when they can say because Donald Trump in a private meeting
00:10:17.860
said S-hole countries, and so now they all are going to get to say the full word because
00:10:23.540
it's news, in quotes, and so they all come out, you know what Donald Trump said, eh, and
00:10:28.820
No, but, and then now Bob Frank is saying the F-word everywhere.
00:10:34.880
His Hispanic priest, Patrick O'Malley, Father Patrick O'Malley.
00:10:40.280
He's very upset that his young altar boy was, is using the F-word like that.
00:10:48.200
And Patrick O'Malley created Salsa Verde, if I'm not mistaken.
00:11:02.760
Cory Booker's a pandering machine, so he's going to pander no matter what is said.
00:11:06.200
He actually was bashing Trump about the bill that they did together on criminal justice
00:11:13.820
He's like, Chrissy Teigen, the model slash wife of someone who's accomplished things,
00:11:20.320
has wrote some really nasty thing with all sorts of swears and stuff at Donald Trump.
00:11:25.940
And he came out, he's like, another example of Donald Trump targeting minority women.
00:11:33.280
It's like, wait a minute, she was calling him like all sorts of swears, and I don't even
00:11:40.220
She came back with some really like vile rant against her, and he's like, I'm on team Chrissy.
00:11:45.840
Oh, wait, Chrissy Teigen is now a victim of something?
00:12:01.880
I don't either, but I don't know why everyone else is so obsessed with this.
00:12:07.840
The next thing you know, you're going to be saying, no, the company's not responsible
00:12:30.700
And I think Biden would just, it would just have to look at everybody else.
00:12:36.500
And if everybody else was saying yes, then he'd say yes.
00:12:39.060
And then he'd probably flub six, seven sentences in a row.
00:12:50.400
We're going to, we're going to talk a little bit about the debate tonight in Houston.
00:12:53.200
One of our, one of our writers and journalists from the blaze and glennbeck.com is going down.
00:13:02.480
And I'm going to try to convince him to shout out bingo.
00:13:10.500
One day you notice that all the blinds in your house look like they, you know, they stopped to hail a hand grenades.
00:13:20.980
We were picking out, um, we were picking up blinds, uh, and, uh, and shades.
00:13:26.820
And, you know, we were at, we were at that blinds.com.
00:13:29.860
And I just told you a few minutes ago, I wasn't, I didn't know I was going to do a commercial for it today.
00:13:33.940
Um, and, uh, we get down to it and we're putting all these blinds in and it was like, I don't know, 22 or $2,300.
00:13:41.340
And my wife looked at me and went, and I said, I know it, but a 40% off.
00:13:47.920
Uh, and she said, okay, that's just a lot of money for blinds.
00:14:07.760
She put it in and it went from $2,200 to like $1,300.
00:14:19.560
So we have been looking at blinds and we went to other places, uh, and we did our homework and they were much more expensive than the $2,200.
00:14:29.540
Uh, and then it put the promo code in and, uh, hello, make sure you put the promo code in.
00:14:35.080
So make sure you do that, uh, because, uh, worked out pretty well for us last night.
00:14:40.260
Uh, may I recommend if you're looking for blind shade, shutters, drapes, anything for your, your windows, blinds.com has it.
00:14:47.900
They do a really good job and you are going to find, uh, an easy way to do it online.
00:15:03.580
Plus you'll get an extra 20 bucks off at blinds.com when you use the promo code back.
00:15:10.220
You shouldn't have been surprised by this either.
00:15:15.600
I, are you, I just, it doesn't seem like it'd be a huge shock.
00:15:21.360
I asked my wife, did you put the promo code in?
00:15:24.900
Because the, the price was cheaper than the blinds we were looking at from someplace else.
00:15:29.940
And so I said, she said, that's still a lot of money.
00:15:33.800
And I said, yes, but have you put the promo code in?
00:16:03.740
Welcome to our, our writer and journalist, Kevin Ryan, who's written several things for us this week.
00:16:14.460
He's, he's writing something on, is it on the blaze or is it on?
00:16:20.540
A great story about your encounter with, and I don't mean that in a French sort of business way, your encounter with Joe Biden.
00:16:33.580
And so we all know the story about his comparison, poor kids to white kids.
00:16:38.800
But one thing you, you won't find anywhere else is the, the overall view of the room, which was hilarious.
00:16:46.760
I mean, it was just like a scene straight out of a comedy.
00:16:50.300
Like there was a lady probably three or four feet away from me, because everybody's kind of crowded in, who was really drunk.
00:16:58.560
And she, she kept sneaking out of the room and she, like every time she came back in, she shoved everybody aside a little bit harder.
00:17:06.960
Cause she was just hitting something, vodka or wine or something.
00:17:11.160
Now, is it a requirement to be drunk at a Joe Biden rally?
00:17:27.660
And I think, um, the, the tone of this piece, just like the rest of the series, it's a lot different than, than my profile series.
00:17:36.020
Cause you did the profile on Jordan Peterson and, uh, what?
00:17:43.720
If you haven't read those around on the blaze, they're great.
00:17:46.620
Uh, so you can find that at theblaze.com also at glennbeck.com.
00:17:50.200
Uh, a very great, great story about Joe Biden and being in the room with Joe Biden.
00:17:55.740
And now you're going to be in the room again with him tonight.
00:18:01.460
Uh, and you're going to, first, you're going to see the giant, uh, socialism sucks or whatever
00:18:06.520
it says, uh, the banner that is flying around Houston today.
00:18:26.300
What do you, do you know where you're going to be?
00:18:31.540
I think Stu and I were looking at the media, um, my credentials.
00:18:37.840
There's, it's going to be, there's a story there.
00:18:44.120
You may be watching it in your hotel room about 10 miles away.
00:18:50.140
What would the, what should the word be that it, when one of them brings up this word or
00:18:54.600
this policy that he should scream bingo, just scream bingo as loud as you can.
00:19:00.640
You probably shouldn't do it as a journalist, but as a friend, you definitely should.
00:19:06.420
I mean, you can certainly do it when Andrew Yang talks about universal basic income.
00:19:15.040
Um, what else should the, I, I mean, I think what's going to be the big focus of this today.
00:19:20.100
People are talking about this as if it's the biggest debate of that they've had so far.
00:19:25.160
The next debate, all of these people have already qualified for it.
00:19:30.740
So there's 11 now have qualified for the next debate.
00:19:33.180
So, and also Gabbard and others have chances to get into the next debate.
00:19:38.380
So I don't know that this is the biggest one so far.
00:19:40.580
I think it's going to be kind of a, a low profile one and it's going up against the
00:19:44.240
national football league, which is something Andrew Yang complained about.
00:19:58.920
Um, so it is a, uh, I think it's going to be, you could call bingo out every time somebody
00:20:06.860
And then you could just blame it on Tourette's say, I'm sorry.
00:20:09.380
I just have Tourette's because you'll be screaming it all night.
00:20:32.300
And technically I think you work for glenbeck.com or do you work for the blaze?
00:20:46.020
I, I, I, I don't know what to expect out of this one.
00:20:48.320
They're making it into a big deal because Warren and Sanders and Biden will be on the same page.
00:20:55.740
You mean stage, you also mean page, which is very good.
00:21:02.520
Um, I think, uh, Sanders has something to do here, right?
00:21:07.620
Like Biden and Warren, I would say are the two or one, two right now, even though Sanders is right there in the polls with Warren.
00:21:14.260
You know, Warren and Sanders are competing for the same voters.
00:21:19.400
He's going to get attacked by people like Julian Castro and Bob Frank and Bob Frank O'Rourke is going to come after him to try to make news.
00:21:26.700
But I think that you have to, if you're Sanders, you have to do something to, to figure out how to expand past the 15% you've been stuck at since this campaign launched.
00:21:45.720
Warren just has to look better than Sanders without cutting him off at the knees.
00:21:54.800
You know, with white Democratic voters, Warren is beating, is beating Biden.
00:22:10.640
I mean, and that's the problem with this for Biden is that the first state that has decent representation of African-American voters is state number four, South Carolina.
00:22:20.720
So he's got to get through three states where he's not demographically advantaged to get there.
00:22:28.360
There's this scenario where Warren wins Iowa and New Hampshire and Nevada.
00:22:35.580
I mean, he'll be the only one that could stop her at that point.
00:22:37.300
Yeah, I love, I love what Jim Cramer said about it yesterday.
00:22:41.300
And we'll get to that here coming up in just a second.
00:22:51.200
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00:23:23.060
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00:23:45.520
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00:23:58.180
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00:24:13.960
Just going to check in with him and see what's on his mind.
00:24:18.560
He follows politics, but I don't know if he follows it like we follow it.
00:24:35.900
And if you love the country and you follow it every day, don't you all want to hang yourself every day?
00:24:40.520
Don't you kind of like, hmm, don't think I can do another day of this?
00:24:47.520
It might be because we are all paying attention to what people are doing in Washington.
00:24:52.240
Pat is here from the Pat Gray Radio Roundup, otherwise known as Pat Gray Unleashed.
00:25:04.660
Pat is the host of that podcast, which you can hear live as he records it every morning, right before this one.
00:25:14.300
Uh, and, uh, you can find that wherever you get, uh, podcast or on blazetv.com.
00:25:22.020
Let's talk about the craziness in Philadelphia.
00:25:25.540
Uh, Philadelphia is acting police commissioner.
00:26:06.280
She came in to work, what, last week and was wearing that?
00:26:10.520
Just the, a, a photo surfaced of her from 25 years ago.
00:26:19.000
And now she, you know, they're, they're demanding that she resign because of it.
00:26:23.220
I mean, you're not going to be able to, uh, you better start deleting.
00:26:38.220
I mean, yeah, you're, our kids are going to be.
00:26:46.980
How, when you're a kid, when you're a 15 year old boy, you're not saying things necessarily
00:26:54.640
You're saying them because you know you can get a rise out of people.
00:26:59.620
When you're a 15 year old boy, you don't know what you believe.
00:27:08.000
I saw Jeff, uh, what's his name Bowers, uh, and the way he was, you know, beating up on
00:27:13.440
those other kids and he had real hatred in his heart.
00:27:18.140
But for the most part, kids are just saying things that.
00:27:23.560
You can go back and find any incentive, insensitive joke from a kid at 15 years old.
00:27:27.780
It's usually made because they think it's going to piss a bunch of people off.
00:27:30.880
It's not made because they have a deep seated ideology of, you know, like, it's just like,
00:27:35.660
and when you're young, I'm not supposed to say, let me say that.
00:27:39.020
And when you're young, especially with comedy, when you're young, you don't cut funny.
00:27:45.040
That was literally our theme really for the show when back in the day, back in the day,
00:27:59.060
That was my, that was the first thing I told everybody that came to work for me on the
00:28:10.200
You know, we were never, I, we didn't invent, you know, the claptor.
00:28:14.980
Like, ah, not funny, but I'm laughing in approval.
00:28:20.980
Now, I mean, how are our kids going to survive?
00:28:23.180
The only hope is saturation, I think, for kids today.
00:28:27.640
I was, I was reading, going back through, we were talking about history yesterday and
00:28:31.420
I was clicking around through a bunch of stories and went down some wormhole and there
00:28:38.680
They found, they actually found the potato kid recently.
00:28:45.500
Wait, wait, for anybody who doesn't know this story, he's a child that Dan Quayle had kept
00:28:50.960
in a, in a dark box underneath his refrigerator sink with the potatoes.
00:28:56.880
It was a horrible, horrible thing when we found this out.
00:29:00.200
And it was initially because Dan Quayle impregnated a potato.
00:29:05.580
But the potato has a lot of eyes and he couldn't take the way the potato was looking at him.
00:29:10.780
There's a lot of justification for what he did and we're not going to get into it now.
00:29:14.140
But so he, if you remember, of course, he went up and, and the kid spelled the word
00:29:19.140
And he added on the E and then there was a back and forth about how it used to be spelled.
00:29:22.200
Which, by the way, it used to be spelled that way.
00:29:26.800
But I mean, it basically, I mean, Quayle made the point essentially that it ruined his life.
00:29:31.800
I mean, it certainly ruined his career and was a, it really dramatically affected his life
00:29:40.940
We have politicians that misspell words a hundred times a day on Twitter and no one even
00:29:48.460
At some point, there's a saturation of these things where people just don't care anymore.
00:29:52.780
And maybe we'll get to that point with our kids.
00:29:54.500
They all have so much crap on their, on their back.
00:29:57.000
They've all said so many offensive things on Twitter over the years that you can't hire
00:30:05.580
If it's the algorithm and the algorithm has been written by somebody who has an agenda,
00:30:20.040
The saturation of the story two years ago that Planned Parenthood was selling body parts.
00:30:33.920
Now we have Planned Parenthood admitting in a court of law and the people that were procuring
00:30:42.100
it admitting under oath that, yes, they were selling them.
00:30:45.840
And the company that was procuring them testified that they were taking beating hearts out of intact bodies.
00:31:14.080
So if you just saturate it with something, when it turns out to be true, it doesn't matter.
00:31:24.160
You sat there getting beat up for three years about how a caliphate might be coming.
00:31:28.540
And then all of a sudden there was a caliphate.
00:31:30.600
And then like the New York Times just starts a podcast called Caliphate.
00:31:35.120
Like these people are out there criticizing you like crazy for years.
00:31:39.900
They're like crazy conspiracy theorist, all of these things.
00:31:48.760
Also, I was reading an article the other day that was titled, Dave Chappelle will save the nation.
00:31:57.820
And when I read it, I thought, yeah, you know what?
00:32:14.840
And one of those comedians that all those guys respect and admire.
00:32:18.760
John Stewart on his last show said, I'm I'm this was a joy and I can't wait to go back and be on stage with people like Nick DiPaolo.
00:32:35.640
So, I mean, Nick is really, really good, but he's not doing, you know, the Netflix special because he's on the other side.
00:33:06.140
How is he getting away with saying all of these things?
00:33:15.840
And I think we're at that point to where people don't care anymore.
00:33:21.600
I've never seen a funnier routine than Dave Chappelle's.
00:33:24.380
I mean, that that is an hour and 10 minutes of just absolute brilliance.
00:33:29.020
And Netflix does take some chances with this stuff.
00:33:31.860
And he's not really, I wouldn't call that a left wing routine either.
00:33:36.320
Because every time you think he's going there, there's a little twist.
00:33:45.960
I think people, conservatives are like, oh, well, finally someone's saying some conservative things.
00:33:49.800
Really, he's just making observations about the world and not caring which side it falls on.
00:33:53.740
And that is like, it's a superpower these days.
00:33:56.320
I mean, Bill Burr has a special up there now, which is getting the same type of buzz as the Chappelle one.
00:34:02.380
I'll tell you, there is a chance that comedy saves the country.
00:34:17.360
How do you write something crazier than what's happening?
00:34:24.740
And it's just the observations that no one is willing to say anymore that are true and funny.
00:34:32.680
Because it used to be, if you were joking about something, you were kind of let off the hook.
00:34:39.660
You didn't lose your job if you were joking about something.
00:34:43.000
And clearly people knew you were joking about it.
00:34:54.200
I mean, I guess if she was the police commissioner today, maybe it would be a bad idea.
00:34:59.420
I'm meeting with the police commissioners in Los Angeles, and I thought I'd wear this t-shirt
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Putting it on in a meeting today, that's where you cross a great line.
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There's some audio that we missed yesterday because 9-11, and I want to make sure we get
00:37:03.720
The press has made it sound like the Virginia governor was not talking about infanticide.
00:37:09.620
There was testimony up on the Hill two days ago that you need to hear.
00:37:15.920
She was at Christ Hospital in Oak Lawn, Illinois, and she spoke about her experiences watching
00:37:21.860
something horrifying when speaking on behalf of the Born Alive Act in Washington.
00:37:27.160
When I heard Virginia Governor Ralph Northam, who is a pediatric neurologist, described during
00:37:32.900
an interview, the process by which doctors determined to shelve unwanted abortion survivors, it hit
00:37:43.040
About third trimester abortions, he said, and I'm quoting, if a mother's in labor, I can tell
00:37:55.220
The infant would be resuscitated if that's what the mother and the family desired.
00:38:04.500
This is exactly what happens, I know, because I cared for a dying baby on the other side of
00:38:13.180
My experience was 20 years ago, but as Governor Northam made clear, this is still happening today.
00:38:20.440
I was a registered nurse at Christ Hospital in Oak Lawn, Illinois, when I learned that it
00:38:27.240
committed abortions into the second and third trimester.
00:38:31.040
The procedure, called induced labor abortion, sometimes resulted in babies being aborted alive,
00:38:38.760
and if they were aborted alive, they were allowed to die without any medical care or intervention
00:38:45.260
They were given what was called comfort care, made comfortable, as Governor Northam indicated.
00:38:54.580
One night, a nursing coworker was taking a little abortion survivor to the soiled utility room
00:39:00.060
to die, and when she told me what she was doing, I couldn't bear the thought of this suffering
00:39:06.860
He'd been aborted because he had Down syndrome, and he was between 21 and 22 weeks old, about
00:39:13.780
the size of my hand, and he didn't move very much because he was using all of his energy
00:39:21.840
And I remember, toward the end of his life, I couldn't tell if he was alive or not unless
00:39:26.620
I held him up against the light to see if I could see his heart beating through his chest
00:39:30.360
wall because their skin is so thin at that age.
00:39:33.560
And after he was pronounced dead, I folded his little arms across his chest.
00:39:41.560
I wrapped him in a shroud, and I took him to the morgue where we took all of our dead patients.
00:39:48.700
I will tell you that she went on in that testimony to talk about how, when it was discovered by
00:39:54.260
the people, that Christ Hospital, Christ Hospital, they made a nice little room where you could
00:40:06.360
baptize the baby as they were dying or whatever, and she said, I took pictures of the room.
00:40:14.720
All of this nonsense that the governor of Virginia was, you know, that's not what he said.
00:40:30.080
We have people who are lying on issues of life and death.
00:40:38.260
I mean, we're talking about, hey, did Saddam Hussein have weapons of mass destruction?
00:40:52.660
People are killing children in hospitals after birth.
00:41:19.320
You know, we've had a tough, tough week with 9-11, the remembrance yesterday, and the stupid
00:41:31.540
things the press were saying yesterday about it.
00:41:40.160
I wanted to check in with our friend Nick DiPaolo.
00:41:42.060
If you don't know who Nick DiPaolo is, you need to.
00:41:44.880
But I warn you, he is very politically incorrect.
00:41:50.560
And to say that he probably doesn't book a lot of concerts in Salt Lake City is an understatement.
00:42:02.480
He's saying the things that you just, you'll watch and you'll think, how is this guy still available on any platform?
00:42:13.540
He is taking comedy seriously, making it funny again, and saying the things that he's always been saying.
00:42:29.400
Okay, so Victoria, she wrote in, she said, my pillow was a gift I got before going away to college.
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And I've had this pillow for about five years now.
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I just want you to know, Glenn, I couldn't be happier.
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If I, I noticed that if I use any other pillow, my neck and back are uncomfortable.
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But my pillow, I sleep comfortably throughout the entire night, feel great the next morning.
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Ladies and gentlemen, from the comfort, I believe, of his own home in Georgia, it's Nick DiPaolo.
00:44:12.840
Your physical appearance since O'Reilly days has...
00:44:18.900
Let me just hear you say, come down to KFC, a crayon, get a biscuit.
00:44:25.860
You know, it's really, you know, it's really horrible.
00:44:35.540
I was the last to get it, and I always wanted it because my grandfather had it.
00:44:39.040
But I've turned into my grandfather, and if that's not bad enough, I do look exactly like Colonel Sanders.
00:44:48.940
Well, the white shirt and the black tie is not helping.
00:44:55.660
As you have pointed out, Glenn, though, you are fatter than Colonel Sanders.
00:44:59.800
Yeah, when I actually looked at a picture of Colonel Sanders, I am in worse shape than the guy who is selling fried chicken out of the trunk of his car.
00:45:36.160
Gee, I wonder who's going to win in the ratings.
00:45:42.440
Well, Joe Biden's out of his mind, and he has no business being in the race.
00:45:52.860
I mean, I can't believe he's still in the lead.
00:45:55.160
This guy, he doesn't even know what state he's in.
00:45:57.940
He's a, well, I love here coming to New Hampshire.
00:46:10.040
So, but is he, is he the guy that is doing well just because everybody else is nuts?
00:46:38.240
And, uh, why do you, why do you live in, uh, Vermont, Bernie?
00:46:48.160
He, he's, first of all, he talks like, uh, like me.
00:46:51.520
He, he puts ours on words that whether, you know, I'll have a vodka and tonic and, uh,
00:46:56.220
I have to head, I'll be touring in Nebraska and, uh, and, uh, you and the, and the barter.
00:47:13.640
And if I was Bernie, I'd be PO'd because, uh, Liz Warren is just, uh, you know, rehashing
00:47:20.200
He had the nerve to come out and admit he was a socialist and now she's just trying to steal
00:47:29.900
There's no ours on the word where there should be ours.
00:47:31.960
And adding them where they're, they don't exist.
00:47:34.560
That's what Brooklyn people do and Boston people.
00:47:41.900
Uh, how about the fact that he doesn't understand money?
00:47:44.840
He, he says, I don't understand why we, we can't pay peaches like ballplayers.
00:47:48.700
Ballplayers, uh, we do, we, we pay him like double a ballplayers, but I mean, he doesn't
00:48:00.320
When you can get 20 million people to tune in to a science teacher, rubbing a balloon
00:48:04.520
on a kid's cardigan, uh, to teach electricity and then sell 12,000 beers at 10 bucks a pop.
00:48:11.380
Look, there's only one type of teacher who should get paid like a pro ballplayer.
00:48:15.560
And that's the, uh, young female teachers who sleep with their 14 year old boy students.
00:48:26.040
I'll go right into the principal's office and say, Mrs. Johnson deserves another $200,000
00:48:32.740
Well, she slept with half the basketball team last month and, uh, look at her numbers.
00:48:41.460
Uh, so, uh, what do you, what do you make of Pete Buttigieg?
00:48:49.200
This guy is a, he is a smarmy little sanctimonious, holier than thou.
00:48:58.240
And, and he's on this whole, I mean, he, he passes himself off as this, you know, religious
00:49:05.680
He says in, inaction on, you know, climbing, uh, on inaction on, uh, you know, uh, climate
00:49:15.580
He says, so what are you, what are you going to go into the confessional?
00:49:19.480
If I have sinned, I, uh, I have a sexual thoughts about my neighbor's wife.
00:49:23.540
I murdered a person 20 years ago and I am not using paper straws.
00:49:32.440
I was just in, uh, Los Angeles last week and they handed, you know, you, I asked for a
00:49:40.540
I mean, they have to ask for it and then they don't give, they reward you with this
00:49:44.300
paper straw that I hated those when we, well, they were passing out milk when I was in school.
00:49:53.380
You want, you want me to believe that Hollywood stars are snorting coke with paper straws?
00:50:00.240
Matthew McConaughey has 19 paper cuts in his left sinus.
00:50:08.080
There's a, there's a couple of things that I saw today.
00:50:10.480
There was a story about a 77 year old guy who's being released from prison because Trump
00:50:18.820
He was digging a trench around his property because he was afraid of, uh, of fires.
00:50:25.540
Uh, and he dug a trench and he, he kind of made a little moat.
00:50:30.340
He took a, like a two foot stream and channeled it in so that water was around his property
00:50:47.620
Uh, but Trump has just, has just let him, uh, let him out.
00:50:55.640
Now the EPA is saying that they want to eliminate all animal testing.
00:51:05.300
I said, uh, as far as animal testing, you know, if, if, if hooking a monkey's brain up to a
00:51:11.020
car battery is going to save somebody from dying of AIDS, I have two things to say.
00:51:20.040
If you don't want to use animals, let's replace the, let's, let's replace the animals with
00:51:25.480
Let's, uh, let's, let's, let's pump some chemicals and solvent into Gerald Nadler and see how
00:51:40.160
He just reacts like normal human beings do when they walk up a bunch of stairs when he
00:51:45.760
Yeah, no, this is, this is a, this is quite a workout for me.
00:51:53.100
Yeah, I, I, I have been, I'm living Texas now, by the way, you're living, you moved
00:52:03.120
I moved to a, uh, uh, you know, a very red state.
00:52:06.720
And, uh, first thing I did when I got down here, I wanted to be seven.
00:52:09.720
So I bought a handgun and I put it on my lap and I went through Chick-fil-A drive-thru
00:52:13.740
and I thought I was going to scare the person in the window.
00:52:19.300
They're like, well, you got, let's say I had a 38 snub nose.
00:52:27.020
He's trying to mess around my sister on the 4th of July.
00:52:34.680
Back with more from Nick DiPaolo here in just a second.
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How many, how many shows a year do you do, Nick?
00:54:40.600
Uh, so I used to do 30, 35 weeks a year when I was, you know, young and single and facing
00:54:47.980
And, uh, you know, but, uh, after your eighth time back to Cleveland, you know, how many
00:54:54.980
And, uh, so I probably, I don't know, probably it's probably around 15 weekends.
00:55:01.500
So have you been, have you been affected by this, this quashing of comedy over the last
00:55:15.040
I mean, I'm sure I didn't do myself any favors like landing good gigs, uh, as far as TV and
00:55:24.440
Uh, but, but as far as live performances, I, I, I, I came out of the closet as a righty
00:55:33.620
I was, uh, you know, I was spewing the term cultural Marxism on that show, which was a
00:55:45.180
Everybody gives Dennis Miller and the Schwarzenegger credit for being righties.
00:55:48.480
I'm like, yeah, well, they had 70 million in the bank when they, uh, so, but, so I,
00:55:55.340
I'm not, I'm a comedian who happens to lean right in, in, in, in, so, so people came out
00:56:03.240
Uh, so, you know, but, but yes and no, I, I, a few people walk out of my shows all the
00:56:20.280
Let, let me ask you what your, your thought is on the Dave Chappelle special.
00:56:32.380
I honestly, I don't think Richard Pryor or Chris Rock have anything on Dave Chappelle.
00:56:43.700
And, uh, I, Chappelle is just, he's like a jazz musician.
00:56:51.040
That being said, my only problem is people are coming out there and people on my side
00:56:58.780
Well, he, first of all, he's a famous black guy with a hundred million in the bank.
00:57:11.960
That's why I'm doing a show in the back of an Applebee's right now.
00:57:18.900
And I'm glad somebody that that's famous and has that many people watching, but the message,
00:57:25.440
And if you watch my special breath of fresh air, I touched on basically the same things
00:57:31.080
His came out a few months after mine, we touched on the same subjects.
00:57:34.620
People should put them side by side and go, and this is how it is for a white guy.
00:57:37.980
So I just don't like that they're going, oh, he's fearless.
00:57:41.300
A famous black guy in show business has never gotten trouble for anything other than OJ in
00:57:47.540
But I mean, he's not going to get trouble for anything he says.
00:57:51.740
And so you don't think this, cause he has gotten pushback.
00:57:56.460
Pushback's one thing, but being canned or being, you know, put under the radar for the rest of
00:58:02.820
And, uh, that, that's never going to happen, uh, to Chappelle.
00:58:10.960
He actually came out and said, if my baby's gay, I'm going to kill it.
00:58:16.020
And, uh, you know, six months later, he has a new series on TBS.
00:58:23.540
Tell me a white guy that could say something that outrageous and not be banned from the
00:58:33.780
And I suggest everybody watch that special, but I then, then watch mine and I'm not comparing
00:58:41.260
Uh, but you know, you're going to see the point of view from a white straight 57 year
00:58:47.580
And, and, and he has a little more leeway to say stuff that I do, even though I cut
00:58:54.440
He is, um, you know, I think he's being, um, people are assigning things to him that he
00:59:04.260
Um, many of them take you a minute before you say, wait, wait a minute.
00:59:12.280
He's, he's making a point, but you can't really pin him down.
00:59:19.580
But I don't, I wouldn't, I wouldn't say that he's, for instance, you know, pro-life, but
00:59:29.640
Uh, which I think is part of the genius of the way he's, he wrote this.
00:59:37.280
It's funny you say that because the next hour I'm working on, I have about 10 minutes on
00:59:41.720
abortion and you won't know where I stand either.
00:59:44.280
You know, I, I, look, I, I can't say I, people assume I'm pro-life cause I lean right in my
00:59:50.940
Uh, but I'd be a hypocrite to say that because when I was young, I got a few girls pregnant
00:59:55.000
and I was glad to have planned parenthoods or I don't know, Midas mufflers.
00:59:59.560
I can't remember where they used to do that stuff.
01:00:20.300
And he says, because both Republicans and Democrats buy sneakers and, uh, it's sort of
01:00:25.580
Chappelle sort of, but he, I, but I don't think he's doing that intentionally.
01:00:28.920
I mean, he's, that's how he thinks he's looking at both sides fairly and you don't see that
01:00:34.280
And that, that, that was the genius of it that you, like you said, you could get him down
01:00:39.780
And look, Netflix is Netflix, but let's not downplay the success of a breath of fresh air.
01:00:43.600
I mean, you're up 800,000 views now on YouTube.
01:00:57.320
Um, because yeah, I'm, I'm brutally honest about it.
01:01:01.820
Is it Trump or is it that people are starting to see the effects in their own life?
01:01:09.840
You know, I don't say that they're handicapped.
01:01:13.360
I don't want to, but then you get to a point to where you're like, shut up, shut up.
01:01:24.960
That's now wrestling my daughter in female wrestling.
01:01:28.840
And so I think they're just, this is played out long enough to where people are seeing
01:01:34.700
it affect their, their own life in a negative way.
01:01:38.820
Well, that's some of it, but, but when Trump, look, this is when I, and again, folks, keep
01:01:45.460
I have a much darker sense of humor than you do, but this, this is what I swear to God.
01:01:49.840
And I said, I'm going to vote for Trump and I'm laying on the couch.
01:01:54.360
Remember he went after the, uh, physically challenged report of the New York.
01:01:58.180
I look over the TV and I see Trump and I said, where do I pull the lever?
01:02:08.040
He, he's been great for me because he's calling the media out on the PC bull crap.
01:02:13.680
And, uh, and yes, like you said, uh, just through the way things are evolving, people
01:02:18.280
have had enough, but, but I love that, uh, he, he would say anything.
01:02:23.260
I'm watching him do a rally the other day and they throw a heckler out.
01:02:27.060
And as they throw the guy out, Trump goes, that guy has a weight problem.
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Stu, did you see the, um, did you see the ISIS island video, uh, that was, was released,
01:04:00.600
So apparently ISIS has this island and who knew, and they were storing all kinds of stuff
01:04:10.760
Island life is getting weird with ISIS and Jeffrey Epstein.
01:04:16.320
Uh, and, uh, so we put out a, um, the, the joint, I don't know what it is in enduring
01:04:24.220
whatever, uh, put out a video, uh, and it was from the, I think it was from the edge of
01:04:32.640
Uh, and they showed the bombing of ISIS Island and it is extraordinarily cool.
01:04:45.340
Combined Joint Task Force Operation Inherent Resolve?
01:04:49.560
I don't think this is, yeah, no, this is, this is, I think this is fantasy island, but
01:05:01.180
they show the, you know, they're showing the island, um, a little different than this
01:05:49.560
We'll have to, you know, put that out, put that out on social media.
01:05:54.380
It's a, it's kind of a nicer telling of it, you know, the other one is, do we have the
01:06:05.000
It's, you know, it's got like spooky music with it.
01:06:08.660
But I like he, this is, you're killing ISIS members.
01:06:15.680
Well, they didn't, they didn't have, um, what was his name?
01:06:23.960
There's just no reason for him to climb into a tower and ring a bell and sell and yell
01:06:31.040
Like at, first of all, everyone on the ground can see a plane coming.
01:06:34.400
You don't need to be in a tower to see a plane coming.
01:06:36.680
Number two, if you're going to yell the plane, you don't need to ring the bell.
01:06:40.020
And if you ring the bell, you don't need to yell the plane.
01:06:45.020
This is a, I mean, it's just a terrible business.
01:06:56.800
It's kind of like, uh, what's that, what's that show on HBO about the, uh, AI robots?
01:07:19.000
I liked, I watched a decent amount of love boat.
01:07:21.020
I did not watch a decent amount of fantasy island.
01:07:23.180
I don't know if my parents thought it was inappropriate or something.
01:07:25.260
It was probably it was, you know, fantasy island.
01:07:27.960
So you would go and it would be like, I just want to be discovered and be the greatest
01:07:37.380
And then suddenly you could go and sing and some agent would find you and you'd live this
01:07:43.940
But sometimes it wasn't all what you thought it would be.
01:07:51.520
And so you would go do, you'd live out your fantasy on fantasy island.
01:07:57.680
But Westworld is what people's really fantasy, fantasies really are.
01:08:03.580
Westworld's much more realistic with a human mind.
01:08:06.740
And I'm wondering if, I'm wondering if we have changed or if we just always were like
01:08:14.300
Like when, when the plane, the plane, I just want to fall in love and just be with a beautiful
01:08:19.820
woman and a woman who loves me back, blah, blah, blah.
01:08:23.120
Or was it, I just really just want to be with a woman and then maybe shoot her in the end.
01:08:30.000
That's the difference between fantasy island and Westworld.
01:08:36.360
I don't really want to admit what is probably true there.
01:08:42.960
It's almost like a precursor to like online life, right?
01:08:49.380
Like, was it the Sims, the game that was like a, the game where you'd like have a fake
01:08:55.900
And I guess you'd be like successful instead of the crappy job you had.
01:08:59.680
Like your online life, you were, you were, you were, you were cool.
01:09:03.880
And then in, you know, in, in real life, you, you know, you were a complete disaster.
01:09:17.780
Yeah, well, I don't think, but I think it's different.
01:09:20.120
I mean, like a fantasy Island, they weren't AI, they were real people, right?
01:09:23.920
And so you wouldn't want to do that to a real person.
01:09:26.040
But if you, if it was AI and they were just going to be resetting it, you would, the first
01:09:31.340
time you might, well, this is, geez, I'm, this is the story.
01:09:35.860
I'm only about four years behind you, but you should do this because it's good.
01:09:39.760
Like the first time you go, you would have feelings and emotions and you would want to
01:09:47.640
But then after a while, you might as well switch it up, switch it up.
01:09:53.320
At first you start, you're trying to be the hero and then you just start running over
01:09:58.980
Um, but I mean, just as a, cause you're a rich person and you're like, I want to have
01:10:04.980
I'm going to pay a bunch of people to pretend I'm a good singer and, and clap for me and
01:10:15.620
They just couldn't quite get a break or they, they were too nervous or what?
01:10:21.020
I don't, I, I am, I am digging way back into the Glenn Beck memory vaults.
01:10:26.040
You know, it's not like I've, not like I've said to the kids.
01:10:28.800
Hey, you guys want to watch a great show from the seventies.
01:10:34.640
That might've been the first time that phrase has ever come out of another person's mouth.
01:10:40.960
I would rather watch fantasy Island than this debate tonight though.
01:10:45.320
How about I watch fantasy Island and give you a report on it and you watch the debate?
01:10:51.320
You watch fantasy Island and we don't give the audience a report on it.
01:10:57.500
We need to get like someone from the audience should just call in like, I, cause I want
01:11:01.040
to watch the game and Glenn wants to watch fantasy Island or, you know, duck tales or
01:11:09.140
What if we bribe an audience member to watch this debate?
01:11:21.480
We'll give you $45 in Applebee's gift cards since we've been talking about Applebee's
01:11:36.240
We'll have Marissa dig around the prize closet for all the stuff that we haven't given away.
01:11:41.440
I'm sorry to play the union negotiator here for the audience, but I don't think that's
01:11:52.740
We're going to take three hours of family leave.
01:11:56.980
You got to go out and drink for an hour after the first hour.
01:12:00.880
You could take a break during either commercials or when Julian Castro is speaking.
01:12:04.280
One of those two, you could take a break because no one cares.
01:12:06.280
I don't think he's going to be speaking that much.
01:12:08.840
I think this is a good, we should see if there's someone who will give us a report
01:12:16.220
I'll give you $100 just to watch the debate and then report back to us so we can pretend
01:12:24.800
I mean, first of all, I love the fact that we're giving away your money for this purpose.
01:12:30.940
Are we allowed to give away $100 to some random, I mean, I don't see why not.
01:12:35.860
I know, but you know there's all these rules on this.
01:12:38.040
You know, when you're doing contests, but this is not contests.
01:12:44.740
So you hire a freelancer for three hours tonight.
01:12:53.500
More than Elizabeth Warren is paying her people.
01:12:57.440
And all you have to do is watch it and take some notes and tell us which clips we should
01:13:09.420
So you can't have gone to an Ivy League college.
01:13:18.140
Yes, you come out as an idiot on the other end.
01:13:22.120
Well, but I want someone who's not, and it can't just be, oh, we're going to just only
01:13:29.760
Like, I want to hear what crazy proposals they have, not just, you know, Joe Biden's eye
01:13:36.300
Like, I need to, we need to have a little bit more.
01:13:38.160
His eye just bopped out and rolled around the stage and he didn't even realize it.
01:13:47.880
Because he's had aneurysm, so somebody that could actually, now it would go up, the price
01:13:55.100
Well, I think we could, anyone with some medical knowledge.
01:13:59.180
I mean, look, there's, most of these candidates are like 112 years old.
01:14:05.940
We need someone who can sense the medical issues.
01:14:08.180
All right, if you'd like to put your hat in the ring, and what you'll do is you'll watch
01:14:11.440
it tonight and you'll come on the show with us tomorrow, okay?
01:14:13.940
And we'll pay you that living wage of $33.33 an hour.
01:14:20.020
And we'll maybe give us some bonus for you actually having to get up the next day and
01:14:34.760
I don't understand why you're giving this away.
01:14:45.900
If I said to you, I'm paying you to do this already.
01:15:01.000
If we want to make this, if we want to have correct coverage.
01:15:05.640
You're paying me much more than $100 to watch this.
01:15:31.000
I better find out if someone's protesting that darn flag tonight.
01:15:37.820
And you've got to give us, you know, give us some credentials here.
01:15:41.060
Why you should be the person that we hire to watch this.
01:15:47.380
And then report it back to us so we can claim that we watched it.
01:16:06.960
We may be undercutting the market a little bit.
01:16:14.920
What, are you going to Venmo it to them or something?
01:16:27.460
You can't really moonlight as a real estate agent.
01:16:31.660
There's all kinds of things that, you know, really only serious people should be approaching this.
01:16:44.460
The amount of paperwork alone is enough to scare any sane person.
01:16:48.340
This is why my wife and I started realestateagentsitrust.com.
01:16:54.120
And how do you find the right person that can actually sell your home?
01:16:59.560
We took the time to find out what the best practices were and what makes a great real estate agent.
01:17:11.060
We only have a thousand that are actually on our list.
01:17:14.480
We have thousands, 5,000 others that want to be a part of this team.
01:17:18.560
But we want to make sure that everybody is exactly right.
01:17:21.540
So if we don't have a real estate agent in your area, which is, uh, sometimes can be, um,
01:17:26.800
if we don't have a real estate agent, we won't recommend one.
01:17:29.700
We want to make sure this person is going to sell your home for the most amount of money.
01:17:34.580
They're going to do it fast and help you find a next home.
01:17:38.240
And if it's not in that area, we'll find a real estate agent for you in another area.
01:17:52.520
We're paying, uh, we're paying a listener a hundred bucks.
01:18:15.940
If they'll actually watch the debate tonight and then come on and report it and give us enough information so we can sound like we watched it.
01:18:32.280
You seem very businesslike and I'm glad this is an interview and $72 are on the line for you.
01:18:39.300
Uh, if you, um, Mr. Beck, I'm willing to do it for free.
01:18:44.200
If you don't want to pay me, that's no, I, I don't have a problem paying you.
01:18:58.120
Well, well, well, Mr. Beck and, and Stu, I am actually, I've, I've met you guys both before.
01:19:04.940
I am a graduate of the first Mercury one leadership training program.
01:19:18.000
I am a recent graduate of the political science department of Grove City College.
01:19:23.140
And so I'm, um, a student of one of your, um, favorite.
01:19:29.800
Um, I'm a student of one of your, um, frequent guests, Dr. Paul Kingor.
01:19:38.100
This is a well-earned 20, uh, uh, uh, 70, uh, 70, uh, what is it?
01:19:45.160
I mean, I don't, I don't mean to pay you less than a man, but you might.
01:19:50.240
You might have to have pregnancy leave or, you know, three hour job.
01:20:01.020
Now here's a guy we'd have to pay the full $100.
01:20:17.080
Uh, he, him, um, 47, 47 years old, uh, worked for one of the big four financial services,
01:20:24.100
uh, firms and been listening to the blaze ever since she started.
01:20:27.560
Right now, can you separate yourself, Darren, from your financial firm when Elizabeth Warren
01:20:41.900
Darren and Gabby, I think we're going to hire both of you, but whoever does the better
01:21:13.620
Tell you a story this hour about a guy who moved to the United States from India and he
01:21:19.440
moved in February of 2001 and he was just starting life out.
01:21:26.100
He really loved America from afar and he was standing in his office just a few months later
01:21:32.840
and he said to himself, he heard kind of God talk to him and said, you know, your life is going to change.
01:21:43.960
And he was thinking, I am just going after money right now.
01:21:49.660
He didn't realize that just a few floors above him, a plane was about to hit his new office.
01:22:01.040
Sujo John is his name and he loves America now more than ever.
01:22:15.380
So next spring, we're taking the cruise through history and it's going to be filled with all kinds
01:22:24.220
of exciting events, lots of food, lots of fun presentations by David Barton and Rabbi Lappin.
01:22:32.820
And we have a floating museum of really fascinating artifacts that are going to show you what we took
01:22:42.180
from Venice, what we took from Athens, what we took from Jerusalem and the Temple Mount that built us
01:22:55.940
And so we are going to be renewing a vow in, what is it, next year is 2020?
01:23:16.380
We only have a few cabins left and I'd love to sell these out in the next couple of weeks.
01:23:24.120
You just have to get to the airport, then the flights and everything taken care of until you return home.
01:23:54.340
He's a 9-11 survivor and a founder of something called You Can Free Us.
01:24:07.020
I want to take the radio audience through your story a bit.
01:24:11.160
First of all, you were living in India and had moving to America always been a part of your plan or your dream?
01:24:23.600
America, you know, even for those from halfway around the world, America always stands out as this amazing place where dreams and dreamers collide.
01:24:31.500
And if you have a dream somewhere within you in some part of the world, everybody wants to come to this country.
01:24:38.780
And my view of America was through the lenses of television, movies, and arts.
01:24:42.440
And then growing up in India where, you know, as Christians, you're a minority, I just knew that America is a place that's been founded on Judeo-Christian principles.
01:24:50.400
So that was another big reason why I wanted to come here.
01:24:53.040
And everything that America stands for is very appealing and drawing to people on the other side of the world where they want to build their dreams.
01:25:01.680
And in this country, it's not about your pedigree.
01:25:05.180
If you can add value, you can make something out of your life in this country.
01:25:09.340
I don't think there's any country in the world that provides that foundation, Glenn.
01:25:13.460
It's so good to hear this from people who actually know because we have lost our way so far.
01:25:18.940
We just we don't see the uniqueness of America when you're living in it.
01:25:23.960
So you come to the United States in February of 2001, and you find yourself a pretty good job.
01:25:30.980
You are working on what floor of the World Trade Center?
01:25:36.920
So, Glenn, I came with $50, two bags, and tell people, loaded with a lot of dreams.
01:25:41.400
And of all the places, I find work on the 81st floor of the North Tower of the World Trade Center.
01:25:50.000
I'm doing marketing for a telecommunications company.
01:25:53.200
My dream was to start actually a data center to get into the telecom world.
01:25:58.760
And so I was building my steps towards that and trying to understand what life is all about in America.
01:26:06.740
Because growing up in India, although they believe in capitalism, it's not quite a capitalist economy.
01:26:11.560
And I was just so excited to come to all the places in New York City, I mean, almost like the nuclear reactor of capitalists around the world that have created the wealth, which not only helps people have a better life, but solves problems around the world.
01:26:28.300
She was working on the 71st floor of the South Tower of the World Trade Center.
01:26:32.880
So both of us had offices at the World Trade Center.
01:26:39.260
And that was an exciting season in our life as we are getting ready for our baby to arrive, our first child.
01:26:44.900
And then life takes such an incredible turn on September 11, 2001.
01:26:49.620
And you feel like on September 11, you're there.
01:26:57.920
I would start work usually a little earlier, around 8.
01:27:13.740
And you, before the plane hits, just literally a few minutes before it hits, you sent an email to a friend who went to church with you.
01:27:24.080
You know, I was, like you mentioned earlier, I was empty on the inside.
01:27:30.940
And a lot of people listening to you know this.
01:27:35.060
And sometimes we get wrapped up in stuff, junk.
01:27:41.120
And we think life is all about the next new thing, the next new toy, the next new gadget.
01:27:52.380
And I knew my purpose for which God sent me to this great land was not just to make money.
01:28:02.540
So I wrote an email to my friend saying, I know there's a call of God upon my life.
01:28:08.500
I want to be chasing that which is on God's heart.
01:28:10.940
And I sent that at 8.05 in the morning from the Twin Towers.
01:28:13.960
You don't know that your wife is running late, if I remember right, and not in her office.
01:28:32.000
This incredible explosion that almost rips the building.
01:28:37.060
American Flight 11, a Boeing 767 with 440, flying at 440 miles an hour, carrying 10,000 gallons of jet fuel.
01:28:48.420
The plane literally struck about eight to eight, nine floors above us.
01:28:52.220
But part of the wing of the plane rips through our floor.
01:28:55.620
As everyone who's seen those images, they would know that the plane went in an angle into the building.
01:29:00.880
So there was fire that got stuck around us as jet fuel dumps its way all throughout the building.
01:29:08.600
And did you see the plane coming toward the building?
01:29:12.740
I didn't see the plane, but someone on my floor saw the plane.
01:29:16.500
But we felt this incredible explosion, the building rattling.
01:29:19.140
And we knew as a plane, what else could hit you at that height?
01:29:22.840
But all of us, Glenn, thought it was a small commuter plane.
01:29:26.140
Probably a pilot, you know, had a cardiac problem or something and crashed the plane.
01:29:33.540
And nobody knew that it was actually a terrorist attack, that it was intentionally flown into the building.
01:29:42.280
Yeah, we fought our way to the fire on the jet fuel and started running down.
01:29:45.660
And that's when I passed all these brave firemen and policemen, these incredibly brave men and heroes of our country.
01:29:56.260
So we high-fived them saying, you guys are the real heroes.
01:29:59.600
We had no idea that would be the last time America would be seeing these brave men.
01:30:13.780
And from there, we were told, go down one more level to the concourse level.
01:30:17.280
And I'm walking toward the South Tower to be looking for my wife if she has not gone up.
01:30:22.300
And that's when the South Tower collapses around me.
01:30:27.680
And so it, I mean, I would imagine it was a little terrifying with everything falling around you, that you felt like you might get hit by things?
01:30:42.140
No, I was actually almost right in front of the building.
01:30:44.660
And it was an amazing story of God's deliverance.
01:30:49.380
I made my way to the revolving doors of the towers that take you literally in front there.
01:30:53.200
And that's when the ground starts shaking, the glass is shattering.
01:31:07.960
And we started praying our last prayer, thinking we were going to die.
01:31:14.300
I was in about a pocket of about three feet of soot and ash.
01:31:17.240
The steel was the only thing that really survived.
01:31:21.980
And the first building, when it came down, the front facade of the building stood up for a while.
01:31:31.800
And everything went as if, in the way a mushroom is, it just went past us.
01:31:40.280
And I was pulled out by a man, an incredibly brave FBI agent.
01:31:44.660
And as he pulled me and I pulled him, we both told each other we're going to die.
01:31:50.200
And I told him, do you know where you're going?
01:31:54.600
And we thought we were going to die, choking all the soot on the ash.
01:32:05.640
Runs into the North Tower, which was still standing.
01:32:14.560
Yeah, his name is Lenny Hayton, who was left behind four children.
01:32:21.860
They're actually the only active FBI agent to have died that day.
01:32:27.060
I've had an opportunity to meet his wife and just to know about his life.
01:32:31.080
Another story of another man who could have avoided that place, but he felt so driven by love for his country and fellow human beings and the call of duty that just made him race and run back into the towers to look for more people.
01:32:50.320
You know, when people talk about make America great, I say the people of America are great, America are great.
01:32:58.580
The fact that there are people that are willing to love on their neighbor, there are people that care for this country.
01:33:05.580
I've seen you on television, met you in person.
01:33:08.780
And I know beyond what you do in the media, it's a true love that you have for America that makes people like you speak up on issues, people that want to protect this country, knowing what's about to happen.
01:33:19.460
And for me, who's come from India, that's what I love about America, the great American spirit that is deeply entrenched in everyone that calls themselves an American.
01:33:29.280
Sujo, I'm going to take a one-minute break, and then I'm going to come back.
01:33:31.980
And I want you to tell people what happened afterwards, because that was a big change in your life.
01:33:40.720
The ground shook, literally and figuratively, and you have gone on to do some remarkable things.
01:33:47.400
And I want to hear the second part of your life now in one minute.
01:34:01.380
It's a free gift with any order over $150, and I'll tell you about that here in a second.
01:34:05.300
But first, I want to remind you who Tecovis is.
01:34:07.540
Tecovis was started by a couple of guys who, here in Texas, they thought, you know, I love boots.
01:34:16.880
I mean, if you're in Texas and you want good cowboy boots, you go into a store and you're like, yeah, like, what about this pair?
01:34:30.600
And, well, they're all handcrafted, and they're all blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
01:34:34.020
And then you go and you find another boot, and it's like $35, and it sucks.
01:34:40.040
What they try to do was give you that really, really handcrafted boot and give it to you at about half the price.
01:34:47.940
So their boots are, you know, a couple hundred bucks, $300, but they are like $800 boots.
01:35:00.120
They do all kinds of different things in leather, so they've got the bags and the belts and everything else.
01:35:05.680
And they make really great, I love their jeans, really great jeans and clothing.
01:35:13.380
If you buy something and you spend $150, you're going to get a free, it's a card case.
01:35:27.200
They're going to give it to you for free just because they want to say thank you.
01:35:30.520
They don't usually do this because they, you know, price their things appropriately, so it's a great deal for you and a good deal for them.
01:35:38.460
It is Tecovis, T-E-C-O-V-A-S dot com slash Beck.
01:35:46.360
When you make that $150 purchase, make sure you enter the promo code Beck at checkout, and you'll get the free gift from Tecovis.
01:36:14.380
He was on television, so we were talking just the other day about the thing that he's working on.
01:36:19.920
And we both believe that the only way that we're going to save this nation and save freedom of mankind is if we put into action the things and really the covenant that our pilgrims and George Washington and Abraham Lincoln made with God.
01:36:43.220
And the best way to serve God, as Benjamin Franklin said, was to serve your fellow man.
01:36:48.560
The one thing that we can all agree on now and not argue about is slavery is horrible and needs to be stopped.
01:36:59.040
So here's this guy who is chasing the almighty dollar in the World Trade Center.
01:37:05.920
And Sujo, you believe that you were directed and saved, you and your wife saved that day to be able to do something different than just making money.
01:37:23.160
And the fact that I was rescued, that someone, you know, who rescued me gave up his life.
01:37:30.860
God sends his son to look for broken people like us.
01:37:35.680
And the fact that heaven rescued you and me compels us, our faith compels us to look for people.
01:37:40.900
And the message of Jesus was he came to set the captives free.
01:37:44.240
And there are people spiritually captive and there's also physically captive.
01:37:48.180
So I got exposed to this problem, Glenn, about modern slavery, how there's 41 million people in slavery.
01:37:54.820
And when I saw the conditions, and I know you've seen it in different parts of the world, where women are kept in cells and cages.
01:38:01.020
I remember being in a red light district, 37,000 sex workers and women kept in these cages, three feet by six feet.
01:38:08.860
I felt in that moment something common with those girls.
01:38:13.640
And if someone came and rescued me, perhaps God is tapping on me to rescue these women and children on his behalf.
01:38:22.700
And I come back and I knew America is a place where people are generous.
01:38:25.740
And I came and started talking about this problem.
01:38:27.900
And we started this nonprofit called You Can Free Us.
01:38:42.620
And so that's been our mission, looking for women and children who are trapped in sex slavery.
01:38:47.900
But beyond sex slavery, children are also trapped in labor trafficking.
01:38:54.560
You have a passion, Glenn, with Nazarene Fund and what you've done in helping Christians flee from war-torn countries where they're under the threat of ISIS.
01:39:05.000
And I'm so excited that we get an opportunity to talk about this and also work in the future on a problem that is one of the greatest evils of our times.
01:39:13.100
If we don't engage right now in this problem, a generation that's coming up behind us will say, why did you not do enough?
01:39:22.080
You know, you also may have been in these places around the world.
01:39:27.020
I remember being in Elmara Castle in Ghana and they tell you about the slave trade.
01:39:30.960
I've been in places where Hitler ran wild and wiped up millions of Jews.
01:39:34.880
And we stand in those places and we question and we ask, why did people not do enough?
01:39:46.840
There is a cry rising from the brothels of the world.
01:39:53.180
And the question is, are we listening to that cry?
01:39:57.320
The New York Times just started selling something called 1619.
01:40:00.760
And it's a podcast, a serial that they're doing on the year 1619.
01:40:05.180
They say that's the year of really America's founding because that's when slavery was brought here.
01:40:14.560
And it's the 400th anniversary of our pilgrims the year after.
01:40:18.460
And, you know, you can either look back and blame everything on that.
01:40:25.580
And I don't know what you're gaining out of that, except more anger and frustration.
01:40:32.200
Instead, we should be looking towards today because I can't do anything to change what people did in the past.
01:40:39.220
But I don't want to be remembered as the people in the past that did nothing and were, you know, involved in cakes and circuses.
01:40:49.240
And if we can come together and solve the problem today, it will solve the problems of the past.
01:41:03.540
I just want to tell your listeners that's listening to you, listening to us, Glenn, right now, don't get discouraged when liberals beat you about the problem of slavery of the past.
01:41:13.300
If those people care so much about things that happened in the past, I want to encourage them.
01:41:18.160
Come join people like us in the fight of this problem that's happening right now.
01:41:23.220
I don't know of any country in the world, Glenn, that has shed its blood on the issue of slavery.
01:41:30.180
It's almost 600,000 people, under a million Americans got killed in the Civil War.
01:41:35.360
So America's paid the price with blood on the issue of slavery.
01:41:39.600
And as we're all aware of, and somehow this history is now being passed down.
01:41:43.940
And there are people who come up and talk about the past and say we have to get involved in repatriation for a small group of people that caused this problem that was a global problem.
01:41:53.400
But how about a problem right now in our streets?
01:41:55.440
How about a problem right now around the world when you and I and everyone who cares about this problem, right or left, can be part of a great solution?
01:42:04.860
Sujo John, I encourage you to check out his organization and help where you can.
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Join the growing numbers of people who are saying, you know what, let's deal with real problems.
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She's been driving a school bus for the last 15 years.
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You're picking kids up and you're watching them grow every year and go from young children, young men and women going out into the world.
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It's a job that is satisfying, but, I mean, you know, you're not making a lot of money or whatever.
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And she has real problems with, on cold winter mornings, the pain in her hands over the last several years had become to the point where she couldn't handle it anymore.
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Then she heard about Relief Factor, and it changed her life.
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She's getting back on the bus, and she's, can you imagine driving a bus, especially in pain with your hands?
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She doesn't have to now stop watching those kids grow into great adults.
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She called Relief Factor, and I recommend that you do it, too.
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My hands were in such pain, I couldn't take it.
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ReliefFactor.com, ReliefFactor.com, or you can call 800-500-8384, 800-500-8384.
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It works for 70% of the people who tried the three-week quick start.
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You know, I really think Wells Fargo should just shut down business.
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I mean, you know, just, just, everybody just walk away.
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Yeah, well, you might want to get the wagons back out and start again.
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Anyway, so they were talking about this on CNBC.
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And I think Elizabeth Warren played this perfectly.
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But this is truly what's going on in businesses of all levels all around the country.
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How is it possible that this company cannot find a CEO?
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I mean, are they worried about Elizabeth Warren attacking that?
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If she becomes president, what do you think is going to happen to the banks?
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You think Elizabeth Warren pushes banks into it?
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Yeah, I just think that there were these hearings in the 30s where they brought rich people in front of Congress and just kind of trashed them.
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Look, about 20 years later, we had the least discrepancy in incomes in the 50s and 60s.
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Look, I've got to tell you, when you get off the desk and you talk to executives, they're more fearful of her winning.
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I mean, I've never heard anybody say, look, she's got to be stopped.
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And it's another reason why companies are being implored to do things now.
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If you want to get something done, M&A or anything, think about doing it soon.
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Because come early to mid-2020, if Elizabeth Warren's rolling along, everybody's going to be like, that's it.
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It's why I've been telling you, you have to refi your house.
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You've got to get, you know, as solvent as you can, get the money in gold, get it safe places.
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The banks are not necessarily safe places, you know, in really bad situations.
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But if the Democrats put somebody in office like Elizabeth Warren or will put her into a real position in the next White House, you're going to see the banks.
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They are going to hold on to any kind of money that they have because they're going to be under attack.
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I didn't see how Elizabeth Warren handled this, but my guess is she's using it as a campaign commercial.
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She ran it and she just tweeted, I'm Elizabeth Warren and I approve this message.
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I mean, look, to that audience, destroying businesses deemed as evil, even ones that we interact with all the time.
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People will be surprised at what happens when your bank doesn't have any money or your bank doesn't want to loan money.
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This is why these things are so ridiculous, these debates and such.
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All she's trying to do is find a way to say things that are as far left as possible.
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But she also is not incentivized to, like, it's not a sane argument to say we want to tear down the financial institution.
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I mean, we talked about healthcare being, what, one-sixth of the economy.
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Finance and insurance, these combined industries are about, you know, $1.5 trillion, about 7%.
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So about half the size of the – I mean, the financial sector is a giant chunk of our economy.
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It's half as big as the entire healthcare market.
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I mean, I would say, obviously, these companies are still in business, and maybe that's what she'll try to justify it.
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But, I mean, her idea that people are scared of her right now is a positive, right?
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When she's president, it's not, because the economy tanks, and then all of a sudden her approval rates go through the floor.
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If she looks like she's going to win, and it will be blamed on Trump, but let's say she becomes the nominee, and she's polling well, the market will price it in.
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The market will crash before, and it will hasten her into the market.
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Now, again, if there's any Democratic candidate that Donald Trump can win against, it should be Elizabeth Warren.
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I mean, if Elizabeth Warren, if you can't beat Elizabeth Warren.
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If the economy tanks, that's a whole other situation.
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I'm for all of the antitrust stuff that the states are doing.
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You know, I don't know about all of them, but I think with Google and Facebook and all the things that they're doing, I'm glad the states are looking into antitrust.
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I was standing in the newsroom yesterday, and I said, hey, does anybody know, wasn't the Microsoft antitrust movement, wasn't that at the top?
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Wasn't that the last straw before the dot-com bubble?
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That was filed right at the very top of the dot-com boom.
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No, I think it was just a really strong last straw that was on top.
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We're doing this now with 50 antitrust litigation coming from the different states for Google.
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Yeah, it's a full-on onslaught, which I am for, but you just have to be very, very aware of all of the cards that are on the table.
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You have Wells Fargo and all of their scandals.
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You have bigger debt than we had before in 2008.
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You have an out-of-control printing press all over the world.
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You have banks with no more bullets in their guns because most of them, except ours, are already into zero or negative interest rates.
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So if it falls apart, there's nobody to catch it, and we're the last ones standing.
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Mark my words, trillions of dollars are being flooded in.
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When I saw President Trump say yesterday that the Fed really needs to lower the interest rates and get them down to zero or below zero,
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We, A, have to have some bullets left in our gun.
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And don't spend them now and, B, the only reason why we're getting billions and billions of dollars from overseas investing in America right now
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because we're the last ones standing and that will promise some sort of an interest rate.
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You take that interest rate to zero or below, they'll take their money out and they'll do something else with it.
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Right now, we are performing, but we're the last one on Earth that is performing.
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So you have all these things that are just being built up.
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Then you have an election where somebody is saying, by the way, I'm going to get rid of the free market.
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If she is the nominee, the market could crash just because companies are like, you know what, pull everything back.
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You want to do something, do it right now, and we're going to pull everything back because we don't know what the world will be like.
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It doesn't like change, especially the unknown change.
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And so that could cause the market to absolutely collapse.
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That's what we're dealing with in the next 12 months.
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And I don't think anybody is actually explaining that.
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Just the realistic fear of having somebody like Elizabeth Warren or Bernie Sanders who is saying,
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I'm going to change the financial structure of America.
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If you're running a business and you're seeing this storm coming, you're battening down the hatches.
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You cut expenditures as much as you possibly can, which will stop growth, will bring unemployment.
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If you have money in the market, you don't know what's going to happen to financial institutions.
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If Elizabeth Warren and you are invested, and many of us are, teachers, unions included, if you're invested in the financial sector, you better pull your damn money out of there if you think Elizabeth Warren is going to even be just a big part of the new team.
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Because that's going to hurt those stocks and your investment.
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That hurts the banks even more because now you're taking that money out.
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And then if you want to take your money out, you're the last one.
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As soon as they go bankrupt or they have a problem, you're not getting your money.
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I keep going back and forth on this and I don't, I honestly, it's like a law and order episode where I think the person's really guilty and then they're really innocent and then they're really guilty and then they're really innocent.
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Whoever, whatever lawyer is making the argument is the one I think is telling the truth.
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But it's like, I don't know in my mind whether to root for Joe Biden to win this primary or Elizabeth Warren to win this primary.
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And the argument in my head goes like this, Joe Biden probably has a better chance to win the election.
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However, if he wins, he's less, worse, at least by a little bit.
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Depends on who his vice president is because I'm not sure he makes it for years.
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It's like this idea of he's probably less, he's, let's just say he runs it like Obama ran it.
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And like, it's less worse than Elizabeth Warren or Bernie Sanders.
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On the other hand, Warren or Sanders, I think would be easier to beat.
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And I don't think, I don't think anybody has baked in the fact of the catastrophe that would happen before.
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Remember, when Donald Trump took office, what happened to the stock market?
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The more it looked like he was going to be the president, the more the stock market went up.
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And they kept saying, well, it's all priced in.
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They've already priced in that this is going to be good for banks and business.
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And they saw Hillary Clinton as more like a Biden figure.
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If you have if you have polls that show that Warren is the candidate and Warren is even close, the market will price that in and say, I'm sorry, guys, but I got to get my money out of here.
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I don't I don't I don't I don't know what's going to happen.
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So you will have real slowdown and real economic problems, not from anything the president is doing.
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Just because you have someone saying, I'm going to change the financial sector entirely when I get into office.
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It will cause this massive slowdown, maybe even collapse, and it will hasten Warren into office because the media will blame all of that on capitalism and Donald Trump.
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The only I mean, I'm just coming to this now because I've been back and forth, too, but I'm just now that I'm saying this out loud, the only candidate we can afford to have is Joe Biden.
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Because there won't be that fear in the in the markets.
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Like I there's a lot of people around the country that don't like the Dallas Cowboys.
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He doesn't really like capitalism all that much.
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I have a visceral hatred for the for the Dallas Cowboys.
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She hates the fact that businesses can do well and and and this economy can can move on in a capitalistic direction.
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Don't think that they don't know just as well as we do that if the economy starts to go sideways, that it hurts Donald Trump.
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And don't think that they don't know that, which is another reason why I believe they are so very clear and will continue to be clear that this is a system that has failed.
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And we have to change it because it will only hasten us because it will be blamed on Donald Trump.
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And it will hasten our demise and hasten the the run towards socialism.
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Have you thought about putting your financial house in order?
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I have my money, you know, at least 10 percent of my money in gold and I put it in there and I haven't thought twice about it.
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I'm not watching it all the time going, oh, how much is it making?
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You know, God forbid, you know, you have a socialist that is running and going to be the candidate against Donald Trump.
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And and you could see the end of capitalism happening in the next 12 months.
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May I suggest, please, you do your own homework and look into gold at Goldline Goldline dot com.
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They're waiting for you at eight six six Goldline eight six six Goldline.
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You should have at least 10 percent of your portfolio should be spread out among a whole bunch of things.
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But 10 percent, I really, truly believe, should be in gold, physical gold, not ETFs, physical gold.
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But look at what's coming and call Goldline at eight six six Goldline one eight six six Goldline or Goldline dot com.
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That that last break may be the most important break we have done in maybe.
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A couple of years, I don't even know that just kind of came out of nowhere.
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And it is with Stu and I were just talking about it.
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We're going to do some real research on this and and talk to some people and really get some facts and some numbers on it.
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If Elizabeth Warren, Bernie Sanders are even seriously looked at by the Democrats and even if Joe Biden is the guy, but Elizabeth Warren is vice president or has a serious role.
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We are in for deep trouble, self-fulfilling prophecy, really.
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And Trump will have a hard time winning because that alone will affect the economy in a powerfully negative way.