The Glenn Beck Program - January 21, 2020


The Media Got Virginia Embarrassingly Wrong | 1⧸21⧸20


Episode Stats

Length

2 hours and 6 minutes

Words per Minute

168.38875

Word Count

21,311

Sentence Count

1,629

Misogynist Sentences

21

Hate Speech Sentences

26


Summary

On today's show, we have a special guest on the show, a man who has been through hell and high water. He's been through a lot in his life, and now he's trying to figure out how to get his family through the holidays.


Transcript

00:00:00.000 that is absolutely insane insane what maxine waters just said we got a great show coming up
00:00:09.160 for you in just a second i have to tell you i started making my own dog food now this is
00:00:15.500 something that you think excuse me uh but i started making my own dog food a couple of weeks
00:00:22.060 ago and it's really really simple and i started putting something in called rough greens uh and
00:00:30.120 rough greens uh vita smart makes your food the dog food tastes better even if you don't make your new
00:00:36.380 dog food but i have to tell you we were feeding uh uno stuff and he hated it he would never eat
00:00:44.380 unless one of the family members stood there we almost had to hand feed him he never would eat
00:00:50.520 uh we started putting rough greens in this is this little packet that you can order and he
00:00:56.340 runs to the bowl then i was talking to the guy who makes rough greens and he said you really want to
00:01:01.780 do something right for your dog start making your own dog food and i was like how do you do that
00:01:05.480 it's really easy uh and i've never seen my dog even react like this it is so great you don't have to
00:01:13.820 make your own dog food you just get rough greens vita smart it'll make your dog food better they
00:01:20.140 like it and it's really healthy for them you want to see your dog thrive go to rough greens.com
00:01:26.640 slash beck that's rough greens.com slash beck
00:01:30.800 hey everybody the impeachment trial starts today
00:01:56.620 yay we'll give you all the details on that in one minute this is the glenbeck program
00:02:05.840 inflammation it's a word that even sounds like it's not good a lot of people in the world suffer
00:02:14.340 from frequent pain and inflammation is usually the thing causing it inside your body joints begin to
00:02:22.060 swell and the next things you know you have pain radiating uh outward from those sources into your
00:02:27.480 body and i've heard people you know inflammation it's a inflammation just take some ibuprofen shut up
00:02:34.020 it doesn't work hey you just had brain surgery take some ibuprofen i'm gonna give you the strong stuff
00:02:41.760 now can you handle ibuprofen 800 shut up it's never worked for me never worked for me
00:02:49.440 now i tried relief factor and that's why my wife was like you gotta at least try it i'm not gonna
00:02:56.280 talk to you unless you try it i'm like honey it's not gonna work it's ibuprofen 800 it's not it's
00:03:03.940 completely natural and it works for everybody you work with why won't you try okay so i finally just
00:03:10.440 tried it and my wife wasn't as wrong as she usually is i'm just saying that's uh that's
00:03:17.960 it's all i i am in so much trouble she comes home today i am dead anyway 70 of the people who try it
00:03:25.820 order more and my wife was exactly right even though she does sound like this she sounds like this huh
00:03:32.200 even though she sounds like that she was right it's relief factor it's a drug-free natural way
00:03:39.860 to ease your pain and get your life back go to relieffactor.com that's relieffactor.com
00:03:45.580 mr pid
00:03:50.400 how are you very well glenn how are you oh my gosh so great just so doing well too when your wife gets
00:04:00.720 home after uh that commercial i'll be very excited to see you i think nope i don't think
00:04:07.540 she is she's gonna walk into the house and she's gonna go what the hell has happened here right and
00:04:13.380 that's my this is my point yesterday don't start because you you've been trying to do these extra
00:04:17.460 things like i'm gonna take down all the christmas decorations those will get down eventually don't
00:04:21.920 worry about things like that worry about the basics keep your kids alive uh try not to burn the
00:04:26.100 house down well i come back and she's gonna think whatever you did sucked anyway i wrote her
00:04:30.580 i wrote her this morning i said now you're coming home i just want you to remember look at the bright
00:04:35.240 side i didn't burn down the house all of the kids are alive i remembered to feed the dog and the kids
00:04:43.880 mostly so everything is everything is uphill i mean i mean we did all that now it's just coast down
00:04:52.320 the question is all now is only how much does she owe you for your incredible work yeah no she's gonna
00:04:58.580 come home and she's gonna see the house and she's be like what has happened here honey i tried to do
00:05:05.660 the i there's a lot of loads of laundry i don't know if it's like this when you're around but
00:05:10.920 there's it never seems like there's laundry to do and man alive it just suddenly just popped up i think
00:05:18.700 the kids had it all dirty in there they couldn't wear this many that many clothes in two weeks
00:05:24.280 um and then i did the then i did the stupid thing i tried to take down the christmas decorations and
00:05:30.720 then the house just exploded because i i honestly told her i said honey we have to sell or just dump
00:05:40.260 all the christmas decorations we're buying all new stuff next year she's like why i liked it that we
00:05:48.020 have because you screwed it up and again this is why you shouldn't i didn't screw it up intentionally
00:05:53.560 but that's what she's gonna say all the next fall as she starts to look for the christmas decorations
00:06:00.180 this is all i'm gonna hear what were you thinking that's not how you put it well you put that away
00:06:06.060 you put these things together and what were you thinking this is this is so pathetic by you because
00:06:11.040 not only did you uh you have the obvious excuse you have multiple excuses to not do anything you
00:06:17.600 know uh oh just the impeachment things going on oh i i'm about to that's about to we're a couple
00:06:22.560 weeks from iowa that's all going on yeah you know uh my daughter has a surgery as you know brain
00:06:29.860 surgery brain surgery brain surgery uh you know jeffy i mean she wouldn't believe this but you know
00:06:34.580 jeffy is at a hospital i really care about that or whatever there's so many things going on yeah
00:06:39.620 you could have easily wormed your way out of any work you could let the thing a total mess and been
00:06:44.640 able to justify it and instead you did all this work and you're not i just feel you know what it is
00:06:49.740 but let's just reverse the roles if i said to her i've got to go and you know i'm gone for two weeks and
00:06:58.020 i'm going to be in the hospital with my you know dying relative um you know just go fill in for me
00:07:05.320 and she would go uh what just go fill in for me and here's all you have to do you just have to do
00:07:12.680 the show and then do a tv show and uh it'll be fine and the kids will help you they're teenagers
00:07:20.800 they don't help at all they make things much worse so she could she couldn't do it and so this is my
00:07:27.880 argument with her ah you just said hey just do these things and it'll be fine no it isn't fine
00:07:35.000 no there's there's more to your job than you think so this is you're you're thinking this is a compliment
00:07:43.160 in some way like you saying that she wouldn't be able to come and just talk on the radio like it's
00:07:49.320 some difficult task uh and it compares to what she does every day that's going to make you look good
00:07:54.460 this is your theory it's not no you're going to lose no i'm gonna no take that is that that is the
00:08:03.360 that's see this one is really horrible because this one you know we pretty i mean i can't say i gave it
00:08:12.100 my all but we tried right you know what i mean and you just no matter what guys know you lose
00:08:18.920 you're the nancy pelosi in this situation but you've gone through the entire you've done all the work
00:08:24.220 of doing the stupid impeachment thing and acting like you care about the constitution for a few
00:08:28.760 weeks and then at the end of the day you're gonna have nothing to show for it it's going to be a
00:08:34.860 giant disaster with no measurable result if i'm not here send help if i'm not here tomorrow send help
00:08:42.980 you did it to yourself this is this is something so avoidable when you have a loss your advice the
00:08:48.080 whole time has been do nothing nothing do nothing maximize the the beauty of your loss this is the
00:08:54.440 worst like let's say you know you're going into a game that you're going to lose by 100 points
00:08:58.500 why try don't even show up go to mcdonald's down the street enjoy yourself and just get a forfeit
00:09:04.920 you're going to lose anyway you should have forfeited this one you had no chance of winning
00:09:08.920 and now you're going to go through all of this hassle and end up with a giant zilch on the other side
00:09:14.500 no you're going to get as much credit for the for for cleaning your house as i just don't i don't
00:09:19.540 want credit i just want her to come home and to be like i'm home and coming into this house the way
00:09:26.700 i've left it not good not good i hope you're listening sweetheart not good low whatever you think
00:09:37.320 it might be lower your expectations again the dog was fed every day twice a day twice a day that
00:09:45.200 count your blessings that's a miracle that's a miracle and he never went to the bathroom and
00:09:52.400 took him for walks everything never miracle the children made it to school fully clothed in their
00:10:01.160 uniform clean miracle now did they do their homework no idea did they eat pop tarts for dinner
00:10:12.180 occasionally maybe i don't know who's counting okay miracle lower your expectations really low
00:10:23.560 very low remember the house that you loved that's not really the house you're going to walk into
00:10:32.300 so again this is just like nancy pelosi yeah uh absolutely no if i was nancy pelosi i would be
00:10:40.140 i would be saying oh it's it's perfect it's it's the best your house it's better now you would be
00:10:47.520 lying is what you're saying yeah if you were nancy pelosi better lying which is something you can apply
00:10:52.540 to every situation that involves nancy pelosi uh by the way there is a new book out called profiles
00:10:58.100 in corruption by peter switzer oh wow here's here's what's amazing look at this it's a 300 page book
00:11:05.160 and the last 104 pages uh is all fine print footnotes i mean this thing is so well documented
00:11:15.460 let me give you one of the stories uh an extensive overlap in frank biden's dealings and obama biden
00:11:24.680 frank biden yeah it's a brother yeah uh in their foreign policy in central america uh has just been
00:11:33.380 exposed in this book frank biden first set his sights on uh on central america back in 2009 as the
00:11:41.240 obama administration began to repair the u.s relationship with costa rica i know we've been
00:11:46.520 laying awake at night going how's our relationship with costa rica uh when president obama entered the
00:11:53.020 white house he set out to mend fences in the region in hopes of inaugurating a new era of global
00:11:57.720 cooperation leading that charge on that front was joe biden who has long-standing ties to the region
00:12:05.340 from his tenure leading the senate foreign relations committee costa rica i mean you're leading the
00:12:12.400 foreign senate relations committee and costa rica is even on your radar shortly after the new
00:12:20.940 administration took office frank biden began scouting real estate opportunities in costa rica
00:12:26.260 a lawyer by training frank was undeterred by his complete lack of background in international
00:12:33.440 development this is such a common thread in the biden story isn't it it's people doing things
00:12:40.060 overseas with no experience they're americans prospect for success yes they all work out so
00:12:47.080 well right because they're americans they have the can-do biden spirit they're just lunchbox joes
00:12:54.200 middle class joe middle class joe middle class joe middle class frank it's middle class frank is it
00:12:58.860 lunchbox frank it sure is wow when you open up your lunchbox you're like i got a frank in there
00:13:04.800 it's fantastic and he gets the job done well actually no he doesn't get the job done but he's in there
00:13:13.040 swinging shortly after the new administration took office uh frank biden began scouting real estate
00:13:19.140 opportunities in costa rica uh schweitzer notes despite the professional and personal handicaps
00:13:25.920 business opportunities somehow were plentiful plentiful for frank especially after his brother
00:13:34.260 paid a visit to the country just months after vice president joe biden's visit in august
00:13:40.940 costa rica news announced a new multilateral partnership to reform real estate in latin america
00:13:49.440 the head of this frank biden and a developer named craig williamson uh they they have a newly
00:13:58.040 planned resort is what it said the venture officially sold to investors as and the public
00:14:03.820 as an opportunity to protect costa rica's breathtaking beauty amounted a little more than decimating the
00:14:10.120 country's natural wilderness to build a luxurious resort for wealthy foreigners in real terms frank's
00:14:15.900 dream was to build in the jungles of costa rica thousands of homes a world-class golf course casinos
00:14:21.620 and an anti-aging center the hell is an anti-aging center this family is creepy the costa rican
00:14:28.700 government was eager to cooperate with the vice president's brother so here's the thing his
00:14:35.520 business that he just started in this development his first thing his business
00:14:41.460 only benefited from uh 54 million dollars of your tax money but that's all he took that's all he had
00:14:56.880 54 so i don't know what anybody is really having a problem with well it was a loan
00:15:05.640 you know 54 million dollars in loans and well you know a lot of times you're going to give loans to
00:15:11.760 people who have no experience in the industry that they're jumping into okay so he did the
00:15:15.760 you know golf course thing and that failed um and he lost a lot of money but then he got right back up at
00:15:21.760 the plate and he's like you know what jamaica needs solar power and uh i'm sure somebody in his life
00:15:29.680 went frank you know you don't know anything about solar power yeah so i'm an entrepreneur and they're
00:15:38.740 like yeah but you didn't know anything about the costa rica golf course development and lost all of
00:15:44.700 that guaranteed money from the u.s taxpayers i'm just playing joe biden here right uh and i don't know
00:15:50.380 if you're a really good bet i mean somehow or another you talked me into it because i really believed
00:15:55.540 in you that you were going to make this and you're going to pay these american taxpayers back and you
00:16:00.600 failed to do that i don't know if solar power is the right way to go somehow or another frank convinced
00:16:07.120 his brother for another 6.5 million dollars in taxpayer uh backed loans wow uh in a on a solar
00:16:15.320 company and we all know how that solar company is doing today oh it's huge it's it's no it failed
00:16:21.660 jamaican no it it failed huh uh but it was it was only in the end it was only a 47.5 million dollar
00:16:32.440 loan that's it that's it just the 47.5 million that's it see here's the thing i want to know
00:16:37.960 because you just kind of described an extensive vetting process for these projects yeah yeah sure
00:16:43.400 um do you really think that much vetting went on because we know with hunter biden what the only
00:16:48.800 vetting that went on was i hope you know what you're doing well that's because one question
00:16:54.140 that joe biden asked hunter biden right that's because he didn't feel he had to because i hope
00:16:59.360 you know what you're doing you've seen your your uncle frank you know i mean right two failed
00:17:04.580 businesses now you're going into a business you don't even speak the language and i don't mean
00:17:10.200 technical language i mean the language uh and uh and i hope you know what you're doing because look at
00:17:17.220 you're washed out you know probably on the road to be an alcoholic you know uh uncle stupid brother
00:17:24.580 of mine who's just lost 54 million dollars of taxpayer money right into his pocket now i don't know is
00:17:32.100 frank's history is frank's history as um problematic as a hunter's history is though i mean or is he just
00:17:40.880 a failed business guy well i think failed business how many hookers has he knocked up this i don't know
00:17:46.220 if he's ever knocked up a hooker while he was with his uh brother's widow who he divorced his wife
00:17:54.240 to be with right and then got a hooker pregnant i don't know if that runs in the family that close
00:18:00.860 but seemingly wild success does
00:18:06.140 when when i say success i mean they walk out with a lot of money right yeah of course the
00:18:14.280 businesses fail the important things right yeah so it's good to know that the biden family is doing
00:18:19.380 so well uh all right now i present to you the probably the most important and favorite portion
00:18:26.840 of the show we get letters uh and they say glenn what are the latest identity threats and i'll say
00:18:32.480 you gotta wait for the next update well it's finally here over 26 million customers have their
00:18:37.940 dna information and databases maintained by dna testing companies good lord is my name on this
00:18:43.840 but some of these companies might be vulnerable to data breaches as any other company and your dna
00:18:49.180 information might be attempting target for hacker hackers who could sell this information on the dark
00:18:54.100 web you gotta be kidding me hasn't happened yet that's the good news but you could worry about it
00:19:01.920 happening or you could just get life lock life lock see i've got this detects a wide range of identity
00:19:08.300 threats including the dna thing huh and the agents work to fix them if there is a problem somebody
00:19:13.900 opening a new account in your name selling bits of your personal information on the dark web
00:19:17.640 these and other crimes are things you don't need in your life and you don't need to worry about
00:19:21.940 you need somebody else to worry for you uh no one can like the house thing like honey i don't know
00:19:28.600 if life lock can protect you from the crimes against your home that have been perpetrated by
00:19:34.880 your own children i tried to stop it the whole time just couldn't hold the floodgates back but
00:19:40.900 anyway they can help you if if you have threats to your identity join now and save up to 25 off your
00:19:47.300 first year by using promo code back that's 1-800 life lock 1-800 life lock or head over to life
00:19:52.960 lock.com and use the promo code back for 25 off right now 1-800 life lock or life lock.com we break
00:19:59.140 for 10 seconds station id
00:20:00.240 hello stew it's good to have you here thank you so much it's good to have you here i'm very excited
00:20:16.700 are you to be here yes are you it's impeachment day it is it is it's the day you know they're
00:20:21.720 gonna have we're gonna get to hear a lot about voting on amendments to see what kind of evidence
00:20:27.780 can be uh put into the trial and then tomorrow they're gonna start talking they're gonna start
00:20:33.500 the trial supposedly and they're gonna do two sessions of 12 hours and so they're gonna end
00:20:39.340 every night at like 1 a.m yeah why start you know why start when people are awake well this is the
00:20:45.780 complaint of the democrats who claim that the reason they're doing it this way is to bury much
00:20:51.000 of the evidence after everyone's asleep which i don't know i mean the arguments are going to go on
00:20:55.900 long into the evening and most people probably aren't going to tune into them i got news for you
00:21:00.380 democrats no one's tuning in anyway people are not interested in this i actually am because i'm into
00:21:05.660 history and i actually am yeah i mean i don't find it to be all that interesting i mean look this is a
00:21:10.740 blatantly partisan thing and the founders were smart enough uh to set the bar high enough in the senate
00:21:16.120 that it was almost impossible to get a conviction i mean there's never been one in u.s history uh we've
00:21:21.280 been around for a while so this one's also not going to be one so we make a big deal about impeachment
00:21:26.380 because it's generally speaking rare but what does it mean to get 50 of the house to vote on something
00:21:31.480 is no no big parlor trick look let me give you the most compelling argument to pay attention to this
00:21:36.880 as possible okay okay it rarely happens
00:21:40.720 let me let me let me i didn't okay so let me give you let me give you the comparison in real life
00:21:49.940 we don't know how long your grandma's going to be with us i mean oh no you should go to see your
00:21:56.080 grandma okay because she might not be with us very much longer okay yeah sure okay that's the
00:22:01.400 only reason why we don't know how much longer this republic is going to last you should watch
00:22:07.060 you should be there when it takes its last gasps oh okay okay yeah because life support is on yeah and
00:22:13.920 if we make it through hey you saw a bit of history not a lot of people have seen before in fact no one
00:22:19.260 has ever seen the american republic act like this before it is so it's like you're the man you're the
00:22:24.360 first man on the moon it is completely insane i mean the founders talked about this as being
00:22:28.620 eventually it will be a partisan process and it will go through this but that's why there's 67
00:22:34.500 you know votes needed in the senate i mean listen to chuck schumer talk about this we played that
00:22:39.300 clip yesterday i mean schumer's like look eventually if you if you go after bill clinton the democrats are
00:22:44.020 going to come back and just do this for you know pure partisan reasons and here he is leading the
00:22:48.060 charge here it is uh but it's him you remember he's right remember the vast right-wing conspiracy
00:22:53.880 took hold because they've been after this president bill clinton since even before he was elected
00:23:01.240 this has been their goal the whole time really does it seem like now you're listening to this a fast
00:23:08.020 left-wing conspiracy all right so i uh i had a delorean okay uh and the problem is every time i got up to
00:23:21.740 88 miles an hour i i traveled back to uh 2008 which is not a year i wish to repeat and so i just i
00:23:33.240 so i went in and i said hey can you is this covered with car shield and they said no but then i got into
00:23:40.180 the car went back to 1988 and i just changed a couple of the people there at car shield then i went back in
00:23:47.700 time to the dealership and they were like of course we cover your time machine of course we do it's a
00:23:51.620 delorean so if you have something that's not covered just call me up i got the delorean car shield
00:23:58.240 makes the process of fixing your car for a covered repair amazingly simple and you don't need a time
00:24:04.400 machine all you have to do is just go to carshield.com your car i don't care if it has 5 000 150 000 miles
00:24:11.780 on it car shield will take that and ease your pain when you have that check engine light go off
00:24:20.120 you don't have to worry about it carshield.com promo code beck deductible may apply go to blaze tv.com
00:24:26.820 use the promo code glenn and you can save 10 bucks all the stuff that you need to know on impeachment
00:24:31.400 tonight at 5
00:24:32.400 oh yeah
00:24:52.000 oh yeah dog uh welcome to the uh program mr pat gray from pat gray unleashed the podcast that you can hear
00:25:01.200 wherever you get your podcast or you can uh grab it at blaze tv.com uh and don't forget to subscribe
00:25:08.100 to the youtube channel as well oh that is so great yeah yeah yeah thank you for that reminder no you're
00:25:12.700 welcome you're welcome because i know you've been forgetting there was a little post-it note and i
00:25:16.420 didn't it was empty and i'm like what is supposed to be on well i know you were writing it on your hand
00:25:20.800 every day like tom steyer writes that weird little thing that he does every single day sure yeah wait
00:25:26.520 wait what does tom steyer oh tom steyer draws these little crosses on his hand every day the
00:25:31.860 little t's four of them why like a tic-tac-toe square kind of why well because it reminds him
00:25:38.060 to tell the truth obviously wait what are you guys stupid you don't do the little t's for truth to
00:25:45.880 remind you to tell the truth every day how do you tell the truth ever then wasn't that an episode
00:25:50.420 what do you just naturally tell the truth wasn't that it's ridiculous oh boy
00:25:57.160 wasn't that an episode of like sherlock or one of those shows where they wrote
00:26:02.540 things all over them all over their face and everything does anybody remember that what was
00:26:07.220 it a movie or vaguely yeah yeah i remember something about that yeah i gotta find out what
00:26:11.500 that is because we should compare pictures these democrats this is the weirdest group of people
00:26:15.360 that have ever run for anything ever i mean they're all just freaks they really are they really
00:26:21.980 are but you know what i have put them into a a list i'm going to share it at the top of the hour
00:26:28.940 i'm going to put it into a list that will compare they think and and they see this field like we saw the
00:26:37.820 field of democrats uh republicans you think 2016 really you think so yeah i do i do and i'm going to
00:26:43.640 make that case and i'll show you i'll compare the the it's the same it's the same in their mind
00:26:50.520 it's the same and we have to understand it from their point of view they're just crazy
00:26:55.740 but the first step to recovery is admitting that really just admit it right again if you put your
00:27:03.160 your self inside the person who believes they have bugs under their skin what does the world look like
00:27:08.760 right it's a different one it's a different world it's a different world you're gonna judge things
00:27:12.060 differently yes yes yes so uh pat so the rally yesterday the piles of dead bodies uh horrific
00:27:19.740 my god was it was it a horror or what hang on just a second let's listen to what the press said okay
00:27:25.260 here's the montage of what the press said about this rally and what was coming to virginia
00:27:31.380 right now thousands of gun rights activists white nationalists militia groups all swarming the
00:27:37.640 virginia state capitol there are a lot of people nervous about what's going to happen authorities
00:27:41.340 in richmond are on high alert it could be a tense day took polarization what may happen in virginia
00:27:46.560 several hate groups supposedly some white nationalists white nationalists white nationalists white
00:27:51.640 nationalists white nationalist groups white supremacists white supremacists white supremacists white
00:27:56.060 extremists this entire rally stands in in opposition to the meaning of this day virginia on the edge how
00:28:03.000 concerned are you that there might be some people in this crowd that may want to get violent there's
00:28:07.500 certainly a lot of concern here raising fears of a dangerous confrontation it could be violence
00:28:11.380 there is real concern there about what the intention is behind this a lot of concern about the potential
00:28:16.880 this is violence to spark violence tensions high in virginia may cause violence there north i'm
00:28:22.040 clearly trying to avoid another charlottesville in charlottesville could see a repeat of what we saw in
00:28:26.000 2017 in charlottesville similar to what we saw in charlottesville worrying about a repeat
00:28:30.700 of charlottesville horrible 2017 charlottesville disaster you look at what happened in charlottesville
00:28:35.720 the two sides clashed in charlottesville men walk through the capital in virginia carrying weapons
00:28:41.380 of war many demonstrators are in fact heavily armed heavily heavily armed heavily armed look at the gear
00:28:47.460 what is this all about militia groups armed militia these militia groups far-right militia militia
00:28:52.960 militia groups far-right extremists extremists extremists look those threats which caused the
00:28:57.800 governor to call for a state of emergency have simply not emerged the police very clear in saying
00:29:03.120 that they have not had a single arrest uh during this rally thank you at least cnn told the truth
00:29:11.220 at the end yeah they did at the end at the end yeah they smeared them for a week about a week but
00:29:16.140 then at the end they did do that one report where they're like okay nothing happened you know what's
00:29:20.240 crazy is uh the reports were not a single arrest the police were not out in force because i think
00:29:30.060 the police knew the police knew who these people were so uh the police were not out in force and
00:29:36.860 the quote uh crazy radical militia groups the white supremacists white supremacists brought trash bags
00:29:46.520 and cleaned up after themselves it's just like those nazis to try to trick you into thinking
00:29:51.940 right that they're not litter bugs i was you know they are i was shocked i was shocked at the number
00:29:58.340 of nazi armbands yesterday oh my gosh yeah yeah they were all invisible but i think that's even worse
00:30:04.140 well that's of course when they try to hide it like that and then when when adolf hitler got up and
00:30:10.260 he started i thought the guy was dead and he introduced eichmann oh my gosh man those were
00:30:15.700 now that wasn't nobody heard it or saw it but that makes it worse i think it does pat i really do
00:30:22.920 i do and you know what these nazis liars these they are so insidious they all pretend like they all say
00:30:31.060 oh i was against the nazis i have nothing to do with the nazi party right you know what i mean wink
00:30:36.300 wink right yeah right and so they're denying all of that stuff every single day so they say things
00:30:43.500 like we're against them hey we're just constitutionalists we're for small government
00:30:47.740 we just we care about everybody's rights sure yeah that's what the founder said too yeah and then what
00:30:54.240 did they do they had slaves that's what they did okay and they fomented revolution thank you so
00:31:01.360 these nazis they had guns even though they don't appear to be nazis they speak out against nazis
00:31:06.940 they fought wars against nazis uh their silence their silence their silent support of nazis their
00:31:16.100 silence is deafening it's it's worse and worse it's worse than what msnbc said it is worse because
00:31:24.500 there's no sign thank you there's no sign of it everybody was pretending which makes everybody
00:31:29.700 relax right and then what and then they got you yeah they it's worse right where they want you worse
00:31:35.120 than msnbc it's worse it's much worse basically where they are that's where the media is basically
00:31:42.680 it is at this point they're hiding it they're hiding it they're hiding it everybody knows that dog
00:31:48.180 whistle that they blew yesterday thank you well dogs know it people can't hear dog whistles no that's a
00:31:53.680 weird but all the racist dogs they were all there you see how many german shepherds how many white
00:31:59.060 dogs were there a lot right of them yeah and i will say it was nice to see the media uh a year
00:32:04.920 after the covington incident really learned their lesson learned their lesson over incidents like this
00:32:09.820 they did learn their lesson learned their lesson they know you'll notice it it was things that aren't
00:32:14.160 real don't do it because because you'll get burned in fact you'll have to pay millions of dollars
00:32:18.440 and lawsuits right potentially like cnn did and cnn paid that nobody else has paid that and who is
00:32:24.740 the one that came out immediately and went hey these weren't right this is these are it was all
00:32:29.780 peaceful they were great cnn now they can smear leading up but as soon as there was no evidence
00:32:36.660 that's a nice little explanation for why they would have done that exactly right huh thank you
00:32:41.560 sandman yeah nick salmon was i mean that's a brave look that's a brave kid brave kid bring us i feel
00:32:50.140 like it's more like enter sandman when cnn's looking at it they're like oh no here it comes
00:32:54.480 this is i mean it is a pretty amazing development i mean a year ago here they are trashing this kid
00:33:02.500 who's standing in his place and they were nothing nothing and it was just i will say the washington
00:33:08.120 post was worse than cnn um there were a couple of organizations that actually went further than
00:33:13.560 cnn but still they but not as far as the nazis no not that far of course not the nazis yesterday you
00:33:19.940 mean yeah the invisible ones that didn't say a thing during that whole sandhead thing they were
00:33:25.560 like pretending like hey i don't think this is fair right that's worse it's worse than what the
00:33:31.380 washington post did it is much worse invisible nazis have got to be one of the worst things
00:33:35.760 in the world yeah because you wouldn't even know they were the concentration camps that these
00:33:39.400 people are not building right now or they're building that's worse than actual building
00:33:43.140 nazi concentration camps right it's worse right so because that just means they're due to build
00:33:49.040 more nazi concentration camps when they start building them right they'll be everywhere it's
00:33:53.520 all built up inside of they think they have us but we're on to them on to them thank you cnn
00:34:01.040 thank you for opening our eyes
00:34:03.820 can you believe all those people who were armed to the teeth and they were a lot of them were
00:34:10.580 that you know they had uh air 15s somebody brought a 50 cal yeah
00:34:14.760 and it shows that gosh you you could actually have a gun and not shoot somebody with that wait a
00:34:22.880 minute you could have a weapon of war a 50 caliber machine gun not use it not use it weird weird i
00:34:29.880 didn't see that coming no well that certainly didn't
00:34:32.520 yeah they didn't see a few things coming man they didn't see a few things coming but uh
00:34:39.880 well the good news is they don't have to cover this they did their damage now they can move
00:34:44.880 right on to the impeachment trial thank goodness you know what i mean yes where they can talk about
00:34:50.160 these extremists oh these just radical extremists uh that are are trying to take the country back
00:35:01.040 from whom from whom the black man the orange man they're trying to take it back from the orange man
00:35:07.080 is that what yes the orange man in the white house wow nothing worse than an orange man in a white house
00:35:14.000 although i do like dreamsicles and that kind of sounds like a dreamsicle it kind of does it does
00:35:21.260 orange man white house i'm in now do you think do you think the senate will uh vote to do the
00:35:27.180 witnesses are we going to end this thing quicker like in two weeks wrapped up or is this a months
00:35:31.980 long process it's it's not going to be a months long process i do think that there's a chance that
00:35:37.820 they vote yes on you know they only need four republicans though there's no indications yet that
00:35:42.760 mitt romney romney romney's not even the one they're talking about they're talking about
00:35:45.860 murkowski and collins mar alexander and romney that's only three if you don't have romney in
00:35:51.380 that i don't think he's been saying he's going to uh i i don't think he can afford to always make
00:35:57.300 the wrong choice although he can't afford to like i don't like him i'm not a massive uh mitt romney fan
00:36:05.300 but he has not been like other than just generally speaking romney speak he has not been outspoken
00:36:12.140 and saying i'm gonna you know i we need to go to trial or about it it's worse it's worse because
00:36:17.260 he's not saying he's not saying oh my god that makes it worse you're right he's an invisible vote
00:36:24.480 for witnesses i'm just telling you he may very well vote for it but he only need four he will
00:36:29.780 even if it's just in his even if he doesn't that's worse that's worse because he sold us out
00:36:36.560 and then sold himself out on top of it bad yep bad yep all right that is bad wow right you know
00:36:45.260 he wants to but then he won't so he's a double sellout all right uh if you uh have ever bought
00:36:53.860 right now thousands of gun rights yeah i got it um i don't think i need to hear that again uh if you've
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00:37:15.400 the exteriors blah blah blah blah blah blah now on the buying end maybe you think you know what you're
00:37:22.180 getting into but do you really know it's a big decision you'll be living in this place that you're
00:37:27.600 buying for a while if not permanent permanently you need somebody that is really on your side that
00:37:33.500 knows the market knows what the right value is for your house and your next house and that's
00:37:40.760 an agent you will find at realestateagentsitrust.com go to realestateagentsitrust.com
00:37:47.640 and we're going to line you up with an agent that is right for you somebody that really knows and has
00:37:54.800 the track record of selling homes and getting the homes for the least amount of money in your
00:38:01.180 neighborhood it's realestateagentsitrust.com go there now realestateagentsitrust.com
00:38:08.280 this is the glenbeck program
00:38:13.040 welcome to the uh program we're doing a vlog just because we're just excited to see one of the
00:38:23.620 we'll be back up on it tonight
00:38:23.980 we'll be right back
00:38:25.300 we'll be right back
00:38:27.260 we'll be right back
00:38:29.300 we'll be right back
00:38:30.400 we'll be right back
00:38:31.700 we do
00:38:31.980 now we'll be right back
00:38:33.540 welcome to the uh program we're just the entire program that we're doing on it
00:38:36.260 at the run
00:38:38.920 boom this is anytime we'll be right back
00:38:41.200 Welcome to the program.
00:38:42.540 We're just, you know, this Prince Harry, is it Prince Harry that married Markle, Merkle,
00:38:50.660 Markle, whatever her name is?
00:38:52.480 Yes, okay, it's Harry.
00:38:54.040 So, you know, Harry is leaving.
00:38:55.560 If you watch The Crown, it all of a sudden really makes sense to you.
00:39:00.420 This is like three generations in the making, him leaving the family.
00:39:05.720 It was his great-uncle who abdicated for love, and, you know, it was a mess.
00:39:14.980 When he left and abdicated, the family just treated him horribly.
00:39:20.540 It's a really bad family.
00:39:22.780 And then he, according to The Crown, at least, which is based in reality and fact, historic fact,
00:39:31.100 he has the family manipulating a relationship with Camilla Parker before she's Bowles.
00:39:41.740 And she's set up as somebody that they just want him to have a dalliance with so he'll forget something else.
00:39:51.260 And so they set it up, but he falls in love, and so does she.
00:39:54.380 But she's married, and it's really, really ugly.
00:40:00.560 And the family arranges all of the marriage for Camilla and gets everything back together and puts it all together
00:40:12.520 so he will not have anything to do with her.
00:40:14.720 But he's actually in love.
00:40:15.900 And at the time that he's falling in love, he's meeting with his dying uncle,
00:40:19.700 who was the king that abdicated for love, and he's saying, leave this.
00:40:25.480 Love is the only thing that matters.
00:40:27.340 Don't let them push you around.
00:40:29.720 Well, they do.
00:40:30.460 He marries Diana because of all the family pressure, and he never does it.
00:40:35.900 But now Diana and Prince Charles' son, he does it.
00:40:40.740 And you can see it.
00:40:41.900 If you're watching the crowd, you see this, and you're like, wow.
00:40:45.940 That kid is brave.
00:40:47.860 Really brave.
00:40:48.600 Yeah, no, it sounds really good.
00:40:50.220 I haven't, I'm not a big Royals follower, but I know you've been speaking highly of this series.
00:40:55.440 I love this series.
00:40:56.560 I mean, it has, you know, the first two seasons with Winston Churchill are unbelievable.
00:41:01.240 Just great.
00:41:02.080 I'm excited about McMillions.
00:41:04.120 The new documentary coming to HBO.
00:41:06.960 Oh, that was the corrupt game that they put in the bag.
00:41:11.020 Yeah, right.
00:41:11.400 Which I'm really, I'm fascinated to watch.
00:41:13.400 And I've decided this is my ultimate way delivery system for television now.
00:41:17.460 I only want to watch limited series.
00:41:19.960 This is the way to do it.
00:41:21.220 Like, there's six episodes of this, and then it's over.
00:41:24.520 There's not like 9,000 episodes, and it's not like, you know, only one little thing where they don't tell you the whole story.
00:41:30.340 That like six to ten episode thing is such a nice little sweet spot.
00:41:34.980 Because you can watch the whole thing in a relatively short period of time, and then it's over.
00:41:38.860 You don't have to wait another year.
00:41:39.780 Like, I'm waiting for Ozark for another year.
00:41:41.420 I've been waiting forever.
00:41:43.160 I mean, I want it to start, and then I want it to end.
00:41:45.740 And be over.
00:41:47.140 Leave me alone.
00:41:47.860 That's for healthy people.
00:41:49.440 That's true.
00:41:50.020 For those of us who just can't stop eating, I need season after season after season.
00:41:55.120 I mean, some of us, you know, are foodaholic, alcoholic.
00:41:58.200 Right.
00:41:58.880 You know, seriesaholics.
00:42:00.260 We have to be fed constantly.
00:42:02.020 And you're all three.
00:42:02.980 Which is an interesting combo.
00:42:04.820 It is.
00:42:05.380 It is.
00:42:06.000 Some people would claim, like my wife.
00:42:08.380 You take everything to the extreme.
00:42:10.600 What?
00:42:11.200 You're listening to Glenn Beck.
00:42:25.920 Relief factor.
00:42:27.620 Relief factor for millions of Americans has dramatically changed their life.
00:42:32.360 Dramatically changed their life.
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00:42:39.400 can't get rid of it.
00:42:41.000 You've tried everything.
00:42:43.280 Why did you try Relief factor?
00:42:44.820 Says my wife.
00:42:46.360 And so I did.
00:42:47.940 I mean, after a few.
00:42:49.940 Why did you try Relief factor?
00:42:51.320 After a few of those, I decided I'm going to try it.
00:42:54.240 So I tried it.
00:42:55.160 And it's changed my life.
00:42:57.300 I've gotten my life back.
00:42:59.180 So do the same thing.
00:43:00.860 Get your life back.
00:43:01.880 You have a three-week trial.
00:43:04.480 It's $19.99.
00:43:06.180 If it doesn't work, stop taking it.
00:43:08.380 70% of the people who try the three-week quick trial, it works for them.
00:43:12.740 And they go on to order more and more.
00:43:14.520 So please, just try it and get your life back.
00:43:17.660 Relief factor.com.
00:43:18.660 That's relieffactor.com.
00:43:19.940 The fusion of entertainment and enlightenment.
00:43:39.600 This is the Glenn Beck Program.
00:43:41.420 I think, I think, I think, I have found a way to relate to Democrats.
00:43:53.040 And I don't know.
00:43:54.940 But I think I understand what they're doing right now.
00:43:59.060 And that's saying a lot.
00:44:01.660 Because I don't even know if most of them know what they're doing right now.
00:44:04.400 But I think what they're going through right now is the same thing, except in the exact opposite direction, that the Republicans went through in 2016.
00:44:18.420 And let me explain in one minute.
00:44:24.100 This is the Glenn Beck Program.
00:44:26.080 Okay, I want to talk to you about Shave Secret.
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00:44:40.400 It's not like a shaving cream or a gel.
00:44:42.240 You don't need any of that crap.
00:44:43.360 In fact, this is the way they used to shave the kings in the old days, is they would take really good essential oils and they would put it on the beard.
00:44:53.620 And it helps, you know, avoid the nicks and the cuts and the ingrown hairs and everything else.
00:45:00.300 Makes for a really smooth shaving experience.
00:45:03.940 So I want you to try Shave Secret.
00:45:07.200 Shave Secret, a proprietary blend of essential oils.
00:45:10.580 And it will dramatically change the way you shave, on your face or on your legs.
00:45:15.880 Hey, and guys, who am I to judge?
00:45:18.440 Maybe.
00:45:19.100 Why not?
00:45:21.200 ShaveSecret.com.
00:45:22.320 That's ShaveSecret.com.
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00:45:24.880 Now, they also have it up back east.
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00:45:53.080 Okay, I want to show you that what we're seeing is, yes, it is a comedy TV show.
00:46:14.000 What we're seeing happening on the Democratic side is a comedy TV show.
00:46:19.160 Now, let me show you, this is a internal video from the New York Times editorial board with Bernie Sanders speaking to the editorial board on why they should endorse him because this is who he is.
00:46:34.540 Listen to this amazing audio.
00:46:37.820 Look, I don't tolerate bulls**t terribly well.
00:46:41.840 And I come from a different background than a lot of other people who run the country.
00:46:45.960 I'm not good at back slapping.
00:46:47.800 I'm not good at pleasantries.
00:46:49.380 If you have your birthday, I'm not going to call you up to congratulate you and say you love me and you write nice things about me.
00:46:54.600 That's not what I do.
00:46:55.800 Never have.
00:46:56.780 And I take that as a little bit of a criticism, self-criticism.
00:47:00.540 I have been amazed at how many people respond to, happy birthday, oh, Bernie, thanks so much for calling.
00:47:07.160 You know, it works.
00:47:08.180 It's just not my style.
00:47:10.320 You know, I try to stay focused on the important issues facing working families in this country.
00:47:16.140 Stop, stop, stop, stop.
00:47:18.240 Now, I'll show you that this is a TV show.
00:47:20.800 I want you to play that audio again.
00:47:22.500 And, Sarah, watch for my cue on when to start it.
00:47:26.320 And it'll all fall together.
00:47:27.820 Go ahead, start the Bernie audio.
00:47:30.740 Look, I don't tolerate bulls**t terribly well.
00:47:33.820 And I come from a different background than a lot of other people who run the country.
00:47:37.940 I'm not good at back slapping.
00:47:39.760 I'm not good at pleasantries.
00:47:41.360 If you have your birthday, I'm not going to call you up to congratulate you so you love me and you write nice things about me.
00:47:46.600 That's not what I do.
00:47:47.800 Never have.
00:47:48.720 And I take that as a little bit of a criticism, self-criticism.
00:47:52.680 I've been amazed at how many people respond to, happy birthday, oh, Bernie, thanks so much for calling.
00:47:59.160 You know, it works.
00:47:59.820 It's just not my style.
00:48:01.940 I mean, this is Larry David.
00:48:05.100 It is.
00:48:05.500 It is Larry David.
00:48:07.000 You can't write that unless you're Larry David.
00:48:12.040 And he's just as, like, frustrated and miserable and, you know, it's the same character.
00:48:20.100 It's crazy.
00:48:20.780 Okay.
00:48:21.020 But that's not the character they want.
00:48:23.640 Okay.
00:48:24.080 They don't want Larry David.
00:48:26.080 They want Donald Trump.
00:48:28.120 Who does?
00:48:29.260 The Democrats.
00:48:30.220 I may have missed a news story.
00:48:31.620 What do you mean?
00:48:31.900 No, no, no.
00:48:32.040 They want a Donald Trump.
00:48:34.660 They want somebody who speaks to the American people, just says it like it is, their version of it.
00:48:42.480 What evidence do you have of this?
00:48:44.360 They want to beat Donald Trump.
00:48:45.640 So they're looking for someone.
00:48:48.640 They want their own Donald Trump?
00:48:49.820 They want their own Donald Trump that can box people out, you know, punch them in the face, get them to shut up and sit down, that can wield power like Donald Trump does.
00:49:01.960 Okay.
00:49:02.760 That's what they want.
00:49:04.300 They want that kind of personality.
00:49:06.720 Okay.
00:49:07.240 So let's look.
00:49:09.020 As I was looking at the Democratic field the other day, and I started thinking, okay, so what's really going on here?
00:49:19.280 How can we possibly relate to the people that are on the stage?
00:49:26.740 Because they're all weirdos and freaks.
00:49:28.900 And is it just me?
00:49:31.860 No, it's not.
00:49:34.020 So I thought, what is it that they are actually, what is it that they're actually looking for?
00:49:40.320 They have Joe Biden, Bernie Sanders, Elizabeth Warren, Pete Buttigieg, Amy Klobuchar, and Michael Bloomberg, also still in the race, Andrew Yang and Tom Steyer.
00:49:50.080 Well, you're forgetting about Michael Bennett, Tulsi Gabbard, John Delaney, and Deval Patrick.
00:49:55.960 Yeah, sure I am.
00:49:57.600 Yeah, okay.
00:49:58.100 See, just like the rest of America.
00:49:59.920 But let's just take the ones that they have.
00:50:03.220 What they're doing is what the Republicans were doing in 2016.
00:50:10.000 There was a chance to have a new party and a new direction, okay?
00:50:16.040 And if you look at all of the players here, you will see that the same players, just on the opposite side, were in 2016, except for one.
00:50:31.360 Joe Biden.
00:50:33.180 Joe Biden.
00:50:34.240 Who's Joe Biden?
00:50:36.180 Joe Biden is the establishment.
00:50:38.200 He's more of the same.
00:50:39.760 He's what everybody has grown to go, I'm sick of.
00:50:43.100 Joe Biden is Jeb Bush, except at 80.
00:50:47.320 If he was Jeb Bush's age, he might have a chance.
00:50:55.500 But he's the same guy.
00:50:57.240 Bernie Sanders, they hope, in some ways, is Donald Trump, because they're just looking for somebody that can beat him.
00:51:07.300 And he's not Donald Trump.
00:51:10.380 He's, in 2016, he's Rand Paul.
00:51:14.280 But he's more Ron Paul, because he had that big following that only cared about Ron Paul.
00:51:22.520 And they didn't care about anything else.
00:51:24.720 In fact, they wanted to burn the rest of the situation down.
00:51:27.540 You know, the party can go burn itself to the ground.
00:51:30.680 They didn't care.
00:51:32.320 That's Ron Paul.
00:51:34.320 And because they're ideologues, they just have, you know, Mao's little red book.
00:51:41.440 We had the little pocket constitution.
00:51:45.140 It's Rand Paul or Ron Paul.
00:51:48.440 Elizabeth Warren, like Ron Paul, was too extreme for some people.
00:51:54.260 But they liked the fact that he was constitutional and, you know, he believed in all of these things, yada, yada, yada.
00:52:02.400 But he was too far.
00:52:04.140 You wanted somebody that was more, you know, wonky or, you know, just could operate in the system without burning it down.
00:52:13.640 That's Elizabeth Warren.
00:52:15.400 So Elizabeth Warren is Ted Cruz.
00:52:18.900 Just the opposite side.
00:52:20.640 All right.
00:52:21.160 Ted Cruz is the guy who would go, no.
00:52:23.640 You're like casting the movie.
00:52:24.820 Like you're casting the movie of the Republican primary with the Democratic candidates.
00:52:29.720 Because they kind of have, there's an equivalence.
00:52:31.700 There's an equivalence.
00:52:32.580 They're not exact.
00:52:33.860 And they're certainly ideologically on the opposite ends.
00:52:37.460 But Ted Cruz was Ron Paul, except he wasn't going to burn the system down.
00:52:43.580 He had a plan.
00:52:45.660 And he was going to, we'll execute this.
00:52:48.460 Well, he was methodical.
00:52:50.440 I can see that.
00:52:51.220 Those are fair so far.
00:52:52.680 So you have Elizabeth Warren as Cruz.
00:52:57.280 Pete Buttigieg, I'm not really comfortable, but I think he's kind of like Marco Rubio.
00:53:02.440 Yeah.
00:53:03.100 He's less experienced than Marco Rubio.
00:53:05.660 But you look at him, he's like, ah, he should win.
00:53:07.920 He is pretty good.
00:53:09.140 On paper, he's good.
00:53:10.420 Now, I kind of thought Rubio could be Kamala Harris, the on paper candidate that should win.
00:53:16.140 She would probably be better.
00:53:17.040 But she's dropped out.
00:53:18.140 Yeah.
00:53:18.480 Buttigieg is the closest thing I think you have to Rubio.
00:53:20.340 Yeah.
00:53:20.680 And I don't think I have, I don't have anybody clear cut for Buttigieg.
00:53:24.520 That's good.
00:53:24.900 I think you're right, though.
00:53:25.560 I think Rubio is a good example there.
00:53:26.860 Andrew Yang, Carly Fiorina.
00:53:32.020 Okay.
00:53:32.500 Both tech entrepreneurs.
00:53:34.060 Tech entrepreneurs.
00:53:35.640 Somebody who speaks common sense.
00:53:38.780 You know, may not, everybody on the other side is not going to agree with.
00:53:42.040 But somewhat palatable to the other side at times.
00:53:44.360 Correct.
00:53:44.920 And somebody who's just like, can we just talk facts and figures here for just a second?
00:53:49.400 Can we just be rational human beings for a minute?
00:53:51.420 Generally thought of smart, well liked.
00:53:53.000 Correct.
00:53:53.500 Yeah.
00:53:53.840 Correct.
00:53:54.180 All right.
00:53:55.000 Okay.
00:53:55.760 You've got me so far.
00:53:56.860 Um, Amy Klobuchar seems like, you know, a normal human being, but probably not so much,
00:54:11.140 you know, uh, kind of like a John Kasich where you're kind of like, eh, but I went back
00:54:18.600 and forth with John Kasich because I think in a way it could be Tulsi Gabbard because they,
00:54:25.320 because they perceive her the way we perceive John Kasich, just a total sellout.
00:54:34.000 But Kasich was much more of a party, you know, figure.
00:54:38.180 He was a more of a Republican creature.
00:54:40.800 Gabbard's not at all.
00:54:41.720 You're right.
00:54:42.320 So Klobuchar is probably the right one.
00:54:43.920 Yeah.
00:54:44.020 Cause Klobuchar too is one that, that occasionally seems palatable to the other side, which people,
00:54:49.240 what people said about Kasich.
00:54:50.280 Like, you know, Kasich was the one candidate that the Democrats would say they wanted out
00:54:55.800 of the entire field.
00:54:56.960 And probably Republicans might say the same thing about Klobuchar.
00:55:00.020 I mean, we, we talked to, we talked to, um, Mike Lee when he was in here and we said,
00:55:04.820 Hey, what do you think?
00:55:05.960 Who is of the Democrats that are running that you work with?
00:55:08.300 Who's the closest to the constitution?
00:55:10.000 And he said, Klobuchar.
00:55:12.660 So, I mean, you can kind of see that Gabbard is, I think, likable in different ways in that
00:55:19.040 she's standing up against the Democrats.
00:55:21.920 I think that's the main reason people like her.
00:55:23.840 Her policies are just not even remotely close to what a Republican would want.
00:55:28.620 There are some people on the right who are like her anti-intervention sort of policies.
00:55:33.980 So there's some alignment there, which there's not really any alignment.
00:55:37.500 This is not fair to say, you know, oh, well, who's the closest to the, uh, uh, uh, the
00:55:41.440 constitution in this field.
00:55:43.060 Uh, it's probably Amy.
00:55:45.360 You know, that's like having me, Tim Tebow and Tim Tebow and a wino.
00:55:50.500 And which one's the closest to an astronaut?
00:55:53.560 I don't know.
00:55:54.200 Probably Tebow.
00:55:54.960 Cause he's in shape.
00:55:55.940 Right.
00:55:56.320 But other than that, nothing, right.
00:56:01.120 Nothing.
00:56:01.600 He struggled with it to be fair.
00:56:03.260 Okay.
00:56:03.780 Yeah.
00:56:03.960 But I think the idea is that occasionally Klobuchar could in theory say something that
00:56:10.740 is parallel to sane.
00:56:13.600 That's the only standard we're talking about here.
00:56:16.160 Um, and I think the left would say the same thing about Kasich, right?
00:56:18.920 Kasich was a very boring, generic Republican that would say things that kind of felt good
00:56:24.060 to the mainstream media, which is why he was the nice guy, right?
00:56:27.640 Trump was mean.
00:56:28.560 Cruz was mean.
00:56:30.080 Kasich was the nice guy.
00:56:31.140 He was the, he was the moderate, I don't know.
00:56:33.660 And they do say that about, uh, Klobuchar when she's not, you know, pelting employees
00:56:37.640 with things.
00:56:38.140 She's not around.
00:56:39.020 She's Minnesota nice.
00:56:39.540 As long as you don't work for her, she's very nice.
00:56:42.760 She's very nice.
00:56:44.000 Uh, and as warm as those winters, she's grown accustomed to, uh, so Tulsi Gabbard, then
00:56:50.880 maybe Ben Carson.
00:56:54.340 Yeah, cause he's totally kind of from out of the, not, not a normal Republican, right?
00:57:02.800 He came from a, a totally different background as Gabbard did.
00:57:06.720 She's, uh, she's very religious in her way.
00:57:11.180 He's very religious.
00:57:12.160 And I think, didn't he have some strange, uh, background or uncommon.
00:57:16.940 There were reports on that.
00:57:17.840 Yeah.
00:57:18.040 Yeah.
00:57:18.320 Uh, and, uh, they're both really nice.
00:57:21.400 They both kind of had a little bit of attention, but never really made a serious run.
00:57:25.280 Yeah.
00:57:25.540 Yeah.
00:57:26.040 Uh, yeah.
00:57:26.520 Okay.
00:57:26.760 Okay.
00:57:27.080 Okay.
00:57:27.520 All right.
00:57:27.780 Uh, now Tom Steyer.
00:57:31.140 Oof.
00:57:31.720 I put into the category of Chris Christie.
00:57:36.060 If power was money in his state, you know, uh, and if, because the only difference, Aaron,
00:57:45.760 this one feels like a reach to me.
00:57:47.020 Okay.
00:57:47.260 It might be, it might be, but here's what it is.
00:57:50.960 You know, no matter what they act like, you know, in your heart, there's a lot of corruption
00:57:58.580 going on there.
00:57:59.740 Mm-hmm.
00:58:00.440 Okay.
00:58:01.000 So you look at Chris Christie and you might be like, ah, it's funny.
00:58:03.920 And look at the fat man on the beach and whatever.
00:58:07.640 Um, but it's all about power.
00:58:10.260 And yes, you know, there's a little corruption going on there.
00:58:13.200 Maybe a lot.
00:58:13.900 And the same thing goes with Tom Steyer.
00:58:16.680 He can, he can write, you know, the little T's to remind him to tell the truth.
00:58:21.240 Nobody has to draw a T on their hand to remind them to tell the truth.
00:58:25.720 I wake up every day and write, don't be Satan on the back of my hands just to remind myself.
00:58:29.960 Try not to be Satan.
00:58:30.740 I get up every morning after I remind her, don't be Satan.
00:58:36.140 Who does that?
00:58:37.460 Usually it's easier.
00:58:38.560 Yeah.
00:58:38.860 You don't, you know, unless you are Satan, I'm not Satan.
00:58:43.080 Look at my hand.
00:58:44.800 He writes crosses on his hands and then he lights them on fire.
00:58:48.120 Right.
00:58:49.240 I mean, it's kind of like Chris Christie.
00:58:51.500 It's like, you know.
00:58:52.300 Yeah, okay.
00:58:53.100 You know.
00:58:53.620 I mean, I, it's a little bit of a reach because Christie was, you know, a governor and they're
00:58:58.000 coming from totally different backgrounds.
00:58:59.660 But I can see the similarities there.
00:59:01.140 Yeah.
00:59:01.240 They both had power in their own way.
00:59:02.800 Yeah.
00:59:03.020 Both have power in their own way.
00:59:04.340 And both of them, you know, would close the bridge if they, if they, if they wanted to.
00:59:09.460 Oh yeah.
00:59:09.660 Steyer's closing the bridge.
00:59:10.480 He's closing the bridge.
00:59:11.820 There's no doubt about that.
00:59:12.660 Right.
00:59:12.900 And Bloomberg is George Pataki.
00:59:15.580 Bloomberg is, think of that.
00:59:17.860 Think of that.
00:59:18.360 I think Bloomberg's got a better chance of winning than George Pataki.
00:59:21.080 Yes.
00:59:21.420 But they're both as lovable.
00:59:24.340 Pataki might be a little more lovable, but they're the same kind of.
00:59:29.560 New York politicians, certainly.
00:59:33.680 Anyway, I have a point to all of this and I'll get to it in a second.
00:59:36.600 I'd love to hear your list as well, Stu.
00:59:39.440 But we'll get to that here in a second.
00:59:41.120 First, let me tell you about Patriot Mobile.
00:59:43.700 Something that gets overlooked in our lives.
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00:59:53.500 It's okay to be proud of your conservative views.
00:59:57.700 You're not a rebel.
00:59:59.560 If you're a rebel, George Washington, who they say is irrelevant and dusty, what kind of rebel is that?
01:00:07.200 You are a rebel that believes in the Constitution.
01:00:10.780 You believe that you have a right to bear arms.
01:00:14.720 You have a right to life, liberty, and property.
01:00:18.420 So don't throw your money away and throw your money to people who are funding causes that are fighting against this.
01:00:27.640 This is a real battle that's going on.
01:00:30.200 And every time you pay your Verizon bill or one of those big phone companies, you are paying the left because they take a lot of their money and they donate it to, you know, pro-abortion, Planned Parenthood, anti-Second Amendment, anti-First Amendment stuff.
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01:01:16.440 So live consistently.
01:01:19.800 You have a choice on this one.
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01:01:42.420 PatriotMobile.com slash Beck.
01:01:44.400 That's PatriotMobile.com slash Beck.
01:01:47.780 We pause for 10 seconds.
01:01:49.080 Okay, so now think of this.
01:02:05.340 This is the way the Democrats are looking at this election.
01:02:09.820 Remember, last election, they look at us as radicals and revolutionaries.
01:02:14.960 If you believe in the Constitution, you're a radical and revolutionary.
01:02:18.720 Why?
01:02:20.940 Because if you believe that, you're dismissing the last 100 years.
01:02:27.480 And the last 100 years have been 100 years of progress.
01:02:32.020 Look how great things are now.
01:02:34.200 So 100 years of progress.
01:02:36.260 The progressives on both sides, the Republicans and the Democrats.
01:02:40.740 Remember, progressives started with Theodore Roosevelt.
01:02:43.060 The progressives on both sides dismissed the Constitution and the Declaration of Independence a long time ago.
01:02:50.100 100 years ago, 100 years ago, and so we were seen as radicals that want to drag you back before Woodrow Wilson and Theodore Roosevelt.
01:02:59.440 Well, yes, because those are the American principles that have been distorted by the socialist movement in the Progressive Party early on.
01:03:09.020 So, yeah, we want to get rid of those because we don't believe those are progress.
01:03:13.700 That makes us a radical and revolutionary.
01:03:15.900 We're wanting to stick to our founding documents.
01:03:19.220 Their radicals and revolutionaries want to do the same thing except it's Mao's Little Red Book.
01:03:25.120 Or it's, you know, the Communist Manifesto.
01:03:28.020 They see themselves as re-founders just as much as we did, except only one of us is truly an American idea.
01:03:41.460 The other is this European socialist communist idea that goes against everything America stands for.
01:03:50.300 This is why our radicals, one, wraps themselves in the flag, because we are proud of America.
01:03:58.580 The other needs to destroy America.
01:04:01.680 Remember, Marx said at the end, America is the target because it will shed who it was.
01:04:10.840 It will shed its ugliness and its capitalism and its freedom, and it will gain real freedom through this communist new order.
01:04:20.300 In the Communist Manifesto.
01:04:24.300 That's the radicals.
01:04:26.460 Then, in the middle is the mushy stuff that we all rejected, and they want to reject as well.
01:04:35.200 They just didn't have a Donald Trump step to the plate.
01:04:39.000 They don't know who can beat Donald Trump.
01:04:45.120 That's the problem.
01:04:46.420 They keep trying on another pair of Donald Trump shoes, and none of them fit.
01:04:54.580 You're listening to Glenn Beck.
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01:06:32.040 Welcome to the Glenn Beck Program.
01:06:44.380 Really glad that you're here.
01:06:46.600 Stu and I were just talking about this list that I made because what you need to understand is here's the main difference between the left and the right.
01:06:56.260 The rights radicals, like the media made out, everybody who went to that Virginia rally yesterday, that's a radical, a revolutionary.
01:07:05.520 They're a danger because they all accept the progressive premise that we don't really have the Constitution and we don't run it like we used to run things.
01:07:17.900 And that's the point of our radicals is we need to get back to the Constitution.
01:07:22.760 So we have a right to privacy, we have a right to life, we have a right to speech, we have a right to the Second Amendment, the Tenth Amendment, all the amendments.
01:07:32.240 That's our radical.
01:07:33.840 And they see them as radicals on the left because they've dismissed everything prior to 1900.
01:07:43.880 It's just nonsense.
01:07:45.060 It doesn't matter.
01:07:45.680 It's not relatable anymore.
01:07:47.040 What the progressive radical, the left radical, the difference here is they're going back to 1858 and they're getting the Communist Manifesto and they're saying we need to fundamentally change America because America is a bad place.
01:08:07.440 So the Democrats don't have a uniting force.
01:08:12.600 The Republicans have a uniting force, and that is we all love America.
01:08:18.840 We all love the Constitution.
01:08:20.880 Now, some of us want to adhere more to it than others, but none of us want to abolish the Constitution.
01:08:28.460 None of us think America is a bad place.
01:08:31.180 None of us think that, you know, we made mistakes, but we've been trying and we're getting better all the time.
01:08:39.100 The Democrats, the regular Democrat in, you know, flyover country, I think the non-political ones, just the normal Democrat, believes the same thing about the country.
01:08:51.380 You know, I love the Constitution, but some of it might, you know, might want to change or whatever, but I don't want to throw it out.
01:08:57.780 I don't want to throw our system out.
01:08:59.320 I love the flag.
01:09:00.340 I love our country.
01:09:01.740 I think we made some real mistakes that we don't, you know, necessarily admit to, but we're a good place.
01:09:07.540 We just need to fix it.
01:09:09.620 Where half of the Democrats believe that, and all of the Republicans generally believe that, half of the Democrats don't love America.
01:09:20.640 And so you have this Joe Biden guy who's like, okay, well, okay, he loves America, and I don't, you know, he's probably going to do some, you know, things that, you know, will increase welfare in the state and everything else.
01:09:35.180 But I'm okay with that.
01:09:36.580 I just don't want to be with the radicals.
01:09:38.840 That's a split.
01:09:41.500 They have to decide.
01:09:43.000 Which one are they?
01:09:44.800 Which one are they?
01:09:45.620 Yeah, I think they are deciding.
01:09:46.920 Right.
01:09:47.160 Yeah.
01:09:47.700 The radical.
01:09:48.320 The, it's very possible a non, you know, outward socialist wins this primary for them.
01:09:56.120 But I mean, they're making a statement as the party as to who they're putting in charge, right?
01:09:59.500 I mean, basically Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez is running the party at this point.
01:10:04.740 They're all signing on to the Green New Deal and all this nonsense.
01:10:07.420 So they've made their intent clear in a long-term way.
01:10:11.220 And the only time they talk about it.
01:10:12.340 That doesn't mean Joe Biden doesn't win here.
01:10:12.820 Right.
01:10:13.080 And the only time that they don't talk about the Constitution and the only time they do talk about the Constitution is times like impeachment.
01:10:19.340 When it works to their advantage.
01:10:20.900 Exactly.
01:10:21.260 Just like the only time they care about your rights with your body is when it's abortion.
01:10:25.800 Yes.
01:10:26.120 When it's your doctor, of course, obviously you can't.
01:10:30.100 No, the government's going to make those decisions.
01:10:32.080 Yes.
01:10:32.320 When it's every other topic, they don't care about individual liberty at all.
01:10:36.740 But in this one, they do.
01:10:37.940 They use these things when they need them.
01:10:40.220 But I'm looking at your list.
01:10:41.180 And I think I pretty much agree.
01:10:42.520 Because you're comparing the 2020 Democratic field with the 2016 Republican field.
01:10:46.940 They're making the same kind of choices we were making.
01:10:51.520 Who are we?
01:10:53.220 So this is your list here.
01:10:54.540 And I think I agree with all of them.
01:10:55.640 Let me give you one example.
01:10:56.780 Let me try to sell you on one difference.
01:10:58.280 Okay.
01:10:58.640 So you're saying Bernie Sanders is Rand Paul.
01:11:00.960 And you kind of said more like the Paul family.
01:11:03.020 Yeah.
01:11:03.320 More like Ron Paul.
01:11:04.480 Ron Rand Paul.
01:11:04.920 Better example.
01:11:05.560 But yeah, because he really had more of a cult following.
01:11:08.840 Yes.
01:11:10.000 Elizabeth Warren, Ted Cruz.
01:11:12.240 I think that's like pretty, you know, very conservative for Cruz.
01:11:15.920 Very liberal for Warren.
01:11:17.280 Still in the Senate, in the system a little bit.
01:11:20.060 Can work the system more than a Ron Paul or a Bernie Sanders.
01:11:23.100 Yeah.
01:11:23.280 Ron Paul represented a revolution.
01:11:26.500 Bernie Sanders represents a revolution.
01:11:28.780 To Democrats, Warren represents more of an evolution.
01:11:36.100 Right.
01:11:36.740 Same place.
01:11:37.820 But you can do it without like, you know, blood in the streets, perhaps.
01:11:42.360 Right.
01:11:42.580 And the same thing with Ted Cruz.
01:11:44.440 He's just going to be able to put Ron Paul's, many of Ron Paul's things that Ron Paul supporters would really like into place.
01:11:53.380 But it'll take you to the same place just without blood in the streets and blowing the thing up.
01:11:57.860 Pete Buttigieg, you had Marco Rubio, which I'm, it's growing on me, actually, because here's the young up-and-coming politician with promise.
01:12:06.800 Yes.
01:12:07.220 Right.
01:12:07.580 That the establishment seems to like a lot of, but never really could inspire a lot of passion.
01:12:15.080 Like Rubio never really connected with Republican voters.
01:12:18.280 He was the guy on paper, you might say, is the one who should win.
01:12:22.060 He's the guy in 2008 that would have swept the nomination.
01:12:28.020 He would have swept the nomination.
01:12:29.720 And, you know, in 2016, Rubio looked for a while like the guy who had a good chance of winning.
01:12:35.140 And I think if you look at this field, I mean, Buttigieg comes from no status, right?
01:12:39.840 Like he's a, you know, a mid-city mayor where Rubio was a senator in Florida.
01:12:44.580 But generally speaking, if you looked at this field kind of on paper, you'd probably say Buttigieg is a good idea for the Democrats, right?
01:12:51.120 I mean, he's young, he's well-spoken, he's smart.
01:12:53.820 You know, there's a reason.
01:12:55.300 He's diverse.
01:12:56.060 Diverse, right?
01:12:56.740 The same thing you'd say with Rubio, right?
01:12:58.840 Yes, he's diverse.
01:12:59.740 Yeah, has all those same characteristics.
01:13:01.540 Biden is Jeb Bush.
01:13:02.980 That one's a little problematic just because Bush faded so quickly.
01:13:06.720 And Biden has led this case the whole time.
01:13:09.080 Let me explain this.
01:13:10.480 Because we had every single choice loved America.
01:13:16.480 So there was a whole bunch of them we could look at and go, okay, if that guy drops, we can just go to the next one.
01:13:22.960 So Joe Biden is, like, really the only iconic guy that stands for the old establishment and, you know, still loves his country.
01:13:37.960 Everybody else is shades of loving their country.
01:13:40.840 And they start pretty gray, you know, and then quickly descend to black.
01:13:45.360 Yeah.
01:13:45.780 Where Jeb Bush, he didn't have to fight that battle.
01:13:49.640 So you lose Jeb Bush because you're just not an establishment guy?
01:13:53.900 Because really, I don't think the Democrats are establishment people either.
01:13:58.220 I don't think they actually want Joe Biden.
01:14:01.400 He's just the best one up there that represents steady as she goes.
01:14:06.940 Yes.
01:14:07.660 And that was the idea with Bush.
01:14:09.540 The Bush administration was not remembered by Republicans as fondly as the Obama administration is for Democrats.
01:14:19.360 So there's a difference there.
01:14:20.720 And we should also point out, Jeb Bush did fade very quickly.
01:14:23.660 However, Biden might, too.
01:14:25.520 I mean, he's leading now.
01:14:26.580 But if he loses these first two states, who knows what happens?
01:14:28.800 Yeah.
01:14:28.980 So he might be gone early, too.
01:14:30.920 Klobuchar, Kasich.
01:14:31.900 I like that one a lot.
01:14:33.320 Gabbard, Carson, I think, is the right way to go.
01:14:36.360 So Andrew Yang as Carly Fiorina, I think, is a really, really good one.
01:14:42.080 Tom Steyer, Chris Christie is a little bit of a reach.
01:14:44.860 Yeah.
01:14:44.960 But I think it's as close as you can get with Steyer.
01:14:47.360 There's no Steyer.
01:14:48.260 No.
01:14:48.760 I mean, you'd have to go to some, you know, Mr. Potter from It's a Wonderful Life.
01:14:54.360 You know?
01:14:55.100 Yeah.
01:14:55.560 There's not really a good fit there.
01:14:57.100 The one I would kind of say I would like to, because you said Bloomberg was Pataki.
01:15:03.000 And again, like, Pataki was out of it immediately.
01:15:06.020 They have both New York politicians.
01:15:07.320 There's some similarities.
01:15:08.740 I know where you're going on this.
01:15:09.880 I think if there's a Trump in this race, it's Bloomberg.
01:15:13.340 And if you think about it this way, Bloomberg, obviously, they're both billionaires.
01:15:17.520 They're both businessmen.
01:15:18.660 You might think of Bloomberg as in a politician.
01:15:20.420 But remember, he was a businessman turned politician.
01:15:24.020 The only thing he's ever done in politics was the mayor of New York, which is obviously a big gig.
01:15:29.720 He breaks with party orthodoxy relatively often.
01:15:34.280 He doesn't agree with the—
01:15:35.420 On both sides.
01:15:35.860 Right.
01:15:36.320 Like, Trump was against things like free trade and things like that.
01:15:40.420 The same thing with Bloomberg, where he'll embrace business, which makes Democrats very uncomfortable.
01:15:45.080 He's a wild card.
01:15:46.500 He can get himself on television.
01:15:47.940 I mean, he owns a television network, so it's pretty easy to get on.
01:15:51.580 But, I mean, he can get himself on television.
01:15:53.120 Bloomberg, he's not near the profile of Trump, but he's also going to spend—
01:15:59.340 You know, he's already spent hundreds of millions of dollars of his own money.
01:16:03.500 He is a wild card in that no one can really predict where he's going.
01:16:11.480 He's not first.
01:16:12.500 Trump led the polls for a long time.
01:16:14.060 And I don't think Bloomberg has near the chance of winning that Donald Trump did, as far as the primary goes.
01:16:19.140 But Bloomberg is in fourth or fifth in a lot of these national polls.
01:16:25.180 And he is the guy coming in after these early states to try something that no one's ever tried before,
01:16:31.320 where Trump was running a campaign with basically no infrastructure, trying something that no one has ever tried before.
01:16:37.600 I'm not saying this means that Bloomberg is going to win the nomination, but if there's someone close to Trump on the Democratic side, I think the profile is Bloomberg.
01:16:45.140 I think the profile is closer to Bernie Sanders.
01:16:50.540 Yeah, but it was never an ideological movement with Trump.
01:16:53.060 No, no, no.
01:16:53.640 I know that.
01:16:54.340 But neither is Bernie Sanders.
01:16:57.600 He is an ideological movement, but he is also Larry David.
01:17:02.640 He also does things.
01:17:04.280 And you're like, I mean, who does that New York Times interview we just played where he's like, I don't send birthday cards.
01:17:10.020 Yeah, I don't you know, I'm not going to say happy birthday to you.
01:17:12.160 Why?
01:17:12.380 Why?
01:17:12.540 Why would I waste my time?
01:17:13.680 He's he just is raw and is perceived as honest.
01:17:19.720 I think, though, there's two ways you sound like that.
01:17:22.380 One is you are an ideologue like Sanders or he doesn't care because he know he legitimately believes in socialism and doesn't care if he doesn't sound right.
01:17:31.700 The other way is when you have a few money.
01:17:34.060 That's Trump and that's both Bloomberg.
01:17:35.880 It's not the same crap to people.
01:17:38.100 He's he's a guy who told a reporter at a party when a woman walked by that was dressed in a tight dress and he said, look at the ass on her.
01:17:46.200 He said it to a reporter in the middle of a profile is also the guy who took a a an air conditioning unit from an apartment style window and put it in his SUV.
01:18:02.780 So when it was sitting out front, his car could be really cold without burning any any fossil fuel.
01:18:12.200 Right. I could see Trump doing something like that.
01:18:13.980 I could do. I could do.
01:18:14.760 And the thing is with Trump and I think about that one other similarity, I would say, is one thing with Trump is what he did break with party orthodoxy relatively often for a candidate that won up winning the nomination for sure.
01:18:26.560 However, the things he agreed with the party on, he really agreed with them on things like the border, for example.
01:18:34.620 Look at Bloomberg. Bloomberg has been the preeminent funder of anti gun causes in the United States.
01:18:41.720 He has been the preeminent funder of of global warming causes in the entire United States.
01:18:47.320 He wouldn't burn fossil fuels in his car.
01:18:49.280 I'm not saying he's a consistent person by any means.
01:18:51.860 His personal character is totally different than those things, but he wouldn't be able to excite the base on big issues like that.
01:19:02.720 Even though he disagreed on things like taxes and business, he would be able to get a lot of Democrats on board because he would stand up and say, basically repeal the Second Amendment.
01:19:12.380 I mean, he'd be basically to that level of anti gun talk.
01:19:15.780 He'd be basically that level on global warming.
01:19:17.760 He would be the type of guy who would be like, we're doing an emergency the day I get in office.
01:19:21.780 I mean, I'm not saying he has the same chance to win, but it's the same profile.
01:19:26.460 He would be a guy, same profile in many ways, except the stardom and unpredictability is what was attractive to many on Trump.
01:19:37.220 And as you were talking about that, that is also the Achilles heel of Donald Trump.
01:19:43.780 People like stability.
01:19:45.680 Right.
01:19:45.880 And they're not sure that they can.
01:19:48.080 You know, the Democrats don't find him stable at all.
01:19:50.940 Many Republicans don't find him stable.
01:19:53.260 You just never know what's going to happen next.
01:19:55.500 And that's the one thing that if he could excite the base, maybe he doesn't.
01:20:01.620 He just is not a likable guy, though.
01:20:03.640 No, but I mean, that was a big complaint about Trump, too.
01:20:05.740 He never had high personal likability numbers.
01:20:08.040 Oh, no, he did.
01:20:08.900 No, the Trump, the that was the big complaint about Trump is that he wasn't likable.
01:20:15.400 I mean, again, like he was a TV show star.
01:20:18.240 I know he was.
01:20:19.220 But I'll say this to look at his rallies.
01:20:21.200 I tend to keep coming back to the same thing.
01:20:23.300 A lot of people are saying if they split four states, then Bloomberg has a chance to jump in.
01:20:27.380 I think the best chance for Bloomberg to win this thing, if there is one, is Sanders, Sanders, Sanders, Sanders.
01:20:34.060 If Bernie Sanders, let's say, sweeps those first four states, which isn't impossible,
01:20:39.400 then the Democratic Party is going to be with that real decision of we have no one except Michael Bloomberg and his $2 billion and or Bernie Sanders, a socialist.
01:20:49.740 We may lose with Bernie.
01:20:51.140 He's too far for me.
01:20:52.340 There's one option here.
01:20:54.240 The only one left is the guy with all the money in these super Tuesday states.
01:20:58.860 Let me just say this.
01:20:59.660 Then we have to break.
01:21:01.740 Imagine if you had Ron Paul as the candidate, the first four or five states, and then the Republican said, we got to stop this guy.
01:21:15.480 Imagine what would happen.
01:21:17.620 Imagine what would happen to the party.
01:21:19.000 Imagine what would happen if they were in, say, Milwaukee over the summer.
01:21:25.180 All right.
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01:22:35.820 You're listening to Glenn Beck.
01:22:43.140 This is the Glenn Beck program.
01:23:04.200 Next hour, I want to talk to you about a couple of things.
01:23:06.840 One is Michael Bloomberg's money.
01:23:10.500 And would you be running for president if you had his money?
01:23:13.140 I would not.
01:23:14.080 By the way, Glenn, we can now officially announce that no podcast in history has ever grown faster than Stu Does America.
01:23:21.200 It's true.
01:23:22.240 Just right now, I'm looking at it.
01:23:23.520 We are up infinity percent compared to last month.
01:23:26.780 Infinity percent.
01:23:28.100 Zero.
01:23:28.860 Never been higher.
01:23:29.640 There's no number higher than the percentage growth month to month for this podcast.
01:23:33.620 Will you keep that up for the next 18 months?
01:23:36.340 I think we can do it.
01:23:37.100 I think we can do it.
01:23:38.500 Go to StuDoesAmerica.com and subscribe on YouTube and podcasts and all that stuff.
01:23:43.160 And look, would I continue to do that if I had Bloomberg-type money?
01:23:47.260 Nope.
01:23:47.400 You don't even call to say goodbye.
01:23:48.760 Don't even call to say goodbye.
01:23:49.820 You're right.
01:23:50.540 Don't call.
01:23:52.380 Where's Stu?
01:23:53.060 You're listening to Glenn Beck.
01:24:00.020 All right.
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01:25:11.620 All right.
01:25:12.180 Welcome to the program.
01:25:14.540 We have an interesting question.
01:25:17.700 Stu's already spent a good portion of his money.
01:25:20.060 I don't think that's true.
01:25:21.600 That's crazy.
01:25:22.560 I still have about 80, 90% left.
01:25:23.580 If we have Michael Bloomberg money, $54 billion, what are you doing?
01:25:32.120 Are you going around asking for people's votes in Iowa?
01:25:35.940 I'm not.
01:25:36.840 Not even considering it.
01:25:37.540 I'm not.
01:25:39.120 Now, Stu is like, I'm just going to disappear and have a Unabomber cabin.
01:25:46.000 A nice one.
01:25:46.620 A nice cabin.
01:25:47.260 Right.
01:25:48.060 And I'll buy the Philadelphia Eagles.
01:25:50.060 Certainly.
01:25:50.740 I don't think I have a plan.
01:25:52.440 I don't, hmm.
01:26:07.980 The fusion of entertainment and enlightenment.
01:26:15.160 If you had $54 billion like Michael Bloomberg,
01:26:19.620 $54 billion.
01:26:25.140 Would you be schlepping around Iowa asking people for their votes today?
01:26:30.460 Because I don't think I would.
01:26:32.400 And Stu definitely would not.
01:26:36.340 What would you do with $54 billion?
01:26:40.200 Beside, you know, beside running for president,
01:26:43.260 which I don't think is on anyone's list except for Michael Bloomberg.
01:26:47.960 This is the Glenn Beck Program.
01:26:52.820 All right.
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01:29:28.880 So, Michael Bloomberg has $54 billion.
01:29:39.040 Now, I cannot imagine, because I've watched others go through it.
01:29:44.560 I mean, there is nothing that will talk you out of running for president faster
01:29:49.920 than following somebody around the country who's running for president.
01:29:53.360 It is a nightmare.
01:29:55.680 It's a hard life.
01:29:57.060 Oh, it's not only just a hard life of, you know, waking up in the cities you don't know where you're at
01:30:01.940 and just nonstop over and over again.
01:30:04.820 It's just so dishonest and dirty with the press and just awful.
01:30:10.360 I hated it.
01:30:11.680 Yeah.
01:30:12.140 I mean, just because you're going from city to city, but they're not like, it's not like glamorous travel, right?
01:30:17.640 Like, you're traveling back roads to little halls where you're talking to 40 people,
01:30:22.980 and you go and go and go, and you give the same speech over and over and over and over and over and over again.
01:30:29.800 If you mess up one little thing, it's all over the world.
01:30:32.920 If you do everything right, no one notices.
01:30:35.680 You know, it is really a, you know, and you're going in and out of, like, every back room,
01:30:40.280 and they've got, like, you know, three-day-old danishes, and that's what you're eating.
01:30:44.580 Yeah, there's nothing that will cure you from hotel food faster than going in the back way of hotels.
01:30:50.600 We do that all the time, and I can name the hotels that I still am comfortable eating at.
01:30:55.840 You walk through the back kitchens and the back hallways, and they are nasty, nasty.
01:31:01.820 And I will say a lot of these people are used to kind of a nice life, right?
01:31:04.480 And then they go to Iowa, and they're staying at, like, a Holiday Inn, you know?
01:31:07.780 Remember, we've stayed at a place where they had the pancake printer.
01:31:11.240 I loved that.
01:31:11.760 In the lobby, where you just pressed a button and a pancake popped out.
01:31:14.920 Screw the Four Seasons.
01:31:15.720 Oh, God.
01:31:16.240 They don't have a pancake printer.
01:31:17.720 I love that hotel.
01:31:18.660 I love that thing.
01:31:19.540 I want one of them in my house.
01:31:20.740 It was a Holiday Inn Express, if I'm not really sure.
01:31:22.160 I think it was.
01:31:23.320 And legitimately, you just pressed a button, and in, like, about 40 seconds, a pancake popped out.
01:31:28.300 It was a nice, hot, delicious pancake.
01:31:31.240 I want one in my house.
01:31:32.580 Why don't we have one on set?
01:31:33.840 No, a Holiday Inn Express.
01:31:35.280 I want one in my house.
01:31:37.120 So it's a different life from these, you know, politicians that are used to nice hotels in Washington, D.C.,
01:31:43.080 and they're traveling all over the country getting nice speeches and everything else.
01:31:46.120 That goes away for these terms.
01:31:47.260 The one thing I did notice that while you're on campaign is you do get to see America.
01:31:55.400 You know, that's the one thing that the Electoral College ensures.
01:31:59.880 These people have to go out to the farmlands.
01:32:03.240 They have to go out to places and spend a lot of time with people who would never be in their circle.
01:32:10.620 Never.
01:32:11.060 No.
01:32:11.660 And it's really good.
01:32:13.040 Do you ever see Hillary Clinton at any state fair?
01:32:17.080 Any state fair?
01:32:18.460 No.
01:32:18.940 Right.
01:32:19.600 Never.
01:32:20.440 Never.
01:32:21.020 I don't think she'd allow her private jet to fly over one.
01:32:23.240 Right.
01:32:23.740 Right.
01:32:24.420 No, people stink down there.
01:32:25.780 I know.
01:32:27.200 So it requires them, because of the Electoral College, to go into places where they would
01:32:33.680 never, ever go and really have to spend time living the life that they live.
01:32:40.860 And I think that's healthy in some ways.
01:32:42.580 Oh, I think it's definitely healthy.
01:32:44.400 Yeah.
01:32:44.520 But it's not something that if I have Michael Bloomberg money, I'm interested in participating in.
01:32:50.180 I mean, Steyer's doing this.
01:32:51.640 Now, Steyer does not have Bloomberg money.
01:32:54.100 He has a couple billion dollars.
01:32:56.240 Oh.
01:32:56.620 Which is not, you know, nothing.
01:32:57.920 Right?
01:32:58.080 I mean, it's basically poverty.
01:32:59.100 You remember when a billion dollars meant something?
01:33:01.120 It's basically poverty level.
01:33:02.180 Right.
01:33:02.400 That's what we're talking about.
01:33:03.080 Right.
01:33:03.580 For the Democrats.
01:33:04.680 Yeah.
01:33:05.000 Kind of.
01:33:05.440 Yes.
01:33:05.700 But he is, and by the way, his ad spending has taken a nosedive the last few days.
01:33:12.360 People are starting to wonder whether Steyer's decided, eh, maybe this is not going to happen.
01:33:17.420 You know, maybe my money is not going to be able to buy this election, which of course
01:33:20.840 is what conservatives have been saying forever.
01:33:23.040 That's not the way it works.
01:33:24.360 Plus, he's out, he's totally outshined by Bloomberg anyway, on that front.
01:33:28.740 So he's in, he's, he's in trouble.
01:33:30.920 But Steyer's been actually going to these early states and trying to campaign.
01:33:34.120 And that's not something, even if I have Tom Steyer money that I'm interested in.
01:33:39.080 Now, if I've got Bloomberg money, there's no way I'm doing it.
01:33:42.200 Now, Bloomberg is.
01:33:42.800 Well, one way to get Bloomberg money is to be the president of the United States.
01:33:46.980 As soon as you're president of the United States, except for Donald Trump, you watch.
01:33:52.020 Donald Trump's not going to be out making all these speeches and, you know, giving all
01:33:56.320 these, because he's not in the popular crowd.
01:34:00.380 It's true.
01:34:01.060 He'll still do well, I think.
01:34:02.340 No, he will.
01:34:02.840 And he did well before.
01:34:03.540 I mean, look, do you remember when the Obamas were like, we still have student debt?
01:34:08.880 Yeah.
01:34:09.320 And then they just bought a 11 or 15 million dollar house on Martha's Vineyard eight years
01:34:15.440 later.
01:34:15.740 That's a pretty decent eight years.
01:34:17.960 Yeah.
01:34:18.060 Netflix is like, here, take a billion dollars to make documentaries or whatever they're doing
01:34:22.560 with that.
01:34:23.020 I mean, it's so just a payment.
01:34:25.080 It is.
01:34:25.440 Right.
01:34:25.620 It's just a payment.
01:34:26.720 It is.
01:34:28.280 With Bloomberg money, though, you don't have to care about that.
01:34:30.800 You don't care what your life is like afterwards.
01:34:32.180 Your life is set.
01:34:33.220 He's got fifty to fifty four billion dollars.
01:34:36.140 He's the ninth richest man in the world already.
01:34:39.860 That's different level than even a Tom Steyer.
01:34:42.660 Right.
01:34:42.820 So what do you do?
01:34:44.960 All of a sudden you wake up and you find out that you're related to Michael Bloomberg.
01:34:48.360 He just died of, you know, SARS or whatever, that Chinese.
01:34:54.680 He's got that Chinese thing.
01:34:56.400 I don't know how the Chinese keep getting sick.
01:34:58.120 They all wear surgical masks.
01:35:00.140 How do you keep getting sick?
01:35:01.880 There's a chicken and egg issue here.
01:35:03.400 You might want to consider.
01:35:04.540 It's like you're all wearing surgical masks all the time.
01:35:08.040 The sickness may come from the surgical mask.
01:35:13.180 But anyway, you know, what do you what do you do if you are if you if if he dies, you're he's your rich uncle.
01:35:23.120 You're the only relative to Michael Bloomberg and he's left you fifty four billion dollars.
01:35:27.360 You don't even call me to say I'm not coming in.
01:35:32.100 You'd never.
01:35:32.640 I mean, you might see my face on television if I get unlucky.
01:35:35.980 Right.
01:35:36.280 Yes, you're right.
01:35:37.060 I don't even call.
01:35:38.380 Maybe maybe I have someone.
01:35:40.600 We wouldn't.
01:35:41.040 No, wait, wait, wait.
01:35:42.320 I want to amend that until you actually got the money.
01:35:46.260 You would be coming in every day and you wouldn't tell a soul.
01:35:50.960 No way.
01:35:51.560 No one would know.
01:35:53.360 Your best friends wouldn't know.
01:35:55.580 Your wife probably wouldn't know.
01:35:57.880 You would just be totally silent.
01:36:00.360 Then you'd have it once you had the money ghost.
01:36:04.220 Oh, yeah, to a lot of people.
01:36:06.640 You know, I mean, maybe I'd give a call just to kind of laugh, you know.
01:36:10.340 No, the kids would come along.
01:36:11.440 Kids would come along.
01:36:11.920 Kids would come along.
01:36:12.720 But would they be with the help now?
01:36:15.040 Well, of course, I'm going to take care of them.
01:36:16.580 It's not going to be me.
01:36:17.240 I got fifty four billion dollars.
01:36:18.440 OK, I got it.
01:36:19.220 I got it.
01:36:19.600 Yeah, I could be working anymore.
01:36:21.000 Right.
01:36:21.920 Patting them on the head.
01:36:22.880 Nice to see you guys.
01:36:23.880 Night, night.
01:36:25.000 Now, of course, my first call would not be to you or my wife or anybody else, but Jeffrey Lurie, owner of the Philadelphia Eagles.
01:36:29.960 And of course, that would be immediately purchased for any price.
01:36:33.460 So I probably out about I mean, it's valued at three billion.
01:36:36.900 He's not going to sell it to me at three billion.
01:36:38.720 Why?
01:36:39.500 Well, because I mean, that's why he could sell to anybody for three billion dollars and he's not selling it.
01:36:44.220 Right.
01:36:44.320 So I don't have to have to go through the NFL thing.
01:36:47.540 Oh, yeah, they'd certainly they would not approve.
01:36:49.900 Oh, they would.
01:36:50.480 They would hate you because you were.
01:36:52.860 Aren't you the guy who worked with Glenn Beck?
01:36:54.940 No, I've just you know what?
01:36:56.580 No, you have fifty four billion dollars.
01:36:58.580 I'll spend a billion erasing you from the planet.
01:37:01.060 So no one knows I ever knew you.
01:37:04.840 Well, yeah, what happened to my studios?
01:37:06.580 They were here yesterday.
01:37:09.900 There's a new apartment building where my radio studio was.
01:37:14.320 But yeah, I mean, so if you own something that's worth three billion dollars and you can sell it at any time, like you have nice things.
01:37:21.520 Right.
01:37:21.860 You could sell those things for whatever their market value is.
01:37:25.080 You don't do that because you're valuing that thing more than the market does.
01:37:29.200 Right.
01:37:29.960 You know, I have like if I've got how much you're willing to pay for the Philadelphia Eagles at a fifty four billion dollars.
01:37:35.900 How much are you willing to give up?
01:37:37.420 I mean, well, let's just say you're going to negotiate.
01:37:40.080 But what is what's it worth?
01:37:42.160 John Huntsman taught me this.
01:37:43.800 John Huntsman, senior never pay more.
01:37:46.560 Not than what it's worth.
01:37:47.660 Never pay more than what it's worth and what it's worth to you.
01:37:51.720 Right.
01:37:51.880 That's very important.
01:37:53.100 Right.
01:37:55.780 I think he meant that that number should always be lower.
01:38:00.800 Oh, really?
01:38:01.560 Because I think it's good.
01:38:02.360 Certain things I would value more than others.
01:38:04.360 Right.
01:38:04.580 That's what the market is.
01:38:05.480 So I would value the Philadelphia Eagles certainly more than almost anyone.
01:38:08.960 Right.
01:38:09.100 But he was talking about he was talking about business.
01:38:11.600 Remember, it's it's still business.
01:38:13.280 Like I asked him one time, when does a Gulfstream jet ever make sense economically?
01:38:20.500 And he said, oh, it never does.
01:38:22.320 Now he's like a billionaire.
01:38:23.580 Yeah.
01:38:24.000 Never does.
01:38:25.440 Then why did you get one?
01:38:26.940 Because my time with my family is more valuable than the money.
01:38:32.660 OK.
01:38:32.940 Exactly.
01:38:33.500 Right.
01:38:33.900 Right.
01:38:34.140 Like, I mean, there's never a way of, you know, a vacation is worth paying for any vacation.
01:38:40.700 It's not worth it financially.
01:38:42.420 However, you're buying an experience.
01:38:44.200 You're buying something you want.
01:38:45.160 So you're buying a two, four, six, eight billion dollar experience with the Eagles?
01:38:50.740 Well, first of all, it's going to generate lots of revenue.
01:38:53.700 However, yeah, I mean, you start getting north of 10 billion.
01:38:57.320 I start getting a little nervous, probably nervous.
01:38:59.580 You're getting a little nervous.
01:39:00.760 54 billion.
01:39:01.300 Don't tell Jeffrey Lurie this, because if I do get the 54 billion, he's going to have
01:39:04.600 a very good negotiating position.
01:39:06.780 However, like, yeah, I want it.
01:39:09.500 It's and I'll pay any price, basically.
01:39:12.540 Right.
01:39:13.020 I mean, first of all, I only need to get 51 percent of it.
01:39:15.760 So, I mean, I might even be able to maybe be able to skimp a little.
01:39:18.700 I can't think of anything that I would pay a billion dollars for.
01:39:21.820 That would mean so much to me that I mean, I would start like, for instance, I could
01:39:28.280 see myself starting a town, going out someplace, doing what Walt Disney did, what he tried
01:39:34.160 to do with Epcot and say, Nevada, I want this property and it's mine.
01:39:40.320 I can build whatever.
01:39:41.420 None of your little rules.
01:39:43.180 I'm going to build a capitalist John Galt kind of town.
01:39:49.060 That's cool.
01:39:49.780 We're going to experiment.
01:39:51.340 I could do that, but I can't think of a thing or an entity that I would want.
01:39:56.320 You wouldn't buy, you know, some Disney property that you want or.
01:40:02.520 I would never sell it to me.
01:40:03.840 And it would be much more than 54 billion dollars.
01:40:06.780 Yeah.
01:40:07.160 Well, I mean, yeah.
01:40:08.140 Maybe the Space Needle only just to spite all of the people in Seattle that are crazy
01:40:14.560 because they could never.
01:40:17.420 Right.
01:40:17.880 They could.
01:40:18.180 As long as I keep the elevator up at the top, they could never grapple up.
01:40:22.240 Yeah.
01:40:22.720 You know, so I could I'd be safe.
01:40:24.500 I would.
01:40:25.020 You know what I would do?
01:40:25.820 I'd put Crisco on the legs of the Space Needle.
01:40:29.060 So you're just basically being Rapunzel.
01:40:30.740 Is that is that your story?
01:40:31.920 Basically, but I never come down and then I electrify the roof and I electrify the little
01:40:36.640 thing that goes around the Space Needle.
01:40:38.240 So if you're trying to skydive in, you're trying to and you have to look at me all the time.
01:40:45.340 I'm in every picture you want because I have the Space Needle.
01:40:51.040 And so I'm there every time just pissing you off and maybe pissing on you from time to time.
01:40:56.860 You know, it's raining.
01:40:58.700 Really?
01:40:59.240 Is it?
01:40:59.640 Does it rain all the time in Seattle?
01:41:01.120 Or is that time back pissing on us from the Space Needle, which he just bought?
01:41:04.980 It might be that.
01:41:06.580 Find out how much that's worth.
01:41:10.120 I don't know.
01:41:10.860 American financing NMLS 182334 www.nmlsconsumeraccess.org.
01:41:16.640 I like that idea so much.
01:41:18.220 I might we should call American financing.
01:41:20.600 How much how much down do I how much down do I need to buy the Space Needle?
01:41:27.480 What kind of rate can I get on a 10 billion dollar loan?
01:41:30.060 Right now, there's no way for me to pay that back unless somehow or another I'm related to
01:41:36.060 Michael Bloomberg and his only relative and he decides to leave it to me.
01:41:39.780 And he inexplicably has SARS.
01:41:41.620 Right.
01:41:42.700 Which is a really weird thing for him to get today.
01:41:45.200 He could have it.
01:41:46.200 He could have it.
01:41:46.680 I don't even remember what SARS was.
01:41:48.200 I think it was one of those viruses that was going around China for a while.
01:41:51.140 It was like one of those things that like.
01:41:53.000 It's like 2010 maybe.
01:41:54.080 When you said when I said it, I'm like, oh, God, I hope that wasn't one of those really
01:41:57.280 bad.
01:41:58.060 It was pretty scary for, you know, it was it was like the swine flu.
01:42:01.360 Remember, for like one year, everyone's freaked it freaked out about it.
01:42:04.240 It's the flu.
01:42:05.220 And there's a new one, too, by the way, that looks, again, very scary.
01:42:08.420 Yeah, it's a flu.
01:42:09.560 It kills old people and people with regular flu kills a lot of old people.
01:42:13.420 Yeah, I know.
01:42:13.960 Sadly, this is just a, you know, souped up flu.
01:42:16.400 OK, we got it.
01:42:17.660 We got it.
01:42:18.140 You understand the I understand the concept of the flu.
01:42:21.080 I got it.
01:42:21.780 And this is a bad one.
01:42:22.820 OK, get over it.
01:42:24.140 Do you remember?
01:42:24.900 Do you remember when AIDS was first was first coming on the scene and there was a product
01:42:31.540 called the AIDS diet plan?
01:42:33.920 Oh, yeah.
01:42:34.460 They were like candy.
01:42:35.720 AYDS.
01:42:36.620 AYDS.
01:42:37.020 Yeah.
01:42:37.400 AIDS diet plan.
01:42:39.080 And I remember when you saw AIDS and everybody was losing weight and they were just they
01:42:43.420 was just a horrible death.
01:42:45.540 I just remember thinking those people in that company are just like, good God, you couldn't
01:42:50.500 have called it Butterfinger.
01:42:51.900 You couldn't cut it anything else.
01:42:52.900 Anything but AIDS?
01:42:54.760 Yeah.
01:42:55.960 And they just disappeared.
01:42:57.420 I don't.
01:42:57.820 Definitely a secondary tragedy of the virus, but it was sad.
01:43:02.180 It was sad.
01:43:02.740 Not as sad as the actual victims.
01:43:04.700 Not as the actual virus.
01:43:05.360 The virus.
01:43:05.900 That would be number one.
01:43:06.680 That would be number one.
01:43:07.480 Number two was the candy diet company.
01:43:09.580 Those two things.
01:43:11.480 Man.
01:43:11.900 Both victims.
01:43:12.600 That would have been.
01:43:13.320 See, that's my kind of investment.
01:43:15.200 That I'd be like, just before AIDS was, I'd say, billion dollars.
01:43:19.880 This AIDS diet company.
01:43:21.400 They got a bright, bright future.
01:43:23.340 Jump right in.
01:43:24.020 Jump right in.
01:43:24.940 And then the next day.
01:43:25.780 They would announce the, you know, the actual disease of the same name.
01:43:29.960 Right.
01:43:30.580 And the ink would be dry.
01:43:32.660 And I would be back to doing this.
01:43:35.160 Anyway.
01:43:37.400 American financing.
01:43:38.480 If you are looking for a new house, if you are carrying a heavier than you should be carrying burden on your shoulders of debt.
01:43:47.540 Debt tends to feed on itself, especially if it's credit card debt.
01:43:51.540 You know, even your house debt.
01:43:52.700 If you took a loan out in 2018, you can save a buttload of money right now if you refinance.
01:43:59.340 2018, when you financed your house originally.
01:44:03.160 Please look into these rates and call American financing.
01:44:07.520 American financing is a family owned and operated company.
01:44:12.040 They're salary based mortgage consultants.
01:44:13.940 They work for you and not the bank.
01:44:16.020 So call American financing at 800-906-2440.
01:44:19.160 800-906-2440.
01:44:21.320 800-906-2440.
01:44:23.400 Or Americanfinancing.net.
01:44:25.720 We pause for 10 seconds.
01:44:27.200 Station ID.
01:44:37.520 I'm going to go to Nathan in Virginia, who was at the rally yesterday.
01:44:43.440 Hello, Nathan.
01:44:44.040 Welcome to the program.
01:44:45.780 Hey, how's it going, Glenn?
01:44:46.860 Good.
01:44:47.140 Thank you so much for holding, especially through all of our nonsense.
01:44:50.640 Wow.
01:44:51.160 You know, there was a lot of blah, blah, blah, but that's fine.
01:44:53.220 Yeah.
01:44:56.200 Look, I love you guys and all that.
01:44:57.660 But listen, yesterday was nothing but a peaceful grouping of people.
01:45:01.580 Yeah, in Virginia.
01:45:03.560 Yeah.
01:45:05.040 It was great, wasn't it?
01:45:06.980 The left tried to scare us away from coming to that event, and I don't appreciate that at all.
01:45:12.800 And what Governor Northam has been doing and what he's been up to, I'm proud to see that most of the people at the event were.
01:45:22.080 Are you still listening?
01:45:22.880 Did you hang up?
01:45:23.820 No, we're still here.
01:45:24.860 I'm not listening, but we're still here.
01:45:26.340 A little insecure there.
01:45:27.420 Yeah.
01:45:27.540 Boy, a little hostile, too, Nathan.
01:45:30.120 I mean, I know we made you wait a long time.
01:45:32.900 This is the same Nathan that got in trouble for, like, we'll impeach Trump, you know.
01:45:38.400 I don't remember that.
01:45:39.620 On this show?
01:45:41.020 Yes, on that show.
01:45:41.900 Man, it happened back in the day.
01:45:43.660 You know, I remember those days.
01:45:45.080 No, I don't.
01:45:45.680 But now that you bring it up, now I'm more likely to hang up on you.
01:45:48.840 Am I supposed to be mad at you?
01:45:50.220 Am I still mad at you?
01:45:52.100 No, I actually called you and asked you to forgive me.
01:45:55.180 Oh.
01:45:55.520 I remember that call.
01:45:56.880 I remember all the good ones, yeah.
01:45:58.400 I remember that one.
01:45:59.420 That was a good one.
01:46:00.340 Anyways, look, man.
01:46:02.060 Look, I'm just saying, yesterday was a success all around.
01:46:05.900 It was.
01:46:06.440 We had the LGBTQ, XYZ, LMNOP community there.
01:46:11.760 And we talked to them, and we were civil with them, and they were civil with us, and they
01:46:15.320 had the same worry that we had.
01:46:17.100 Isn't that great?
01:46:17.620 We had the Asians.
01:46:20.020 We had blacks.
01:46:21.520 It wasn't.
01:46:22.160 There was no need.
01:46:22.640 Did you have the whites?
01:46:24.120 I'm Jewish.
01:46:25.220 Well, obviously, we had the whites.
01:46:27.160 Okay, you had the whites.
01:46:28.080 Okay, I just want to make sure you had all the colors.
01:46:30.160 Yeah, but they called them rednecks and neo-Nazis and all sorts of terrible things.
01:46:35.640 And that's not what was there, actually.
01:46:37.780 It was just a lot of Americans coming and taking maybe a holiday from work because it
01:46:43.580 was Martin Luther King Day and using it towards what we're trying to do here, and that's to
01:46:49.060 get America back to the Constitution.
01:46:50.740 Nathan, I appreciate your phone call.
01:46:52.700 I'm glad that you went out there.
01:46:53.900 Thank you for the update.
01:46:54.900 I will tell you that I was really proud of—I was proud of America.
01:46:59.400 I was proud of Virginians yesterday.
01:47:01.400 It's what I expected.
01:47:03.160 Nobody in the press expected that, but that's exactly what I expected, and it was good to
01:47:09.420 see Americans being Americans.
01:47:12.780 You even cleaned up after yourself.
01:47:15.200 People brought garbage bags.
01:47:16.800 The place, as always, was left cleaner than it was when they got there in the morning.
01:47:26.460 You're listening to Glenn Beck.
01:47:29.000 You know, it's hard enough to focus on things that you have to get done throughout the day
01:47:31.900 without having back and leg pain and feeling cramped up in your chair, for that matter.
01:47:36.560 Unfortunately, when you have the office chair that has all of the ear markings of having
01:47:40.860 come from a fire sale at Guantanamo Bay, your chances of sitting in ease and luxury are pretty
01:47:46.220 low.
01:47:47.240 That's why I suggest the X-chair.
01:47:50.820 Patented, dynamic, variable lumbar support.
01:47:54.160 You will not forget what that is once you've sat in an X-chair.
01:47:58.460 It has 10 different settings.
01:48:00.880 The X-chair—I mean, honestly, I gave one to Stephen Crowder, and he said, and he said,
01:48:05.980 this is going to take me a while to learn what I said, I know, but do learn it, because
01:48:09.680 once you learn it and you can find it, set it, he wrote to me about a week later and
01:48:13.500 said, this is fantastic.
01:48:15.520 I finally found all the settings that were right for me.
01:48:17.540 This is fantastic.
01:48:19.100 It's just a great office chair for home or work, and it's $100 off right now.
01:48:23.720 Find the chair that's right for you.
01:48:25.900 Xchairbeck.com.
01:48:27.020 That's Xchairbeck.com.
01:48:29.700 Or go to xchairbeck.com, 844-4X-CHAIR, whichever, just use the promo code BECK, and you'll receive
01:48:36.440 a free set of the new X-wheels with your chair.
01:48:38.780 It's xchairbeck.com, promo code BECK.
01:48:44.320 And you can go to blazetv.com, use the promo code GLENN for $10 off.
01:48:48.000 You can get, of course, GLENN Beck, you can get the radio show, get the TV show, get Stu
01:48:51.020 Does America, get Pac-Ray Unleashed, all part of the subscription.
01:48:54.400 For Stu, that's great.
01:48:59.700 Hey, I'd just like to start a new segment.
01:49:19.400 I don't know if we could do this every day or maybe even more than once a year, but the
01:49:23.700 new segment is, Not All People Suck.
01:49:26.980 And I think this is...
01:49:28.140 Oh, it's not more than once a year.
01:49:29.040 Obviously, so it's an annual, biannual...
01:49:31.460 It might be every, you know, we'll find one and we save it for the presidential election
01:49:37.560 years.
01:49:38.320 Okay.
01:49:38.900 Yeah, so once every four years.
01:49:40.400 Yeah, once every four years.
01:49:41.080 Just like the Olympics.
01:49:42.080 Yeah.
01:49:42.780 We've tried out a good story about people.
01:49:44.320 We've got a good story about people that make you go, you know, not everybody sucks.
01:49:48.080 Okay, so this is a story about Howard Kirby.
01:49:51.360 Now, Howard was living in Owasso, Michigan.
01:49:55.920 I don't even...
01:49:59.040 I don't even...
01:50:00.040 Okay.
01:50:00.740 Owasso.
01:50:01.380 I didn't...
01:50:01.460 Get a real name if you're a town.
01:50:03.320 Anyway, he purchased at the Habitat for Humanity Restore, he purchased a couch and an ottoman.
01:50:10.900 And he brought it home and it was just for his man cave and he was sitting in it and he
01:50:14.160 was like really uncomfortable.
01:50:15.240 uncomfortable and he was, you know, saying, geez, man, this, this is, the ottoman is just
01:50:20.780 really uncomfortable.
01:50:21.860 It doesn't feel at all like the, like the couch.
01:50:24.600 And so his daughter says, let me, let me look at it.
01:50:27.500 And so she found a zipper on it and she unzipped it.
01:50:31.020 And inside, uh, they discovered stacks of hundred dollar bills.
01:50:37.000 Okay.
01:50:37.780 Nice.
01:50:38.280 Now it's not Michael Bloomberg money, but it's sweet money.
01:50:41.320 Okay.
01:50:41.600 Okay.
01:50:42.180 Now I want to, I want to ask, remember the name of this is not all people suck, but we
01:50:47.380 know that most do.
01:50:49.120 Okay.
01:50:50.120 So the first stop on the most do train is if you found, uh, $43,170 in a couch, you just
01:51:03.980 bought possession, nine tenths of the law.
01:51:07.520 This was a, you didn't steal it.
01:51:09.080 You didn't steal it.
01:51:09.940 They sold it to you.
01:51:10.780 It was in there.
01:51:11.620 It didn't belong to Habitat for Humanity.
01:51:14.200 They had it.
01:51:15.180 They supposedly went over it, you know, make sure it was good.
01:51:18.480 And they sold it to me.
01:51:19.740 What do you do with the $43,000?
01:51:22.240 What is the thing that you do?
01:51:24.240 What's my public position?
01:51:25.620 Is that what you're asking?
01:51:26.680 No, it's your real position.
01:51:28.080 Um, I mean, I think I would be tempted.
01:51:31.460 Oh, I'll be so tempted, but I wouldn't do it.
01:51:33.400 Pocket the $43,000, but I think I probably get tempted and then eventually make a call
01:51:37.920 to the place I bought it and say, Hey, Oh, see, I would be tempted to pocket the
01:51:41.900 $43,000, but then I'd know I'd blow it all quickly.
01:51:45.500 So I would actually make the call and, and, uh, set up a time to bring it to the bank.
01:51:51.200 I would do exactly the same thing.
01:51:54.820 I think I would, I would, I would be really tempted, but I couldn't live with myself.
01:51:58.820 And it would be, it would be almost blood money.
01:52:01.660 It'd be couch money.
01:52:03.220 Cause yeah, you'd wonder what the story was.
01:52:05.080 I will say I would definitely exploit it for the most attention and positive.
01:52:10.620 Oh my gosh.
01:52:10.920 Yeah.
01:52:11.120 I would be like, I am, I'm a great person.
01:52:13.860 I'm just basically a great person.
01:52:15.320 I am tiny Tim here.
01:52:17.000 Uh, I want everybody to look at, look at me, look at me, look at me.
01:52:19.940 That would be tiny Tim.
01:52:20.780 I would change my license plate to look at me.
01:52:22.940 Yeah.
01:52:23.340 After doing this, cause I'd want everyone to know what a great person I was and I would
01:52:27.320 do it just for personal gain.
01:52:29.480 And at the end of the day, I might as well just keep the money.
01:52:31.500 I might just have my personal campaign would be who's better than me.
01:52:35.000 And my license plate would just read.
01:52:36.880 Not you.
01:52:37.560 Not you.
01:52:38.260 Okay.
01:52:38.740 So anyway, so he's biblical, right?
01:52:42.860 Yeah.
01:52:43.120 Of course it is.
01:52:43.980 Of course it is.
01:52:44.460 It's in the Bible someplace.
01:52:45.500 It's all in the Bible.
01:52:46.260 We're still in Bible country.
01:52:48.080 Uh, so, uh, uh, so Kirby buys this place, you know, buys his couch.
01:52:52.960 From this, you know, secondhand Habitat for Humanity thing.
01:52:56.560 And, uh, you know, the guys that are working there, they're getting rich.
01:53:00.820 He calls up and says, Hey, you know, that couch you sold me.
01:53:04.480 Yes.
01:53:05.640 I found $43,000 in the couch.
01:53:11.660 Now you're working at the Habitat for Humanity place.
01:53:16.660 And you know that most people suck and you don't really see a future.
01:53:21.920 You know, you're working, selling used couches.
01:53:25.260 Yeah.
01:53:26.280 What do, second question.
01:53:28.240 What do you do when somebody calls and says, Hey, I have this $43,000.
01:53:33.220 Right.
01:53:33.780 Do you know who it belongs to?
01:53:35.960 Cause you're, you're opening up my mind to a lot of possibilities.
01:53:38.680 Yeah.
01:53:38.880 My answer is yes.
01:53:39.860 I do know who it belongs to.
01:53:41.720 Yes.
01:53:41.960 Just bring it to me.
01:53:42.940 Just bring it to me and I'll take care of it.
01:53:44.160 I will deliver it to the person, which, because I am only saying that because I know you're
01:53:50.500 going to start a campaign of who's better than me and your license plate is going to be not
01:53:53.460 you.
01:53:53.920 Right.
01:53:54.280 So there's also, and we should explore this a little bit too.
01:53:57.080 There's the thought that you call up the Habitat for Humanity and you say, Hey, I found
01:54:01.680 an Ottoman with $36,400 in it.
01:54:05.620 So Kirby passes two tests for people that don't suck.
01:54:08.960 Cause he could easily have just said a lower number.
01:54:10.700 Yeah.
01:54:10.980 Although we could say there could have been a 50K in there and he was only saying 41.
01:54:14.700 So we don't know for sure.
01:54:15.500 So he might suck a little bit.
01:54:16.880 Maybe.
01:54:17.180 He might suck.
01:54:17.520 But still overall, pretty good guy.
01:54:18.880 Pretty good guy.
01:54:19.520 And then the Habitat for Humanity person, I guess if you're working at Habitat for Humanity,
01:54:24.420 you're probably more likely to be a good person.
01:54:26.920 Either that or you're a washed out wino, you know, and then Habitat for Humanity is like,
01:54:31.160 we got to have somebody.
01:54:32.760 I mean, we're at 3.9% unemployment rate.
01:54:34.960 Who do we get?
01:54:35.620 Right.
01:54:36.020 And some guy's like, I like your couches.
01:54:38.740 And you're like, you want to work here?
01:54:40.700 Right.
01:54:41.220 Okay.
01:54:41.680 Okay.
01:54:42.140 So the Habitat for Humanity person could have easily said though, I know who it is.
01:54:46.380 Bring it in.
01:54:47.340 We'll get it to them.
01:54:48.640 You're a really good person.
01:54:49.480 You know what?
01:54:49.840 Keep $100 because you're such a good person.
01:54:52.280 And then you keep the money.
01:54:53.520 Right.
01:54:53.560 Then you keep it.
01:54:54.120 But he didn't do that either.
01:54:56.080 He actually knew who sold them the couch.
01:54:59.140 So he called her.
01:55:00.440 And he said, was there anything in that couch of yours?
01:55:07.400 Now, somebody calls me.
01:55:09.440 I think maybe there's a, I don't know, a dead heroin addict that, you know, was stuffed into
01:55:16.540 the couch that I didn't know of or, you know, there's SARS, which just killed Michael Bloomberg
01:55:22.480 apparently.
01:55:23.560 And he left all of his money to some radio guy.
01:55:27.360 So I don't, you know, I'm thinking, wow, what's, what's wrong?
01:55:30.860 I should train myself to think money might be in that couch.
01:55:34.660 So the answer is money.
01:55:36.540 That's what you should say.
01:55:37.680 Anybody says, hey, you know that chair or that couch or that picture frame that you sold
01:55:42.600 me?
01:55:43.200 Yeah.
01:55:43.500 Yeah.
01:55:44.340 Did you, what do you know about that?
01:55:46.680 I made a huge mistake.
01:55:48.180 It was worth a lot of money.
01:55:50.060 It was given to me by my great, great, great grandmother.
01:55:52.840 So glad you called.
01:55:53.480 I've been panicked.
01:55:54.200 So glad I've been panicked.
01:55:55.140 Why?
01:55:55.360 What did you find?
01:55:57.040 I think that's the right way.
01:55:57.940 It's like, it's like Ghostbusters.
01:55:59.780 If, if someone asks, if you're a God, you say yes.
01:56:02.060 Yes.
01:56:02.420 Right.
01:56:02.760 Yes.
01:56:03.420 That's what you do.
01:56:04.060 It's exactly right.
01:56:05.500 It's exactly right.
01:56:06.420 So let's just keep that in case some, in case anybody finds money or the declaration
01:56:11.280 of independence, it's behind something that you sold at a garage sale.
01:56:15.120 Just, they call and say, hey, what did you know about that?
01:56:18.100 You say, oh my gosh, did you find it?
01:56:20.500 Please tell me it's still all there.
01:56:22.320 That's how you answer that question.
01:56:24.140 Oh, thank God.
01:56:25.240 Please tell me it's all still there.
01:56:26.740 Yes.
01:56:27.260 Okay.
01:56:27.560 That's the right answer.
01:56:28.180 Oh, I'm so glad.
01:56:30.120 Oh, I don't want to tell you.
01:56:31.040 Wait, wait.
01:56:31.440 Because if they say, well, what is it?
01:56:33.100 Oh, wait, if you didn't find it, I don't think we should talk about it, but I do need it back.
01:56:37.040 Right.
01:56:37.340 I desperately need it back.
01:56:38.340 So it's easy to do that.
01:56:39.480 So this woman didn't do that when they call her.
01:56:42.980 Now she's the third person.
01:56:45.380 And she's like, well, that was my father's couch.
01:56:48.340 Uh, and I just sold it and I gave it to Habitat for Humanity.
01:56:56.200 She didn't say it was hers.
01:56:57.740 So all the way down the line, you go, well, that guy's dead.
01:57:01.540 So I guess that money's mine.
01:57:03.500 None of them did that.
01:57:04.880 They returned the $43,000 to the original woman.
01:57:08.960 It was her father's.
01:57:10.560 He apparently was like, I don't trust the banks, which I agree with.
01:57:14.780 But I tell my children where the money is before I kick it.
01:57:21.420 And, uh, and so apparently he put his, all of his money, uh, into the, into the couch.
01:57:27.460 Either that, or this story has a really bad ending that he was some like mob guy and he
01:57:33.120 was keeping drug money in the couch.
01:57:34.940 But let's not go there.
01:57:36.060 But again, this title is not everyone doesn't suck.
01:57:38.500 It's that some people don't suck.
01:57:40.360 So it still would work.
01:57:41.440 Though I think there's a, there's an opportunity here.
01:57:43.320 First of all, if you're the daughter and you've donated this to Habitat for Humanity,
01:57:49.080 isn't the right thing to do to donate the money to Habitat for Humanity?
01:57:52.960 And isn't it Habitat Humanity for Humanity's, uh, position, you know what?
01:57:58.000 We sold it and Hey, you, you got it.
01:58:02.660 And if we told you comes as is and as is had $43,000 in it.
01:58:08.780 And, you know, we wouldn't have helped you if you found, you know, SARS in it with a dead
01:58:14.920 junkie.
01:58:15.540 Yeah.
01:58:16.360 So, well, I think, so I guess it's yours.
01:58:19.860 The way, the way along with the dead junkie, what happens to the money though?
01:58:22.320 Cause the way this should end is they split it three ways, right?
01:58:25.380 That's the way this should end.
01:58:26.520 Where like the guy who tuned it in gets a nice reward Habitat for Humanity gets a donation
01:58:31.240 and the person who didn't even know she had the money gets a big chunk of extra money.
01:58:35.160 That's exactly what Solomon would say to those three.
01:58:39.560 Let's cut.
01:58:40.520 Cut the baby.
01:58:41.020 Let's cut the baby in thirds.
01:58:42.640 You each take a third.
01:58:43.980 Right.
01:58:44.160 And that's when somebody like me says, Solomon, no, no, no, guys, the right thing to do is
01:58:52.200 give the money to me, the fourth person, the fourth person wasn't even involved.
01:58:58.020 No, no, it was my money originally.
01:59:02.620 And your dad stole it from me.
01:59:05.000 Exactly right.
01:59:06.060 He was a bastard.
01:59:07.120 He was a bad, bad man.
01:59:09.640 And I'm going to spend half of the money advertising what a horrible person.
01:59:12.840 Well, this is depending on if you count me or not, this is three out of four or three
01:59:17.360 out of five people aren't all bad.
01:59:20.460 All right.
01:59:21.080 Having a really good time.
01:59:23.060 Having a good.
01:59:26.540 Can I start this over?
01:59:28.300 Sure.
01:59:29.940 If 2020, one of your goals is to stay alive, not have your house, you know, broken into,
01:59:36.500 burned down, not have, you know, some sort of carbon monoxide back up in your house and
01:59:41.920 you're like, don't know it.
01:59:42.960 So you sleep the sleep of death.
01:59:45.880 Any of those on your to do list, you might want to consider simply safe and you own the
01:59:51.920 system and it's 50 cents.
01:59:53.400 How much is not sleep in the sleep of death worth to you?
01:59:56.860 50 cents a day?
01:59:57.920 At least.
01:59:58.540 Is it too much?
01:59:59.400 Is it too much to ask?
02:00:00.600 Not to mention, I need to protect all of my Ottomans.
02:00:03.140 Right.
02:00:03.660 You don't know what's in those Ottomans.
02:00:05.100 The world was billions of dollars.
02:00:06.500 Billions of dollars.
02:00:07.060 I am knifing all of my Ottomans.
02:00:09.520 All right.
02:00:10.160 Look, you really need to protect your home, your family.
02:00:14.240 And the best way to do it is is with simply safe.
02:00:18.180 Fifteen dollars a month.
02:00:19.220 It's like 50 cents a day.
02:00:20.800 Just go to simply safe back dot com.
02:00:22.620 Except.
02:00:23.240 See, this is where they get you.
02:00:24.260 Except in February.
02:00:26.140 And it's not 50 cents a day.
02:00:28.720 Wow.
02:00:29.280 Because it's not 30 days.
02:00:30.740 OK.
02:00:31.700 They're not even going to reveal that.
02:00:33.180 They're not even going to reveal that.
02:00:34.320 This is truth in advertising?
02:00:35.680 I think not.
02:00:37.580 SimplySafeBeck.com.
02:00:38.600 Go get a free Simply Safe security camera.
02:00:41.160 Can you tell how I'm excited my wife is coming home?
02:00:43.200 I can.
02:00:43.640 Mainly just to take the burden of those damn children off my...
02:00:47.680 It's like an albatross.
02:00:49.360 I feel like the ancient mariner with children hanging off my neck.
02:00:53.700 Anyway, SimplySafeBeck.com.
02:00:57.200 Normally $100.
02:00:58.280 You'll get their free security camera.
02:01:01.020 Free.
02:01:01.540 Free at SimplySafeBeck.com.
02:01:03.860 Go there now.
02:01:04.300 SimplySafeBeck.com.
02:01:07.120 You're listening to Glenn Beck.
02:01:09.900 I have another good story for you.
02:01:37.720 Do you like another good story?
02:01:38.540 You have two positive stories in the same day.
02:01:41.000 I do.
02:01:41.280 I do.
02:01:41.740 I do.
02:01:42.140 This is fascinating.
02:01:43.060 I'm skipping over the laziest states in America.
02:01:47.660 Are you skipping over the 45-year-old man caught with child pornography and said he identifies as an 8-year-old girl?
02:01:53.200 Only because I want to hit that one tomorrow.
02:01:54.860 That one's worth a lot of discussion.
02:01:56.360 Yes, it is.
02:01:56.960 And I am skipping man high on meth fights off 15 police officers while masturbating.
02:02:03.540 That's a double tasker.
02:02:07.060 You're multitasking in a serious way.
02:02:10.200 I don't want that skill, but that's a skill.
02:02:12.700 That is a skill.
02:02:13.420 That's a skill.
02:02:13.960 That's an accomplishment.
02:02:14.380 It's like, you know, I don't know, at least circus-level performance of some sort.
02:02:20.840 It seemed like a good pre-workout as well.
02:02:23.000 Yeah.
02:02:23.040 I don't.
02:02:23.700 Yeah.
02:02:24.520 Oh, yeah.
02:02:25.160 It's the meth thing, so it's really not a skill.
02:02:27.860 He's probably not as good at that.
02:02:30.720 You think he just naturally was going around beating up 15 people while masturbating?
02:02:34.540 I read that and I didn't think about it.
02:02:35.720 Yeah, well, it could be.
02:02:36.440 I mean, we learned people suck.
02:02:39.740 All right.
02:02:40.620 Here's a good story.
02:02:42.740 104-year-old Marine Corps veteran, 104.
02:02:46.600 He served in World War II, injured at the Battle of Iwo Jima.
02:02:52.800 He lives in California now, and he has a lifetime of scrapbooks.
02:02:59.900 He's kept all kinds of stuff.
02:03:01.800 He's 104.
02:03:03.380 He says, I save everything.
02:03:04.580 I'm saving little things that have come up until right now as a personal part of my history.
02:03:09.780 His mementos include a Purple Heart for surviving Iwo Jima.
02:03:16.100 Gee, and that's it.
02:03:17.260 That's all they, huh.
02:03:19.200 So the rest of his mementos must suck because he's got one that's mentioned in there.
02:03:25.180 Here's what he wants.
02:03:26.180 He's 104 years old.
02:03:28.020 He wants Valentine's Day cards.
02:03:30.400 And so he wants to receive a bunch of Valentine's Day cards.
02:03:37.020 So I think, I mean, when I say we, it's like the royal we.
02:03:41.240 I'm not going to do it, but I think we should do this.
02:03:44.460 Okay.
02:03:45.860 Operation Valentine.
02:03:48.100 Operation Valentine.
02:03:49.060 Valentine, just attention, Major Bill White, The Oaks at Inglewood, 6725 Inglewood Avenue, Stockton, California, 95207.
02:04:03.540 I think that's great.
02:04:05.200 That's cool.
02:04:05.800 I like that.
02:04:06.200 I love to see that guy just, well, not covered in Valentine's because he would probably die.
02:04:12.520 He's 100, he'll be 105.
02:04:14.680 I mean, is this one of those, because you would think in a big moment like this and you have this last sort of request as you're getting older, you want to, you might go Christmas, you might go Easter, you might go, Valentine's Day, is it just because it's the closest one?
02:04:30.400 Maybe.
02:04:30.920 You know, you're just like, okay, I want to get a bunch of cards and Valentine's Day is around the corner.
02:04:34.380 And I may be gone by, you know, Easter.
02:04:36.060 Who knows, you're 105 years old?
02:04:37.340 Yeah, 105.
02:04:38.800 Maybe, maybe.
02:04:39.780 Either that or Valentine's Day, you know, you're 105.
02:04:42.520 I'm guessing that, you know, you haven't had a sweetheart send you something for at least 10 years.
02:04:51.460 Let's say, you know, most people, you know, 95, that's a, so at least 10 years.
02:04:55.940 Could be dating younger, you know?
02:04:59.580 Maybe a 30-year-old sweetheart.
02:05:03.260 I mean, love is, you know, age is a number.
02:05:05.200 Doesn't sound like he has a lot of money, and love does transcend all, except being poor, I think.
02:05:19.460 Poor people can't fall in love.
02:05:21.100 No, poor people can fall in love, but 105-year-old men don't necessarily attract a lot of 30-year-old women.
02:05:30.940 Unless they happen to be like the...
02:05:32.980 Very wealthy.
02:05:33.880 What was the woman who had the reality show?
02:05:36.980 She was in Playboy, Blonde, and a Nicole Smith.
02:05:39.680 Yeah.
02:05:40.060 Right?
02:05:40.300 That situation.
02:05:41.220 Exactly right.
02:05:41.800 Like, maybe if you're 105 and you're that guy.
02:05:43.900 If you're that guy, then you might have somebody, like, that's like, hey, I don't even know if he's going to make it to Valentine's Day.
02:05:50.020 So, there's not a lot of work I put out.
02:05:51.840 It's possible.
02:05:52.560 It's possible.
02:05:52.980 He's asleep by 2.30 in the afternoon, and he gets up at noon.
02:05:56.400 Mm-hmm.
02:05:56.640 Which sounds fantastic.
02:05:59.780 All right.
02:06:00.120 I put a video on.
02:06:01.580 I just made a video of me, you know, from, like, when I was growing up, and he sat there and talked to the TV for an hour and a half.
02:06:08.720 He thought it was me sitting there.
02:06:10.340 I don't even have to show up for this.
02:06:11.780 He just sucked some of the sweetness out of the story.
02:06:15.380 A little bit.
02:06:16.600 A little bit.
02:06:17.300 A little bit.
02:06:17.900 In the presentation.
02:06:18.680 I don't know if it was detectable to the audience.
02:06:20.180 I think this is really cool.
02:06:21.260 Get your kids to do this.
02:06:22.100 Operation Valentine will post the website.
02:06:24.980 I'll just tweet it out.
02:06:27.260 Major Bill White, Oaks at Inglewood, 6725, Inglewood, Stockton, California.
02:06:32.780 Back.
02:06:33.400 Back.