The March to Socialism Continues? | Guests: Chad Felix Greene & Shayna Lopez-Rivas | 2⧸19⧸19
Episode Stats
Length
2 hours and 4 minutes
Words per Minute
172.48885
Summary
Brenie Sanders is in the race! Bernie Sanders is running for president and he s got a platform. We talk about his platform and why he s running and why you should vote for him.
Transcript
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the fusion of entertainment and enlightenment this is the oh my the stew we've got a real
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presidential race full of young vibrant new kind of thinkers yeah because marx is super new he's a
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new super new and speaking of the word new guys who knew marx are now in the race we have biden
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he's not in yet well he's coming you know he's coming we don't know yet yes he was in germany
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bad-mouthing america that is exactly what barack obama did that's what you do man uh and of course
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the one the only bernie sanders wait until you hear his new ideas you thought the new green deal
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was a big deal no a fresh start for america we get into that in one minute
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this is the glenbeck program so a survey finds that two-thirds of adults still battle a recurring
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pain as a result of an injury suffering during suffered during high school that's my broken
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heart oh man every once in a while oh that high school injury i didn't play any sports but
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oh i loved a lot and lost yeah yeah if you have um if you have chronic pain if you have pain i mean
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since high school a third of people here in america from running weightlifting awkward golf swings
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that no that's not awkward that is my golf swing uh errant softballs bike crashes whatever it is
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a third of people say they still feel that pain get out of pain relief factor it has worked for me
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now it works for about 70 percent of the people so 70 percent of the people find the relief from this
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all-natural it's not even a drug this all-natural medicine that helps reduce the inflammation in your
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body which is what really causes the pain i want you to go to relieffactor.com right now that's
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relieffactor.com 800-500-8384 you want to reduce your pain well you could not listen to bernie bernie
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center's platform here in a minute or you could try relief factor one of those is doctor recommended
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the other one is really not a good idea because it's just too much fun get rid of your pain now
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relieffactor.com relieffactor.com bernie sanders bring him on i'm so excited stu i'm so excited
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bernie sanders is now in the race yes thunk it who would have thunk it now he's got an exciting
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platform we go now to our on the scene reporter right across the desk is stu brageer stu now his
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aides are saying he has a couple of things he wants to do as part of this presidential campaign
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one he's got to go to potty a lot he's got to go to the potty unless well unless the adult diapers are
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are freshly changed well that's that's not that's not even nice to joke about that what do you mean
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well someday you'll be wearing adult diapers and will you be joking about that i didn't make one
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even hint at a joke you said he had to go potty and i said you don't have to go to the potty i thought
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it was ageism quite if you have an adult diaper that potty is not necessarily a trip you need to
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make as okay all right that's all okay he wants to do medicare for all medicare for all now again i
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point this out every single candidate in this race wants to do medicare medicare for all not the case
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quite recently in fact you might think to yourself wasn't barack obama a progressive liberal president
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well uh when he was president bernie sanders introduced medicare for all and got zero co-sponsors
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zero he was the only one interested in doing medicare for all publicly in 2013 sure now the
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rest it was marxist nonsense they're not going for that they're never going to go for that
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how dare you even suggest that you racist medicare for all which means we get rid of all uh private
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insurance so you don't you don't have your there's a couple different spins on it there's the one
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kamala harris talked about getting rid of all private insurance some candidates are supporting a version
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like medicare for all where it would just be available to everyone sure okay so it's like
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france everybody has uh medicare uh in france or whatever they call it over there oh you sick you
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get this uh but everybody also gets to on top of the high taxes they also get to buy insurance to
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cover for the stuff that medicare for all you know doesn't cover yeah so it's a it's a double
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blessing it's it is a blessing i think that's the right word for it and we should say that it is
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important for medicare for all to happen to cure our horrible health care system currently known as
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obamacare the last thing they told us was going to cure our horrible health care system remember it
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hasn't been repealed it's still in effect the thing they're all running against is the thing they all
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told us was the cure last time remember that when they can't start saying of all when they start
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listing all the problems because what they're going to say is well trump has gutted it i mean look
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the only thing really we've seen a couple of of regulation changes the biggest thing being that
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they zeroed out the penalty if you don't have health insurance which i like i'm a fan of however
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the problem with the way they did it was they just zeroed out the penalty but the penalty is still there
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so the next you know next time the democrats have control they can just non-zero out the president
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the the uh the penalty they didn't get rid of the mandate they just zeroed the penalty so in theory
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what you're supposed to do is actually have health insurance if you don't you have to pay a you're
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against the law but you have to pay a zero dollar penalty right it's a weird way they did it and it's
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going to go away as soon as democrats get control okay so basically we're in obamacare and that's what
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they're complaining about got it next up green new deal green new deal yes all of it green new deal
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green new deal so medicare for all and the green new deal now the green new deal obviously you've
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probably seen the uh faq that was uh posted by alexandria ocasio cortez's team which said things
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like everyone gets a job even if they're unwilling to work they get paid basically universal basic
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income um that is not necessarily what he's saying here he's saying the proposed bill that the resolution
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that went through and the resolution basically says every green dream you've ever heard of uh from
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uh democrats okay it's not but it doesn't say some of the things that were in that faq to be clear okay
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$15 minimum wage $15 minimum wage countrywide yep so if you live in new york it's still not a livable wage
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if you live in you know uh outback wisconsin it's uh sweet living sure you can't no business can run
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right if they give less than $15 as a minimum wage which of course as we've seen in even in high
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price areas like seattle has destroyed industries yes and destroyed really profitable and not working
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out for seattle no yeah uh criminal justice reform now we just passed criminal justice reform
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but as you listen to the people who wanted criminal justice reform they were very clear this was just
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a first step i believe the act was called the first step act uh so there's plenty more to come
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i think what the the end game here is if you haven't committed a crime you go to prison if you have
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committed a crime you're out you're let you're set free they're just going to reverse the walls well
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it's going to be like uh superman in superman 2 where he reverses he goes inside the little
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protective thing and reverses yeah they get the kryptonite to the outside right so that zod gets
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hit with it right it's just like that that's criminal justice reform okay good i like this i like this and
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and and now with all of the you know big state regulation we're all criminals and we've all
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committed a crime we just don't know it yet yes so we might as well all go to prison sure all right
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let's make it fun number five free college free college yes that's always fun now of course we've
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seen the cost of that uh is pretty it's pretty high um it's gonna get even better once the government
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is involved it's gonna get better you don't you think oh i mean think about it this way think about
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it this and they are already heavily involved by the way yeah um if you think about it this way
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where you've got a uh you've got a college system that would be run by the u.s government
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uh and you're expecting that college to teach the constitution and to teach the teach the founding
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documents which says you should be very skeptical of the government you shouldn't trust the government
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you shouldn't give the government more power of course the people who are paying for that
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they want that stuff taught right they want that stuff taught yeah okay so it's gonna be good it's
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gonna work out well so free college again the reason why the cost of college is so high yes is
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because the government is involved in the on the loan side guaranteeing very low cost loans to
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people that they run up and then theoretically try to pay back for the rest of their lives sure
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theoretically uh theoretically uh breaking up the biggest banks break breaking up banks yes
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now surely there will be a cost to that as well um and of course there will also be massive uh
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problems with the government invading into private business not but that there's not these these guys
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who are running the banks you know the five biggest banks in the world there is that there there is
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absolutely no power there there's no power to do anything or fight back in government you know it's like
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google what is google gonna do if they're like hey you're gonna stop doing these things what are they
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gonna track politicians and find out all their dirty secrets and threaten to expose them no no google
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doesn't do that kind of stuff no and big banks and you know global economies running on the backs of
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these banks there's no one in the world that has incentive or enough power to hurt a socialist federal
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government from stopping the banks and breaking them up there's no no no one no one no one okay
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next up is uh gender pay equity now interesting thing about gender is i think it's the most
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simultaneously the most important thing in the world and also the least important thing in the world
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yes yes you're not supposed to notice anybody's gender but also if there is no difference if you
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notice the wrong gender it's basically like holocaust denial it's it's like the worst sort of speech you can
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holocaust what is that uh there you go um that's i don't that might be on the plan here somewhere
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but i don't think so um but gender pay equity again what you're i guess you're going for an equal pay
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amendment to do that and which is obviously ridiculous because all of the never mind go ahead
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uh he wants to lower drug prices now uh elizabeth warren had a way to lower drug prices she's already
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proposed we don't know exactly how bernie wants to do this yet but uh hers was that the government
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would actually have own factories that made pills and those the the pills would go to compete of
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course that's what a socialist does is they control production that is what the socialist does that's
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true so i would assume bernie's either there or close to there well you're going to mandate that
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you can't charge americans uh more than more than what you charge people in ethiopia which i think
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is perfectly fair for a uh progressive to say you know that makes total progressive sense because
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for instance the progressive income tax okay you know you would never charge you'd never charge
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people different amounts if they were rich and especially the richest one percent you do you
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don't charge them different amounts you charge everybody exactly the same and uh and so that's what
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they're they're suggesting now seeing that we are the richest one percent even the poorest among us
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are the richest one percent of the world um we can't charge americans the richest one percent
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more for their drugs we have to charge the same price that we uh charge in ethiopia you know who
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really benefits from this ethiopians because certainly a company that needs to make money and
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need to needs to pay for their business like a pharmaceutical company is going to just take let's
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say they're charging ethiopia one dollar they're charging us 10 they're just going to lower it all to one
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dollar surely they're not going to start charging ethiopia and us seven dollars so then ethiopians
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can't get access to drugs that's a good policy i really think they should go ahead with that because
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who needs the ethiopians they're just a country way over there who cares about people another another
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global warming oh yeah they're all going to get killed by global warming anyway i guess
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well no they're contributing to global warming we can't let them we can't develop right can't let them
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develop how many times have we heard that seriously that's not you know i know um
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number nine uh expand social security you see social security has been such a huge success
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and is always able to pay now sir sure 90 percent of people who go into social security get more
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money out of it than they put into it but let's expand it because it's been working so well so far
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and it has only caused uh just a giant chunk of our multiple trillion dollar debt don't worry about
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it our future uh liabilities we're up about 100 trillion right now huge chunk of that is social
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security don't worry about it let's expand it yeah our unfunded liabilities are more than that
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more than 100 trillion now i mean it just depends on what timeline you're giving it right the bottom
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line is it's negative every year so we could go a thousand years in the future and make that number
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as big as you want go to usdebtclock. i think it's org and and tell me uh our debt and our unfunded
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liabilities uh should we uh take a break we have a few more oh we have more yeah oh yeah we still have
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let's see one two three four five six seven eight nine ten more things holy cow this is quite and
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it's cheap too that's a good thing for the richest country in a in the world this is cheap why aren't
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we doing these things continue with bernie sanders platform uh coming up in uh just a second first we
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want to tell you a little bit about liberty safe liberty safe you i'm telling you right now you i bought
00:15:40.040
a little one the first one i bought was a little one and i was like i just want to put you know my
00:15:45.280
guns in there and you know maybe my wallet or you know our marriage license it was full within 20
00:15:52.520
minutes of of having just a little closet one it was absolutely stuffed full and you and i said to my
00:15:59.520
wife i said i didn't realize we had so many things laying around that shouldn't be out you know
00:16:04.380
papers mainly and photographs and things like that things that we just would not want to lose in a
00:16:09.600
fire so we went and got a bigger safe that is the number one complaint of liberty safe is that a
00:16:15.560
sweet problem i mean that's not like that's not like a french food problem where like you know the
00:16:21.480
only problem with that is they don't put anything on the plate except a pea and a little bit of steak
00:16:28.020
about two ounces that's not it this problem is it's such a great product and you don't even think
00:16:36.160
about it going in that you don't think i i need a bigger one that's the biggest complaint it's
00:16:42.620
liberty safe best built safes on the planet bar none fire theft tornadoes they got it all covered
00:16:50.080
liberty safe.com go there now liberty safe.com uh we're gonna pause for um oh i was supposed to
00:16:57.680
say that the liberty safes are on sale now at cabela's so you can go to cabela's and get those
00:17:01.820
safes uh liberty safe.com we're gonna pause for 10 second station id
00:17:05.640
our uh unfunded liabilities 122 trillion dollars so i was only up by 22 trillion yeah
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yeah that's no big deal it isn't it isn't you're just calling me out for no reason on that one
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uh next up on the uh bernie sanders plan for america save unions save people are clamoring
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i assume this isn't a religious thing um he is you are saved saved unions afl cio put your hands
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on the radio right now teamsters of america you are saved uh yeah he wants to save unions which i
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again we don't know exactly what that means or what that would cost it's it could very well cause
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uh some sort of government matching type of situation also could be attempting to reverse
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the recent supreme court ruling in some way we'll see where that one goes so can i can i interrupt
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here for a second i have to tell you last night i was doing homework with my son and uh uh he is
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now currently in the progressive era no no no so he's in the progressive era and he said
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this is honestly what he said hey dad um i need to make some 3d objects i said okay he said for
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history and i said oh okay sure uh what do you need what are you gonna do and he said well i want to
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build a bomb i said excuse me he said i'm studying uh uh sacco and vicente or sacco and is it no it's
00:18:48.060
ven i can't remember the guy's name uh the two guys in the progressive era that you know were were
00:18:54.660
were robbers that took money so they could take the money and give it to all of the anarchists to
00:19:00.800
build bombs right it's the red square 19 or red scare of 1920 so last night i find myself helping
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my son do research on on how they made the bombs back then and then make a facsimile of that bomb
00:19:19.180
with the string running inside and everything else then he had to make three and i said okay so what's
00:19:28.520
the next one he said well i want to do it on uh propaganda and how propaganda changed the world and
00:19:35.860
i said oh and i told him the story of edward bernays and the cigarettes and what he did with the ladies
00:19:42.020
as they were trying to get the vote and hike up their dresses in the parade do you remember that yep
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and they would hike up their dresses and in their garter they would have cigarettes women didn't smoke
00:19:51.300
because it was a phallic symbol uh and so he said you're gonna get i'm gonna have the
00:19:56.720
right where the judges are i'm gonna have all the reporters there what i want you to do is as
00:20:01.320
you're going for women's suffrage i want you to stop and i want you to hike up your dress and in
00:20:06.940
your garter i want to you're going to have a cigarette and a match and you're going to light
00:20:11.300
it you're going to put it in your mouth and then you're going to light it and then you're going to
00:20:14.120
hold that up like the torch of the statue of liberty he killed two birds with one stone he was
00:20:20.260
working for a tobacco company but he was also working for the women's suffrage movement and how it
00:20:25.160
changed so i built a bomb with my son and then i uh talked to him about the uh the phallic symbol of
00:20:32.820
the cigarette and uh and uh and and the and the women hiking up their skirts women hiking up their
00:20:39.480
skirts and so he went in and he said hey mom i i need a garter belt and my wife said excuse me
00:20:47.660
and i said she said i need he said i need a garter belt and uh she said well i don't happen to have
00:20:53.820
one uh son and uh she said what are you two doing and so he explained to her and she said oh
00:21:02.560
i think you can get those at hobby lobby last night was i was living in a world i didn't even
00:21:10.060
understand lobby lobby lobby when did hobby lobby start to carry that i don't know she said she
00:21:16.700
thought that they might be in like a marriage aisle or a wedding aisle or something like that
00:21:21.220
i'm like okay i officially i'm making bombs with my son and uh buying uh uh you know sexual uh things
00:21:28.800
at hobby lobby world makes sense that does make a lot of sense i actually think your your kids are
00:21:33.700
going to be really bad at history what i actually i was thinking about this the other day you you
00:21:37.900
your career has basically been made at at finding these little nuggets of history that nobody knows
00:21:43.240
and they don't teach in school so unless the person teaching happens to be a you know a fan of your
00:21:50.920
show the whole point of these shows being successful was that the history teachers weren't teaching it
00:21:56.000
so when you pull out these little stories from history they're unless they go and check them all
00:22:01.920
which you know they're not going to do which if he gets yeah because i will check it if he gets a mark
00:22:08.100
down on that history oh we're gonna have a little talk with the history you didn't make that really
00:22:14.540
because here are all the footnotes here's where you can find it what part is not accurate
00:22:20.240
i'm on i made history teachers worst nightmare i drilled him last night man he knows it nice
00:22:30.100
he knows it all right back in a minute rest of bernie sanders platform
00:22:34.380
you're listening to glenn beck all right i want to talk to you about a cyber criminal that
00:22:45.980
hangs out at a coffee shop you go in there you're on starbucks you just log on to their wi-fi
00:22:51.600
and he is just sitting there he's not doing work well he is doing work his work is to steal your
00:22:56.160
information he can now get your passwords credit card numbers private photos financial statements
00:23:01.900
tax return just with your social security number these are the targets a public wi-fi is the problem
00:23:09.400
it's public you don't even if it has a password it's public you need a norton secure vpn
00:23:16.140
a virtual private network uh norton security vpn easy to use it installs on your laptop and your mobile
00:23:23.900
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and security than i think you've ever had the price start about 333 a month this is something
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that everyone should have camouflage your connection using norton secure vpn it's norton.com
00:23:40.620
we have more of bernie sanders platform he's announced for president we're going to go over
00:23:44.880
the rest of it including pat gray in the conversation he comes up next on the clinic program
00:23:49.660
why pay your hard-earned money to join an organization that fought for a government-run
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health care system and stood against tax cuts for middle-class americans and small business owners
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that's aarp join amac the conservative alternative same money-saving benefits of aarp without the
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liberal agenda stand with amac as they fight the good fight become a member today join now at
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amac.us slash usa amac.us slash usa america's march to socialism continues the fundamental transformation
00:24:31.620
of america where we've got medicare for all this is bernie sanders new platform medicare for all green
00:24:37.720
new deal 15 minimum wage criminal justice uh reform part de free college breaking up
00:24:45.900
the banks uh gender pay equality lower drug prices expanding social security and the all-important
00:24:53.680
save unions we're only halfway there uh pat pat gray joins us now from the pat gray radio extravaganza
00:25:02.000
uh and uh puppet show it's great yeah you don't want to miss it now with puppets and some of them
00:25:08.620
are brand new really yeah it's weird that you had a you called it the puppet show and previously did not
00:25:13.620
have puppets that's radio nobody knew oh yeah but now because now there's actual puppets yeah now he
00:25:18.460
really believes in this and he wants to make sure that his actions are backing up that promise he has
00:25:23.700
real felt puppets nice it's like when a when an organic food contains uh real flavors instead of
00:25:31.900
artificial that's kind of what the actual puppets are yeah yeah okay anyway it's important so go ahead
00:25:37.180
do you have a bernie sanders puppet yet yes yeah i just added it today uh paid leave paid leave now
00:25:45.000
we assume that has something i mean now that's governmental paid leave yes you're gonna demand
00:25:49.760
that the corporations provide paid leave it's going we don't know the actual details of that um but we
00:25:55.300
we do remember that this cost uh you know multiple billions of dollars per year about you know some of
00:26:01.040
these do have some support across do you know that there's there's companies already offering paid
00:26:05.500
leave to the husbands to the fathers i i was in utah a couple weeks ago and uh my son-in-law's brother
00:26:14.740
was on paid leave because they just had a baby five months for the father five paid leave but i mean
00:26:25.700
that's a corporation choosing to do that i'm stuffing one of the kids back into tanya right pulling them out
00:26:31.680
every six months look we got another one i'd have a baby a year at that rate it would have a i'd have
00:26:37.200
two babies a year i'd be i'd be for polygamy so i could have two babies a year uh so uh that
00:26:45.700
plan has been scored as well i mean we've talked about some of these really he's starting at the 32
00:26:50.860
trillion dollar he's everything in that 32 trillion dollar estimate that came out a few months ago
00:26:55.560
is in this plan and there's a lot more i will say though you know you have some of these that have
00:26:59.420
support across party lines like you know donald trump obviously supported the criminal justice
00:27:03.180
reform he just signed that in he's also talked about breaking up the banks he's talked about
00:27:07.080
paid leave he's talked about lowering the drug prices well and also expanding social security
00:27:11.340
obviously the plans are different on how to get there but some of these things will i think score
00:27:15.780
fairly well with the pop with the population until they find out the cost of them yeah and that's
00:27:20.740
when breaking up the banks is something that we should have gone this direction after 2008
00:27:25.840
instead the democrats and and uh and uh barack obama and even george bush decided to consolidate
00:27:33.480
power and made the banks even bigger yeah remember the whole thing was too big to fail this is a
00:27:38.900
problem let's make them bigger well how about we make them smaller uh and so we just made this so
00:27:44.740
it's we should be going in that direction but what does that mean for bernie sanders a socialist
00:27:49.620
something that's not good right uh dream act and going into effect if bernie sanders gets his way
00:27:55.980
obviously uh universal background checks for your guns uh an assault weapons ban which is an amazing
00:28:04.520
one they keep asking for purely because you know they did it already and it didn't work
00:28:10.440
like that's such a strange one it's a new idea it's a new idea they just didn't do it right it was in
00:28:16.020
effect for 10 years and it showed no advantage whatsoever i did not stop any murders it didn't
00:28:23.440
work yeah but okay affordable housing affordable housing what does that mean i mean i'm surprised
00:28:31.460
not to see the word free before housing but affordable housing i guess if you have no money is
00:28:35.780
would be free um we don't know how much that's going to cost again these are just outlines broad
00:28:42.120
strokes broad strokes from burns number 16 new infrastructure i am so sick of infrastructure i am
00:28:50.140
sick of it as well i don't even know what the infrastructure is that we bought with a trillion
00:28:54.880
dollars and what we're buying this time with another 10 years ago that we bought yeah 10 years ago we
00:29:00.000
bought infrastructure for 780 billion dollars biggest bill ever in our lifetimes at the time now we've got
00:29:07.460
what 1.3 they've been talking yeah i know trump proposed i think 1.5 during the campaign obviously
00:29:13.460
democrats want to go to more they want more than that well if infrastructure includes rebuilding every
00:29:18.900
or retrofitting every home and every building in america it could get even more extensive i just want
00:29:25.120
to know what it is well consider i'm sick and tired of um uh you know uh we need uh we need
00:29:30.600
infrastructure uh uh uh worked on and we need a new and infant a new infrastructure bill well
00:29:36.820
how did you get to work didn't you notice all the crumbling bridges yeah no i i just i i strange there's
00:29:42.620
a lot of new brand new spanking new bridges in our area i mean i know texas had a good economy for a
00:29:47.780
while so uh-huh but man they seem to be able to build them yeah they seem to have no problem with it
00:29:52.320
uh with by the way no state income tax we should point out uh somehow texas is constantly building new
00:29:58.940
roads and everything else with no state income taxes it's a miracle uh but new infrastructure
00:30:03.160
you know you're again probably cost looking at a couple trillion dollars extra and i will say we
00:30:07.660
already said the new green deal is part of this which as you point out pat had a retrofitting of
00:30:12.380
every structure at least in the notes about the bill uh which would cost more than 32 trillion
00:30:18.320
dollars by itself uh if they actually did it opposing the military industrial complex
00:30:24.680
now i don't know that that actually i don't know that that actually costs anything for him to
00:30:30.180
oppose it well supposedly he's gonna make dramatic cuts to the u.s military well that'd be a smart
00:30:35.820
thing to do yeah that'd be a smart yeah you need to um we need to spend about a dollar fifty because
00:30:40.980
we are not honestly we are not headed towards war no not at all no the world is fine what are you a
00:30:48.200
conspiracy theorist where you think russia's a problem china come on china middle east the 1980s
00:30:54.260
called they want their foreign policy back that's a good one i nailed him on that one um legalizing
00:31:03.440
weed yeah that's an important one legalize it uh so that one's that one i i think that's going to
00:31:09.700
happen it is uh very soon i mean it doesn't make sense that it is that is uh legal in states and
00:31:16.800
illegal by feds i mean make a decision one way or another next democratic president that has any
00:31:21.780
control we'll get that done and i think honestly a lot of republican presidents if trump were to
00:31:26.660
decide not to run and some other republican won i think there's a good chance even a republican
00:31:31.020
has left the barn i do too and the polling is now it's just like the and quite honestly i just don't
00:31:36.480
think it's worth fighting it's just like whatever yeah and i think honestly it's a the federal
00:31:40.960
government shouldn't be involved in that anyway nope in my opinion so marijuana was only made illegal
00:31:46.600
because prohibition ended and they had all these atf people uh and they were drug enforcement the the
00:31:54.100
you know drug enforcement or the alcohol prohibition enforcement team and so when that went away of
00:32:01.300
course the government didn't shrink again so they made them the atf and that's when they said oh and
00:32:06.260
you know what that bad marijuana we ought to get that it was just it was a job creation bill or a job
00:32:13.260
uh a job saving bill for jobs in the federal government and it's basically legal in half the
00:32:19.940
states right now anyway every every election a few more states pass it uh but uh abolishing private
00:32:26.960
prisons now that would be an interesting one because that would definitely cost a considerable
00:32:32.420
amount of money some people do uh think of that that as a priority the idea being that these evil
00:32:37.560
capitalist companies are trying to get more people in prison just to pay their bills well i will tell
00:32:43.220
you this it really makes an awful lot of sense when you abolish private prisons um that takes away
00:32:48.980
anyone you can run to so in other words uh if it's run by the government you can't go to the government
00:32:56.220
and say look at the abuses happening here because they are the police they don't care they don't care
00:33:02.400
they're not going to change it i mean that's the one thing i don't understand how do you think that
00:33:06.660
things are not going to get out of hand and be really really nasty when you're you're asking for
00:33:13.560
the uh the um socializing of all of these corporations and all of these things you take
00:33:21.280
drugs over who do you think is going to watch the quality of the drugs the fda is going to find
00:33:26.420
themselves you really think that they're going to care no they make a mistake they kill a bunch of
00:33:32.640
people what are they going to do be put out of business of course not it's the government i had
00:33:38.760
to mail a package at the post office and they have the little automated machine where you can print out
00:33:42.720
your own postage for your package yeah um and i went there this is before um christmas and i went
00:33:48.460
there to mail it out in november late november and the machine was broken so then i went back the next
00:33:52.920
week in december and the machine was broken and then i went back the next week after that and the
00:33:57.640
machine was broken and then i got so frustrated i think i sent it fedex or something because the
00:34:02.120
of course the only thing was that's good about the machine is i can go there in the middle of
00:34:05.340
you know 10 o'clock at night when i have time so i uh the other day i had to mail another package
00:34:11.060
uh still broken so the machine still the machine has been broken since november well you can't get
00:34:17.820
on that right they're gonna get on that though eventually come on give them a minute and number 20
00:34:25.360
end cash bail now i don't know if that costs a weird problem money it's a weird one time clamoring
00:34:33.380
for that though that's all i'm hearing lately is can we please end cash bail well actually you have
00:34:38.840
a bumper sticker on your car that says end cash bail i noticed that one right now it is yeah it's very
00:34:43.520
large it almost covers like your entire door i don't know how you get in and out and finally
00:34:48.360
major police department reform oh good good good yeah because of that's the brutality of the police
00:34:56.900
and how they they beat and kill uh minority people my understanding of the police is the federal
00:35:01.860
government doesn't have all that much authority over the local police but i guess they well we're
00:35:08.360
gonna take it we're gonna they're gonna make it uh their their business oh they have to yeah they
00:35:13.480
have to make it they do business i mean it's just so it's so out of control out of control so out of
00:35:19.620
control so i feel like we're at i mean let's just make it a round number and call it a hundred trillion
00:35:25.280
dollars oh now i would say what are you what are you getting the kmart special because some of these
00:35:32.020
are just you know just unlimited you can't really how much does a 15 minimum wage cost our economy
00:35:37.840
who knows i mean really uh and especially if you're guaranteeing that you know the one of the
00:35:42.900
proposals out there is if you are making less than that people will just be automatically subsidized up
00:35:50.360
to that point yeah which would be another interesting expenditure that i'm sure would not have any
00:35:54.660
ramifications part part of his plan though is is to uh make the estate tax 50 on all estates over
00:36:02.000
five million now five million you know when that includes all your property and everything you own
00:36:09.280
that's not an extravagant amount of money it's good it's really good it's good but no it's good
00:36:14.020
most people don't die with five million dollars bill gates money it's not no it's not yeah bezos money
00:36:18.900
it's just you know you've done really well they're gonna take half of that after you paid taxes on all
00:36:24.340
of it your entire life now we're gonna take what you have left and remove half of it from you and you
00:36:30.440
know what people will do give their property away to their children and find ways to put them in
00:36:36.100
trusts yeah because they'll try to if you have five you have five million dollars you don't want
00:36:42.120
someone coming in and are you okay with somebody coming in on your deathbed in the middle of the
00:36:47.000
night and going no he's got five million dollars in the safe he's weak he's he's dying let's go get
00:36:53.060
it it's right immoral you wouldn't have you would you would protect it from robbers well what is the
00:36:57.880
federal government you're dying that's what you built to pass on to your children and they're
00:37:03.360
going to take half of it screw you rich people will not put up with it no and it'll pass it'll
00:37:09.900
pass and they won't say anything they'll just lobby and find a way that the average person couldn't do
00:37:16.520
they will just find a way around it or move or move by the way the average home cost right now is
00:37:21.900
four hundred thousand dollars for a new home so but you know how long is five million dollars is a lot
00:37:26.580
of money now i mean in 30 40 years is it a lot of money 40 years are you kidding me with the way we
00:37:32.620
we're going to be printing money here soon five million dollars it's going to come fast it's going
00:37:36.760
to come very fast look how much the property is worth in venezuelan money all right let me talk to
00:37:44.380
you about brick house nutrition their product field of greens you know this is a this a company uh that
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was started because it's it was a uh the guy who started it was a guy who had been um he's a health
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nut and so he thought oh you know what i'm going to get into nutrition stuff and then he realized oh
00:38:04.820
my gosh this stuff is all a scam it's all a scam he got out and he was like i i actually want
00:38:12.520
nutritionist nutrition stuff i want to take supplements i want to be healthier so he started
00:38:18.940
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get 15 off your first order when you use my name glenn a better you awaits brickhouseglenn.com offer code glenn
00:39:09.140
welcome to the program um so glad that you're here we have uh donald trump on socialism coming up in
00:39:24.700
just a little while uh he was speaking in florida and he talked about venezuela and socialism and he
00:39:32.000
said socialism is about one thing power for the ruling class they want the power to decide who wins
00:39:37.220
and who loses who's up who's down and even who lives and who dies america will never be a socialist
00:39:43.680
country hurry hurry on that one i'm also interested in talking to chad felix green he's coming up at the
00:39:49.920
top of the hour and we've been we've been talking about you know for instance uh the uh is it jussin i can
00:39:56.620
never remember just a just jussie jussie jussie jussie uh small yak or whatever it is smollett
00:40:06.300
whatever he's a big star um and we've been talking about how the press is uh talking about how these
00:40:14.160
things are going up all these these these horrible things violence against minorities going up uh we
00:40:20.760
have uh chad felix green on who is a gay man who did the research on is that true entirely
00:40:29.820
gay man gay journalist gonna tell us about how uh how hate crimes i believe it's uh five out of every
00:40:36.000
one gay people are assaulted on a daily basis i believe is the stat he'll tell us all the truth about
00:40:41.000
it uh because hate crimes are constant if you happen to be gay never stops in fact every day when you walk
00:40:47.600
down the street 37 hate crimes happen to the average gay person so we'll get into the stats
00:40:52.400
behind that i hope he has pretty amazing pretty amazing their truth is utterly amazing wait till
00:40:56.920
you hear it by the way you see that facebook was banning people who were saying that uh jussie
00:41:01.620
smollett's uh crime was a hate crime which is the point i made on television last night this is a hate
00:41:07.820
crime he hated white people he hated trump supporters he hated somebody and he decided to make a point
00:41:16.280
isn't this a hate crime making that up you're listening to glenn beck
00:41:22.040
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the fusion of entertainment and enlightenment this is the glenbeck program if we have learned one
00:42:41.280
thing we have learned from uh jussie smollett that hate crimes are going through the roof
00:42:49.080
hate crime i mean even if he lied about this one we know that hate crimes against gays
00:42:56.440
going through the roof or the exact opposite chad felix green he's a senior contributor of the
00:43:06.040
federalist he is also a gay man and a gay journalist and he looked into the stats and he
00:43:12.360
says uh not so fast we talked to him an amazing eye-opening interview on hate crimes in one minute
00:43:21.780
this is the glenbeck program life lock you know i remember when this first came out maybe in the 80s
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00:44:32.820
chad felix green i would never introduce you as a gay man and a gay journalist except in this particular case
00:44:49.660
because you it gives you the credibility that you just don't hate gay people although i hear that
00:44:57.540
that is actually a charge that people have leveled against you uh because of these uh these stats that
00:45:04.660
you have looked into welcome to the program chad thank you yes uh chad tell me what you found when
00:45:13.000
when you look into hate crimes are trending uh trending down well since 2010 when uh hate crimes
00:45:22.360
started to be tracked by the fbi um we saw a immediate spike uh back in 2013 and then ever since
00:45:31.900
it's really gone down it fluctuates really by just a few uh between 2016 2017 for example when they say
00:45:40.320
there was a 17 spike it changed by 54 incidents and we have to remember that these are reports they're
00:45:47.400
not confirmed convictions just this just means because that the fbi received reports right and
00:45:53.400
and there's a huge difference between a report uh and a conviction because jesse simola has showed us
00:46:01.320
here the last couple days i mean last yesterday i showed all these hate crimes uh that i think i had 25
00:46:07.400
of them that the that the media had jumped on and none of them uh were true and so that would be
00:46:15.400
included in the hate crime statistic correct correct that's insanity and hate crimes can be uh anything
00:46:25.040
reported from somebody stealing um rainbow flags from residences uh as a protest to someone finding a
00:46:34.020
swastika on a wall to someone reporting to the police that someone yelled name at them as they
00:46:41.480
were driving by adam ripon for example reported this that he was walking with his boyfriend in new york
00:46:47.360
city and some random stranger walked up to him and said that he hated uh gay slurs and then ran away
00:46:54.080
um if he had reported that to the police the police would have listed that as a reported
00:47:00.000
anti-gay uh hate crime you know it's amazing to me um you know i the the hateful things that have
00:47:07.140
been said to me uh on the street and i would never have run to the police to report them you just kind of
00:47:13.480
like yeah well okay everybody has an opinion and everybody has two armpits don't share it with
00:47:18.640
everybody um what is it what exactly chad is a hate crime a hate crime is it's different by state but
00:47:29.080
the essential definition is that it's uh they're also called bias crimes uh they were introduced after
00:47:35.500
the matthew shepherd right incident and basically it's the idea that a person targets a protected class
00:47:44.900
for violence or intimidation or harassment uh because of their protected class status and
00:47:51.400
that's evolved now into crimes against persons property and society okay so so could you say
00:47:59.000
with the jesse smollett uh case is that a hate crime because he came into it with a bias against
00:48:05.880
trump supporters white people is i mean isn't that a hate crime i mean i think all crime is
00:48:12.640
hate crime quite honestly i mean it's i don't care what your motivation is it's a crime
00:48:18.580
um but isn't this a hate crime what he perpetrated i believe so uh if we look at the law as equally
00:48:28.140
applying to everyone it should be um unfortunately it's not in my opinion hate crimes create inequality
00:48:34.640
in the law because i agree they protect certain people and there's a difference between uh a racial
00:48:41.420
and a gay identifier and a gay identifier the truth is is that if you and i were both
00:48:46.380
mugged on the street because i self-identify as a gay man i would receive more justice more protection
00:48:55.640
my crime would be seen as worse having a priority over yours based only on that characteristic i don't
00:49:03.020
think that is uh justified but you would have to claim that as the victim wouldn't you wouldn't you
00:49:08.480
have to claim this was done to me because i was gay uh yes for example uh there's a recent uh hate
00:49:18.240
crime in austin that is um it's the most recent one that we've seen where two gay men were leaving a
00:49:24.960
bar at 3 a.m and a group of men started yelling homophobic slurs at them and they got into a
00:49:31.940
confrontation and then they beat them up badly ran off and then now it is referred to as a hate crime
00:49:39.080
the police have stated that in that area in austin there has been a rise in uh random targeted attacks
00:49:46.280
at 3 a.m on that area uh at not you know at that time of night by gangs uh and so there's no indication
00:49:53.820
that they were specifically targeted but because these people used homophobic slurs while they were
00:50:00.140
attacking it is now considered a hate crime and if they're they're convicted hate crimes will be
00:50:05.320
added to their sentence which means that they'll get a harsher punishment uh because they use those
00:50:11.260
slurs not because of what they actually did talking to chad felix green from the federalist chad i mean
00:50:15.980
the the way that the media portrays this you know what maybe it's half of gay people are victims of
00:50:22.060
gay of hate crimes that's what it feels like do you have any any concept of what the percentage
00:50:27.080
is of of gay people who go through a hate crime in a given year uh yes um it's uh as as a rounded
00:50:36.060
number it's generally uh 0.001 percent um as the lgbt population has grown uh from three percent to
00:50:45.960
4.5 percent over the years that has reduced down to 0.0008 percent of the lgbt population and that's not
00:50:55.320
the population of the country that's just 0.008 percent of the 15 million lgbt americans report
00:51:04.500
hate crimes that doesn't tell us how many period well they will say the opposite they will say
00:51:10.500
that it's worse they just don't report it correct and my answer to that because that's always a
00:51:16.860
response when we talk about anything where the numbers do not match the narrative as they say well
00:51:21.260
that's underreported imagine how many reports it would take to move that one to 0.1 percent or to
00:51:29.480
one percent you'd have to multiply the incidents by a thousand you'd have to have 120,000 incidents in
00:51:37.480
a year rather than 1200 which we currently have you couldn't really go any further than that because
00:51:43.080
there's only 15 million lgbt people in america so you couldn't have any much much higher than that
00:51:47.820
so we would have to agree that 120,000 people are gay people are attacked intentionally because of
00:51:57.600
their sexuality but fail to report and i just don't see that as being reasonable based on the fact that
00:52:03.160
every person who reports gets a glowing shining media experience they are glorified as victims they
00:52:12.120
are protected they get interviews they get go fund me money there's no downside to telling the media
00:52:19.640
that you were a victim of a hate crime or the police as a gay man what do you think of the uh jesse
00:52:26.640
smollett case what do you but we there was a washington times reporter who said or not washington
00:52:32.860
times washington post reporter yesterday who said i so want this to be true i want this to be true
00:52:39.280
because i don't i don't want i don't want real hate crimes dismissed and so we need this to be true
00:52:46.200
right what's your take on it when i first saw the story it had immediate red flags i think the very
00:52:53.680
first tweet i said was something seems very off about this story i've been covering uh hate crimes
00:52:59.380
every time there's a big hate crime report i look into it see what's happening uh for years and i'm
00:53:06.040
accustomed to a huge spike in media reports and then nothing what was unique about this was that
00:53:12.420
the police actually continued to investigate and the story continued to move forward and we found out
00:53:16.900
what happened but my first response was when you see a hate crime report and it sounds like a movie
00:53:23.920
sounds like a tv show something's wrong people just do not behave in this way people do not
00:53:31.320
stalk out on the street wearing political gear waiting to see if they come across a gay person
00:53:40.520
and attack them it's different for jews it's different even for black people the jews get very
00:53:46.700
targeted hate crimes but the most if you look at actual hate crimes for gay people um and trans people
00:53:52.820
are a little bit separate because they have a different world of of uh sex sex work and drugs and that
00:53:58.560
sort of thing but if you look at gay people they're typically opportunistic crimes you know they're
00:54:03.600
leaving a bar at 3 a.m they get into a verbal fight with somebody um or there are things like um i'll
00:54:10.880
give you an example in 2017 there were 52 murders of lgbt and 11 of them were done by people that the
00:54:21.060
that they knew personally and 45 percent of gay male homicide homicide so 45 percent of gay men who
00:54:28.720
are killed are the result of hookups they met somebody online and that person targeted them
00:54:35.420
targeted them or killed them and occasionally that there have been people that have been serial killers
00:54:40.060
who have targeted gay men specifically for that reason but my husband and i walking to walmart are just
00:54:46.080
not going to see somebody in a red hat who yells homophobic slurs at us and beats us up for the
00:54:52.540
fun of it it just doesn't happen all right i want to talk to you if i if you don't mind i want to take
00:54:57.340
a quick break and i want to come back and and talk about also the the stats that you see the other
00:55:03.560
things they include include including prison riots uh the numbers that we're seeing are so skewed
00:55:11.880
uh that you can't really trust any of these numbers and what does that mean how do we ever solve a
00:55:19.880
problem if we don't really know what the truth is you're never more than 60 seconds uh away where
00:55:27.240
we'll be uh right back with uh chad felix green um uh in just a minute i want to tell you 23 and me
00:55:34.060
we got rafe's uh dna stuff back last night now he's adopted so we didn't have any uh we had no
00:55:41.700
idea of of his background at all except we knew that his mother was scottish but that was as far as
00:55:48.080
we got uh he is like 83 percent uk uh i don't know another 10 percent irish i think a little french
00:55:57.780
which i told him we could get we'll have therapy for that uh and uh and german and scandinavian but he is
00:56:04.760
also 0.3 african so he was very excited he said dad i can get into college now he could do the soul
00:56:17.360
man movie he can actually remake it do that he has he has more african in him than he does uh then
00:56:24.160
than elizabeth warren has native american by a lot too yeah yeah so um so your african son my african son
00:56:31.860
there you go and it's great and we're gonna watch i don't know shaft i don't know what what you what
00:56:38.240
the first african movie i should watch with him you're so in touch with that culture i am i am i'm
00:56:43.440
one i'm one so so anyway it was really actually very exciting and it was it was cool to see the
00:56:51.160
things that he's predisposed and is he a carrier of of different genes etc etc so it goes into health
00:56:58.720
and also it goes into uh who you are and your relatives i mean relatives popped up for him
00:57:06.320
yes no relatives that we know of uh but relatives popped up alive today it was amazing amazing
00:57:14.720
23andme.com go get your free kit i'm sorry it's not your free kit well i mean it is it comes with the
00:57:21.660
anyway get your kit uh it's 23andme.com slash beck that's the number 23andme.com slash beck go there
00:57:32.080
now and join me on this amazing journey we break for 10 seconds station id
00:57:36.860
uh last night on uh the news and why it matters uh jason uh was was in he's our head researcher
00:58:01.820
and he and sarah were talking about um the stats of hate crimes and how hate crimes include numbers
00:58:10.760
from like prison riots oh yeah yeah it's it's crazy to to be able to quote any of these and have it
00:58:19.320
mean what the public thinks it means do you have anything on that chad did you look into any of those
00:58:25.360
kinds of stats i tend to focus mostly on lgbt um related stats um because racial and jewish crimes
00:58:34.860
are a little bit different i did uh research into the adl released a huge surge in anti-semitism um
00:58:41.620
last year uh before we saw more of um what we're seeing today uh uh from uh congresspeople and that
00:58:48.920
sort of thing but for example there was uh a jewish man who had personally called in several hundred
00:58:56.560
bomb threats and each one of those was included as an incident in the adl's uh in the in the adl's
00:59:04.960
uh numbers and you know i was looking at i don't know if you remember there was a young man his name
00:59:11.300
was uh seth owen and the headline that we saw for a while was that he was kicked out of his home for
00:59:17.080
being gay and he was now homeless and he was a gay valedictorian he wanted to go to college
00:59:21.680
oh yeah yeah yeah well i researched that and um the truth was that he was 18 when the story happened
00:59:28.340
he actually came out when he was 15 uh he just disagreed with his parents churches uh if you want
00:59:34.600
homosexuality and he left on his own but because of the story that he said i was kicked out i was
00:59:40.580
rejected by my family he got fifty thousand dollars from donors he got a free ride to college
00:59:45.040
and ellen uh invited him on the stage and celebrated him as an lgbt hero there's a huge
00:59:51.320
benefit personally to every minority but specifically the lgbt to be able to say i survived the hate in
01:00:00.020
this country and it's become so important that to say i've never experienced a hate crime like me
01:00:06.840
uh is devalued it's much you receive social benefit uh to saying i survived a hate crime
01:00:15.820
and one of the things that i always point out is if we have such a small amount of reporting
01:00:21.760
how is it that so many lgbt activists will very loudly say that they have experienced multiple hate
01:00:31.160
crimes in their lifetime when it's it just simply isn't possible we're talking about 1200 people
01:00:36.840
out of you know 325 million that's it's interesting chad because i think the jesse
01:00:43.040
jesse smollett story a lot of people on the conservative side have taken you know the media
01:00:48.340
doing a terrible job with it which is certainly a big part of the story but i think this developing
01:00:53.480
incentive to climb up the intersectionality ladder and show how you know show victimhood has become
01:01:01.300
the the trophy you go for in the society and those incentives i think are are even a bigger story
01:01:07.680
than anything the media is doing absolutely um when when he released this story and and and i've said
01:01:15.940
that i don't i didn't necessarily judge people who immediately stood up for him or who sympathized
01:01:20.460
with them because that's just human compassion once we started to see things that were problematic
01:01:25.460
and they started to be bullies and yell at people who questioned or asked questions that's when i
01:01:30.120
started to be frustrated but the truth is that once this story came out dozens and dozens and dozens of
01:01:39.080
activists and celebrities and politicians all suddenly poured out their love to this person
01:01:45.160
and that is from a human perspective that is a very difficult thing to to be strong enough to
01:01:53.680
walk away from imagine the whole world telling you how brave you are and how wonderful you are and how
01:02:00.700
you are the voice of a generation the human rights campaign and chad griffin's the uh the president of
01:02:08.080
the largest lgbt organization you know is is thank you you speak for all of the uh
01:02:15.140
queer poc people in the world and in america all the all the kids who face hate every day who don't
01:02:22.100
have a voice can now feel safe because you have a voice that's a very intoxicating position to be in
01:02:29.720
that the left is so used to people not questioning them that it it seems like a very easy thing to go
01:02:38.980
after and i'll and i'll be honest i believe that very often they believe these things are true even
01:02:46.240
though they set it up there's this mindset in their head of i'm just acting out what i know is happening
01:02:52.280
every day because i have the power to bring it to light even though it didn't happen to me specifically
01:02:57.380
i am bringing a voice to it because i know that it's happening everywhere yep so what do you think
01:03:04.320
will happen to him in the gay community we only have a one minute do you think jussie is going to
01:03:10.360
pay a price for this or are they going to give him a soft landing i think we're going to i'm surprised
01:03:16.740
by the the sort of the negative you know the kind of i can't believe he did this the truth is that
01:03:22.660
everyone is sort of baffled and hurt but they're switching it to look how excited conservatives are to
01:03:28.540
pounce and this doesn't mean hate crimes aren't real and i believe that that's i think that whatever
01:03:34.920
happens to him legally he'll probably fade away but the story is going to be more focused on
01:03:41.400
this just shows us how important it is to fight real hate crimes thank you so much chad felix green
01:03:47.780
from the federalist uh great reporter and and a great guest thank you so much for being on again with
01:03:52.820
chad felix green all right coming up guns and background checks
01:04:02.060
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i just uh just read a tweet from uh kirsten powers she's she's got a string of tweets but this is the
01:06:34.860
the most important i've spent i spent the last few weeks in a mostly twitter free zone to spend time
01:06:39.880
reflecting on what role i may have played in what has indisputedly become a dangerous toxic culture
01:06:49.860
five years ago i asked will anyone in the press do this and take responsibility for what they have
01:07:01.100
done i'll take responsibility for what i've done will you even look at yourself she's the first person
01:07:07.060
to do it that i know of and i would like we disagree on a lot of things but i would love to have her on
01:07:14.760
and talk to her about this journey that she has made uh herself i think that's hats off hats off
01:07:22.140
all right i want to introduce you to uh somebody um shana lopez uh rivas is a gun rights activist
01:07:32.420
and she was she has a rather dicey story at the beginning she was against uh guns and she had she said
01:07:40.740
she had all kinds of misconceptions um you know from the gun control groups that she kind of hung out
01:07:47.080
with uh but something happened that changed her mind and she has written a great uh article for the
01:07:53.520
miami herald uh the latest gun background check legislation would not have stopped the parkland
01:07:59.040
tragedy in fact it does so much more uh than that and shana is joining us now hello shana how are you
01:08:05.520
hi um i'm doing great good uh thanks for having me on you bet shana for those of you who don't
01:08:12.460
know uh can you give us a a a a brief uh look at what happened to you i'm sorry i'm so uncomfortable
01:08:22.140
even asking you to go through this uh but can can you talk about what happened to you of course
01:08:28.220
uh no problem i um in 2014 i was on my college campus trying to um i was going to study at the
01:08:37.000
library that night uh finals were just a couple weeks away and um instead of studying i ended up
01:08:44.380
being attacked and raped on my college campus um he had a knife i had pepper spray it didn't really
01:08:50.960
work out for me and so from that night i made a promise to myself that i was never going to be a
01:08:57.340
victim again and i started um just delving into self-defense training and um came up came up with
01:09:04.380
um firearms training and have not really looked back since right um and now you are talking to friends
01:09:13.320
and you become a gun rights activist uh with some credibility behind you uh and um you just
01:09:21.080
uh just took a friend to uh a uh a shooting range uh who was what neutral on guns or what were their
01:09:30.460
opinion on guns when you went yeah um i have a lot of friends that are just not either neutral on guns
01:09:38.440
not very comfortable around guns um so i kind of always just put out this standing notice essentially
01:09:46.500
to to everyone in my own network but hey like if you you know if you want firearms safety training
01:09:54.720
like we don't you don't have to agree with with um guns you don't have to ever touch a gun again but
01:10:00.220
if you just want you know basic safety and knowledge of how to use one i have no issue teaching teaching
01:10:05.780
you that and so i took my friend who was i wouldn't say she was anti-gun but she wasn't very pro-gun out
01:10:12.360
to the range um and she absolutely fell in love with it she loved every minute she was out there
01:10:19.080
so um i ended up writing about it for the miami herald because of um hra and how that would
01:10:27.700
essentially impact her training in the future this is amazing now this is called the bipartisan
01:10:34.260
background checks act of 2019 or hr 8 uh and it's supposed to make sure that gun safety this
01:10:42.240
is just bipartisan common sense gun safety except it's not explain what it will do
01:10:49.120
so hra is um is what the bipartisan background checks bill is um it does not actually uh one
01:10:58.720
of the worst things that it does is does not define transfer but essentially um it bans any private
01:11:05.020
transfer of a firearm to um from one individual to another so essentially um and and the example
01:11:12.660
in the article that i gave i took my friend out to the to the shooting range if i wanted to lend her
01:11:17.700
a firearm so she could go back and like continue to train on her own um it would essentially make me
01:11:23.940
a criminal if i didn't first go to a federal firearms license dealer and get a background check done
01:11:29.940
on her even though she's a close friend and i know her well i know she's not a criminal i know
01:11:36.360
she's not going to hurt herself or others but it would essentially make it illegal punishable by up to
01:11:41.140
a one thousand dollar fine or a year in prison and there's no excuse for ignorance on this um no none
01:11:49.680
and would it ban would it ban you from taking her to um a shooting range yourself and handing her the
01:11:58.920
gun like for instance automatic weapons uh i have some fully automatic weapons and they take
01:12:04.740
all kinds of special license and everything else it's a nightmare to get through but i cannot hand
01:12:11.220
that weapon to somebody else unless they're on my license so if i just said look at this and i handed
01:12:18.380
it to a friend i could go to jail i'd go to prison for that does this does does hr 8 go that far do you
01:12:26.680
know um hr 8 originally did go that far however um in order to essentially circumvent people from
01:12:37.480
saying like that's what it's going to be um the the democrats and the people that had written the
01:12:42.860
bill essentially changed it to include a sense it basically makes very few exceptions um but it
01:12:51.260
it essentially covers only the transfer the actual transfer of the firearm when you are not there
01:12:56.900
okay so essentially but the problem is it really doesn't define the word transfer at all though so
01:13:02.380
in theory yes it could um include that i did there's nothing better than you know really important laws
01:13:10.600
that are cryptic um it also you say will not stop criminals from stealing firearms getting them on the
01:13:17.460
black market or getting them through straw purchasers no um it won't in fact there was a study that showed
01:13:24.400
that 90 percent of criminals um get their guns through illicit methods essentially and uh and it
01:13:30.720
doesn't stop any of those methods um this hr 8 was also um they put this bill in markup the day before
01:13:39.400
the parkland shooting anniversary and um the most ironic part about that is that this bill would not
01:13:46.620
have start parkland in any way if it was passed then like at all it would have had no impact on it
01:13:53.660
because the um person that committed that horrible act passed a background check anyway can you tell me
01:14:02.340
how many how many how many guns are being used by by criminals uh or killers that have borrowed a gun
01:14:13.420
from their friend do you have any idea i don't i don't know the actual like number for that but i
01:14:20.740
did read recently read a study it was um i think in the journal of preventative medicine that essentially
01:14:26.400
like showed that 90 percent of of criminals they did a survey of um inmates that had been put in prison
01:14:33.740
for firearm gun related crimes and they said that in like 90 percent of them said that they did not get
01:14:39.480
they they got it essentially from those off the book mean um means where like somebody knew who they
01:14:46.160
were and gave it to them as a gift anyway even though that's illegal um or they stole it or um
01:14:54.000
otherwise were given um shared it with other like gang members that sort of thing so you're talking
01:15:01.200
about like the majority of criminals are getting their guns from like illicit means anyway they are not
01:15:06.940
going to follow the law anyway what are the odds hrh hra passes in the house i think it'll pass yeah um in
01:15:16.940
the senate i don't know and i would really hope that if it did pass in the senate that president trump
01:15:23.880
wouldn't sign it into law but um you know i have concerns there too so uh shana uh thank you so much
01:15:32.960
for turning something bad in your life into something good and uh and uh and and then sharing
01:15:39.560
that with the rest of the world um and thank you for standing up as an activist to protect the second
01:15:45.920
amendment i appreciate it thanks shana thank you so much you bet uh you can follow her uh noel for
01:15:52.600
justice noel for justice most amazed that the combination of strange stances that goes on sometimes
01:15:59.940
in this country for example you know we're in the middle of watching venezuela crumble and then we
01:16:04.720
have all these new socialists here in this country it's fascinating same thing here in that you you have
01:16:09.460
a democratic party that is against firearms and basically every single case they want to get rid
01:16:15.700
of them there are now uh one of the candidates just announced her support for a um semi-automatic
01:16:21.960
weapon ban that's not a that's not the quote-unquote insult weapon that's basically every gun that anyone
01:16:27.040
knows that's any that's any gun that that uh you know has gas that that that reloads right so i mean
01:16:33.860
it's it's over what was it 90 of guns i mean it's it's basically everything um at the same time
01:16:40.400
they tell us constantly that the me too is almost every woman is being harassed maybe assaulted one in
01:16:48.300
four women are raped on campus we hear all of these things that go on it's like wouldn't you combine
01:16:53.820
that with empowering a woman with the one thing that can take down a guy who's trying to assault her
01:16:59.700
no no no here's why because women just they'll have the take the gun taken from them okay so the
01:17:08.020
guy is too powerful women cannot defend themselves hard to walk through bullets glenn really hard no
01:17:14.380
that's that's though it'll be used against them study shows too that most people that have a gun
01:17:20.380
have it turned against them no really is that what studies show that's what studies show studies show
01:17:24.400
it huh yeah well i mean i think i'd rather have the opportunity to to actually be able to defend
01:17:29.380
myself yeah and i think women would like that as well they choose to and anybody who has a gun and
01:17:35.240
then has it uh turned against them it's only because you weren't willing to pull the trigger and
01:17:41.460
that's because you haven't thought about it enough yeah you need you do need to train you have to
01:17:46.140
train i mean it looks some someone could come up from behind you and yeah there's certainly instances
01:17:50.100
it's not going to work every way they the way they say well women will just have the gun taken from
01:17:54.500
is because you're too stupid to use the gun yeah you don't know women yeah you're you're you're gonna
01:18:00.580
say stop stop and and not really want to fire the gun that's the only way if i know my wife she is a
01:18:07.380
great shot and i know my wife will take that gun and she'll look at somebody at the hallway that's
01:18:12.720
coming down towards the bedroom or towards the kids and she will say i have a gun i'm prepared to
01:18:17.660
shoot move one more step toward us and you will be shot and that person moves one step and she will
01:18:27.080
shoot them nobody's gonna take that gun away from my wife she will shoot you first and that's that's
01:18:32.300
the problem a gun by itself is nothing it's a tool if you've never i mean you should see me with tools
01:18:39.580
using a hammer it ain't pretty because i don't ever practice using a hammer and you're not a man right
01:18:45.600
well no i you have no i'm not a protected class so i can't say anything about that hateful
01:18:54.640
well if you're not observation if i'm if i'm correct then you are a protected class
01:18:59.040
because i'm a woman you well you'd be you'd be maybe transitioning
01:19:04.960
and uh anyway you have to when you have a tool you have to learn how to use it of course you have
01:19:12.280
to learn how to use it and you are absolutely right this this back and forth gymnastics that you
01:19:19.400
have to do to be a modern day social justice warrior or progressive or socialist is insane
01:19:27.120
you have to deny that what's happening in in venezuela is happening because of socialism this
01:19:35.300
is the way socialist countries always end it is not sweden that is not a socialist country that is a
01:19:42.900
free market with a heavy welfare state put into it it's not socialism venezuela cuba that's socialism
01:19:53.640
so you have to deny your eyes there you have to say women are powerful but the gun will be taken away
01:20:00.560
from them women are smart enough and they're good enough to be in the army but they'll have the gun
01:20:07.600
taken away from them i mean why do we have women in our armed forces if they're gonna have the gun
01:20:13.480
taken away from them it's insulting it's totally insulting totally insulting
01:20:17.820
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coming up in just a few minutes on the glenbeck program we are going to uh we're going to bring
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and justin wheeler who is uh uh our chief researcher for financial uh stuff and um i want to talk to
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him about a couple of things uh that are going on one uh the incredible spike in defaults of people's
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auto loans and what that's going to mean for the economy we know some people that you know are fed
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a minute let's check can i just go to any company to do this for me though glenn you know there's
01:24:18.860
nobody else that does that stupid thanks for asking that question uh they are exclusive home
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title lock.com we get your free title scan and report it's a hundred dollar value find out if this
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has happened to you find out if this has happened to your parents home title lock.com but is there a
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website yeah home title lock.com where would i go on the internet home title lock.com that's what i was
01:24:41.940
the fusion of entertainment and enlightenment this is the glenbeck program so i want to have a serious
01:25:03.020
conversation with you for just a couple of minutes here on uh the economy and how things are changing
01:25:08.180
and what we need to be aware of if you care about uh your own personal economy which i think we all do
01:25:15.260
you know your job and your future uh but also if you care about this election it really revolves around
01:25:21.460
the economy holding together will it there's some troubling signs and we want to talk to you about
01:25:30.020
this is the glenbeck program uh i have to tell you i i love to paint um and i've been painting more
01:25:40.160
and more and relief factor has allowed me to paint um there's a a painting i just i just painted a few
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weeks ago um that uh i i i it says social justice underneath and uh my hands were shaking so bad
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from the pain that i couldn't if you look up at it close you can see how it's how bad it is uh and
01:26:06.980
uh there are times that i just have to put the paintbrush down um but i will tell you relief factor
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a paintbrush i i think i've told you before i can't write a letter more than like half a page
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anymore yeah we've had issues when i mean you're kind of famous for doing chalkboards where you're
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writing on camera yeah and that's been a problem in several shows where it hasn't been possible
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really yeah not lately though so uh relief factor has helped me a great deal if you're in constant pain
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new york times uh charles blow admits uh smollett could be an insane psychopath which wow that's kind
01:27:37.040
of a turnaround uh farrakhan news on him and what he said about congressman or to congressman omar
01:27:43.080
it's pretty amazing we'll give that audio to you by the way still has a blue check mark still on
01:27:48.780
twitter uh louis farrakhan does he have a blue check mark i know he's on twitter for sure yeah
01:27:53.020
he might have lost his blue check mark which you know now it's crushing it's crushing soul crushing
01:27:58.020
yeah you know who probably did it the jews dirty jews probably the jews did it yeah dirty jews you
01:28:02.180
wait till you hear what he says about the quote dirty jews uh we'll have that coming up i wanted
01:28:06.500
to bring in our uh our our senior researcher on uh economics uh justin wheeler justin um is working
01:28:16.460
on several projects uh for me that all revolve around the economy because the economy is the key
01:28:21.480
to everything you want to make sure that we don't have socialism protect the economy you want to make
01:28:26.560
sure that we don't have a socialist president in 2020 protect the economy um you want to make sure
01:28:32.640
you are are secure protect the economy know what's coming and i saw a disturbing uh story that there is
01:28:41.300
a huge spike in in auto loan defaults now uh danielle dimartino booth who was a researcher for the fed she
01:28:51.560
was really important here in the dallas fed uh she said that's the thing that she's really watching
01:28:56.580
and she was waiting for this spike and we just saw a real spike can you explain it justin yeah of course
01:29:02.780
uh thanks for having me on um so yeah more than 7 million uh current auto loans are in default which
01:29:09.800
is defined as greater than 90 days delinquent in making their payments and it's important to note that
01:29:14.840
does not include leases so leases are also in as bad a shape um they just don't count those in the
01:29:20.740
number because it's not an auto loan it's a lease and the the car company still owns the vehicle
01:29:24.580
so so put this into perspective 7 million are 30 or 90 days or longer in default uh and in 2010 i think
01:29:35.600
was this was the real height of the auto line a lotto loan crisis remember it's 2011 i think it was
01:29:41.120
2011 remember the cash for clunkers and all of that stuff uh when uh that had a huge spike and that was
01:29:49.720
only 5.6 million i think right we're 1.3 million more in default today than we were at the at the
01:29:56.640
height of that uh crisis in the middle of a good economy too uh on its surface right like this is
01:30:01.480
not like a we're not in a theoretical crisis at this moment you know unemployment's low things have
01:30:06.880
improved lots of good indicators and yet we still are have more people in default on their auto loans
01:30:12.120
that's that's terrifying why so here's why um there's a couple of things that that are just uh
01:30:17.720
we should seem very familiar if you if you were with us in 2008 and 2009 um 40 of auto loans made
01:30:24.980
in the last two years were made to subprime borrowers oh my gosh 40 just the 40 though yeah
01:30:30.540
that's at the height of yeah 2006 2007 leading into the housing crisis 14 of home loans were made to
01:30:38.780
subprime so we're at 40 in auto is 14 was the height of home loans made so so danielle says this is
01:30:46.480
this is our undoing she said this is the this is the little teeny pebble that's gonna spurt out of
01:30:53.000
the dam that's gonna make the whole thing come down uh very well could be it's definitely a key
01:30:57.840
leading economic indicator that everyone should be watching very closely um and there's one other
01:31:02.840
reason to point out um the most popular vehicles to purchase in the united states today are trucks
01:31:08.520
and suvs and that's great uh i own an suv i think they're fantastic to to drive around in um those
01:31:15.200
vehicles tend to cost 50 percent more than your average sedan and they cost 35 percent more to
01:31:21.460
operate and maintain over their lifespan so americans compared to 2011 are buying more expensive vehicles
01:31:27.620
and they're buying vehicles that cost them more to run the whole time they have it so it's no wonder
01:31:31.580
that we have more uh vehicle loans and auto loans that are in default today so uh how does this how
01:31:39.720
does this spread what when when you see a number like this does this does our economic defcon go up
01:31:48.380
uh i i think it does significantly and certainly our um this should act as a canary in the coal mine we
01:31:54.740
really should be paying close attention to this from our for our own economy uh one other one other
01:31:59.820
thing to point out when we're looking at auto loans it's worse in other countries so yes we have
01:32:05.400
millions of auto loans and that's gmac that's oh that's exactly right you look at the companies that
01:32:10.300
are impacted by this it's not it's not banks it's the car companies it's gmac was allowed to become a
01:32:18.320
bank and so they make all of the car loans not all of them but you know they're big if if the auto
01:32:25.180
loan industry goes down the tank it doesn't matter if their car industry their car making thing was
01:32:33.260
good that impacts the entire company yeah and imagine what happens to those pensions at those
01:32:39.120
companies again uh with that type of impact but there is good news okay so seven million auto loans in
01:32:45.900
default eight million student loans are in default and the good news is uh well you know it's that's only
01:32:53.280
20 of all student loans are in default uh so it's not that bad it's expected to increase to 40 of all
01:32:58.860
student loans being in default by the time our next president is sworn in so just over the next couple
01:33:03.260
of years and here's your pitch for free college right i mean this is when the bernie sanders plan
01:33:07.020
came out today it's gonna be free college student debt relief right why did that why did that suddenly
01:33:13.140
spike i mean because there was the what was called a conspiracy theory uh but as as we play over and
01:33:20.120
over again with health care it's not a conspiracy it's not a trojan horse it's just right there i'm
01:33:25.640
telling you yeah i'm telling you this is it um one of the theories was is that they wanted to be able
01:33:32.420
to drive people into debt debt you could not wash away and then say well we're going to create a program
01:33:39.420
uh like americorps and you're going to work for americorps you're going to serve
01:33:43.840
now they they want to crush any college that wants to do that themselves and say hey look we'll pay for
01:33:51.500
your college it's like an apprentice program but you're going to work for us for three years
01:33:55.180
afterwards uh yeah the government doesn't like that but they'll do it with this sure absolutely
01:34:00.900
they'll do it for themselves i mean just think back to um what we went through with the adoption
01:34:05.540
of obamacare so obamacare if you recall had about a 62 even with all the new taxes even with the
01:34:11.280
subsidies uh coming from higher wage earners um had about a 62 billion dollar a year shortfall
01:34:17.140
so the government had a really clever plan to cover that shortfall and that was the government took over
01:34:22.320
the student lending industry instead of backing the loans made by banks the government just started
01:34:27.260
lending directly to students and the income that the government was going to make on the interest
01:34:32.420
paid by those students on their loans would cover the 62 billion dollar shortfall so we do have
01:34:37.640
this entire generation now the average college student is graduating college today with 41 000
01:34:43.000
of debt to the government that is the average senior graduation debt ratio and with 40 of those
01:34:51.980
expected to be in default in the next three years that means that the dollars that are supposed to be
01:34:57.860
flowing into the government's coffers to cover obamacare disappears that money's gone obamacare also will
01:35:04.280
not be fully funded because student loans are supposed to be what's funding obamacare
01:35:08.160
you said you had good news oh i'm sorry i hadn't gotten to that yet
01:35:12.700
the u.s farm belt is experiencing bankruptcy rates that are 75 percent higher than at the height of the
01:35:21.400
great recession okay and that's tied to that's tied directly to the trade war yes it it is there's
01:35:27.340
actually another component i want to bring up though uh this is it's this in a way this really is a good
01:35:32.620
thing over the last few years we've talked about this several times on the show uh pinker has it
01:35:36.540
in his book obviously and we've we've had him on um we have lifted two billion people globally out of
01:35:42.800
poverty over the last uh 20 years uh just in the last eight years um 500 million new uh people have
01:35:50.380
been lifted out of poverty globally primarily through farming so what america did is we took our
01:35:56.800
technology and we took our apparatus and we took our uh great technologies around getting water to where
01:36:01.980
it needs to be and we taught the world how to farm well that has dramatically suppressed the prices
01:36:07.060
of soy and corn and rice and 15 other crops because they can grow there because now they can grow them
01:36:13.900
there which is good that's fantastic it's good it's wonderful but it does have a direct impact
01:36:18.700
obviously on u.s farmers who used to be the primary producers of those crops globally um and now they
01:36:24.740
are coming from other countries closer to where they are being imported into places like china and
01:36:28.820
australia um and then you attack on top of that the tariffs and the impact of the trump tariffs the
01:36:35.000
retaliatory retaliatory tariffs that get put on by those uh other countries mexico china uh chief among
01:36:41.640
those and you have a dramatic suppression of prices uh for u.s farmers that's okay that was the good
01:36:49.040
news okay that's the good news okay well 500 you know i gotta say 500 million people lifted out of
01:36:53.480
poverty in eight years no it's probably overshadows everything else we'll talk about today and you know
01:36:57.340
that is the kind of good news that we're going to be having for the next 10 years because there are
01:37:01.820
going to be so many things that are really tremendous but are going to cause a lot of pain
01:37:08.220
in the shift of this economy as we as we totally change to a high-tech economy um i i want to ask you
01:37:16.380
one thing um when we come back there was a uh a report done in goldman sachs and it was on biotech
01:37:25.040
and it asked the question let's see if i have excited don't want to i don't want to misquote it
01:37:32.420
is curing patients a sustainable business model
01:37:37.680
this one is disturbing or it's exactly what you would expect goldman sachs to do in a good way and
01:37:47.380
i want to talk about that and tell you what this report says and what they're trying to settle
01:37:54.000
i don't buy uh new cars um i don't buy any new cars anymore because i just don't think it's
01:38:03.720
i just don't think it's worth it um it's just a foolish thing i think you you pay so much and you
01:38:09.280
drive it off the lot and then a few years later you come back and you're like hey i want to get
01:38:13.360
another new car and they're like well that one's lost a you're like wait what i really took care of
01:38:17.600
this car i mean it really nope doesn't matter not a good investment not a good investment just a
01:38:22.240
really bad investment anyway um so what i do is i buy old cars and then uh i have car shield car
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01:38:55.780
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so in a biotech research report for goldman sachs they talked about curing drugs and it says
01:39:39.500
treatments for hepatitis c this is one of their examples which achieved cure rates of more than 90
01:39:45.260
percent the company u.s sales for these hepatitis c treatments peaked at 12.5 billion in 2015 but
01:39:52.820
they've been falling ever since goldman estimates the u.s sales for these treatments will be less
01:39:57.140
than four billion dollars a year according to the table in the report guild the company that made this
01:40:02.700
is a case in point where the success of hepatitis c franchise has gradually exhausted the available pool
01:40:09.220
of treatable patients in the case of infectious diseases such as hepatitis c curing existing
01:40:15.520
patients also decrease decreases the number of carriers able to transmit the virus to new patients
01:40:22.940
so is curing patients a sustainable business model
01:40:27.660
that's an uncomfortable question the potential to deliver one-shot cures is one of the most attractive
01:40:37.280
aspects of gene therapy genetically engineered cell therapy and gene editing however such treatments
01:40:42.680
offer a very different outlook with regard to recurring revenue versus chronic therapies
01:40:47.680
while this proposition carries tremendous value for patients in society it could represent a challenge for
01:40:53.520
genome medicine developers looking for sustained cash flow how do you look at that justin you talk a
01:40:59.880
lot about um you know don't fear a i fear the algorithm yes um imagine you developed an algorithm
01:41:06.380
that said maximize profits that's all it said that the goal of that algorithm was just maximize profits
01:41:11.280
the end result would be exactly this summation they would say curing people reduces our capacity to make
01:41:18.220
profits therefore don't don't cure anyone that's what the algorithm would determine it would make that
01:41:22.560
determination um the great news is uh the so far the economy is still run by human beings um uh in uh in the
01:41:31.800
banking sector a few years ago an algorithm developed a underwriting model for financial transactions for
01:41:37.220
loans uh and the algorithm again was about maximizing profits and reducing defaults reduce risk in the
01:41:43.640
portfolio and the algorithm came back and said don't lend to minorities that's basically what it said
01:41:49.340
yeah don't lend to blacks and hispanics they default more often but of course we ignored the algorithm
01:41:54.820
and we actually increase our lending to uh blacks and hispanics um we have we have a separate set of
01:42:00.380
goals uh morally as human beings so it's not surprising that a financial analyst could come up with that
01:42:06.240
type of summary uh this isn't an algorithm that wrote this this is a hey for all i know it could be
01:42:11.520
yeah yeah yeah but i mean if the if the if the pharmaceutical company writes that you got a big problem
01:42:17.460
right if that's the way a pharmaceutical company is thinking sure that's a problem i mean what is
01:42:22.740
goldman sachs other than essentially an algorithm to figure out how to make profits off of different
01:42:27.360
industries so the fact that they are analyzing it that way the same way they would say hey if a war
01:42:32.900
breaks out these defense contractors will increase their profits that's not saying they're rooting for
01:42:38.040
war that's just saying like the reality is this could be an issue if you're thinking about investing in
01:42:43.720
these particular medical stocks so here's the problem you know just as eisenhower said you have
01:42:49.700
to be very aware of a military industrial complex that will have its roots everywhere and it will be
01:42:59.800
it will be motivated to take us places that the american people may not be motivated to take us
01:43:06.220
the same thing could be said here we are we are now at an algorithm industrial complex to where
01:43:14.180
you could easily surrender to these algorithms and say we've got to maximize things and because
01:43:24.240
we're we're getting to a place now to where we are going to be talking justin tell me if you think
01:43:29.840
this is unreasonable i'm gonna i'm gonna make it 30 years okay but i don't think most people would hear
01:43:35.340
this even with 30 years and say that's even a possibility we are looking at approaching a time
01:43:41.980
where 90 percent of all the things that we suffer from now are no longer a problem and they're either
01:43:50.320
they're either no longer in existence or we can replace those body parts and you're just gonna it
01:43:56.680
just won't be a problem we're 30 years away from that i think we're about 10 years away from that
01:44:01.740
um but that's going to change the model oh it absolutely has to the planned death age today
01:44:08.040
and social security in their model is 83 years so if you're going to live past 83 years the model
01:44:13.640
entirely breaks down you guys were talking earlier about unfunded liabilities and uh obviously we had
01:44:18.800
to correct stew on the year it's 122 trillion for government unfunded liabilities but if you just
01:44:24.400
fast forward that by four years and you can do that on the debt clock you can just say you know pick the
01:44:28.340
year you want to look at uh it increases to 157 trillion by the time the next president is
01:44:34.040
sworn in i mean that that's pretty incredible it we we jump from 122 trillion to 157 trillion why did
01:44:40.200
you smile when you said that i like big numbers okay um and i also want to introduce um a new word to
01:44:46.120
the human lexicon if you had asked the average american in 1930 what came after a billion what number
01:44:52.120
comes after a billion most of them couldn't have told you it's a trillion and now we all know it
01:44:55.880
um what comes after a trillion quadrillion very good uh gold star for both of you the global
01:45:03.100
unfunded liabilities including government guaranteed pensions globally is 1.2 quadrillion today today
01:45:10.920
that's what it is today it's what what did you just say 1.2 no what's that number attached to
01:45:16.520
total global unfunded liability so this is all governments including government guaranteed pensions
01:45:26.740
we we wait we the global economy is 55 trillion isn't that the global gdp yeah 50 about 55 uh it's a
01:45:39.960
little bit more than that but about 60 yeah about 60 trillion dollars that's what everything is made
01:45:45.680
in a year bought sold made everything in a year is 60 trillion dollars
01:45:57.280
houston get prittin i think we have a problem i think we have a problem hey thanks for that cheery
01:46:06.360
update of course no it's always good to have you here just again forgot to get to that good news
01:46:10.460
oh no oh yeah i do have something down here at the bottom don't forget this is the usa
01:46:14.700
oh okay cool oh that's good that's good we make it through everything we're good to go we dealt with
01:46:19.580
hitler jeez we can do it we we can do it i'm just rocking back and forth we can do it we can do it
01:46:26.240
it's fine we can do it you're listening to glenn beck actually we can do it if we set our minds to it and
01:46:36.100
we we look at the problem then americans will invent their way out of it and find a way
01:46:40.800
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own lifelock.com promo code back or 1-800 lifelock lifelock.com promo code back kind of we have a cbs
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reporter who's criticizing the media for being too liberal also some new comments from some of the
01:47:40.540
crazy candidates in 2020 on the way i want to take this uh call real quick from bruce in ohio we were
01:47:50.780
just talking about uh this goldman sachs um uh biotech research report that that asks is curing
01:47:56.840
patients really a sustainable business model should we be in the business of you know gene therapy when
01:48:03.260
that will be a one-time cost instead of people being sick for the rest of their lives really uh harsh
01:48:10.880
and ugly bruce in ohio welcome hey glenn this is bruce in ohio hey um i can't tell you how uh what a
01:48:20.320
privilege is to be on your program thank you and to talk to you i mean i've listened to you for a long
01:48:25.400
long time thank you thank you i'm a tradesman i'm working on the job every day listening to you
01:48:30.340
the first three hours of the day thank you i never listen to him in contrast they pay me to
01:48:36.080
listen to this show so i don't know uh so bruce um curing patients you say is not a good business
01:48:42.720
model uh no because that's already what we're following our our whole medical industry our whole
01:48:51.500
pharmaceutical industry our our our politics is all set up i'm not curing things our our whole medical
01:48:57.860
industry right now treats the causes treats the causes of something they they treat everything
01:49:05.780
with medications and drugs but they don't really address what caused people to get in the condition
01:49:10.260
they are and i'm i'm i'm as far as i can see i think it's mostly it's because our food supply
01:49:17.760
instead of instead of instead of really teaching people how to eat and getting the the toxins out
01:49:24.940
of our food supply we're just treating people with medications because it's repeat business because
01:49:30.560
instead of really telling people what how they can get off these medications we instead get a repeat
01:49:36.860
customer for the rest of their lives so i bruce i i i kind of agree with you um and but i don't think
01:49:42.620
it's a conspiracy on that i think it is a uh i think it's the idea that um uh we've got a such a
01:49:51.420
complex system the you know the the companies that are making our food are doing trying to maximize
01:49:59.520
the ability to make food for the entire world and so that food may not be as good for us as it it used
01:50:06.940
to be uh but they're not doing it because they're like we're gonna get you hooked on it although there
01:50:11.320
are some things about you know the gene splicing with the wheat and so you know it's a trademark uh
01:50:16.700
wheat but even that is there's more to that story um but i think we are entering a time if we don't
01:50:24.320
find our moral compass that the decisions and we are seeing this now it's not worth keeping you alive
01:50:30.960
turn the machine off um and it's never been a problem well it's always been a problem
01:50:37.840
because it's been the free market that has decided that if you can pay if you can find somebody to help
01:50:47.120
if you can raise money you're going to be able to do that and that's been unfair but now we're entering
01:50:55.680
a system to where a an algorithm or a team of doctors will make the decision and that seems to me
01:51:02.740
more unfair because now it's a group of people that they're just like you they're making the decision
01:51:10.080
who lives and dies i don't like that and that's certainly a a really disturbing question as we go
01:51:16.320
forward i you know bruce sounded like a good guy i totally disagree with every point that he made
01:51:20.320
but uh i mean i think this idea that it's not a good business to get in the idea of uh of
01:51:27.200
curing diseases i think it's nuts i mean look i think there's more money to be made on the cure
01:51:31.720
for cancer oh my god it's unbelievable you get every every we'd be in the trillions of dollars of
01:51:37.840
of money if you can cure that remember you get a cure worldwide there's new things that pop up all
01:51:43.060
the time there is a it's like one of these things there's a theoretical amount right of overpopulation
01:51:48.920
that could happen on the globe theoretically it could happen who knows my belief is it will never
01:51:53.320
happen we will never get to a point like that in fact we won't even get close to it
01:51:56.580
but in theory you could say one of these overpopulation people are like oh my gosh
01:51:59.960
like we're gonna have so many people we're not gonna have enough resources theoretically you
01:52:03.220
can imagine that the same thing with curing diseases if you were to come up with a cure of
01:52:08.100
cancer today likely you would still there would still be cancer on this earth when you die right
01:52:14.080
like the amount of runway you have before that theoretical idea of the way they'd start losing
01:52:19.340
profits is so insanely far down the road plus there's always a hundred million new things to cure we
01:52:24.720
invent new diseases like every day all you have to do is just make it a vaccine and eventually people
01:52:29.300
will say i'm not taking that cancer vaccine and it'll all come back it'll come back they're raging
01:52:34.520
cancer throughout the the world and then it'll come back it's like these things where they say well
01:52:38.800
they don't they don't there's all these new alternative fuels that you can fuel your car for
01:52:42.760
nothing but they don't want those things to come out the bottom line is when those things do come out
01:52:48.100
and they're reliable the same freaking companies that give you gas today will be the ones supplying it to
01:52:53.280
you in the future and they'll be able to make money because free market rewards things that change
01:52:59.440
people's lives for the positive i was talking to a guy who's in the race car business okay he's in the
01:53:05.620
very high end race car kind of uh you know street legal race car stuff he said uh there's a couple of
01:53:14.140
major companies that are now gonna uh are now introducing inside the all-electric car
01:53:23.140
okay that will compete with tesla but on a very high you know like the bugatti size yeah that will
01:53:30.500
stop they he said to me i believe that you will see in the next 10 years an end to these engines
01:53:39.740
combustion engines yeah it's like holy cow i mean it's the free market doing it not free market doing
01:53:47.800
it it's the free market doing you look at i mean we've driven a tesla before that's been really
01:53:52.280
high level tesla that they brought over here one day and it is uh i mean look it's faster than any
01:53:57.460
combustion engine i've ever been in no it's faster than a ferrari or anything else pretty much any car
01:54:02.700
any car in the market yeah from zero to 60 for sure it has no gears right it just goes it just goes
01:54:08.020
it's just there it's just at the it's just at the speed almost immediately uh you know like those
01:54:13.280
things are incredible innovations at some point i think that that very well may be the way that we
01:54:17.820
go it's it's a different uh you know i think americans still love their internal combustion
01:54:22.920
engines but you know what these things cultures change and there'll always be a place for them
01:54:27.900
in some world culture is changing everywhere and what's amazing is there are people it's already
01:54:33.280
going to come down and change but there are people that are intent on destroying it right now
01:54:38.640
can i switch subjects and go to farrakhan here's lewis farrakhan uh on um congresswoman
01:54:45.100
omar listen to this farrakhan to omar why was the honor well he should get off no
01:54:51.920
breaking up every pillar of democracy because there wasn't no damn democracy from the beginning
01:55:00.640
no it's a republic it needs to be broken up now you got my sisters in there
01:55:07.400
102 women in congress boy am i happy and one of them said that
01:55:14.480
she was using some funny language brother miss omar from somalia she started talking about the
01:55:22.340
benjamins and they trying to make her apologize i sweetheart don't do that
01:55:27.860
oh pardon me for calling you sweetheart but uh you do have a sweetheart because you sure
01:55:35.000
using it to shake the government up you have nothing to apologize for israel and
01:55:41.840
apac pays off senators and congressmen to do their bidding so you're not lying so if you're not lying
01:55:52.280
stop laying down you were sent there by the people to shake up that corrupt house shake it up
01:56:03.180
it's amazing he goes on to talk about the dirty jews and how the dirty jews are breaking up the women's
01:56:10.060
movement uh and trying to get him to uh uh say horrible things how long is this clip sir because
01:56:17.380
i've got 18 seconds yet just listen to this now the wicked jews wicked jews want to use me to break up
01:56:25.780
the woman's movement it ain't about farrakhan it's about women all over the world have the power to change
01:56:35.300
the world so uh he's uh he's still going he by the way he still has an account on facebook he can still
01:56:42.000
say all of these things you can't question on uh on twitter whether or not uh jussie what's his name
01:56:50.420
created a hate crime or committed a hate crime can't say learn to code god forbid you say learn
01:56:57.300
to code you're gonna get you to lose your account you can say all of these things now there were two
01:57:01.780
two reporters that i think show promise uh that show that maybe maybe slightly a few things are
01:57:11.040
starting to change and one i mentioned uh one i mentioned earlier and that is kirsten powers now she
01:57:18.120
is she's the reporter she was on fox she was annoying um well she yeah she's the democrat that
01:57:24.380
was on fox and all those debates right and so it's just like okay um but there are a lot of
01:57:29.800
republicans are that way uh as well on on uh television um but she just tweeted that she has
01:57:37.120
spent time away from social media and now she has examined her role on what she's done to divide the
01:57:43.820
country and she said i don't like the results uh and i find that very very comforting and interesting
01:57:51.020
from her because i would not say she was one of the worst offenders when it comes to democrats on
01:57:54.980
television if any i think she was on the better side generally of democratic commentators uh but
01:58:02.040
yeah she yeah i disagree with her and she was one of those people you're just like frustrated with
01:58:06.080
yeah but she she doesn't she wasn't a flamethrower and this is a whether she is or not i mean just the
01:58:11.280
fact that she's at least examining and is a positive side reflection there's also the cbs reporter
01:58:16.700
now this is uh laura laura logan laura logan if you remember laura logan she was the one that was
01:58:23.380
raped in uh egypt during the uh during the revolution the the uh the spring the arab spring
01:58:31.280
the glorious arab spring that was so wonderful and peaceful uh she was raped in that uh here she is
01:58:37.880
she's a 60 minutes reporter i want you to listen to what she said uh in this uh in this podcast about
01:58:44.200
reporters listen to this 85 percent of journalists are registered democrats so that's just a fact
01:58:52.720
right no one's registering democrats when they're rarely a republican so the facts are on the side
01:58:59.620
of what you just stated most journalists are are left or liberal or democrat or whatever word you want
01:59:05.300
to give it how do you know you're being lied to how do you know you're being manipulated how do you know
01:59:11.660
there's something not right with the coverage when they simplify it all and there's no gray there's no
01:59:18.980
gray it's all one way well life isn't like that for example you know all the coverage on trump all the
01:59:27.880
time is negative there's nothing there's there's nothing uh no mitigating policy or event or anything
01:59:35.620
that has happened since he was elected that is out there in the medias that you can read about right
01:59:41.340
well that tells you that's distortion of the way things go in real life because although the media has
01:59:47.140
always been historically always been left leaning we've abandoned um our our pretense or at least the
01:59:57.760
effort to be objective today unbelievable frankness and she's absolutely right it's what i wrote about in
02:00:05.240
um addicted to outrage i said if if you talk to everything that we everything we watch on donald
02:00:11.540
trump it's all negative or it's all absolutely positive that's not true mcdonald's is the greatest
02:00:17.460
example there are times that you want mcdonald's food there are other times you're like no it'll be
02:00:22.660
all afternoon and you can say mcdonald's has bad food but if i say to you yeah okay i'll agree with
02:00:29.380
the shake and maybe a couple things but their fries are the best if you can't admit that mcdonald's fries
02:00:34.000
are the best there's something wrong with you there is something wrong with you this donald trump
02:00:39.800
is mcdonald's yeah there's some bad things but there's some great things too you got to mention
02:00:45.180
both if not you're not an honest broker all right i want to talk a little bit about gold line with the
02:00:52.620
things that we have talked about uh just recently just in the last half hour about the economy
02:00:58.300
uh i really really really want you to pay attention to what you're doing on your investments you have
02:01:05.780
to spread them out um 70 percent of american wealth is in um equities or stocks and bonds
02:01:14.100
70 if there is a giant uh downturn it'll come back eventually but we'll be destroyed make sure
02:01:23.680
that you spread your risk out so anything in your 401k you your ira you might even be able to put
02:01:31.280
some of that in actual physical gold find out all of the information at goldline.com call them right
02:01:37.400
now they're waiting to hear from you just ask them for the brochure then do your own homework about them
02:01:43.540
and gold and everything else and then call them back and say okay i want to talk to you about how i can
02:01:48.040
take what i already have and i want to take 10 of it or 5 of it and turn it into physical gold how do
02:01:53.540
i do that gold line 1-866-GOLDLINE call them right now 1-866-GOLDLINE or goldline.com
02:02:04.920
all right we've got a couple of things that we want to we want to hit of course bernie
02:02:17.860
sanders we covered uh his new really great and cheap uh policies uh something we didn't really
02:02:24.640
understand uh but we also want to hit the klobuchar town hall where she supports a semi-automatic gun
02:02:32.160
ban now listen to this like new hampshire minnesota is a state that values the outdoors uh we value
02:02:39.500
hunting and fishing and so i come at it from a little different place than some of my colleagues
02:02:44.900
that are running for this office and that i always look at every proposal and say would this hurt my
02:02:49.900
uncle dick in the deer stand um and i would say that these common sense proposals in front of us do not
02:02:57.000
um i don't see banning assault weapons right i don't think that hurts in the deer stand yeah
02:03:04.220
a semi-automatic gun ban takes away about 90 percent of guns does she phrase it there as a
02:03:13.760
assault weapons ban but what does assault weapon mean exactly that's good this is a semi-automatic so
02:03:19.400
most handguns now are semi-automatic okay most handguns of course so they're all gone that's a ban on
02:03:27.660
that so what you're left with is a western style gun i got a six shooter on my side that's what
02:03:35.480
you're left with i will remind you that klobuchar too is running as basically the moderate in the
02:03:39.720
race right now oh i know she's not even the most extreme oh i know even close to it oh i know our
02:03:44.340
uh democratic primary election model right now has her in fourth place who's in first place uh we so
02:03:50.640
we just added bernie in there so right now we have first place is kamala harris
02:03:54.140
just a just a tick ahead of bernie sanders those are the two top tier the next tier would have
02:04:00.380
cory booker then abe klobuchar then elizabeth warren next tier is a julian castro kirsten
02:04:06.660
jillibrand tulsi gabbard and then we're down to buddha judge will williams and yang delaney
02:04:11.200
buddha and yang are buddha judge he's the mayor of uh that's two that's two that's that's the last
02:04:18.180
name that's not two names not buddha judge no that would be a good name yeah mr judge yeah
02:04:22.960
buddha judge pete buddha judge pete buddha judge which i don't know why he's not running on the
02:04:27.640
impeached kavanaugh because he buddha judge it's in his name you just say hey i'm buddha judge and
02:04:33.980
i'm gonna boot that judge like that's a great people would actually recognize him i don't think it
02:04:39.160
will help his campaign i don't i don't think buddha judge is gonna make it but you can you're listening