Unity Expected? | Guests: Eric Bolling & Jon Miller | 2⧸5⧸19
Episode Stats
Length
2 hours and 2 minutes
Words per Minute
162.1056
Summary
On this episode of the Glenn Beck Show, host Glenn Beck is in attendance at the State of the Union in Washington, D.C. and tells the story of the fight club in Congress, which took place on February 5th, 1849.
Transcript
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You know, I'm here in Washington. Well, I'll explain in a minute. I'm here because
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The fusion of entertainment and enlightenment. This is the Glenn Beck Program.
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Today is a kind of a special anniversary. I am from our studios in Washington, D.C., where
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tonight the State of the Union happens. I'm actually going to be in attendance, and I'll
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tell you why. Because today is a very special anniversary. Today, the Fight Club in Congress
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happened in the 1850s. And it involved the swinging of the ceremonial mace and the ripping
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off of toupees. It's the greatest story in American history when it comes to slimy politicians.
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It was late on February 5th and Congress was in session. They were working on the Kansas
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territory pro-slavery constitution. And things were heating up. Now, remember, just a few years
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ago, there had already been a beatdown in the Senate when a senator stood up and said,
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the South is sleeping with a harlot. They are sleeping with a whore of slavery. Well, that upset
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a congressman who heard about that. Somebody, somebody was saying this about the South. How
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dare you, sir, say these things about the glory of the South? And so he crossed chambers and came in
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and he beat the man almost to death. Okay. It was, it was, it was quite a, it was quite a show.
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Nobody stopped him. He took his cane and he beat him in the head until he was almost dead. The only
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thing that saved him was that little Jimmy Stewart senator desk that he, that they all sit behind
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and he crawled underneath it and it couldn't be moved. And that was stopping, uh, the blows to the
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head. He was out for about three years and never really truly recovered, but he had to go out, uh,
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and, uh, convalesce for about three years. What's amazing about this story is no one in
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the Senate asked for the perpetrator to be arrested. And in fact, the Democrats took pieces
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of that cane and they made little teeny canes out of the wood and some out of silver. And they put them
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on chains that they wore around their neck that basically said, you come after the South, you come
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after to slavery and we'll beat you to death. They were proud of it. All right. So four years later,
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they're in session and now they're talking about slavery again. And, uh, the, uh, the South and the
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Southern Democrats were, were pushing slavery onto Kansas and things started to boil over. More than 30
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members started joining in on what became a melee. It was about two o'clock in the morning
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and they started insulting each other. And then somebody threw a punch at one and then the other
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threw it back and it became this melee. And this is the, this is my favorite. First of all, the Sergeant
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of Arms, you know, the guy who comes in, Mr. Speaker, I hate this. The president of the United States.
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He has a mace and I don't even know, Stu, does he carry the mace around? He doesn't do that. I don't know
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the answer to that. No. Well, you would recognize it. It's this, do you know what it is? Have you ever
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seen it? No. Okay. This is a tradition comes from the 1800s, like 1840. They decided to go all regal on
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us. And, uh, and so they made this mace and it's, it's 13 wooden rods. And then I think in silver,
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silver, it's bound together like, um, uh, fascis. Uh, and so it's, it's bound together
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with silver. Then it has a globe on the top and a giant silver Eagle. And so it's, he carries
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this around like, I can hit you with this at any time. And I can also have you arrested
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because I've got this big stick thing. So the Sergeant of Arms, he grabbed the mace in this
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melee and he started swinging the mace. Uh, you're not really actually supposed to swing
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it. And he was swinging the mace. Somebody else, they were, they were punching each other,
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about 30 of them punching each other. One guy, this is my favorite. I would love to see
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this recreated a, um, a guy named Cadwaller Washburn. Uh, it's a solid name right there.
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Cadwaller Washburn. Yeah. I'm Cadwaller Washburn. Uh, he was a northerner. He was a Republican
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or, uh, uh, yeah, I think he was a Republican. Yeah. Wisconsin Republican called, uh, Cadwater,
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Cadwaller Washburn. He grabs one of the Democrats. He was a Democrat from Mississippi. His name
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was William Barksdale and he grabs him and grabs his hair piece and rips it off. This is one of the
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most satisfying moments I can possibly imagine. Imagine somebody in Washington DC, they're having
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a brawl and a famous politician with, which had to be an infamous hair piece. Somebody reaches and
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rips it off his head and he's bald. How satisfying would that be? Needs to happen at more, more get
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togethers in Washington. It does. It needs to happen tonight. It needs to happen tonight. I'm going to be
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up in the balcony and I'm going to be going, Cadwaller Washburn. Uh, anyway, now here's what made me
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think of, uh, what I thought of when I read this. Stu, do you remember when George, our agent,
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uh, went through a period of his life where he thought he should have a toupee? I don't know.
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I don't remember this. You don't remember this? No. Really? No. Wow. Okay. So George, so, you know,
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George, he's, he's bald as a cue ball. He's just got the hair right around the strip. Okay. He's
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been bald since like 1971 and everybody knows that he's bald. He comes into the office one day
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and, uh, he, he goes into all the management and I'm on the air and somebody comes into the office
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and says, do not say anything. George is wearing a toupee. And I'm like, what? George is wearing a
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toupee. Well, maybe he's wearing it as a joke. No, he's not. We called. He's, he's, he's wearing a
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toupee. We called. Okay. So like a central information source of some, yeah, some sort. Yeah. So yeah. Is this a,
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is this a joke toupee? So he, he wears the toupee and I'm sitting in this meeting and I'm like, I
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can't, I mean, I just, I have to say something, but I don't, I don't just in case it's a joke.
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Well, about 10 days go by and no one has said anything about this. And, uh, and I said before
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he was coming in, I said, uh, we, we have to tell him about the toupee cause it's ridiculous and he's
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serious. And, uh, so there was like, no, no, I'm not going to say anything. I said, I will. So he
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sits down in my office and I said, George, I got to talk to you about the hair piece. He said, what?
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I said the hair. What are you talking about? George, you've been bald, completely bald until last
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Friday. You, I mean, we all have noticed what, what do you, what do you think? I think it looks
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ridiculous. Why, why are you doing this? And he said, well, thank you for saying something. You
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know, nobody would say anything to me. And I, I, it was just a joke. It was just a joke. And I could
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tell that it wasn't. And it was him just going through a time in his life. I mean, guys, women
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don't understand what, what hair losing your hair does to you. It freaks you out.
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And apparently all the way up until you're in your seventies, it continues to freak you
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out. So he took the hair piece off. But anyway, I brought that story up because I thought you
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remembered. He looked ridiculous in it. And that was in like 2010 when hair pieces were
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good. What did hair pieces look like in 1850? Yeah. That's like you slaughter a beaver on
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the way into the Capitol and you just throw it on your head. That's, that's about as good
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as it could possibly be. Yeah. That'd be like a coonskin calf. I mean, what did that look
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like? Could you imagine how ridiculous somebody looked in one of those back then? I think that's
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bad. Think of how it smelled. I mean, nothing could have smelled good in that era. Imagine
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a, I mean, either a dead animal or a bunch of other humans hair kind of just worn on a sweaty
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head with no air conditioning. Oh, I hate to, I hate to bring this up. I hate to bring this
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up. But, uh, do you know that in medieval times urine was a prized possession? Urine was
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collected. Uh, and, and, and I hate to even, I mean, but it's true. They used to think that
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it had purifying properties. And so they would wash their hair in it and they would like brush
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their teeth. If they brush their teeth with it. Is this true? It's honest to God. True. No,
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it's honest to God. True. Shockingly. The life expectancy was like 32, uh, which no, that
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was old age. Okay. That was old age. I, you know what? You can say what you want. You can
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say how horribly oppressed you are and all these things. You ain't brushing your teeth
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and washing your hair in urine, man. Be happy. Be happy. I think that's, I think that's how
00:13:41.560
Trump starts the state of the union today. Hey, look, there's some things you don't like,
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but you're not brushing your hair and brushing your teeth and washing your hair in urine. So
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be happy. All right. Good night. That's the state of the union. It's pretty strong. Thanks.
00:13:52.720
Good night. Good night, everybody. I think that's exactly right. We'll get to what you should
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watch for, uh, tonight in the state of union. What we think is going to happen coming up in
00:14:03.020
just a second. Also Ben Sass on his, uh, uh, is banning of infanticide. An incredible story.
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What an extremist he is. I can't believe he's asking to ban it completely. I mean, no options
00:14:17.680
for infanticide, not even one. You have, you have the baby. You can't let it die or kill it. Come on.
00:14:23.980
Not even in an extreme circumstance. You're late for an appointment. Uh, okay. Jesus. Thanks a lot
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Welcome to the, welcome to the program. I'm so glad that you're here today. Uh, still we go to
00:16:25.360
state of the union or do we, uh, do we pivot? You know, let's, let's hang off on the, on the abortion
00:16:32.000
thing. Uh, cause it's just, it's a, it's amazing and deserves a time on its own. Uh, tonight, uh,
00:16:40.780
I'm going to be at the state of the union. This is a bizarre development. How did this happen?
00:16:48.460
So, uh, Thomas Massey called me, uh, on Thursday, I think. And, you know, he was like, Glenn, I've gone
00:16:54.520
through the phone book. I've gone through my Rolodex. No one will come. No one will come. And I was
00:17:00.600
like, okay. And he's like, I have to know right away if you'd want to come. And, and, and, and,
00:17:07.120
and it sounded sad. I got a phone message from him and it sounded sad. He was like, I'm going to be
00:17:11.060
the only one without a guest. And because every, but there's only like 50 people that want to go
00:17:16.300
and they all got to those people before I did. Uh, and, uh, and so I, so you're really in demand here.
00:17:24.600
You're, uh, yeah, no, I, oh no, I'm the last. I'm the, I, I, this was honest to God. This was Thomas
00:17:30.800
Massey going, who else could we call? Somebody said Glenn Beck. Oh no. Like, no, I'm looking for
00:17:36.680
somebody who is like, you know, important or interesting or something. I have to have dinner
00:17:44.220
with him. Not, not Glenn Beck. Who else? Uh, Charlie Manson was not allowed to leave. And so they, uh,
00:17:51.900
they, they got down to my phone number and I, and I said, yes, surprisingly, I've turned this down
00:17:57.420
for 15 years in a row. Uh, and, uh, I said this, yes, this year, because I'm really not sure how many
00:18:05.100
more of these we're going to have. The state, like the state of the union speech overall. I mean,
00:18:10.340
it doesn't seem like, I mean, I would love, as you know, I would love for this to go away. I hate it.
00:18:15.900
I've hated it since birth. Uh, you know, it used to be a letter. It should go back to being a letter.
00:18:20.540
Uh, but I don't know. I mean, I hate it. These guys love the audience. I don't think it's ever
00:18:25.600
going away. Yeah. Well, I, I really despise it because, uh, I mean, who was it that started it?
00:18:32.940
Well, Woodrow Wilson brought it, brought it back. He wasn't the first person who ever did a speech,
00:18:37.060
but he was the guy who made it into this annual event. Exactly right. You could deliver it as a
00:18:43.020
speech, but it's asked for as a letter from time to time. Not even every year. And the reason,
00:18:48.080
right. And the reason why it was from time to time was because Congress was only supposed to meet
00:18:53.760
in the summer. That was it. They all had jobs. I don't know if they were all teaching school or
00:18:58.740
something, but they could take the summers off and they all came to Washington. And that's the only
00:19:04.660
time they were supposed to meet. They were supposed to be like three months out of the year.
00:19:08.060
And the, and the Capitol, I hate this city so much. I hate, I used to love this city. This city
00:19:14.600
is, is nothing but skyscrapers all around it with all of this industry, everybody who's got their
00:19:23.540
handout for the taxpayer money. And I just despise it. It's the only place when we hit in, in 08,
00:19:30.960
the only place that had skyscrapers in the sky that were building buildings still were in Texas
00:19:37.680
and in Washington DC. And for the opposite reasons, one was actually creating jobs. The other one was
00:19:45.700
just getting fat off of taxes. And I, I just despise it. I just despise it. But you were supposed to meet
00:19:53.060
in this swamp from time to time. So the president could go, Oh yeah, by the way, uh, this is what I've
00:19:58.940
been doing lately. Uh, and, uh, I've been traveling around. I've been hearing people
00:20:02.660
and they don't really like you guys. So I suggest you do this. That's what it was supposed to be.
00:20:10.640
Yeah. Cause they didn't know. I mean, back in those days, people had no idea what the president
00:20:14.740
was trying to accomplish and, uh, what he thought was important. And at that time,
00:20:19.060
it probably made sense. However, they still did it as a letter. I mean, there's, there's a,
00:20:23.880
there's a good argument to have the priorities of the president and in a formal, uh, you know,
00:20:30.300
written way so that people can kind of like look at it back in history and try to, you know,
00:20:35.560
see what the priorities were at the time and the arguments. That's all valuable. But now,
00:20:40.900
I mean, the speech thing is just, it's just, it's all pomp. It's all circumstance. It's all just this,
00:20:46.300
you know, this ridiculous thing that I expect from another country and not us, you know,
00:20:51.660
everyone's fake clapping and everything. Oh yeah. It's just like royalty. It's, it's ridiculous.
00:20:55.980
Yeah, it is. It really is a really terrible tradition. It's a, it's just who, I mean,
00:21:01.000
it was terrible. Obama did it. It's terrible when every president does it. It's, it's got nothing
00:21:04.840
to do with who the president is. It's just got to do with, we were a country that was created to
00:21:10.000
fight against events like this. If nothing else, I did to fight against these. We made fun of
00:21:17.080
countries like this. Yes, that was our, that was our stick. We made fun of countries. Our deal was,
00:21:22.700
look at these dopes. I mean, that was our deal. Yeah. And now we are those people. Yeah. I just
00:21:29.560
don't get it. I know we're not those people. The people here are those people. I was, I would,
00:21:33.960
there was a part of me that hoped with this whole little battle between Trump and Pelosi that Trump
00:21:38.000
would just be like, you know what? No more. I'm sick of this nonsense. I'm sick of people trying to
00:21:42.040
use this against me. I'll send you a letter. I might just tweet the thing and that's it.
00:21:47.540
You know what? We get probably far more people would actually see it if he tweeted it. Certainly
00:21:52.280
the, you know, the media would be obsessed with every word of it. If it came out via Twitter,
00:21:56.920
it probably would get more attention. I mean, at this point, just kill this event. It's just so
00:22:01.080
awful. But I mean, I just think that it is one of the biggest audiences a president can get. And if
00:22:08.100
Trump can kind of move the American people on a particular issue or two, maybe it's a good idea.
00:22:12.860
You know why it has a big audience? It has the big audience because it's on every channel. Yeah.
00:22:19.040
But now that you have Facebook, YouTube, that's where we're going to be. Live tonight, Facebook,
00:22:25.380
YouTube, and the Blaze TV, commercial free. It's the State of the Union. Tonight, it begins at 7.30
00:22:32.660
Eastern. I'll be live from the Capitol. Eric Bolling is hosting our coverage. Then it moves
00:22:38.620
to the Trump Hotel until I think midnight or one o'clock.
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Join now at AMAC.us slash USA. AMAC.us slash USA. Tonight, Blaze TV live. We are live from the State
00:24:33.740
of the Union. I'll be up on Capitol Hill. I'll be actually inside with the doors closed and locked
00:24:41.520
and locked. I'm locked in with those people. Anyway, I'll be up on the Capitol tonight and then I'll be
00:24:48.780
joining for the later coverage as well. But Blaze TV is going to be uncensored, unfiltered,
00:24:57.340
unapologetic. Our State of the Union coverage tonight. We have Mark Levin's going to be there.
00:25:05.360
I'm going to be there. Phil Robertson is going to be ranting a bit. Ali Stuckey, John Miller,
00:25:11.720
Ben Ferguson, Steve Dace, Sarah Gonzalez, Nate Madden, who is our correspondent up on Capitol
00:25:17.940
Hill, and he's really good. Sean Spicer is going to be joining us. Corey Lewandowski.
00:25:27.540
Bill O'Reilly is going to be there as well. So you don't want to miss it tonight. Our special
00:25:34.560
coverage, State of the Union. So have you seen who, first of all, the president has invited that
00:25:44.380
little kid that, actually the first lady invited, that little kid who is bullied because his last
00:25:50.200
name is Trump. Okay, 12-year-old sixth grader. And his last name is Trump and he has been bullied
00:25:56.240
so bad that I think he didn't go to school for a while, right? And they hope that it died down and
00:26:02.020
it never did and it's horrible. Yeah, obviously horrible. I mean, this is a very much a function
00:26:09.460
of our society today, right? The fact that some kid with the last name is the president is,
00:26:15.140
I mean, I feel like there was a time in which that would have been a really cool thing for a kid.
00:26:19.520
Right now, I mean... Now it's not. Now it's not. You know who actually, the reason why Thomas
00:26:25.580
Massey invited me is because he did invite, oh shoot, what's the kid from Covington? And the
00:26:35.520
parents were like, we don't want him, we just don't want him doing anything anymore. It's just,
00:26:40.520
it's, we just want it to go away, which I think was a really smart thing to do.
00:26:45.200
That's where I would be as a parent in that situation for sure. Me too. I would want this
00:26:48.540
thing over. Me too. And, and Thomas was very helpful with the family and that whole thing
00:26:55.980
in Covington. I mean, that's his, that's his area. And so that's why I got, you know, the sloppy
00:27:02.880
invite, uh, because everybody else was turning him down, you know, of any real importance. Uh,
00:27:08.960
but anyway, um, so last night on CNN with Cuomo, uh, he said, you know, the first lady, uh, is
00:27:18.240
bringing, uh, that kid who is because of his last name, Trump, no relation was, uh, was bullied.
00:27:27.760
We all know the scourge of bullying somewhere between the third and, uh, and, uh, and a quarter
00:27:35.500
of the kids in America say they've been bullied at school. Trump's own health and human services
00:27:40.480
identifies being gay or disabled as those who are most at risk. But now the kid with the last name
00:27:47.500
Trump, and he tries to get Don Lemon to go in with him. He says, my concern is my concern is that he's
00:27:56.520
just going to be used as a political pawn and that all the different kinds of bullying that goes on,
00:28:03.060
they're highlighting someone giving Trump a hard time. Uh, Don Lemon doesn't go for it. Cuomo comes
00:28:10.700
back and says, I'm worried about the kid because he's got enough trouble, you know, wait a minute.
00:28:15.900
So you're worried about this kid, but last week you weren't worried about the Covington school kids,
00:28:22.000
all of them. You weren't worried about them. No, not worried about making a kid who stood
00:28:27.880
somewhere and didn't move, uh, with a red hat on, making him into a national news story for
00:28:33.380
multiple weeks. That did not concern the bullying folks at all. They didn't care about that. Right.
00:28:38.380
And they didn't, they didn't mind using kids as political pawns when there was a shooting at a
00:28:46.500
school. They had no problem with that. Parkland? What? They weren't political pawns. They weren't
00:28:52.240
being used by us. They were putting on David Hogg for like, Donald Trump, tax policy and term limits.
00:28:57.120
Like, what is this kid on TV for today? I don't understand. That was, I know. It's all they,
00:29:01.900
they, they had, they had someone who could not be criticized. So he could come in and say every
00:29:06.500
liberal talking point. And if you said anything critical about him, you know, every, every boycott
00:29:10.840
organization would jump into action. Correct. Cause they had to protect these kids because those
00:29:16.820
kids agreed with them. Uh, if the Don Lemon says this, there's a lesson in this for anyone.
00:29:22.060
It's beyond the kid. It's for the president. Now listen to this, this, they're talking about the
00:29:26.540
kid who was bullied because his last name was Trump. It's a, it's really for the president.
00:29:31.560
Maybe this president has something to learn from a 12 year old sixth grader. Uh, he goes on to say,
00:29:37.060
and maybe the president will see the error of his ways and he'll stop calling people names and
00:29:41.580
making fun of them because this kid knows how it feels firsthand to be bullied. Maybe the president
00:29:47.000
will learn from it. Wait, wait a minute. Wait a minute. I agree with you that the president calls
00:29:52.300
people's people names. That's his deal. Get over it. I don't like it either. I wish the president
00:29:58.440
didn't, but that's the way he's always lived his life. You thought it was funny when he wasn't
00:30:05.020
running the president or when he wasn't running the country. You thought it was funny. Now that
00:30:10.000
he's the president. Oh, now it's not so funny. Uh, however, I just want to remind you of a couple
00:30:15.420
of things. One tea baggers. You remember that from the president, these tea baggers go around.
00:30:21.620
You didn't have a problem with that. And second of all, the president should learn from this.
00:30:27.880
The kids being bullied because his last name is Trump. I don't think it's Donald Trump or his
00:30:37.400
supporters that are bullying this kid. Where, where are they feeling empowered to bully back?
00:30:46.580
Where are they feeling empowered to call people names? Media outlets, their parents. I mean,
00:30:53.700
we're all responsible for this, but kids learn mainly from their parents on what's acceptable.
00:31:00.720
And the media calls Trump names all the time. They act as a one way street. I know. Do you
00:31:05.540
remember when they were saying they, uh, how many reporters were tweeting about how they wanted
00:31:09.720
baron Trump to be locked up in a cage like those kids on the border? Yes. I mean, this is not
00:31:15.260
something that is that look, I don't like it either. I mean, I don't think it's a great idea. It's really
00:31:20.060
something that, you know, dopey talk show hosts like us do, which is, you know, like that is where
00:31:25.800
it's expected. And I don't think the president should be doing it, but I mean, you can't say
00:31:29.200
that this is a one-sided thing where he's the one bullying. Oh my gosh, stop it. They're calling him,
00:31:33.800
they're calling him fascist and racist and every horrible name on the planet every day. Every day
00:31:40.280
they call them these, these things. I mean, this is a two way street that they don't feel like they're on.
00:31:44.540
And his guests tonight are all just for political posturing. Now I want to compare guests. Here's
00:31:51.720
who he's invited. Uh, Alice Marie Johnson. She's the cocaine grandma. Remember? Uh, Timothy
00:31:57.680
Mattson. That was pardoned? That, uh, is that what you're talking about? Yeah. Okay. With Kim Kardashian
00:32:02.100
and that whole thing. Yeah. Right. Um, Timothy Mattson and Judah Samat. These are two survivors
00:32:08.320
of the, uh, uh, tree of life synagogue that remember when the anti-Semitic guy shot the
00:32:15.500
synagogue up, uh, Ashley Evans, who struggled with opioids, uh, Matthew Charles, 21 years
00:32:23.280
in prison, uh, and it has, uh, been, uh, turned out for release. And now the cocaine grandmother,
00:32:32.600
uh, Ashley Evans, uh, Ashley Evans, Matthew Charles, those are all about opioids and about
00:32:39.060
reform. And, and they're wanting to say, this is divisive. The president, I can guarantee
00:32:45.860
you is going to say about prison reform. He's going to say, we came together and did something
00:32:52.940
together. We need to pull together and move priorities together. He's going to call for unity.
00:32:59.720
I can guarantee it. And they're going to roll their eyes. By the way, what is the over under
00:33:04.000
for you for, uh, eye rolls from Nancy Pelosi? It's interesting. It's, I've heard people talk
00:33:10.580
about how many times she's going to eye roll and it's just, it's hard to detect any expression on
00:33:15.200
her face. So yeah, I mean, I like, I know that's why I'm down to, that's why I'm down on, I'm only,
00:33:22.720
only six faces. She'll try to do more, but she'll only be able to make six different faces.
00:33:31.220
Okay. Six different times. Uh, she won't be able to battle the Botox any more than that.
00:33:35.880
The eye roll. I give her two. That sounds like a reasonable over under. There's got to be Vegas
00:33:41.740
odds on this stuff. Doesn't there? I gotta, I gotta look for this. Gotta be, gotta be, gotta be.
00:33:45.460
Okay. So, so he's also got, uh, Elvin Hernandez. He's a special agent with trafficking in persons
00:33:53.240
unit of the Homeland Security Department. Um, and can I tell you something? This, this guest,
00:34:00.780
I think came from Tim Ballard. Do you see that Tim Ballard, the CEO of the Nazarene Fund or the
00:34:07.860
chairman of the, I don't know what he is. Uh, and also, uh, Oh, you are. He was with the
00:34:14.740
president yesterday afternoon and they were meeting about his, his, uh, op-ed piece that he wrote last
00:34:20.900
week. Here's one reason we need border security. And he talked about, uh, the human trafficking that's
00:34:28.060
happening on the border. I expect that that is going to play a role, uh, tomorrow and congratulations
00:34:34.520
to this audience for bringing this, uh, to the light of the world. If you will, you're the ones who
00:34:42.500
started this and, uh, it's a compelling argument and hopefully the president will make that tonight.
00:34:48.280
Okay. So those are the, those are the people the president is inviting. They don't seem divisive.
00:34:54.700
Now, let me give you the list of the Democrat invitees. We'll do that in just a minute.
00:35:04.120
Also have Glenn, a list of prop bets, uh, for the state of the union coming up as well. Uh,
00:35:12.360
like, does he mention CNN? Does he, how many times over, under on how many times he says jobs?
00:35:18.000
We'll get into all those here coming up in just a minute. Uh, Valentine's day is not far away.
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00:36:38.540
You know, I'm, I'm making a, a bingo card, uh, for tonight. Uh, I should, I, uh, we'll, we'll post
00:36:44.800
it on, uh, Glennbeck.com. You can play, uh, State of the Union bingo, but if I get it first, you'll
00:36:50.140
hear me from the upper balcony. Bingo! Uh, but it's got all of the things that I think that might
00:36:55.800
happen. Like, for instance, Nancy Pelosi eye roll one. There's eye roll two. You can't
00:37:01.860
count them the same. Uh, Nancy Pelosi tries to make a face. Wait, hold on. It's kind of
00:37:06.820
subjective. I have a clarification on Nancy Pelosi. What if she rolls only one eye? I feel
00:37:12.040
like with her situation. It is, it is an eye roll, not eyes roll. Right. So if one eye rolls
00:37:18.660
and then the other eye rolls immediately afterwards, that's two eye rolls? If they
00:37:24.180
were, if they are revolving in other directions, so one goes left, then one goes
00:37:30.060
right. I'm okay with that. Even if they're at the same time. Or if one goes, if one goes
00:37:34.080
left and then it comes back to the center and the other one goes right, then I'm
00:37:38.620
okay with that. Okay. That's an important, important clarification. So I have, uh,
00:37:43.880
Venezuela, uh, border security, uh, Nancy Pelosi makes a face applause, uh, uh, with
00:37:51.580
the other side sitting down, um, unity border fence jobs one and two unemployment. We
00:37:59.580
need to work together. Uh, Nancy Pelosi, I roll two unity Gorsuch, uh, fake news
00:38:07.700
emergency. It's not legislation. What is he calling this? Emergency action for the
00:38:13.120
border. What is that called? Oh, I might have to take emergency measures or whatever
00:38:19.620
national emergency. Um, yeah. National is that what it is? I'll have to declare a, I
00:38:24.700
don't think it's that I'll look it up. We'll have the right one. But what that
00:38:27.720
means is, you know, when he says I might have to take extraordinary measures, I
00:38:30.900
need to take, you know, matters into my own hand, China border wall and border
00:38:36.920
fence. So, so now jobs almost always come in a pair of threes people. They just say
00:38:41.340
jobs, jobs, jobs. So if you have jobs one and jobs two, I mean, that's almost a
00:38:45.260
guarantee. You can almost put, you can almost mark those boxes off right now.
00:38:49.160
So why don't we do jobs? We go jobs, uh, one and jobs for, I think that's true.
00:38:57.420
Cause cause he goes jobs, jobs, jobs. Now, if he doesn't do jobs, jobs, jobs, you can
00:39:02.680
count the next job at the end of the speech. If he's not talking about jobs, jobs,
00:39:07.840
jobs, jobs, you can count two jobs. So you're thinking, so it's either four or
00:39:12.760
two job groupings is essentially your category. Yeah. Job, job, jobs is a
00:39:17.220
grouping. Now there's an actual bet you can place on the total, the over under
00:39:20.660
for the amount of times he says jobs during the speech. Yeah. Which is seven
00:39:24.420
and a half, seven and a half. Yeah. Over under seven and a half. Now, of course,
00:39:29.440
jobs, jobs, jobs get you almost half the way there. And he does it one time. You're in
00:39:33.320
really good position. Not in Glenn Beck, state of the union bingo though. No, that
00:39:38.380
does not help you in state of the union bingo. Um, they also have, uh, some other
00:39:43.660
bets they have. If some of the ones you mentioned, North Korea, uh, Mexico, China,
00:39:48.040
Russia, will he say that? Uh, you can get up to, uh, Russia was four and a half to
00:39:52.140
one. Uh, you can get that. They have, I'm going to take, are the first two words of
00:39:57.040
his speech. Thank you. If, if they're not, then you get, you can get three to one on
00:40:01.480
that one. Does he mention CNN? Uh, about three to one on that ISIS. Uh, if he does
00:40:08.500
not mention ISIS five to one, he's going to mention ISIS. That's a, you can't,
00:40:13.020
yeah, that's done. Uh, let's see. They have a prop bets on what color dress will
00:40:18.340
Ivanka Trump wear? Uh, what color dress will, uh, float us where she wore white
00:40:25.260
last time. Yeah. White's four to one this time. Glenn, uh, you can get black at two
00:40:29.300
to one blue to two and a quarter to one red three and a half to one white four to one
00:40:34.280
and field four and a half to one. All of it. What is that? Camouflage? I could be any
00:40:40.720
field. I mean, it means everything else field and stream. She's going to come dressed as
00:40:45.780
a hunter or I'm not sure what that means. I should have been more, uh, specific. You
00:40:50.160
know, I'm not a big sports better. Now we will post this at glennbeck.com, uh, state
00:40:55.940
of the union bingo and join us tonight. Commercial free and free Facebook, YouTube,
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also blaze tv.com slash Beck. Eric Boulding is our host tonight. Live from Washington.
00:41:11.600
First, let me tell you about home title lock. You should be very aware of this. If you're
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00:42:16.000
The fusion of entertainment and enlightenment. This is the Glenn Beck program.
00:42:23.040
So how hard is it to say if a child is born and we tried to kill it, but if it survives an abortion,
00:42:35.520
once it's born, should we kill it? How hard is it to say no, no, we shouldn't kill it. That's
00:42:44.980
infanticide. It's an infant. It's been born. It's outside of the mother's body. No, we shouldn't kill
00:42:51.840
it. Well, apparently for the Senate, that was a bridge too far. We'll give you the details in one
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That's the most important thing. Design consultants is just a nice, easy pathway to laziness for you.
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Yesterday, Ben Stass, Ben Stass stood up in front of the Senate and he said, we have to decide
00:45:17.380
who we are. Here's Ben Stass previewing the anti-infanticide vote.
00:45:23.820
In a few minutes, the United States Senate is going to have an opportunity to condemn
00:45:29.240
infanticide. 100 United States senators are going to have an opportunity to unanimously say
00:45:35.400
the most basic thing imaginable, and that is that it's wrong to kill a little newborn baby.
00:45:43.600
Every senator will have the opportunity to stand for human dignity, to stand for the belief that
00:45:48.620
in this country, all of us are created equal. Because if that equality means anything,
00:45:59.080
I think this is a pretty low hurdle. I think this is one of the lowest hurdles I've ever heard.
00:46:05.500
Now, you want to talk about a teenager and killing your teenager, then we could probably talk about
00:46:15.380
that because we all understand that. However, infanticide.
00:46:22.580
So what happened? Because all he said was, we need to have a vote. Now, there is a House or, I mean,
00:46:28.780
a Senate rule that allows a senator to call for a vote like this, but it has to be unanimous.
00:46:37.780
So everybody has to agree that the vote is going to happen. Well, one senator said, this is an outrage.
00:46:46.740
That's not what any of these things mean. These new bills, these new laws in New York and Virginia,
00:46:54.280
that's not what they were proposing. Yes, that is exactly what they were proposing in Virginia. Exactly.
00:47:00.980
And you're talking about a baby in the last trimester. Once the baby, once the woman has started to give birth,
00:47:13.500
the baby could be in the birth canal and they can kill the baby. Now, I understand you don't like to call
00:47:23.560
a fetus a child, but when that fetus is going to be transformed in magically somehow into a child within the next
00:47:33.680
minute, your argument kind of breaks down. This is infanticide, clear and simple. And what he was asking for
00:47:44.420
was a vote. If you try to kill a child in the last moment and they're born alive, do we kill it or do
00:47:56.880
we have to resuscitate it? Now, if you remember right, the governor of Virginia said we would keep
00:48:03.400
the child comfortable and then we would talk about it. That's what the governor of Virginia said.
00:48:16.760
You would think this would be the easiest vote because even if you thought that that wasn't what
00:48:22.560
the bill said, you stand up and say, this is the most ridiculous thing because nobody is proposing this.
00:48:30.500
Of course, it is an abomination. Of course, we're against it. We saw this with Steve King a couple
00:48:37.500
weeks ago when people were talking about Steve King and he made those comments to the New York
00:48:41.300
Times and they did a resolution to say we're against these racist comments and we're against
00:48:49.240
people thinking white supremacy is good. And so Steve King went up in front of the House and said,
00:48:55.540
look, you know, I didn't mean it this way. And he tried to explain himself. But when it came up for
00:49:02.420
the vote, you know who voted for the bill that's there, the resolution that said how bad racism was
00:49:09.020
Steve King, because the text of the bill basically just said racism is really bad. And Steve King
00:49:14.380
said he agrees with that. So he voted for it, even though obviously this was just targeting him and
00:49:19.040
trying to make him look bad. He still voted for it because the concept of racism is bad. He agreed
00:49:24.120
with the this is the same thing here. You can make the argument sure that if you're a Democrat and you
00:49:29.680
don't want these rights to go away, you get nervous every time anyone anything revolving
00:49:34.180
abortion is being voted on. However, when it comes down to the text of what's actually happening
00:49:39.840
here, we're talking about babies that are being born alive and dying afterwards because of our hands.
00:49:47.420
It is. It was the born alive abortion survivors protection act that says it all. The bill would
00:49:56.540
have required doctors to provide medical care to babies born alive during failed abortions. So if
00:50:05.240
your baby, this has no application for anything other than the baby was they tried to abort it. It's
00:50:14.440
now born. You have to keep it alive now because it's a baby and we don't perform infanticide. If you
00:50:25.520
remember right, there was a hospital that got in trouble in Chicago years ago because when this was
00:50:32.580
happening, they wouldn't kill the baby. They would just put it in a closet. Do you remember this?
00:50:38.440
And they would neglect it and it would eventually die. So nobody wanted to kill it. They just neglected
00:50:44.280
it by putting it in a closet. And one of the nurses was like, this is craziness.
00:50:49.520
So Patty Murray from Washington. Now, here's the problem in Washington, I think.
00:50:55.580
And then I say this as a Washingtonian, I'm somebody who grew up in the Pacific Northwest.
00:51:00.340
I just had good enough sense to get out of there before this happened to me. But you
00:51:05.540
once you live there for a while, it's it's like the water starts to to to seep into your head
00:51:13.640
and moss starts to grow on your brain and it's sloshing around in there. And before you know
00:51:20.380
it, it's just you're just a big jug head of water and brain power is almost entirely taken
00:51:27.080
by by by moss. And I think that might have happened with Patty Murray. I'm not sure she
00:51:33.680
may be a moss brain at this point, because how do you stand up unless you are trying to
00:51:42.000
protect this procedure? How do you stand up and do that? I and by the way, if you are if
00:51:50.080
you if if you are a politician, you are you are so convinced that the people on the left
00:51:59.680
in your district are so cool with infanticide that you can get away with it.
00:52:07.260
And you're about to get a year and a half of a campaign in which everyone tries to say
00:52:11.640
how much infanticide is allowable. And if you don't allow more, you're going to be an evil
00:52:16.420
conservative and can't get the nomination for the presidency. It's a giant candy jar
00:52:20.920
for Republicans politically, but the scariest thing in the world. I mean, the fact that for
00:52:27.220
politics, they will go so far as to not even deny people's rights to kill people that are
00:52:33.780
alive. Is there not? I don't think this is for I think it is. This is not for politics.
00:52:38.440
I think it is. Tell me. Tell me why. Because, you know, I think what happens here is they see
00:52:43.980
it as this slippery sort of slope to to erode women's rights. For example, if I were to say
00:52:50.880
to you, do you support killing kids a month after birth? People would, you know, a hundred
00:52:56.660
percent of people in theory would say, well, of course not. That would that makes you a
00:53:00.440
murderer. You're a psychopath if you want that. Well, what about 10 seconds or five seconds
00:53:04.300
after birth? Well, well, no, of course they're born and that's where you get 99 senators on
00:53:09.600
board here, right? But then what about five seconds before birth? Well, still most people
00:53:15.280
would say no, it's well over 80 percent. If you go to the second trimester, what about
00:53:20.080
then? People will say, well, now it's like about 70 percent oppose it. And we can do the
00:53:23.620
third the third trimester or the first trimester. Then it's about 50 percent. The point of this
00:53:28.160
though is to say that if five seconds after birth, it makes you a murderer and five seconds
00:53:33.420
before birth is okay. Almost everyone would agree that that is a nonsensical, crazy position
00:53:40.120
to say that 10 seconds could be the difference between you being a fighter for women's rights
00:53:46.100
and a murderer. So back that up to whatever level you're at. If you think it's the end of
00:53:51.000
the first trimester, how about 10 seconds before that? How about 10 seconds after that? If you
00:53:56.520
are the type of person who's saying, well, I think it's okay here and not there. What you're
00:54:00.340
saying is the same point. About 10 seconds from one line to the other is the difference
00:54:05.560
between one person fighting for women's rights and being a psychopathic murderer. And none
00:54:10.060
of that makes any sense. When you draw a line like that and when people start thinking about
00:54:15.160
that line, wherever you draw that line, you realize what you're doing is something that
00:54:20.160
is completely insane. And the further we go down the debate there and the further that
00:54:25.760
gets to be clarified, the scarier it becomes for people who are pro-choice. Because you
00:54:31.240
can't make that distinction when you're arguing about a completely arbitrary line. The kid
00:54:39.420
does, you say whatever you want about science, there's no way you can say, well, at three
00:54:44.840
months, this thing over a two second period goes from a fetus to a child. It's completely
00:54:50.220
an insane viewpoint and no one can logically believe it. And so that is why I think they try
00:54:55.100
to guard these lines so carefully. Because as soon as you start really putting a magnifying
00:54:59.820
glass up to what they say they believe, it doesn't make any sense. And it's indefensible.
00:55:06.100
So I tend to agree with you. And I think I agree entirely with what you just said. But
00:55:14.300
I don't necessarily agree that this is just a political maneuver. And I want to explain
00:55:19.140
why. But give me one minute and then we'll come back.
00:55:24.180
You're always no more than one minute away from programming. We have moved the commercials,
00:55:30.080
those long commercial breaks, out of the first half hour. We've gotten rid of them entirely
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in the first half hour. And we only stopped for a minute at a time so we can get right back
00:55:38.420
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SimpliSafeBeck.com. That's SimpliSafeBeck.com. We pause for 10 seconds. Station ID.
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SimpliSafeBeck.com. This is the Glenn Beck Program. Live from the nation's capital for our State of the
00:57:19.260
Union coverage on Blaze TV tonight. And you can watch it for free on Facebook, on YouTube, also on
00:57:27.340
the Blaze TV. It's BlazeTV.com slash Beck. Sign up and help us continue to tell the truth and speak
00:57:38.320
with boldness. We have tonight joining us Mark Levin is going to be there. I don't know if I can
00:57:45.780
be live. I'm pretty sure I can be live from inside the State of the Union, but I'm going to be inside
00:57:53.000
the Capitol. And then hopefully I'll be joining Eric Bolling later. He's going to be here at our
00:57:59.040
anchor desk here in Washington, D.C. And then I think he's going down the street after the State
00:58:04.480
of the Union and it's going to be held at the at the bar there in the Trump Hotel, which is I stayed
00:58:12.460
there last night. It is a beautiful hotel. It's the old post office and it's just unbelievably beautiful.
00:58:22.180
Anyway, I'm going to be with the gang. Phil Robertson from Duck Dynasty is chiming in. John
00:58:30.740
Miller, he is our guy who has the White House covered. He's in the White House press corps.
00:58:37.640
Ben Ferguson is going to be on with us. Steve Dace, Sarah Gonzalez, Sean Spicer is going to be
00:58:44.240
joining us. Bill O'Reilly will also be joining us all from Washington tonight. You can find it at
00:58:50.060
the Blaze TV. That's BlazeTV.com slash Beck. If you use Beck as the promo code, you'll also save 10%.
00:58:58.900
I hope you're going to put them all on the same panel. So we have like a table that goes like 400
00:59:03.200
football fields long with all of them sitting at it. And we're all talking at once and arguing
00:59:08.840
and pulling wigs off. It's the only way to do coverage. I learned it from CNN.
00:59:12.140
Yeah, I hate that. Oh, I hate that. All right. Let me get back to Patty Murray blocking the Senate
00:59:21.800
bill banning infanticide. Now, here is what the bill said. It requires doctors to provide medical
00:59:29.200
care to babies who are born alive during failed abortions. So you're having a last minute
00:59:36.900
abortion. You're in labor. The baby is born. You tried to kill it. It's born alive. Do we have to
00:59:46.180
keep it alive? Do we have to feed it? Do we have to, can we neglect it until it dies? Can we,
00:59:53.620
do we have to give it a medical help to, to heal it again after trying to kill it? Well, Patty
01:00:01.780
Murray said, this is just ridiculous. This is just, she said, this is a gross misinterpretation
01:00:07.580
of the actual language of the bill that is being asked to be considered. And therefore
01:00:11.480
I object. So the bill didn't pass because of her. Now, if you, if you don't believe that,
01:00:19.340
if you think that this is not what the bill says, you say exactly that this, not what the
01:00:25.320
bill says. This is a gross misrepresentation of what this bill does. And of course we're all
01:00:30.680
against it. I stand against it as do all of my colleagues. So yes, pass this bill.
01:00:38.120
That's what you say. Now, a lot of people are saying that this is all about politics.
01:00:43.320
And I think part of it is for some, but I think the democratic party, the leadership has gone
01:00:49.880
so far to the crazy side that there are those that want infanticide. There are those, I mean,
01:00:57.740
we have gone from a culture that says, you know, it should be rare. It should be safe, but you know,
01:01:04.900
it should really be rare. And it's, and it's really, you know, once we get past the first
01:01:10.260
trimester, it's only for the health of the mother. That's where we were. We are now to the point where
01:01:15.680
they are shouting their abortion. They are, we are now at a point to where they are releasing video
01:01:22.600
of them talking to school kids who think abortions, uh, are not good. And they're trying to say,
01:01:30.940
you know what? I mean, I, you know, I wasn't reckless. I just didn't, we just didn't want to
01:01:35.900
have protection while we were in the moment. And so I got pregnant and well, I don't want to have a
01:01:43.760
baby. And they're trying to convince these kids that it's okay. They're starting to do TV show.
01:01:50.000
They're doing everything they did, uh, with Ellen back in the nineties to try to normalize
01:01:56.520
homosexuality, which worked. This now is normalizing death. This is normalizing death.
01:02:05.880
And I think there are those people. We know it. I mean, we've, we've talked about this before
01:02:10.720
the weather underground. They're perfectly willing to kill people. Uh, how many people in Occupy Wall
01:02:17.360
Street students do? Did we interview that said, yeah, I mean, people are going to have to die
01:02:22.060
because, you know, this system is just broken and it's killing our planet. How many people would be
01:02:28.520
comfortable on the left killing a lot of people? People. We have played many of the clips, uh, over
01:02:35.020
the years. And I think the difference, I guess, in what we're talking about slightly is I think the
01:02:39.640
admitting it is the politics, right? Like what they say is never what they believe unless it's
01:02:46.680
politically beneficial. For example, we all know that they've supported gay marriage long before
01:02:50.700
they started admitting it. When Hillary Clinton was saying it was a foundational principle of her
01:02:54.740
soul, that marriage was between one man and one woman. Did anyone believe that? When Bill Clinton
01:02:59.720
was saying the era of big government is over in big speeches, anyone believe that? No, they were
01:03:04.740
incentivized at that time through politics to say that they oppose those things. That's what's I
01:03:11.480
think different because it's a different thing about society right now is that people, the Democrats
01:03:16.720
now believe and are incentivized to admit that they want abortion up to the last second and, but quite
01:03:23.160
possibly past that. Are they misreading this? Are we a nation now that is ready to embrace infanticide?
01:03:32.500
Are they delusional? Are we delusional? Well, they have a primary audience that might be
01:03:38.280
willing to embrace it. I don't know how they walk that back. I don't know. I don't know. How do you walk
01:03:44.300
that back with Democrats in the center of the country?
01:03:58.420
Okay. What are you going to do? Valentine's Day is
01:04:25.320
You get that because you say it's the Enchanted and she goes, oh, that's great.
01:04:29.420
And inside you're dying in an Enchanted Rose Medley.
01:05:16.960
At checkout, select your own iPatriots email address.
01:05:30.940
covering the State of the Union. You'll be able to watch
01:39:48.360
would say that in my lifetime, possibly, possibly, we
01:40:08.600
The State of the Union, I think, is in one of the
01:40:16.200
And it's strange because it seems diametrically
01:42:07.940
but I do need you to recognize that you were part of
01:42:40.240
And it's more popular today to divide people than it was
01:42:53.540
I could make a lot more money now than I did then.
01:42:59.380
You have credibility if you stand up now and say,
01:43:12.840
I think those people exist in the heartland of America.