'The End of The Beginning?' (Buck Sexton joins Glenn) - 3⧸13⧸18
Episode Stats
Length
1 hour and 52 minutes
Words per Minute
157.30998
Summary
Pres. Rex Tillerson has been replaced with CIA Director Mike Pompeo, a major change to the national security team, and a new leader for North Korea talks. Also, a russian spy has been killed in the UK, and more.
Transcript
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love courage truth glenn beck president trump has ousted secretary of state rex tillerson
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replaced him with cia director mike pompeo this is a major change to the national security team
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um and it is coming on the heels of the announcement that we may be going to north
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korea for talks trump apparently asked friday for tillerson to step aside um and uh move on and
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cut short his trip to africa and return to washington pompeo is going to replace him at
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the state department and gina haspel she's the deputy deputy director at the cia will succeed him
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at the uh cia she will become the very first woman to run the spy agency if she is confirmed
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uh the president said that it was important to make a change now as he prepares for the talks
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with north korea uh he said i want to thank rex tillerson for his service a great deal has been
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accomplished over the last 14 months and i wish him and his family well uh rex tillerson on his
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behalf said i am deeply grateful to president trump for permitting me to serve as director of the
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central oh no i'm sorry that's pompeo uh pompeo said i'm i'm deeply uh grateful for uh letting me
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serve as the director of the central intelligence agency and now for the opportunity to serve as
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secretary of state that uh just broke this morning and it's coming at an interesting time and
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uh i i i i have a feeling this all came because tillerson was like what
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because tillerson last week was saying we're not going to north korea we're not going to north
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korea we're not going to north korea yeah what an hour before trump said we're going to well we're
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not going to north korea but we're going to meet with kim jong-un right before that tillerson said oh
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we're a long way away from direct talks right which was that long way was 60 minutes right you know
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that's a long time my kids think an hour is a long time right are we there yet are we there yet
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uh so so the uh the speculation is is that this was the big falling out this was the final straw
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tillerson was uh shocked by it uh he said right after the statement last week that he had absolutely
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no idea the president didn't consult with anyone it's not his i mean it's his prerogative he doesn't
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have to consult with anybody um the the only problem with the north korea thing and i'm willing to give it
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a whirl but the only the only problem from a from a department of state uh uh stance would be that
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once you have the two big guys talk there isn't anything else left so if you know you you try to
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hold that off as the last possible option when the deal is really getting close to push it over the top
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you don't want to do that before you've exhausted every other option because once they've met in
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person there's nowhere to go from there except for missiles start flying at least that's the that's
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that's the theory that's the theory that's the theory uh yeah and this is interesting pompeo moving
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into that slot you know first of all uh pretty stable guy you know people it would be this is not
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like it there's not a controversy over oh my gosh mike pompeo like this guy's he was the cia director
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already former congressman um you know generally well respected one of the interesting things about
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pompeo is he's been one of the harshest voices about russian meddling in the administration he
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said that they absolutely were meddling uh in the elections now again that does not mean russian
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doesn't mean collusion with doesn't mean that they changed the outcome of the election has nothing to do
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with that but he's been very harsh on russia and what they have done in the past year uh or two so
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that's kind of an interesting point yes and i positive that that he would i think that's a real
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positive especially for the deadline that we are waiting for in england you don't know about it
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yeah probably because the news has been so focused on other crap that you didn't hear there's big
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developments between the uk and russia and we'll talk about that as the morning progresses
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it's tuesday march 13th you're listening to the glenn beck program
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here's what happened last week in case you in case well you know in case you have a life
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uh and you're not paying attention to news all the time and especially when you are paying to the news
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uh paying attention to the news if they happen not to be talking about some scandal
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was it last week i think it was last week there was a uh a russian spy that was killed in the uk
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now this isn't the first time what was his name lavenko do you remember him uh that was when we were
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at cnn i think uh and there's a huge list of these i mean i was reading this just the other day
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the list of russian poisonings outside of russia of various uh uh former friends yeah or enemies of
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the administration in some way or another i mean it's it's scary yeah and they've been doing this for
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a long time so but the last one like this uh i think was uh lavenko and he was a um he was he was
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he he we budin was not a fan of his and he was in england and he was eating in a restaurant and
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they believe that uh there was about the size of a grain of salt um uh enriched what was it uranium
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it was uh polonium 221 212 something like that you'll have to you'll have to look it up if you
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really if you really want to know um but it was it's very rare there's only two places that already
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could have come from and that's deep in the vaults of the united states or deep in the vaults of russia
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um it's it's extraordinarily dangerous and very very rare so it was used to send a message
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to the world i can get you anywhere because it clearly came from putin so they killed him on
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english soil and the english didn't do anything about it they were just like you know it's a spy
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dad and you know spy versus spy whatever so they just moved past it this time however there was a
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chemical weapon released in england and it's put 22 or 21 people in the hospital it's killed two people
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so far there are people that are in critical condition this is a chemical weapon released
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in england by russia now when we told you this last week we've speculated that it was russia and we said
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but we'll they'll never they're never going to say that they're never going to come out with
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any of that because what are the options you're going to go to war with russia because that remember
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chemical weapons used on your civilian population i think that's a red line
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so what are they going to do we supposed they would do nothing because you don't want to escalate
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things at this time with russia that's not what teresa may did here's a speech yesterday in the house
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of commons listen to this mr speaker on wednesday we will consider in detail the response from the
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russian state should there be no credible response we will conclude that this action amounts to an
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unlawful use of force by the russian state against the united kingdom
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and i will come back to this house and set out the full range of measures that we will take in response
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mr speaker this attempted murder using a weapons-grade nerve agent in a british town
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was not just a crime against the skripals it was an indiscriminate and reckless act against the united
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kingdom putting the lives of innocent civilians at risk and we will not tolerate such a brazen
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attempt to murder innocent civilians on our soil okay so what she said before this was we now have
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identified the the nerve agent and it's like vx uh but it is only made in russia so the only
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perpetrator could have been russia and most likely this came through in a diplomatic bag i mean it's not
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something you're going to smuggle across you know the uh in through customs uh so they don't know how
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at least they're not saying how it got in to the country uh but they are saying that it is from russia
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now she used some some interesting language here she said they had 36 hours to respond
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and that's wednesday and if they don't respond in a credible way on what were you doing what were
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you thinking how did this happen oh you guys didn't do it really tell me about that if there's not a
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credible response from russia by wednesday they will declare it an unlawful use of force
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that sounds kind of legalistic she then goes back and she says this was weapons grade um a weapons
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grade nerve agent and it was an act against the united kingdom
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article five is something that all nato countries have signed on to an attack on one is an attack on
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all of us um it's possible that she is setting up article five uh against russia
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and uniting nato now there isn't a country that wants to take russia on but there isn't a country
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i think in europe that isn't tired of russia's meddling because they are meddling in all of our
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affairs they are meddling with all of our elections they are meddling in uh by funneling money and all
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kinds of things into what are called conservative movements but over in england conservative is not
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conservative uh conservative is usually a national socialist organization there are 66 of these that
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are being funded and and advised and helped by the russians i think there's a possibility that the
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nato countries are going to say yeah okay what do you want and teresa may she may kick out all of the
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spies i mean i think the least they would do is apparently we all know who's got spies where which
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is bizarre but we let their spies in our country and they let our spies and we just kind of like what
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spies i don't know what you're talking about but there's a possibility the the least uh offensive
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thing she could do is say uh we're going to kick your spies out the next step would probably be we're
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going to kick your ambassador out and we're going to apply sanctions on you if she invokes article 5
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she could say i would like all nato nations to kick their spies out or uh kick their ambassadors out
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and if we moved as a block that is that's a big big ballsy move but what is england going to do
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i don't know and it's it's insane that they just continue to do this russia there's huge lists of
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all these poisonings and one of them comes from the new york times an article they wrote in 2016 and it
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just goes through all of these poisonings that they've done this is paragraph 10 of the story
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paragraph 10 of the story other countries notably israel and the united states pursue targeted killings but
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in a strict counter-terrorism context no other major power employs murderers as systematically and
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ruthlessly as russia does against those seen as betraying its interests abroad killings outside
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russia were even given legal sanction by the nation's parliament in 2006 wait what killings outside
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russia were even given legal sanction by the nation's parliament in 2006 so the parliament
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said acknowledged at least they're open about it at least they're like yeah we're going to kill people
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overseas that are our enemies that's i mean it is legal in the russian government now they've never
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claimed that they've used that law of course they deny every one of these killings um though they
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these people tend to die in ways that you can only trace it back to the to russia which is intent i
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remember when when that happened with lavinco and it was polonium and and i had never heard of
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polonium before yeah and it was explained to me by several experts you would only use this if you wanted
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everybody to know and that's what he's doing you wouldn't why would you use a a nerve agent that is
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only made in russia why would you do that i mean you could use vx that could have come from us it
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could have come from syria could you know you can use vx you pick the one you got all those on the
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shelves you pick the one that is only used in russia that tells you that you either have a rogue state
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somebody inside that is stealing things from a lockdown situation to make russia look bad
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false flag or you are sending a message to the world i don't care i don't care about you you're
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not going to do anything anyway and that's usually the way it's taken uh yeah i think that we follow
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the trail of breadcrumbs here from uh from vladimir putin in his interview with megan kelly
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was it the jews we have not even considered that you know what thank you for saying that
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there was there what was the name of the guy that ran the um the deli slash chemical nerve agent shop
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good customer service there yeah yeah yeah great bagels great sandwiches some locks maybe a nerve
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agents or two all right more bad news uh the huge data breach uh with that major credit bureau that
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happened remember it was 2.4 million americans were impacted that brings i love this number that brings
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the total number of americans impacted to 149.9 million americans oh well that's it that's only half
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really half of us it's not a big deal how many of us even know if our name was on that list it is the
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largest breach in uh in human history now the original number was 145.5 but then the company
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came out and said oh you know what we misplaced a couple of other names so now it's 140 149.9
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the additional 2.4 million had their names and driver's license numbers stolen so even more
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glenn beck mercury glenn beck okay there's um as the rex tillerson story uh was filed this morning
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there was another story that came out um shortly after it that uh just bothers me um at 8 18 so the
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rex tillerson story was released what about 8 o'clock central time a few minutes before 8 yeah
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uh and uh and so all of the news agencies were on that and then the white house at 8 18 central uh
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released uh another story and it is about the president's personal assistant can you read this
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please yeah so he is uh he is his personal assistant seen as kind of the last of the original
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group with hope hicks leaving uh kind of the last of that original close group uh president trump's
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personal assistant john mcinty was escorted out of the white house on monday two senior officials uh
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administration officials said the cause of the firing was an unspecified security issue
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said a third white house official with knowledge of the situation okay so that's not going to get any
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coverage but i think it's interesting that it is released uh it happened last night and it was
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released after uh the uh rex tillerson so nobody is looking there i don't know what he did i i have
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no idea but this is the personal assistant to the president who by the way have you ever heard of john
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mcinty i have i'm not apparently he's a uh a trick shot quarterback saves i mean which is why if i'm the
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president that's what i'm looking for dude perfect man he's got he's got a gig he can probably leave
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to i know so you know i i have no idea why he was escorted but for a personal assistant to be escorted
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on security issues is pretty significant yeah i mean could it be tied to the the whole controversy
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that's been going on with the um temporary versus permanent security clearances maybe but for a personal
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secretary or personal assistant that would be kind of a strange line to draw i mean you can keep
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other people in the administration with uh on temporary security clearances but no read that
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again uh sure i'd love to okay uh president trump's personal assistant john mcinty escorted out of the
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white house they it also says uh in here that he was it was such a fast situation they had to send
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somebody in for his jacket yeah there's something no it's kind of strange the cause of the firing was
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an unspecified security issue yeah yeah you had to leave so fast that you you didn't you forgot your
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jacket yes he mcinty was removed from the white house grounds uh without being allowed to collect
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his belongings he left without his jacket yeah something bad happened there
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you're listening to the glenn beck program so the news today is that uh trump has fired uh tillerson
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um and rex tillerson is now coming out and saying the quote is i don't know why i was fired i never
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talked to the president um i'm sure rex knows why he was fired um and uh and i'm i'm guessing that and
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the president just did a press conference a second ago as he's getting ready to go on to marine one
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and he sounded very presidential in it uh he gave rex tillerson all kinds of uh you know kudos and
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support and said uh you know i i admire him i think he did a great job we just had different views on
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things and he mentioned specifically the iran deal yeah saying that tillerson wanted to keep it in place
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he wanted to blow it up and i think there's a i mean i don't think tillerson was terrible but i think
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there's optimism that pompeo will actually be better at that job well pompeo the thing i do like
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about pompeo is that is he has been outspoken on russia and russia is a big big threat and the
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president went on to say uh that he's going to speak to teresa may this afternoon uh he said uh they
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he said my understanding is is that they believe that russia was behind this chemical weapons attack
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on uk soil uh he said uh and if that's what they tell me i would take that finding as fact
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he said but i will speak to her this afternoon and if that is true we will of course condemn russia for
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it that's good that's a very good uh way of looking at that it'll be interesting to see what
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the pushback is because they keep promising and we do this all the time every country does this all
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the time serious consequences if x y or z and then x y or z happens and the serious consequences
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are just that you say yet again there will be serious consequences in the future there'll be
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i mean if you had a chemical weapons attack on your soil regardless if it was some operative from
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another country that was targeted i would think you actually would make sure there were serious
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consequences i mean can you imagine if 21 uh american uh red line right red line chemical attack on your
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soil i know but what i'm saying though is can you imagine that happening on our soil yeah i can um but
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when the president says it's a red line and then you do nothing things get worse so theresa may has to
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be really careful and the the the nato countries have to be really careful are you prepared what are you
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prepared to do now i didn't think they would say anything because i didn't think anybody is prepared to
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actually go to war with russia and i don't think that they want war with russia i don't think that's
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you know on the immediate horizon but this is a step towards it depending on what they do if it's a slap
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across the wrist you know then we go back to normal and he continues to kill people on you know on uk
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soil uh we have uh jason and jason is our uh uh head of national security he watches this for us
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uh and has been watching russia now for the last five or six years with me what do you think what
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are the what are the options here jason uh very limited and the kremlin knows that uh which is kind
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of infuriating because i think that uh i mean just the fact that they use this nerve agent over there
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was really the equivalent of you know you know putin signing his signature to it you know putting in
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the acronym lol you know and cracking up because he knows that we're there's not a lot we can do
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the minor things we could do like so this is called the very low end teresa may and boris johnson their
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foreign minister could say okay fine we're gonna react like we did with litvinenko who was another
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spy that was that russia took out on uk soil um they could do that and they just expelled a few russian
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ambassadors or a few russian diplomats and pretty much called it a day it was very minor slap on the
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wrist big difference in this case though is that 21 uk citizens were hospitalized a lot bigger blowout
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a lot more collateral damage it didn't happen with litvinenko case and the language that um teresa
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may is using kind of sounds like you could make the case that they're trying to set up article five
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yeah now it's an she's calling it an illegal attack oh you know an illegal attack on on on uk soil
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no she said it's an unlawful use of force and weapons grade uh weapons grade uh nerve agent
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which is an act against the uk those are her exact words that's those are scary words because you
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definitely could and you know that they're coordinating and reaching out to their nato
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members uh i would almost call them secretary of state tillerson former secretary of state tillerson
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said yesterday that okay yeah it was obvious that russia did this and a response is incoming
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so you know they're talking to each other so it must be a collective nato thing at this point the
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question is how far are they going to go now the second option would be that they go a little bit
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more strict they go a little more hardcore let's say the rest of nato bands together and it's a
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collective action against russia and they all decide to significantly downsize their diplomatic
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embassies and consulates all over everywhere they have an inside of a nato country the extreme end
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would be they just boot out the russian ambassador all together and say find us another ambassador
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that would be huge because it would be mutually assured destruction because the russians would do the
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exact same thing and we'd be at the lowest of low i can't i don't think even during the cold war when
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relations between nato and russia would have been that low that that would get scary
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and let's it's only the the russian ambassador to the uk or are you saying the russian ambassadors
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to all nato countries well that is what i that was i'm saying to all nato countries yeah okay if
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they do do an article five yeah that would be how they respond not militarily but more like a diplomatic
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article five now let me ask you this how does this play into the hands of uh people that they are
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funding you know with the world national uh conservative movement where they are funding
00:26:38.300
people like golden dawn and job ex in hungary and uh um in france and and all over these these
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nationalist neo-nazi kind of groups that love russia now how how is this going to play you know it's
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it really is all connected you know the more chaotic western europe in the united states is the more uh
00:27:00.640
that their job is basically just to make people doubt their governments yeah the more that these
00:27:04.680
people will say look look this is you'll probably hear this word a lot uh russophobia you'll probably
00:27:09.220
hear that a lot and it'll be coming from those far-right groups you'll heal that from you'll hear
00:27:13.200
that from the alt-right here in the united states russophobia russophobia russophobia and you'll hear that
00:27:16.900
all over the identitarian um far-right groups over in europe but they what the scary part is that they a
00:27:23.820
lot of these groups especially not so much here in the united states thankfully um but cpac is starting to
00:27:29.980
you know change that but a lot of those groups in europe have a strong foothold in mainstream
00:27:35.920
government so they're going they have they hold significant seats so they'll start using their
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influence to try and change things and are we seeing are we seeing actual funding going to any
00:27:45.420
of these groups jason or is it mainly advice counsel and social media support no funding and we'll never
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see funding i mean that's just the way that you know that's what they call what's what russia calls
00:27:56.060
cutouts they've been doing the same thing since the soviet union it's very very difficult to
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actually attach so what you like for instance when they did find the funding that went to the
00:28:05.580
front national the far you know the marine le pen's group in france that was through a bank that is in
00:28:11.980
moscow that is a was basically a cutout and it had random ties that eventually led back to the kremlin
00:28:17.760
but it's so like wishy-washy it provides easy plausible deniability the world national conservative
00:28:23.560
movement which was a you know a conglomeration of all these far-right groups in europe again the
00:28:27.680
perfect cutout but again the people that started that were from the russian rodina party who had
00:28:33.080
their leader at the time is now the deputy vice premier president or whatever or uh whatever they
00:28:39.760
have he's like deputy prime minister that's what it was yeah who was right there under putin so you
00:28:44.620
all these people are connected and they all have their their tentacles into mainstream government
00:28:49.840
it's just they're very very good at concealing it yeah well not not concealing it uh but making
00:28:56.360
sure you can't prove it that's true and that's what makes this chemical weapon so interesting is
00:29:02.100
you're you don't have to you don't have to work hard to prove it this is the only place that that
00:29:09.540
chemical nerve agent was made is in the soviet union or russia the ultimate autograph he autographed this
00:29:15.340
and then laughed and no knew that we couldn't do about anything and i'm just a really another quick
00:29:19.700
point glenn what it's been too so the the brits figured this out in what three four days what
00:29:25.220
happened to it's been for it's been 14 days it's been two weeks since the attack on the military base
00:29:30.040
on where our marines got hospitalized we still haven't been told the chemical agent that we use
00:29:34.640
that was used we haven't been told if there's any leads why why are the british that much better at
00:29:40.580
investigating than we are same type of thing they're speculating it was a nerve agent that
00:29:45.140
attacked our u.s marines 14 days ago they won't tell us a thing i just reached out to them again
00:29:48.580
this morning to get confirmation they won't tell us what's going on false flag
00:29:54.360
interesting thank you jason keep following those stories for us will you
00:30:00.620
we have a quick statement from the state department it's an odd day today glenn uh this is a
00:30:10.380
attributable to the undersecretary uh for public diplomacy from the state department
00:30:14.440
the secretary tillerson had every intention of staying because of the critical progress made in
00:30:20.440
national security he will miss his colleagues at the department of state and the foreign ministers
00:30:23.660
that he's worked with throughout the world the secretary did not speak to the president and is
00:30:27.800
unaware of the reason this is an on the record statement from the state department he's grateful
00:30:32.840
for the opportunity wait this is not a this is a this is not a reporter calling somebody in the
00:30:38.760
state department this is an actual statement from the state department it's an official statement
00:30:43.920
from the state department yes on the record what the hell does that mean this is not a like something
00:30:47.860
leaked from someone who like right right this is an on the record statement from the undersecretary
00:30:52.760
of for public diplomacy if i may say at least currently he is the undersecretary for public diplomacy
00:31:01.560
what the hell do you think that means i mean he's clearly saying that uh this i mean signaling
00:31:11.040
that this was not handled the way that uh the other people uh in the state department are happy with
00:31:16.900
uh and obviously also saying that it was a surprise to tillerson now there's reporting all over the
00:31:22.600
place that they had you know trump said that they had been talking about this for a while which had
00:31:26.740
been widely reported also that that uh trump had been the tillerson had been asked to leave
00:31:31.980
on friday um however this makes it seem like it was a much more of a surprise you know i just don't
00:31:38.840
i wish i trusted the state department but i don't i don't trust the state department at all uh and they
00:31:44.720
may be you know they may be afraid of the cia director uh coming in i i don't know we'll just
00:31:53.060
take it for what it's worth nothing at this point all right let me tell you about blinds.com
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glenn back mercury glenn back notice you uh won't talk about the real story today i don't even know
00:33:32.700
what the real story is today there have been three pretty big bombs dropped in my lap in the last 30
00:33:38.200
to 45 minutes like you're let's talk about rex tillerson let's talk about russia's chemical
00:33:44.400
attack you don't even talk about anything real what's what do you what what am i missing here
00:33:48.120
stew uh well there's a new report that's a posthumous memoir from her former husband
00:33:54.160
judy garland may have been sexually harassed by the munchkins on the wizard of oz set oh my god
00:34:02.480
oh i can't i can't they would make uh they i can't no i i don't think i'm strong enough i don't
00:34:10.280
think i'm strong enough to handle this i really they were drunks they were drunk said judy garland
00:34:17.380
in a 1967 interview with a tv talk show host jack parr they put they put them all in one hotel they
00:34:22.900
got smashed every night and the police had to pick them up in butterfly nets
00:34:26.160
you won't talk about this i won't i wish i would have led this uh led the hour with this though i
00:34:37.100
really do this is the latest step in the me too movement apparently the munchkins from
00:34:44.740
from wizard of oz were going after julie garland they're saying i mean some of it they were 40 years
00:34:50.420
old and they were uh making her miserable on set by quote putting their hands under her dress
00:34:57.460
those dirty little bastards you know we'll talk about this because they everyone wants to protect
00:35:04.120
the munchkins everyone is trying to protect them they've known this whole time everyone knew
00:35:08.560
all of hollywood knew you know who i'd like to talk to today i'd like to talk to that bastard that
00:35:14.180
made the hobbit that's who i'd like to talk to there's a reason he lives in new zealand
00:35:19.260
there have been many rumors about the debauchery of the munchkins
00:35:24.240
really oh don't act like you don't know all right no i know i i heard the rumors but i didn't want
00:35:33.260
to believe you definitely don't want to believe this uh they had reported at the time quote they
00:35:38.820
had sex orgies in the hotel they had to have police on every floor this is insane uh there are a lot of
00:35:47.780
them who like to go out and have a few drinks but nothing got out of hand said one of the munchkins
00:35:51.660
when she was 15 what would he expect you to get out of the munchkins the munchkins are gonna defend
00:35:55.860
other munchkins that's what happens with munchkins you know it's like the thin munchkin line yeah you
00:36:00.840
know they're not gonna cross it no one's gonna cross it no i'm just glad finally you allowed this story
00:36:05.840
to be told well i've been trying to get this story on on the air since 1939
00:36:09.800
no one would listen to me who is who it's a source on that uh what news from the daily wire from the
00:36:17.180
daily wire from the daily wire well ben shapiro i mean he's he's got balls he is not gonna be silent
00:36:24.720
i guess not yeah he's he's like damn it i'm gonna stand for the truth it's got to be told
00:36:31.460
we applaud his bravery in this matter oh my gosh i mean oh by the way also we're uh rex tillerson
00:36:38.120
fired yeah and and the whole russia thing was a scam but um and yeah also the chemical attack on
00:36:46.020
uk uh yeah well that's a different russia thing yeah and then a personal assistant for the president
00:36:51.420
escorted out for a security issue yesterday yeah it was so quickly that he wasn't allowed to take any
00:36:56.280
of his stuff including his jacket they had to go back in and get it but have you heard about the
00:36:59.900
munchkins yes you heard about this you heard about me too damn it me too
00:37:19.060
love courage truth glenn beck a serial bomber is terrorizing the residents of austin texas
00:37:34.600
three package bomb explosions have killed two people and injured three others the first package
00:37:41.840
exploded march 2nd killing a 39 year old man the second and third packages both exploded yesterday
00:37:48.760
killing a 17 year old boy and wounding two women a boy went out to his uh front porch
00:37:58.100
picked a package up brought it into the kitchen with his mom it blew up killing him
00:38:04.620
the second package exploded uh just a few hours later about five miles from the site of the first
00:38:13.560
this time it was a 75 year old woman she stepped outside picked up a package and it exploded on her
00:38:20.500
porch she survived but she is in critical condition police don't know if the victims are specifically
00:38:29.220
being targeted yet however the stepfather of the man killed on march 2nd is close friends with a
00:38:34.760
grandfather of the 17 year old killed in uh the first explosion yesterday both men one a retired
00:38:43.380
pastor the other a dentist are well known in the black community police are not ruling out this as a
00:38:50.340
potential hate crime the two victims have been black and one was hispanic austin's interim police chief
00:38:59.320
told the media that police see similarities among the three explosions they believe they are related
00:39:04.920
austin police are warning residents don't touch any suspicious packages how many times do you come
00:39:12.640
home and there's packages on your doorstep it you don't even know what it is i mean you're getting
00:39:16.720
so many at least we are because of amazon we get so many things from amazon i don't know what the hell
00:39:21.780
it is oh it's soap oh it's a bomb so far police have not released any information about the suspects or
00:39:29.960
the motivation they do not believe the attacks are tied to the south by southwest music and media
00:39:35.440
conference that is going on now in austin investigators also don't believe the packages
00:39:41.860
were delivered by the post office or other delivery services they appear to have been left on people's
00:39:47.060
doorsteps overnight our governor great governor of the great state of texas
00:39:51.700
governor grave greg abbott announced fifteen thousand dollar reward for any information
00:39:56.160
leading to an arrest and we keep our fingers crossed that we saw the last two yesterday the
00:40:04.320
explosions are tragic the fbi will catch the vicious murderer behind them in light of the other recent
00:40:14.740
tragedy that has dominated the national conversation it's apparent in this case that packages are just as
00:40:20.860
but you'll notice nobody's really covering this one and nobody's saying we have to do something
00:40:32.300
it's not the package it's the person behind the package
00:40:39.440
it's tuesday march 13th you're listening to the glenn beck program
00:40:51.660
you know if you saw the movie the darkest hour with winston churchill about winston churchill you didn't really
00:41:05.900
realize how how much trouble england was in with the nazis i mean i have always known it was bad i didn't realize
00:41:19.900
and the british people stood and they stood their ground and they they didn't act like the french who just
00:41:27.260
kind of ran away they stood against all odds and in 1942 things started to really turn around and the british routed
00:41:38.940
rommel's forces in north africa drove the nazis out of egypt and it was a huge turning point
00:41:45.100
but it was nowhere even close to the the end the darkest days were still ahead
00:41:50.760
and winston churchill stood in in front of colleagues at at london's mansion house
00:42:02.160
and he broke the news to the british people and he said this
00:42:23.780
i want to talk to you about the end of the beginning here
00:43:13.040
or quite frankly as hillary clinton did in india yesterday in a shameful way
00:45:21.320
but there are an extraordinary number of people
00:45:41.600
to make everybody come before a properly appointed board
00:45:46.980
just as he might come before the income tax commissioners
00:45:58.140
now will you be kind enough to justify your existence
00:46:04.240
if you're not pulling your weight in the social boat
00:46:14.120
we cannot use the big organization of our society
00:46:21.200
how is george benard shaw still a hero in this world
00:46:35.040
it was this group of people that margaret sanger was with
00:46:44.980
and margaret sanger that saw sterilization and abortion
00:47:03.120
i read an op-ed in the washington post over the weekend
00:47:13.300
margaret sanger led her crusade on what she called
00:47:26.740
well many times that was meant as the african americans
00:47:33.940
79 percent of planned parenthood's abortion clinics
00:47:40.480
36 percent of all abortions in the u.s. were performed on african americans
00:47:51.840
21 percent of all abortions are performed on hispanics
00:47:54.700
and they only make up 7 percent of the population
00:48:44.940
most children with down syndrome have mild to moderate cognitive impairment
00:48:55.240
it's limited capacity for independent living and financial security
00:49:02.100
someone with down syndrome is a burden on the wallet
00:49:06.360
somebody who is consuming more than they can make or perhaps a little less
00:49:12.200
and the new shocking justification for murder is the expense on the family
00:49:29.480
last night on television i i showed you just a horrific television scene that is brand new that came out from the dutch dutch national institute for public health
00:49:42.160
and they're explaining to a man with down syndrome how much he costs society
00:49:51.240
but i don't know if he's comprehending that they're talking about you should be liquidated
00:49:56.340
and he says i i didn't realize i was costing so much money
00:50:03.080
then they ask the expert who else is a drain on society like him
00:50:14.640
this is the same argument that is made by ruth marcus in the post
00:50:29.800
ohio indiana louisiana and utah have proposed legislation to stop down syndrome abortions
00:50:35.920
but legal groups are already gearing up to invoke roe versus wade and crush it and they'll be able to do it
00:51:01.020
by the way they're saying that they're going to they're going to cure down syndrome
00:51:06.040
no you're not curing it you're just killing all of them
00:51:31.480
how about those how about those who are you know we just talked about this just the other day
00:51:42.120
that maybe christians should start really taking something on
00:51:47.080
and maybe we should we should go in and become foster parents
00:51:51.200
all of us as christians we should all churches should start to really push being a foster parent
00:51:56.960
because there are all these kids in foster parent uh waiting for foster parents
00:52:01.040
and aren't getting home so they're in the group homes
00:52:03.220
and if they grow up without a good foster parent
00:52:31.100
and this is audio of him speaking in front of congress
00:52:49.920
let me say that i am not a a a research scientist
00:52:56.520
however no one knows more about life with down syndrome
01:26:51.480
that was the most important part of the interview