VICTORY: The SCOTUS Gun Rights Decision That Will Save Lives | Guests: Tim Barton & Josh Hammer | 6⧸23⧸22
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2 hours and 3 minutes
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162.88109
Summary
Today and tomorrow could be game changing for the United States of America. The Supreme Court could rule in favor of Roe v. Wade, the EPA could be struck down, and there could be riots on the streets. Big day in the Supreme Court.
Transcript
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Big day in the Supreme Court. We'll get into that here in just a second. If you own a home or a
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What you are about to hear is the fusion of entertainment and enlightenment. This is the Glenn
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Beck Program. Hello, America. Welcome to the Glenn Beck Program. Today and tomorrow could be
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game-changing for the United States of America. We could have riots on the streets. That's what
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Jane's Revenge is planning on. We'll see. Today, it could be some of the biggest changes, including
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a change with the EPA that could stop this onslaught from the administration. But we'll see. We're going
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to tell you about the 13 remaining cases that are coming, we believe, today and tomorrow. They could
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go into next week, but there's only 13. They've been doing about five per day. They've added Friday.
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Usually, they do two days a week. This would be a third day. They may clear the docket in the next
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Okay, so there are many, many, many big cases that could be game-changing. We're going to go over
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a few of them. I think today we might get the ruling on the EPA if our theory is correct. They'll
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release six cases today, seven cases tomorrow, which would clear the docket. They've been averaging
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about five every day, so it's not a big leap to add two tomorrow and one today.
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But that would leave the Supreme Court still in Washington, D.C. for a week after the Roe
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versus Wade decision. Stu joins us now. Stu, I can only come up with 12 cases that still remain
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on the docket, but let's go through some of these. I actually would really like to start
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with West Virginia versus the EPA. This one is, I think, could be as game-changing as the Commerce
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Clause was for FDR in the other direction back in the 1940s. What happened in the 1940s, the Commerce
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Clause allows the federal government to regulate trade between states, etc., etc. Well, FDR's
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administration took that and said, well, everything fits into federal jurisdiction because even if
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you're using wheat or selling wheat or growing wheat, the pollination will go from one wheat farm
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to another wheat farm across state lines, and so we have to regulate that. Some of the products made
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by wheat or if you are building a car in Detroit, well, where are you getting the products? Maybe some
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of them come from another place. This allowed the federal government to bring in OSHA and all of
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these federal agencies into our lives. That's the biggest problem that the progressives brought
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to the administration, and it's long overdue to be overturned. This one doesn't overturn that.
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However, this one does say that the EPA doesn't have the right to just make up a law if it's vague.
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This would go for not only clean air, but it would also go for the drugs that now you have to take
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them. OSHA says we're there to protect workers, so now you have to take the vaccine, etc. All of the
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government overreach that we've seen recently and is still in the pipeline coming. This could change
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that course dramatically. Do I have this right, Stu? Yeah, I think what people, when you think about
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this particular case, you should think about it as the most important case that will affect your
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every everybody's daily life, right? Where, look, abortion is a huge, huge ruling, but most people
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aren't going to get abortions, right? I still think it's a more important case, but it's not.
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It's not. Most people don't get abortions. Most people, I mean, statistically, most people don't
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carry their firearms with them. Correct. We're talking about the Second Amendment case, which is
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very important. So I would say the abortion case is a huge moral case, but not one that's going to
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affect your everyday life, but will affect us as people and our country in the direction of our
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country. The Second Amendment is a very important constitutional case, even though it won't affect
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most people, because like you said, most people don't carry guns. But the same can be said about
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the EPA, except unlike guns, and I think this is the point you were making, unlike guns, this will
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touch all of our lives. This will touch us at the gas station, in our place of business, at our homes,
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everything. Yeah. And basically, this addresses essentially a workaround that the government
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has developed over the years, which is, hey, I really want something, and Congress won't pass a
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law to address it, so what if I just do it? This is something that Obama, in 2000, I think it was 14,
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decided to do with climate change, where he said, we're just going to start regulating these power
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plants. And everyone said, well, you have been trying to pass legislation to do this for years and
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years and have been unsuccessful doing it. How can you all of a sudden decide that you're going to
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do it? And he said, well, we looked back, we found, it's like the, the Nicolas Cage movie,
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the Constitution movie, they like found a secret part of the Clean Air Act that will allow them to
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do this. It was, it was text written in invisible ink on the back. Right. And only progressives have the
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special glasses. Right. Exactly. And so what they basically did is say, we have the power based on
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this old, old part of the Clean Air Act that had never been used before to do this. And their,
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their argument was, it was written in such a vague way that the EPA can just make up their own rules
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on it. And this is something we've talked about before. It's called Chevron deference, which goes
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back to an old Supreme Court case, which basically says, if we're not sure if it's really vague,
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the way the law is written, then whatever agency is tied into it can pretty much decide and write
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their own law, which is a, this is a terrible, terrible idea. It's something that is absolutely
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against the way the founders believed this country would work. Correct. I mean, they didn't even have
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any of these agencies. So we know this for a fact. Right. Right. It's absolutely unconstitutional.
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And that is, this is the direction the Biden and Obama and Wilson administration, FDR,
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this is the direction they want to take the country. They want to take it away from Congress
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and the courts. They want to just to be able to, and this is, you know, when this was first thought
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of at the turn of the century, this word wasn't a bad word yet. They want to just dictate.
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They want a dictator at the top who is just an administrator. And, you know, Congress will say,
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yep, we think that smoking is bad. And then the administration can do whatever it wants
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regarding smoking. Yeah. Now, obviously the, with this particular case specifically,
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it would have to do a lot with things like energy prices. And there's tons and tons of rules,
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not the one that we're talking about here, but there's tons and tons of rules already in the EPA
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that affect your energy prices and your, your freedom to spend your money the way that you,
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you want to. The particular rule here was put in place by Obama, but was actually taken out by Trump.
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So it's not currently in effect, but it addresses this overarching idea. And if you want to talk about
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a really relevant, really relevant usage of these types of powers, it's what you saw happen to you
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during COVID where places like the CDC, places like OSHA were able to come up with these wide ranging
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powers. We never knew they had because they had a general dictate to prevent, to help, you know,
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the health of the, of the American people. And so they take that and they, they broaden it wildly.
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It's how they tried to do vaccine mandates. But again, that was shot down in the courts.
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It's how they tried to, to do the, the, the rent, the eviction ban. That was another thing they
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attempted to do this way. And we've seen the courts eventually get angry at that as well.
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If that's, if this gets overturned, there's a good chance that a lot of that stuff will go away.
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Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait. I'm not sure it will go away because the Biden
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administration knows these things are being overturned. They know that they're not supposed
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to do it. They just do it until they are told to stop. And then they just continue to do it.
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Until the court or somebody, Congress, somebody puts teeth into it and says, that is all, that's
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already been ruled on. And we're taking away your money until you stop this. Yeah. I don't think
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it's going to stop. And of course they will try and try and try. The good thing is though,
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when a, when a ruling like this comes down, it supposedly will set a precedent that lower
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courts will immediately overturn this stuff when it's attempted. You know, one of the big tactics
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of the left is to pass a big, obviously unconstitutional law, let it take effect,
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let it have effect on people so that they change their habits, they change their procedures.
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And then when it gets overturned in court, well, everyone's already changed already. So it's not
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that big of a deal. The problem with that approach is that they lose the power going forward.
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A lot of times they can only use it that one time.
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They've tried to amend this process. They did it. They've done this with guns many times
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where they'll pass an obviously unconstitutional gun law. As it's winding through the courts,
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they will, it will start taking effect. People will have to give up their guns. They'll have
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to do all these things. And by the time it gets up to the Supreme Court, they then nullify the law.
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They repeal it and then say, it's moot. We don't even have the law anymore. What are you talking
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about? Why are we going to the Supreme Court? Because they want to be able to avoid the long-term
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repercussions of losing that power because it would get shut down in the lower courts.
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They could do that. But didn't this court take this case after Trump had already overturned it?
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Yeah, that's why I'm hopeful. Through executive order.
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To make a statement about this particular procedure. And it's totally out of control.
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And the point, at this point, this is such a part of your daily life, you don't even know
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what's going on. It's all these rules that you are lived by. If you own a business,
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if you work at a business, all of these rules have been implemented through the administrative
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state in such a thorough way that it's become essentially the way our country operates.
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And it was never intended to be that way by the founders. The progressives certainly
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like it. But this could be a real dagger in that whole idea, which would just mean that
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they'd have to freaking pass laws if they want to do stuff. They could still do a lot of stuff
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that we won't like, but they actually have to pass a law. Their argument is, look, these
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congressmen don't have the expertise in these particular areas. They're not environmental experts,
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so they're not going to know what to put in these laws. But there's nothing preventing them
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asking these experts before they present the text of the law. They can get expert guidance
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beforehand, and they should get expert guidance beforehand. But they can't just implement a
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generic phrase and then let all these bureaucrats that are unelected and unaccountable continue to
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put these powers in on the American people. That's not the way our government's supposed to operate.
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And there is plenty of evidence from our founding fathers, especially Jefferson.
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Jefferson. Jefferson hated these so-called experts. He didn't trust the experts. He didn't trust the
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judges. He didn't trust the education system. He just didn't trust it. And most of them, I mean,
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that's why of the people, for the people, by the people, that's why the people are involved in this.
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We have a representative. Well, if they're not educated enough, well, then they need to educate
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themselves or they need to call a hearing and bring all of the educated in front of them and us
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so we can make the decision. But some unelected expert does not make a decision because they have
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all the facts. That goes against everything we know about self-rule. I'm really, really, really hopeful
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on this. This could be a real, true change in the course of America, at least legally. But if they
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make all of these changes, I will tell you, not only are you going to see Jane's revenge on the street
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and bombings at abortion or pro-life centers, because that's what they've said they're going to do,
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but you're also going to see a massive push to pack the court because the progressives don't like it
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when they don't get their way. They kick and scream until they do. All right, we're going to come back
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with more court cases here in just a second. The Supreme Court is about probably 40 minutes away
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from releasing its first decision, and these are the last 13, and quite a few of them make a huge
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difference. Let me tell you about the Tuttle Twins. So these books are used by homeschoolers like crazy.
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Rebecca wrote in, she said, I'm amazed at how much my son can understand and actually uses what he's learning
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even at a young age. He routinely tells his older sister that he has the right to say things even if she
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doesn't like it because he has the right to free speech, and no one could take that away, even sisters.
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I will tell you that I have friends who homeschool and their kids are quoting the Tuttle Twins all the
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time, and they say things like that. They understand the basics of America. If we are going to save
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America, we have to stop learning dates and names of people that were in wars and start remembering the
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points and why we went to war, what these things meant, why were we thinking what we thought, why are the
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laws the way they are? And Tuttle Twins books will help you do that. Tuttle Twins, they're having a great
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TuttleTwinsBeck.com. Keep your kids sane in a crazy socialist world. It's TuttleTwinsBeck.com.
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I have to tell you, Stu, one of the cases the Supreme Court will be taking up in the next year or so
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has got to be this gun bill. If it passes, this thing is riddled, riddled with problems.
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If you have a juvenile record, you're prohibited from buying guns. I thought, wait, I thought that
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was supposed to be erased when you turn 18. I thought juvenile records were sacred, right?
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Yeah. I mean, I think this is what they're trying to address. And you can see where a problem could
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potentially creep up there, right? If someone's put in a mental institution at 17 and a half and
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gets out three days before his birthday, that's the type of thing that even conservatives obviously
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would theoretically want to prevent. If someone was violent or something like that, you'd want to
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prevent someone from buying a gun. That's been, you know, mental health has obviously been the focus
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of conservatives on these things. It's just a matter of like, look, these are rules. There's rules and
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process in place for a reason. And you really, you have problems when you start trying to just
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disrupt those rules because you really want something. So here's the, here's the real problem
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with the red flag laws in this bill. It incentivizes, it gives money to local, you know, groups that are
00:20:21.940
going to do secret hearings. So you're not, you're not allowed if the red flag law is being evoked
00:20:28.320
against you. You're not notified. They have a hearing without you. You are only granted an
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attorney. Let me see if I have this right here. You are, you are allowed to have an attorney
00:20:45.680
at the appropriate phase. So in other words, they're going to have this meeting. They're going to have
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this hearing. It's all in secret. Then after they decide you get, you can have an attorney,
00:21:01.880
but only at the appropriate phase. And it's at your expense. So you have to prove yourself
00:21:08.780
innocent instead of the courts proving you guilty. And they take away everything for that's not,
00:21:18.260
there's no due process there. Um, they also expand the definition of engaged in business.
00:21:25.240
What they used to say is if you're selling a gun, you're engaged in business with the principal
00:21:30.040
objective of livelihood and profit. Um, they've changed that now. So now it's just, if you're
00:21:36.960
engaged in business, well, wait, so am I a private seller? Am I engaged in business? Because what they're
00:21:47.300
going to do is they're going to make you have a license. If you ever want to sell anything to
00:21:52.800
anybody, which will, you know what it happens when you, you know, you have to have a hair washing
00:21:58.180
license. Um, the new, there's new misdemeanor firearm, uh, prohibitions. They are expanding the
00:22:06.120
definition, uh, of prohibiting misdemeanor, uh, domestic violence. And they do it in such a way that
00:22:15.280
it's pretty much a catch-all for really any kind of problems. And they're empowering your employer
00:22:24.720
to ask for a firearms background check prior to your employment or during your current employment,
00:22:36.520
what is that? This thing will head to the Supreme court because this is, this is reckless and does
00:22:46.440
nothing to stop these crimes. The Glenn back program.
00:22:52.700
More in a second. Um, Chrissy wrote in about her dog's experience with rough green. She says,
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we have two pointers, which hunt at least four days a week, if not more. Wow. Their skin's been dry
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and no more dry flaky skin. We couldn't be happier. Rough greens. It's not a dog food. It's a supplement
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you name it. If it's healthy for your dog, it's probably in rough greens. Most dogs love it and go
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crazy, but just in case your dog doesn't, they don't want you paying for it. Um, what they want
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to do is send you a first bag free so you can just check it out and see if your dog loves it.
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If your dog loves it as much as uno and all the other dogs that I know, uh, if they love it,
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you just order some more and then you watch the difference and watch how your dog changes not only
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physically, but I think mentally and activity wise, all you pay for is shipping rough greens.com
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slash Beck, rough greens.com slash Beck, 833 Glenn 33, blaze tv.com slash Glenn. The promo code
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This is the Glenn Beck program. Uh, I want to just go through a couple of other things that are
00:24:24.660
really important. We'll get back to the Supreme court as the Supreme court is going to start, uh, uh,
00:24:30.200
revealing what their, uh, what their final verdict is on, uh, all of these really important cases
00:24:37.180
facing the Supreme court. We're getting probably five of them today, maybe, uh, six, uh, we will,
00:24:44.300
we will see shortly and we'll cover them as they come out, uh, live. Now there's a couple of things
00:24:51.020
that I want to mention here. A, um, a new Russian threat to target the residents of Lithuania, um,
00:24:58.860
has, uh, should, I should say should wake up America a bit to what we are facing. Uh, the state department,
00:25:09.720
our state department has now warned Russia. Any attack on Lithuania is an attack on the United States
00:25:17.940
of America. Now I believe I have said for a very long time, Stu, correct me if I'm, if I'm wrong,
00:25:27.520
that world war three is going to start in a country that we really don't really know anything about.
00:25:34.800
And we would think it would be ridiculous for us to go to war over that. Yes. You have. I think Lithuania
00:25:43.520
would fit into that category. We've seen that before in many wars start this way, right? And it
00:25:51.000
seems to, it seems to always start that way with some weird event that no one thinks is a big deal
00:25:55.420
at the time and it blows up into something else. And then we're all killing each other a few years
00:25:59.480
later. Yeah. Does it bother anybody that this war in Ukraine just seems to be spiraling out of
00:26:06.600
control a bit. What happened to, we were winning and, uh, you know, everything is great. I think,
00:26:13.240
I think the ruble is now at like a seven year high. Yes. Crazy. What, what, some of the economic
00:26:20.740
stuff, it can get a little overblown. I think, you know, I've been, I've read some stuff again,
00:26:25.460
like being, I would say being an expert on the ruble is not on my business card currently. So I will,
00:26:30.720
I will say some hesitation here, but like there is a, they're doing stuff to prop up the ruble
00:26:37.820
internally. Like for example, forcing their companies that are there to hold certain really
00:26:44.640
ridiculous amounts of the ruble, um, in their treasuries, which for a while can hold the ruble
00:26:51.860
up, right? For a while you can just keep increasing that number and make your, your entire economy hold
00:26:58.700
all of their money in rubles to prop up the ruble. Eventually though, that's going to run out. Uh,
00:27:04.280
that's at least the theory from economists, uh, the same thing with oil where like, you know,
00:27:08.220
they're getting higher prices, but the volume is way down. So it's not necessarily that they're
00:27:13.240
taking in more money. Uh, so some of the economic stuff, I think, I mean, I look, I think they are
00:27:17.980
hurt economically. I don't think this has been a boom to them economically. Uh, but it is, I think
00:27:23.080
the truth that they tried this full scale invasion all at once thinking probably that Ukraine would
00:27:30.080
be excited to have them. And, uh, that didn't happen. So they focused all of their forces now
00:27:36.080
in one, one area. And that is overwhelming the Ukrainian forces. I mean, they're still both
00:27:42.720
taking a lot of losses, but it's a lot easier for Russia to succeed when they're focusing on one area
00:27:47.120
like this. Just really keep your eye on what's going on. Don't move your eyes off of Ukraine. Um,
00:27:54.300
because things could get ugly very, very fast. Yesterday, the Dow plunged 400 more points.
00:28:01.720
The wall street banks yesterday began to warn of significant downturn and, uh, and increased
00:28:09.900
recession odds. The white house is still denying that there's any chance at all.
00:28:15.860
Any kind of recession. We're, we're in a transition period. Um, and that's, what's so exciting.
00:28:22.580
According to the white house, there's no recession coming. We're just in a transition. And I think
00:28:28.980
that's right. We're, um, you know, in a transition from a free market into some sort of totalitarian
00:28:35.020
state where the, uh, where the administrator, uh, Joe Biden just keeps wanting to, you know, take
00:28:43.420
things over. Don't know if you saw this, but, uh, he demanded yesterday that gas stations lower their
00:28:50.060
prices. He said, do it now, do it today. Bring down the price you're charging at the pump to reflect
00:28:58.100
the cost you are paying for the product. Joe, that's not how businesses work. Okay. They can't keep their
00:29:05.280
doors open if they're only charging what they paid for it because they also need to charge for the lights
00:29:14.360
and the building and all of the supplies and the people working there at the gas station. They have
00:29:21.880
to have a profit margin, but you have only been in the private sector your whole life. So you don't
00:29:28.520
understand that. He said, I want the Congress and the States and the industry to do their part because
00:29:34.760
I'm doing my part. Now that's fantastic, but not as fantastic, uh, as what Granholm said later.
00:29:45.480
So they're asking for a tax holiday, which is ridiculous, ridiculous. First, we, you know,
00:29:54.580
practically emptied out our strategic reserves. Now they want a, uh, tax holiday on gas tax, but
00:30:02.560
they're not going to find and cut anything in the federal deficit and the federal budget. So they got
00:30:09.200
to keep paying for all of these, you know, equitable roadways and everything else. So they're just going
00:30:14.580
to find that money. Well, they're going to find it at the fed and the fed can't sell our treasuries to
00:30:21.160
anybody. So the fed will just print more money, put it on our bill and then give it to the United
00:30:28.140
States. So you'll have more money for gas, which is a good thing, but done exactly the wrong way. So now
00:30:39.020
he's talking about a gas tax holiday, uh, which again would be good for the average person for a
00:30:46.380
while. Um, however, Granholm came out yesterday and said, if these companies don't lower the gas
00:30:55.280
price, the president will use every tool he has, including the defense production act.
00:31:07.480
So this would be the, what the third time, Stu, that they've invoked the defense production act,
00:31:12.040
something that hasn't been used since the war in Korea. This is a wartime act. And if you think that
00:31:22.080
they won't declare a national emergency, mark my words, when this happens, run for the hills, they are
00:31:31.160
going to declare a national emergency on climate change, which is the worst. Then they'll issue it and
00:31:38.760
and maybe climate change will can, will, uh, include the gas prices. Uh, otherwise they'll do an energy
00:31:46.780
national emergency. They're going to do a food national emergency, which means the president
00:31:53.020
will have total powers to be able to gobble up the free market. And if you don't, I mean, this is
00:32:02.000
fascism. What he was talking about yesterday is fascism. Now, can I ask another question?
00:32:10.800
There's so much to pay attention to. I, I, I'm sorry. We can barely keep up. I can't imagine what
00:32:16.480
it's like with you, with the family and your kids and school and everything else that's going on.
00:32:21.160
Uh, Matt Gates said, uh, Saturday, the firearms policy under Biden, he is using every tool he can.
00:32:32.980
There is a, uh, a problem that the IRS from March 1st to June 1st, a three month span,
00:32:43.920
the IRS bought $700,000 worth of ammunition. Now, why does the IRS need $700,000 worth of ammunition?
00:32:58.000
There's only two answers. Now, this is on top of the what? 1.8 billion that department of homeland
00:33:05.940
security spent on it. Uh, there's several agencies that are buying up ammunition now.
00:33:13.200
There's two explanations. One is more nefarious than the other. Well, yes, one is more nefarious
00:33:21.240
than the other. One is they just have plans on arming everybody in every agency and you will do
00:33:28.100
exactly what they say or they'll shoot. That's the most nefarious. The second is probably the most
00:33:37.080
likely, although I wouldn't lay any of my money down on it. It's probably more risky than the stock
00:33:42.440
market. The more likely of the two, I think, is that this is just another way to stop guns from
00:33:51.640
being on the streets. They are going to use every lever they can. If the United States government is
00:33:58.420
buying up all the ammunition that only drives the cost of ammunition up and only depletes the market
00:34:05.620
of ammunition. So, in effect, they stop you from being able to have any kind of ammunition. Remember,
00:34:13.960
we told you on Monday of this week what was happening with Winchester. Winchester makes most of our 223 and 556 for the military.
00:34:26.040
They have a military contract. In it, Winchester can sell about 30% of their stock to the open market.
00:34:38.880
And that provides the United States, you know, the average consumer with about 40 to 50% of all 556 and 223.
00:34:48.720
The federal government was pressuring Winchester to stop selling it to the open market.
00:34:57.760
That would be really bad for national defense. But beyond that, it's just another sign that they're
00:35:04.720
doing everything they possibly can to stop guns, to infringe on your Second Amendment rights.
00:35:14.200
These are the kinds of things, I think, that might be caught up in a Supreme Court case
00:35:20.240
regarding the EPA. Maybe. Maybe. But we'll see. You have to understand, boy, if you didn't read
00:35:29.920
Philip Drew, Administrator, get it. It's a free Google book because nobody in their right mind would ever
00:35:36.080
pay for it. It is absolutely the worst book I think I've ever read. It's just so poorly written.
00:35:42.540
But it was done by, I think it was written by Colonel House. He was the guy that was the main
00:35:49.160
advisor and best friend to Woodrow Wilson. Wilson is said to have read it three times during his
00:35:57.640
administration. He just loved it so much. It's so great. I think he said that because he wanted more
00:36:03.300
and more people to read it. You should read it because it is exactly what Biden is trying to do
00:36:10.920
right now. And I don't think I've ever gone into great detail. It's about the country is in chaos.
00:36:17.800
The country is having all kinds of problems. And all of these people just love this hero,
00:36:22.220
Philip Drew. He's a war hero, and he's great. And everybody loves him. And he's super, super honest.
00:36:27.080
And all he does, he just loves the country so much. And everybody knows that he's not going to do
00:36:31.980
anything to hurt the country. Because he's your average Joe. So he becomes president. But he doesn't
00:36:40.820
want to be called president. He just wants to be an administrator. Because he's not qualified to be
00:36:48.120
president. He's an administrator. And he can just use all of the administrative tools of the presidency
00:36:57.860
to get the experts in who know more than he does, know more than the average person. And he's going
00:37:05.920
to let science settle everything. And so he gets into office. He begins to do exactly what Joe Biden
00:37:13.480
is doing now. And then he starts telling the country, the companies in the country exactly what
00:37:19.160
they can and cannot do, exactly how they're going to do. But based on experts, I mean, he's not an
00:37:26.640
expert. So he just listens to the expert. And then when the experts speak, he tells the people the news
00:37:33.420
and the people rejoice, because it's so wonderful having an expert administrate everything in American
00:37:39.880
life. It goes on by two thirds of the way in. Philip Drew is going, he's already abolished,
00:37:49.160
published Congress, and he has rewritten the American Constitution, based on what the experts say.
00:37:56.520
And then on top of that, he does something else special. He goes state to state and abolishes their
00:38:02.280
state constitutions as well. Philip Drew administrator, you can get it free on Google Books. And it is a must
00:38:10.180
read if you want to understand where this administration is going. All right, I have some really good news.
00:38:16.020
Do we have the audio and video? If you happen to be watching the blaze, I want to show you a baby
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Here's the audio and video of that. Watch this.
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So, if we can see that. Look at that heartbeat.
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They're calling this another Beck baby. A baby that you rescued. This is the best thing I think
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00:40:15.120
This is the Glenn Beck Program. We're getting ready for the Supreme Court. We have no idea they
00:40:36.480
could announce one, one decision today and one tomorrow. We think that they are probably going
00:40:45.100
to announce five or six today and then maybe up to seven tomorrow and they'd be done. But
00:40:50.640
they don't have to do that. They can do whatever they want. They have until the end of the month,
00:40:55.740
which is next week. And for security reasons, I'm not sure what they're going to do.
00:41:04.080
There are a lot of really important cases. And in the next two days, all of them could come out.
00:41:12.260
The first one is released here in about five and a half minutes. And we will be following them and
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giving you coverage on all of it as it happens. Don't go anywhere.
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What you are about to hear is the fusion of entertainment and enlightenment.
00:43:45.640
Hello, America, and welcome to the Glenn Beck Program. There is a lot on our plate today.
00:43:50.200
We're going to get right to it. The Supreme Court is letting us know some of their rulings today.
00:43:56.480
We've already got one. It looks like it's a good ruling on the favor of the conservatives.
00:44:01.300
We're going to do analysis and all of it as all of these come out today, plus an update from last
00:44:08.680
night's TV show on our school systems and how bad our school systems are becoming.
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More importantly, why you should never trust anyone who says, oh no, we look at your student
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as our child. That's not true. We begin there in 60 seconds.
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Okay. Stu, quickly, we're going to go into analysis later. Just quickly,
00:45:47.400
what decisions have we received from the Supreme Court?
00:45:52.800
So one in Berger versus North Carolina NAACP was a case about voter ID law, basically who could argue
00:45:59.300
for it in the state. Not a huge high profile one that everyone was talking about, but it was an 8-1
00:46:04.540
decision written by Gorsuch. And the only dissent was Sotomayor. So as you can imagine,
00:46:09.340
probably goes the way that you'd want it to go if you're a conservative. What we see here is these
00:46:14.320
opinions get released by reverse seniority. So that means no Amy Coney Barrett decisions today,
00:46:20.600
no Brett Kavanaugh decisions today. Gorsuch is up now. He could have another one. And then you go
00:46:25.800
into Kagan, Sotomayor, and then Alito, which is if you're going to get Dobbs, hopefully where you would
00:46:30.700
get it. And then of course, filling up the last one would be Roberts because he's chief justice.
00:46:36.560
So anyway, this is where we're going now. We're going to get at least one more. We only know
00:46:41.880
one more at a time. So when a new decision comes out, we'll know if there's one more or if it's
00:46:48.760
Yeah. Okay. Thank you very much, Stu. I want to bring in Ricky Radliff,
00:46:54.080
Radliff, who is my executive producer. I mean, I don't, I don't, I have no idea. I've got a block on,
00:47:01.900
I don't, I don't know what it is. I know. I know. I know. All right. So Ricky, I asked her to look
00:47:11.800
into something because she has real journalistic chops. She's the one that makes sure that everything
00:47:18.680
that we say between her and Stu is accurate and gets a final check. I had, I came to her two months
00:47:26.120
ago with a, um, with a story about a school locally in Texas. And, um, it, it happened to a guy,
00:47:35.740
a contractor that I know, a good friend whose child has really gone through the ringer in the last few
00:47:43.260
years. And the school, uh, what was, was not helpful to say the least. Can you tell the story
00:47:52.380
and then go over what you found in this? Yeah. And I'm going to be relying on some notes because
00:47:57.900
this is now turned legal. Yes, this has become legal. So I'll be referring to some notes to make
00:48:03.240
sure that I get all my facts straight. But, um, basically there's a school in the Dallas Fort Worth
00:48:08.760
area. It's called Springtown High School. And Travis's daughter, Aaliyah, a few years ago,
00:48:14.560
she suffered a brutal rape. And as a consequence of that, she's had a lot of trauma and suffered
00:48:21.720
depression and has been suicidal over the last two years. So Travis decided he wanted to make sure
00:48:27.400
that he got his daughter into the right school that would put her in a program for, that had special
00:48:32.440
needs and, you know, attended to, um, kids like her that, you know, wanted to learn, but also needed
00:48:38.720
a little bit of extra care and attention. So, um, I should point out that because of the,
00:48:46.240
the rape and the depression, she has been on some, some medication to help keep her balanced.
00:48:52.740
Yes, this was a, this was a horrible, horrible incident. And I, I really love the, the family
00:49:00.300
because the father is right, right on top of it and, and, and so caring. And she has had,
00:49:07.560
uh, an attempted suicide, um, because of this. Yeah. In the past, she had, uh, struggled with
00:49:14.080
suicide and he is a single father. So he's doing this on his own with a teenage daughter. Any fathers
00:49:18.800
out there, even, you know, who are doing this with a two parent household know how hard it is to
00:49:23.640
raise a daughter in today's society. So he sends her to school and, um, there's a couple of incidents
00:49:29.200
that lead up to this moment that is unthinkable. Um, she gets into an altercation during lunch
00:49:35.580
with a couple of boys and they have a shoving match. They had cut her in line at the cafeteria.
00:49:40.880
They have a shoving match and they tell her, go home and kill yourself. Now this is at the school
00:49:47.460
that just promised Travis that she would have special classes and they would be very attentive
00:49:52.880
to it. Right. So this kind of stuff could happen, but it's what does the school do about it? Right.
00:49:58.400
Okay. So the shoving match, go home and kill yourself. What happens?
00:50:01.860
She immediately apologizes. I actually saw cell phone footage from another student where I,
00:50:08.500
I see the deescalation. She apologizes. The boys apologize. Um, but they concede, we'll go back
00:50:15.740
to the back of the line. What follows that is she sort of, it sets in. Someone has just told her to
00:50:21.180
kill herself after she's already been struggling with this for the last couple of years. There is
00:50:25.900
video footage from the school. Uh, this is verified by the principal. This is per Travis. He says the
00:50:31.840
principal saw the footage themselves of Aaliyah at the cafeteria, sitting at the table,
00:50:38.360
shaking and trembling by herself. She was so upset about being told by boys to go kill herself.
00:50:44.240
She goes and tells a teacher and a school counselor and, uh, they tell her to go back to class. And
00:50:51.660
then she goes back and forth and she's saying, I'm having thoughts of self-harm.
00:50:55.600
She's saying this to teachers and administrators. Yes. They tell her, well, look, why don't we send
00:51:02.780
you home? So they put her on a bus and send her home. At this point, Travis has still not been
00:51:08.140
contacted. She, and he's at work. He's at work. So she's being sent home alone to a house and they
00:51:16.000
reach out to contact him. No, Travis gets no phone call. The phone call that he does get though,
00:51:20.960
is from his daughter after she has swallowed the last of her medication and, uh, overdose. Yeah.
00:51:27.360
She, she was trying to kill herself and she had a moment of clarity and realized, okay, I want to
00:51:34.340
stay alive. So she calls her dad and he races home and he finds his daughter in an ambulance.
00:51:41.100
She's unconscious at that point. And they get to the hospital and he doesn't even know
00:51:45.860
what has led to his daughter because the school still has not called. No. Um, so he eventually
00:51:53.800
when she comes to, he gets the story and he talks to the principal and the principal is, is very upset
00:52:00.800
and sympathetic to Travis and says, yes, I'm going to conduct an investigation and starts to look into
00:52:06.140
it. So the school starts at, what's the name of the school again? Springtown ISD. Okay. This is just
00:52:10.900
outside the Dallas Fort Worth area. Okay. So the school looks to do the right thing. They're
00:52:16.680
concerned and they're like, I can't believe this happened. Who dropped the ball? Right. Then he
00:52:21.300
gets a phone call from the superintendent. This is all per Travis. So I understand this is a, he said,
00:52:26.320
she said at this point, but Travis says that the superintendent called him and started to put
00:52:31.140
some blame on Travis as though he weren't attentive enough to his own daughter. Oh my gosh. And the
00:52:37.240
conversations that he were, he was having with the principal shut down and it was his assumption
00:52:41.280
that they had lawyered up and he wasn't getting an apology. He wasn't getting any answers as to why
00:52:46.880
they failed his daughter. Um, so I talked to Travis during this time cause he was working on my house.
00:52:53.940
He's one of the guys that was working on our house and, uh, and he was, I sent him home, you know,
00:52:59.520
right away the, like the first day, what go home, go home, go home. Um, and he is, uh,
00:53:05.460
he's not a litigious guy. He's, he's not a wealthy guy by any stretch of the imagination. He's a war
00:53:12.560
veteran, um, and a single dad who is really struggling with his daughter's mental health
00:53:19.500
because of the rape. Uh, and, uh, so I, I know that when he's, he's talking to the school at first,
00:53:27.320
he's saying, I just want to make sure this doesn't happen to somebody else. What happened? How did this
00:53:31.940
break down? He's not even thinking about being, uh, you know, a litigant in this at all. He just
00:53:38.720
wants to know, is this school safe for my daughter or other people's daughters? Right. So once he
00:53:45.520
realizes the school shutting down and they're not really doing anything to, to care for, uh, his
00:53:50.520
daughter. And in fact, they're, they're claiming that they did everything above board. He said that a
00:53:55.680
lot of the conversations with the assistant principal were callous and they, they were saying things like,
00:54:01.340
well, she's fine. She's alive. So what's the big deal? What are you concerned about?
00:54:05.860
So at this point, Travis decides to get his own lawyer and I'm going to read from the letter of
00:54:10.960
demand to the school. Um, Mr. Adams believes that everyone should be fired that was involved in
00:54:18.180
this and not be permitted to work in the district. Again, Mr. Adams believes the district should pay
00:54:22.080
Aaliyah for its failure to identify her as a student with a disability, for its failure to provide her a
00:54:27.700
safe school environment, for its failure to provide her support when she was in crisis,
00:54:31.340
for its failure to notify her father that she was in crisis, for its failure to fully investigate
00:54:36.560
and discipline the student who told Aaliyah to go home and kill herself. Reminder, just,
00:54:40.940
there's this big push for bullying. Everyone has zero tolerance for bullying. I looked at the
00:54:45.140
school. They claim that they do too. Um, and for its failure to fully investigate the assistant
00:54:49.820
principal and school counselor for the role in Aaliyah's suicide attempt, there is no figure the
00:54:54.120
district could pay to truly make up for its failings. But the figure of $1 million would help Aaliyah's
00:54:59.520
recovery and support for her future. These are his demands. So this was sent in late March,
00:55:04.940
um, because I wanted to do our due diligence. I reached out to the school, um, after I heard
00:55:10.840
Travis D tell the story and some of the allegations where I was horrified and the school, uh, quickly
00:55:16.840
got back to us. There's something about, um, media, the Glenn Beck program. And, uh, that sends a bit
00:55:23.460
of a tremble and it wasn't the school that got back to us. It was their lawyer. And I'm sorry,
00:55:28.660
the name of the school again is Springtown ISD. Springtown ISD. Google crashed that website y'all.
00:55:34.880
Um, and the lawyer Meredith Walker got back to us pretty quickly and she said, I represent
00:55:39.880
Springtown. Please direct any further communications regarding this matter to me. Here's a statement for
00:55:45.300
the district. We care deeply about the physical and emotional wellbeing of all of our students,
00:55:49.060
blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. The allegations outlined in your email, which is basically us
00:55:53.580
retelling what Travis told us include inaccuracies. Okay. Well, we don't like being wrong about
00:56:00.300
anything. We want to make sure we get our facts right. So we followed up. And even though I know
00:56:04.460
him, if he was telling me a story that wasn't true, I would be telling him, I'm not doing this story
00:56:11.220
because you, you have your facts wrong or I can't pin him down. Right. So we, we responded,
00:56:16.840
Meredith, thank you for your quick response. You said the allegations in our email contained
00:56:22.180
inaccuracies. Can you please outline what the inaccuracies are? Another legal response. Well,
00:56:28.180
given state and federal laws, protecting student information, Springtown ISD cannot comment further.
00:56:33.280
And then I also have, um, uh, Travis's lawyer sent me a response from the school. They did respond to
00:56:39.160
the letter of demand. And basically it was, so we're not going to do anything about this. You're,
00:56:45.780
your clear ask is outrageous. Let me see if I have this right. So Travis, his daughter,
00:56:51.120
she's, she, she gets out of a mental health institution for suicide. Um, and I know cause
00:56:57.820
I watched him through that torment, uh, and he's driving many miles to be with his daughter all the
00:57:06.000
time. Uh, and she gets out, he finds the school, he tells the school, her situation that she'd been
00:57:12.400
raped. She's suffering from suicidal thoughts. Um, is this a safe school? They say, yes. Can you put
00:57:19.420
her in some sort of special class? They say yes. Um, and we just want to make sure it is safe,
00:57:25.380
but they don't put her in a special class. No, he actually finds out during all of this that she
00:57:30.340
never got put in that special education program. So, uh, she was just dumped into the system.
00:57:36.060
And then when she says I'm having suicidal thoughts, help, help, help. She thinks she's
00:57:41.900
doing the right thing. Cause that's what dad told her to do. Go to the principal, go to any of these
00:57:47.440
administrators and tell them because they know your situation. They say, get on the bus and go home.
00:57:54.100
She then kills herself. No, she attempts to kill herself. Yeah. Thank God. Yeah. Uh, she goes and
00:57:59.800
attempts to kill herself. Uh, and the school is at first outraged and sympathetic, and then they
00:58:05.680
lawyer up. This really, um, shows you America that no, when, whatever Joe Biden says, when he says,
00:58:14.420
Oh, these kids are, you know, our teachers love our kids as much as, as, uh, you do. That's not true.
00:58:21.200
It's, it's not humanly possible. It is not true. Right. And there's this big push right now. We've got
00:58:30.380
to, we've got to stop the bullying that's going on. Governor Ron DeSantis, his legislation,
00:58:35.680
for kids who are suffering with gender dysphoria. Um, if there, if teachers aren't able to push,
00:58:41.460
you know, some of the grooming conversations that are happening in the classroom, this is a form of,
00:58:46.540
it may lead to suicide among, uh, transgendered kids. And if you guys recall, there was just a few
00:58:52.480
months ago. Do we have time for this Sarah to play this clip of Jen Psaki? Real quick.
00:58:56.220
This is a political wedge issue and an attempt to win a culture war. And they're doing that in a way
00:59:03.580
that is harsh and cruel, uh, to a community of kids, especially. I'm, I'm like going to get,
00:59:10.040
I'm going to get emotional about this issue because I just, it's horrible, but, uh, but you know, it's,
00:59:16.260
it's like kids who are bullied and this is like all these leaders are, are taking steps to hurt them
00:59:23.500
and hurt their lives and hurt their families. And you look at some of these laws in these states and
00:59:28.300
it is going after parents who are in loving relationships who have kids. It's completely
00:59:33.800
outrageous. Um, but it is, it is a wedge issue. Sorry. I am. This is an issue that makes me
00:59:39.320
completely crazy. Makes her cry. Yeah. I mean, I believe that Jen is sincere when she's concerned
00:59:45.100
about the kids bullying, but there is some selective outrage going on about the kids that we choose to
00:59:50.120
care about who are bullied. Um, springtown high school. We will be following this, uh, story. I
00:59:57.580
hope you follow this story. It's Dallas Fort Worth area, springtown high school. Um, like to see some
01:00:05.080
compassion and, uh, and something done about this. Uh, but we will be following it. And I would urge you to
01:00:13.240
very politely let the, um, the springtown ISD know that you are following it as well. Nothing like
01:00:22.780
people saying you're in the spotlight that changes everything. Thank you, Ricky. Um, our sponsor,
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Okay. Let's get a SCOTUS update. By the way, we have Josh Hammer joining us at the top of next hour
01:01:57.840
to, uh, go over what these decisions are and what they mean. Uh, what is the next decision that came
01:02:06.300
out and do we have more coming? So, yes, we still have more coming. We know we at least have one more
01:02:10.900
so far today. We've had three. We talked about the first one a little earlier. The second one was a
01:02:15.360
case Nance versus Ward, which was a fascinating one in that the guy who's on death row was basically
01:02:20.540
arguing for a firing squad. So this is one of those cases that if you win, you may get shot. Uh, but he did
01:02:27.580
win. Right. It was, it, the, the, the question was, can somebody who's on death row ask for an
01:02:34.380
execution style that is not currently done in the state? Right. The answer is, yep. Well, no,
01:02:39.520
the answer is, it really was more about the procedure that he could bring, uh, whether he
01:02:44.940
could challenge it under a civil rights, as a civil rights violation. So that is, they said he can do
01:02:50.380
that. So that is going, uh, that, that is, was a five, four case. And, and, and in the way that
01:02:55.780
you'd almost, uh, the, the worried, the way you'd worry about a case being ruled upon in this court
01:03:00.960
and that you'd have, uh, you have Kagan, um, uh, and, uh, but the conservatives going against it,
01:03:08.000
uh, with Roberts going on, on that side. So, um, and then you have a six, three case, uh,
01:03:14.640
in Vega versus Takeo. Uh, this is the one where the, um, another one of these civil rights cases,
01:03:20.300
where if you, a violation of your Miranda rights, uh, is a full justification for a civil rights
01:03:27.180
case, the court says, no, it's not. And that's an Alito decision. Wow. Six, three, kind of the
01:03:32.680
normal split that you'd expect from the court conservatives versus liberals. Uh, we do know
01:03:37.980
we have more to come at least one. And we know now that Alito, they only announce, they only hang on
01:03:44.360
just a second. They only announce it one at a time. So they'll announce one and say another one is
01:03:49.100
coming. Yeah. It's a, they basically announce one and say the, they, they say they announce one,
01:03:53.980
they don't say anything until it's the last one. So you only know at the very last one,
01:03:58.480
if it, when it's over, we now know there's at least one more coming and it can't be by Sotomayor,
01:04:03.960
Kagan, Gorsuch, Kavanaugh, or Barrett. It's gotta be Alito, Breyer, Thomas, or Roberts.
01:04:08.340
We will see which one it is coming up. Wow. Okay. Stand by.
01:04:19.100
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This appears to be a very good day for the Constitution. The gun ruling has just come out
01:06:02.280
from the Supreme Court. The decision was written by Thomas, and it looks very good. By the way,
01:06:10.600
we're going to have full analysis with Josh Hammer, who is right now just scouring these decisions to
01:06:16.800
give us the real important parts of it about 30 minutes from now, because they are still coming
01:06:23.240
out. We'll give you that to you in just a second. Stu, just give the essence of what Thomas is saying
01:06:30.520
on this. Yeah, quick 6-3 decision on the sort of ideological lines you would expect here.
01:06:37.140
This is a great, to give you a quick excerpt, the constitutional right to bear arms in public
01:06:41.900
for self-defense is not a second-class right subject to an entirely different body of rules
01:06:46.420
than the other Bill of Rights guaranteed. The exercise of other constitutional rights does not
01:06:50.820
require individuals to demonstrate to government officers some special need. The Second Amendment
01:06:55.820
right to carry arms in public for self-defense is no different. So it is as good as you could
01:07:01.720
expect, and it's from Thomas. It's a long ruling. There's going to be a lot of good nuggets into it,
01:07:05.680
and we'll get into it coming up. Okay, we'll get into it about a half an hour after we've had time to
01:07:09.840
really digest all of it. That's coming up with Josh Hammer in just about 30 minutes.
01:07:16.020
Tim Barton is here. He's the president of Wall Builders, and also he is part of the American
01:07:22.980
Journey Summer Institute on American History. Our kids learn dates and names, and that's all they
01:07:30.440
learn, and so they don't really learn anything. They don't learn anything of importance. They can't
01:07:35.860
defend the country, the Constitution. They don't even know why it was written. I have actually asked
01:07:42.100
many people before, try this. It'll scare the hell out of you next week. What country did the United
01:07:47.420
States break away from in 1776? No clue. No clue. It is terrifying. Tim, welcome to the program.
01:07:57.680
Thanks. I am now a little scared to talk to people about Great Britain, but, or England, or, I don't
01:08:03.660
know, but I'm nervous now. Yeah, I know. I know. You have, I did a special last night, and I stood in
01:08:10.320
front of this old schoolhouse, and it actually, the hills go up and down as you're on your way. So it is
01:08:17.160
technically, when my grandparents said I walked five miles to school uphill both ways, technically
01:08:24.500
they were right on this schoolhouse. But it was amazing to see it was this building that was cut in
01:08:31.920
half by this folding wall, and little kids on one side and bigger kids on the other. And you have
01:08:39.820
something that in those kinds of schools, back before we had the Department of Education, we had
01:08:45.340
all the teachers unions, we used to learn through catechism, which is you would learn the concepts of
01:08:52.580
them, and then you'd have to defend it, correct? Right. Yeah, we actually, I brought several things
01:08:58.140
with me over to show, but one of them is that early catechism, or one of the catechisms I think
01:09:02.980
you're referring to. Yeah, okay, so this is on the Constitution, and see how many of these you can
01:09:10.620
answer yourself. This was given to not eighth grade students, this was for seventh grade to fourth grade,
01:09:19.520
or fourth grade to seventh grade? So presumably, because there was no Department of Education,
01:09:23.900
education, education was handled locally. So oftentimes, the teacher would choose what she
01:09:28.360
thought was the most appropriate, what he thought was the most appropriate for the students of that
01:09:31.860
age. For the class. This is an elementary catechism. So it's a beginner catechism, and it was used in
01:09:38.960
schools. So at this point, you're guessing maybe fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh grade, because there
01:09:43.980
were only eight levels or eight grades back then, but it was on the Constitution. And they literally start
01:09:49.020
with the very beginning from 1776, when America became a nation, and we are a Republican form of
01:09:54.820
government, and it goes through the sequence. But some of the questions they ask are genuinely
01:10:00.040
astounding. I chose a few fun ones, just to give the indication of... Stu, hang on. I know, Stu,
01:10:07.760
look up from the court for a second and see if you can answer any of these. I've done this.
01:10:11.940
I would absolutely fail. Okay. Go ahead. Okay, so it's a setup question. As you mentioned,
01:10:18.340
there's catechisms, there's questions and answers. So a question in the sequence says,
01:10:22.160
may members of Congress be arrested, that is, seized by a sheriff or constable,
01:10:25.900
for debts they owe while they are attending to their public duty. So while they're serving in
01:10:30.540
Congress, can they be arrested for owing debts? I have no idea. So the answer is... I think the answer is
01:10:40.060
no, but after they leave, once they're finished with the business, they can be... They can be
01:10:46.500
arrested while they're sitting in Congress, or if they're on their way to Congress.
01:10:50.140
But if they're done with their business of Congress, you can arrest them afterwards. Or if they're back
01:10:54.160
home, you can arrest them for debts they owe. However, the answer goes on to say is that
01:10:58.500
Congress's job is so important that they can't be arrested while going or returning to their home
01:11:02.700
or the place where Congress meets, unless they have done one of three things. What are the three
01:11:09.360
things... Next question is, what are the three things the Constitution says you can't arrest a sitting
01:11:14.440
congressman or senator for? Three things they can be arrested for?
01:11:23.860
Well, it actually is what they tried to charge President Trump with was a breach of the peace.
01:11:29.080
So it's a treason, a felony, or a breach of the peace. And then it says, when is a person guilty
01:11:33.540
of treason? And so the whole thing, the catechism is a building block where they walk you from the
01:11:38.280
very beginning, but it literally walks through Article 1, then Article 2, then Article 3, and Article 4.
01:11:43.040
So it's a sequence through this. Everything is question and answer. But this is what children
01:11:48.280
were getting when they were in that one-room schoolhouse when we talk about how much further
01:11:52.920
advanced they were in an educational position at a very young age. This is part of how they got there.
01:11:59.440
It's amazing because my grandfather only went up to third grade. He got up to third grade. He could
01:12:05.760
neither read nor write. But he was a wildly intelligent man. And I can't... I mean, you have
01:12:14.860
kids that are going, you know, graduating from high school, even going to college, and they're
01:12:24.660
It is. And one of the things we know is that even the Department of Education has revealed that it's
01:12:29.740
approximately 19% of high school graduates who are graduating functionally illiterate. They cannot
01:12:34.740
read or write. And so those are also students that oftentimes go to college. And I remember being in
01:12:41.140
college around people who really did not know any kind of structure of sentences and paragraphs and
01:12:47.820
writing things. And I just thought, this is crazy. But this is the reality of the brokenness of the
01:12:51.720
education system. I know that I saw some of the special last night. This is part of the problem. And the
01:12:56.860
further removed education has become from parents, the less involved parents have been, the more it's allowed
01:13:04.060
Yeah, we've got to break up the Department of Education. These administrative... This administrative state has
01:13:10.820
got to be broken down. It's got to be closed. There's no reason that Washington is deciding what we can and
01:13:17.880
cannot do in our own local schools. That's madness. Absolute madness. We also are working with, through our
01:13:27.260
American Journey experience, we have our Summer Institute that teaches kids American history.
01:13:32.780
And we have one more this summer. When is the next one starting?
01:13:43.440
We are. We do have a few spots still available. If people want to sign up, they can go to
01:13:47.280
the American Journey experience or Mercury One or Wall Builders. All those websites will have places
01:13:52.760
where they can sign up. And this is something that there is an application process. There's an
01:13:56.640
interview process because our goal is we're not trying to make converts, right? Some parents get
01:14:01.160
concerned and they want their kids to be changed from the socialistic ideas. Our goal for this program
01:14:06.920
is to make disciples of kids who already believe the truth exists and just want to be equipped and grow
01:14:11.440
and learn more. And so that way we can spend time helping kids go deeper, not just trying to
01:14:16.500
convert them from the craziness of what they've learned from their professors.
01:14:20.280
Right. This one is very specific because this is going for 18 to 24 year olds. These are people in
01:14:25.720
college. These we have had some that are a little wishy-washy and kind of torn back and forth,
01:14:32.700
but we're really trying to focus on the kids that generally get it. I mean, they don't have to
01:14:39.280
understand American history back and forth, but they understand that we're a decent nation,
01:14:43.860
that we were founded in God because it's a very short this year. It's a short, short season because
01:14:50.740
of all of our schedules. And so it's a week, which normally takes us two weeks to do. We're packing it
01:14:57.300
into one week. And these kids are transformed. So if you know, you know, or maybe your son or daughter
01:15:03.540
is going into college or in college, they want to understand American history. They want to be able
01:15:10.560
to defend it. They want to be able to find out how to find the truth. We're not teaching the truth.
01:15:17.180
We're teaching you how to find the truth by showing you the original documents. Um, please go to
01:15:24.080
mercury one or American journey experience or wall builders.com. And you can find all of the,
01:15:30.320
you know, anything you just go, one of those, just fill out the form application, but do it right
01:15:34.940
away. Uh, how's our class doing this week? I, I talked to them Monday when they first came in
01:15:41.800
and I don't think you had broken them down yet. My favorite part of this is Tim is so good at
01:15:48.340
rhetoric. He starts with, so tell me what you believe. And by the end of the day, all of the
01:15:55.040
students are like, I don't know what I believe in you. Breaks them down on, can you defend what you
01:16:02.280
believe? And that show that breaks the arrogance of today, uh, and allows them to open up their
01:16:09.960
mind and go, okay. All right. If I'm going to say, I believe something, I better know why I believe it.
01:16:15.220
Correct. Absolutely. And it's something that we definitely have seen at this point now being on
01:16:18.740
the fourth day in with these students. And as you mentioned, normally it's a two week process. So
01:16:22.080
we're able to take a little more time. Now we're definitely force feeding, cramming some things as fast
01:16:27.220
as we can, but it's, it's really, it's so fun to see kids that are hungry. They want to know truth.
01:16:33.120
And as you mentioned on the first day, we try to expose that they, they might not know as much as
01:16:37.440
they think they do, right? They might have some opinions and ideas, but it's, it's maybe not as
01:16:41.820
grounded as they thought. At 50, I didn't know as much as I thought I knew. It's crazy. And part of
01:16:50.600
the goal of our program is we want to help kids be able to, to have experienced history firsthand,
01:16:55.740
holding original documents, going through the vault and seeing all the artifacts so that when,
01:17:01.300
when they have a conversation, they can have a much more informed, intelligent, honest conversation
01:17:06.060
saying, actually, I held the original documents and here's what it said. And, and I know that story.
01:17:10.560
Well, well, here's, you know, almost like the Paul Harvey, we tell them, look, you're, you're going to
01:17:14.400
get part of the story. People are going to promote, right. Some of the bad and the evil and moments.
01:17:18.260
And sometimes you need to go, well, actually there's more to that story. Here's the Paul Harvey
01:17:21.840
moment. The rest of the story. Right. And, and sometimes even, even, even there is more,
01:17:27.800
there's more bad stuff. Absolutely. In that story. You know, we want them, we don't ever want any
01:17:33.840
student to ever be surprised by the bad stuff in America because we have done, you know, I, I ask
01:17:41.740
people, you know, is America good or is America bad? The answer is yes. Is, is Winston Churchill good?
01:17:49.180
Or was he bad? Yes. He's both. It's the trajectory. And are you learning from the past and the
01:17:57.100
mistakes? Yeah. That's what matters. There's no doubt about it. And actually one of the things
01:18:01.980
on Tuesday, we were going through some of the history of Columbus and Jamestown and Plymouth.
01:18:06.980
And in Jamestown, we talked about, you know, the 1619 practice trying to say America's bad because of
01:18:11.120
this. And, and they're not even telling that story. Right. But if you wanted to say things were bad,
01:18:14.560
we could really go into some bad stuff. And so we did. And so we went back to John Smith's journal
01:18:19.600
and we talked about the starving time in Jamestown and, and read about the actual cannibalism of
01:18:24.500
Jamestown where they had 490 people at the beginning of the winter. And by that spring,
01:18:28.780
they were down to 60. They had starved to death, but they started eating each other in Jamestown.
01:18:33.260
And the students at the end of the day, when we asked him, Hey, what's something that stood out to you
01:18:36.200
today? The number one thing students said was, I did not know that English colonies ever turned to
01:18:42.040
cannibalism. Right. I didn't know it got that bad. And to your point, there definitely are some
01:18:47.080
really bad, despicable, evil moments in American history. And, and what we do here is we try to
01:18:52.540
teach students the whole story, but, but grounded it in truth. So we're not just making accusations.
01:18:57.900
We actually pull out the documents and say, well, actually, here's where that was written. Who wrote
01:19:01.020
that? Here's the story to equip them, to be able to have more honest, intelligent conversations.
01:19:06.560
The American journey experience summer Institute. If you want your kids involved 18 to 24, we have
01:19:14.560
few seats left wallbuilders.com or the American journey.org. You can also find it at mercury one.org.
01:19:23.340
Thank you, Tim. Appreciate it. Thanks so much less more on the Supreme court and the constitution that
01:19:30.160
our kids don't understand. And quite honestly, most of us don't even understand coming up in just a
01:19:35.980
minute. First, let me tell you about our sponsor this hour. It's Patriot mobile. Every time you pick
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back or nine, seven, two Patriot, nine, seven, two Patriot, Patriot mobile.com slash back. Glenn back.
01:21:01.820
If this isn't the definition of Charles Dickens, tale of two cities, it was the best of times. It was
01:21:20.440
the worst of times. Uh, if you look at what's happening in the administration, it is the worst
01:21:26.560
of times. The, the violations of our constitution are out of control. But if you look at what's
01:21:33.520
happening in our Supreme court, it is the best of times. Um, just today, can we go over some of
01:21:40.540
the, we have Josh hammer, uh, coming up. He's going to give us a full rundown of what all of it means,
01:21:45.560
but just quickly, let's go over what came out, uh, today. Yeah. Question about voter ID law in North
01:21:53.380
Carolina. That was an eight, one decision. Gorsuch writing only Sotomayor dissenting.
01:21:57.780
You had a case about, uh, execution methods. That one, the guy wanted to choose a firing squad.
01:22:04.040
And, uh, the question was whether he was able to do that as a civil rights violation,
01:22:08.560
as they wouldn't let him be executed by firing squad. That one was a five, four decision written
01:22:14.140
by Kagan. Then you had a, uh, quick one about, um, uh, violation, uh, of, uh, of civil rights.
01:22:22.520
Um, as it, it was, uh, the Miranda's, the Miranda rights, uh, is that the basis for civil rights?
01:22:28.920
That was a six, three Alito decision on, on typical lines and a six, three decision on ideological lines
01:22:34.820
as well. In the big one, the gun case in New York, which now says you don't have to prove a special
01:22:40.520
need to execute your constitutional right to bear arms. You can do it without proving you need to
01:22:47.400
do it. I've got a lot of questions just on that one with Josh Hammer. We're going to talk to him
01:23:10.520
We've got no room to compromise. We've got to stand together. It's going to survive.
01:23:27.400
Stand up straight and hold the line. It's a new day, our time to rise.
01:23:39.400
What you are about to hear is the fusion of entertainment and enlightenment. This is the
01:23:54.220
All right. One of the smarter guys that I know, and I think a real force, uh, for good in our,
01:23:59.860
in our nation is Josh Hammer. Do not hold this against him. He is the opinion editor at Newsweek.
01:24:05.560
And I, and I think that's actually a good thing that a real conservative is, uh, the opinion editor
01:24:12.460
of Newsweek. Um, he clerked for, I think Alito. He was the, um, editor at large for the daily wire
01:24:21.760
for a while. He's worked with us at the blaze for a while. Guy can't keep a job, but he is. He's
01:24:28.040
probably one of the best guys, uh, I know that can really give us the rundown and the overall view
01:24:33.060
of what has just happened at the Supreme court. We start with Josh Hammer in 60 seconds.
01:24:42.500
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life lock. My friend, Josh Hammer, how are you, sir?
01:25:50.480
Glenn, I'm doing great. Just a quick one clarification. I cannot claim the mantle of
01:25:54.560
former Supreme court clerk. I'm a great admirer of justice Alito, but as for myself, I actually
01:25:58.800
only clerked on the U S court appeals for the fifth circuit, but with that caveat aside, it's so great
01:26:02.940
to be with you on such a great day for the constitution. Oh, well now I don't know if you
01:26:07.080
have any credibility, uh, cause I was looking for somebody who was specifically clerked, uh, Josh,
01:26:12.180
I, I really appreciate the time you've already taken today, uh, to look into all of these rulings.
01:26:17.680
I think this was a very good day for the constitution.
01:26:22.620
Yeah, it is. I mean, it especially is look, I mean, we have to talk about this gun case. I mean,
01:26:28.980
the court determined other cases today. I, you know, they've just done this in the past hour.
01:26:33.420
I would, I would be lying and misleading your listeners. If I said, I've been able to comb through
01:26:36.720
the mall to find to come, but certainly what I'm seeing here is, is a great day. There's another
01:26:41.640
ruling out a case called Vega involving the, uh, expansion or the lack thereof is the case may
01:26:47.460
be of an, of, of an erroneous 1960s era criminal procedure case known as Miranda versus Arizona.
01:26:52.640
This was like a, an excellent six, three outcome from justice Alito, but it is this New York state.
01:26:58.360
How does it wait, wait, wait, hang on before we get to that, how does the Miranda case affect us?
01:27:03.500
So basically the court had an opportunity to expand Miranda and an opportunity to expand Miranda into
01:27:11.560
uncharted terrain and they, and they refuse to do so. It was, it was a six, three ruling that
01:27:16.760
broke down on familiar ideological lines. Basically the court held that in a situation where a police
01:27:22.420
officer fails to give a suspect his Miranda warnings, and then the government uses that
01:27:28.220
suspect's statements against him in court. The suspect does not have an implied legal right
01:27:34.380
of action under the fifth amendment's right against self-incrimination to sue for that. So
01:27:38.860
it's a minor fact pattern dispute as a lot of these cases end up being, but the principle is against
01:27:44.900
the expansion of flawed precedent. And really kind of, it's interesting, Glenn, if you go back to 1960s,
01:27:50.280
when the Warren court was obviously at its heyday, this is the point that I make time and time again in
01:27:54.400
my law school speeches that I do through the federal society, it's usually the, you know,
01:27:57.980
the culture war cases, Griswold versus Connecticut, obviously Roe versus Wade, it is the culture war
01:28:03.680
cases that tend to generate the headline, but it's actually the area of criminal procedure and cases
01:28:09.460
like Miranda versus Arizona, Gideon versus Wainwright, that really, I think kind of make, at least for
01:28:15.680
myself, kind of like a law and order conservative like myself, really kind of makes the hair on the back
01:28:19.180
of my spine just totally leap up. So this is a good decision in refusing to extend Miranda,
01:28:23.920
maybe Miranda will be overturned one day, it's not clear, but it's a step in the right direction at
01:28:28.240
least. Okay, so Josh, I'd love to go back to why you think Miranda should be overturned, but we'll do
01:28:34.580
that another day where we're not talking about the huge gun case up in New York, where I couldn't get
01:28:43.260
a gun in New York. I had 15 active threats, I had Gavin DeBecker and Associates, which were,
01:28:50.800
they're probably the best security detail in the country, in the world, really. And they were
01:28:58.660
following these threats, you know, my kids were looking at pursuer lists on our refrigerator, if
01:29:05.520
these people approach, go run, get mom or dad. I mean, it was really bad. And I couldn't get a gun
01:29:13.040
in New York City, because they deemed that I didn't have enough cause to have a gun. That's
01:29:20.960
been thrown out now. So tell me what they've done. What does this mean for New York and the rest of
01:29:27.780
So it's a fantastic ruling. Look, I have not had the chance to pour through this with a fine tooth
01:29:33.940
comb. Looks like the Justice Thomas majority opinion clocks in at 63 pages, you know, including
01:29:39.020
concurrences and dissents. We're up to 130, 140 pages. So I've got my reading cut out for me for
01:29:43.640
the rest of the day. But based on my quick skimming of it, this is a thoroughly well researched, I might
01:29:49.800
even say thus far career defining majority opinion from Justice Clarence Thomas. It's really interesting.
01:29:55.620
I was thinking about this recently. It's unclear to me to date, or at least before today, whether
01:30:01.940
Clarence Thomas had a career defining majority opinion. He's written so prolifically for so long,
01:30:07.880
but most of his greatest writings, especially on the hard hitting cases, have been in concurrence
01:30:12.940
or more often than not, oftentimes in dissent. Really, Anthony Scalia, I think in another gun case,
01:30:19.740
2008 DC versus Heller had his kind of landmark career defining opinion. And at least until
01:30:25.440
affirmative action, I predict is likely overturned next term, we can get that if you want to,
01:30:30.120
at least until that day where I predict Thomas would also have the majority opinion. This is
01:30:34.180
his career defining opinion. This is an issue that is very near and dear to Justice Thomas.
01:30:38.660
He wrote an amazing concurrence in the court's last major Second Amendment case, the McDonald versus
01:30:43.540
City of Chicago case from 2010, where he had a magisterial 55 to 60 page concurrence just working
01:30:50.340
through the history. This issue is very near and dear to him. He is a personal gun owner. He enjoys
01:30:55.600
hunting. And from what I can tell, it's just a really thoroughly well-researched opinion that reaches
01:31:02.620
the clear and obvious result that anyone with any degree of familiarity with the Second Amendment text
01:31:08.340
could tell you, which is that this is a right. And the very act of talking about bearing arms, not just
01:31:15.340
keeping them, but bearing them, obviously entails the ability to do so outside the home without
01:31:21.420
oppressive restrictions, the likes of which Glenn, it sounds like you faced in my home state, my home
01:31:26.300
state of New York. And a point that Justice Kavanaugh makes in his very brief concurring opinion,
01:31:33.080
he kind of drives home this point, which is the vast majority of states which have so-called
01:31:38.820
shall issue regimes for their gun licensing permits, which means that you have to give the applicant a
01:31:44.880
permit as long as they go through X, Y, Z test, you know, they shoot the right number of targets,
01:31:49.180
similar to what I did in Texas when I got my permit there years ago. Those laws are all untouched.
01:31:54.020
The only laws that are jeopardized by today's decision are the more problematic, quote unquote,
01:31:59.640
may issue laws, not the shall issue laws, where they basically give the licensing authorities a ton
01:32:06.060
of discretion to arbitrarily decide where you have to, you know, you have to show that you truly,
01:32:11.360
you truly need it, whatever the heck that means. But, you know, Glenn, the fact that you
01:32:14.520
didn't get it. Yeah. Go ahead. Yeah, it is nuts. So I wanted to ask you, so doesn't this make the
01:32:22.960
Senate gun bill a joke? I mean, that will have no teeth to it after this ruling, would it?
01:32:31.280
Yes and no. It's really interesting. I expect a lot of commentary over the next 24 to 48 hours,
01:32:40.120
the next week is going to focus on this exact question, right? So in theory, they are different
01:32:45.620
issues. The ruling here today is talking about concealed carry and open carry licensing regimes
01:32:53.140
in the states. The Senate gun bill is in theory focused on other measures. It's focused on things
01:32:58.760
like red flag laws, but it is a little intellectually inconsistent, or at least at a bare minimum,
01:33:05.300
it would be a little peculiar, right? To have a liberalized, and I say that in a good way,
01:33:10.760
a more liberalized concealed carry licensing regime, while at the same time having a red flag law in
01:33:18.120
place that would just infringe upon due process rights willy nilly. Those two things would seem to
01:33:23.100
be in tension with one another. At a bare minimum, the timing, but it's not the same opinion.
01:33:29.640
It really kind of sucks the wind out of John Cornyn and the other 13 Senate Republicans momentum,
01:33:38.040
So how will this affect other states? New York, by the way, has just come out, and I'm going to talk
01:33:43.280
about this in a minute. New York has already come out and said, it's not going to change anything.
01:33:49.160
We're not going to abide by this, which is ironic because that's what the Second Amendment is for,
01:33:56.180
to stop an out-of-control, lawless government doing what they want and not abiding by the
01:34:03.040
Constitution. I just want to point that out. Well, that's wild. I have not seen that, but
01:34:09.460
that's just wild stuff if they said it that bluntly here. Look, the entire idea behind the
01:34:17.140
incorporation of the Bill of Rights, which is itself a legally debatable matter, I should say.
01:34:21.860
But they have held, the court has held that the overall majority of the enumerated rights in the
01:34:27.260
Bill of Rights, including the Second Amendment, by the way, that's the McDonald versus Chicago case
01:34:31.680
in 2010, the court has held that these rights are incorporated against the states, which,
01:34:36.960
you know, to escape the legalese for a minute, means that a state cannot infringe upon these rights.
01:34:43.140
The federal government already cannot, but a state cannot as well. So this case is right out of New
01:34:48.300
York State. So, I mean, if New York State wants to go, you know, flip two middle fingers at the
01:34:52.940
court when they itself are a party to the lawsuit, look, parties to the law are balanced.
01:34:59.160
Let me read exactly what Governor Kathy Hochul said. She said, it's outrageous that at a moment of
01:35:08.500
national reckoning on gun violence, the Supreme Court has recklessly struck down a New York law
01:35:14.800
that limits those who can carry concealed weapons. By the way, I don't know if she knows this, but
01:35:20.880
Buffalo is in New York, so her law didn't do anything. In response to this ruling, we are reviewing
01:35:27.960
our options, including calling a special session of the legislature. Just as we swiftly pass nation
01:35:34.160
leading gun reform legislation, we will continue to do everything in our power to keep New Yorkers
01:35:39.680
safe from gun violence. So she didn't say we're not going to do it. She said we're just going to
01:35:43.780
find a way around it. Right. I mean, that statement is about what I would expect from a left-wing
01:35:49.480
hack like the governor of New York State. We'll see. We'll see what they try to do. I mean,
01:35:54.120
they'll try to pass some law. Maybe they'll try to issue something administrative. Inevitably,
01:35:58.180
they'll find themselves in court again. And with the current composition of the court,
01:36:03.200
if that ultimately makes its way up to the Supreme Court itself, you have to like the odds of the side
01:36:08.820
of gun rights. The reality is that if I have the number correctly, I think it's 43 of the current
01:36:15.220
states in the country. If I recall the number from the Kavanaugh and Kering opinion today,
01:36:19.000
43 of the states are either, quote unquote, shall issue states or just straight up constitutional
01:36:24.880
carry states, states where you simply do not need a license to exercise your right
01:36:28.560
to keep your arms outside the home. So we should note that this opinion does not actually apply
01:36:34.400
to the vast majority of states. We're really only talking here about deep blue states such as New
01:36:39.440
York State. And look, I mean, cynically speaking, as someone who was born in New York and fled many
01:36:45.140
years ago, I mean, if it is oppressive laws like this that incentivize more people to flee blue state
01:36:50.700
tyranny for red state freedom, you know, far be it for me to criticize people to do so. But the statement
01:36:56.160
that you that you read, Glenn, you know, I would expect them to say something along those lines.
01:37:01.600
All right, we're gonna if you don't mind holding for just a minute, I'm going to do a commercial
01:37:05.520
comeback. And I just want to just ask you if you've looked at any of the others, is there anything
01:37:10.000
that you think is a really good sign on where things are headed? Just some of the other
01:37:16.460
decisions that came out today from the Supreme Court back with Josh Hammer in a minute.
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So my producers are freaking out because they want to make sure that I clarify something here that I
01:39:15.340
just said. Historically, the reason why the Second Amendment exists is not for hunting, not a sport.
01:39:26.580
I want to go shoot clay pigeons. Okay. That's not what it was about. Otherwise, you might be able to
01:39:32.720
find like bowling in the Constitution and the Bill of Rights. It's not about a sport. It's about protecting
01:39:39.040
yourself and protecting your community against an out-of-control, rogue government. That's what it's
01:39:49.300
about. So I just find it ironic that if they're like, we're not going to obey by this rule, that's
01:39:55.780
what the Second Amendment, that's what the founders were talking about. Right. But you're somebody that
01:40:01.080
just decided. As you just read that statement, that's not exactly what's happening. You're not
01:40:06.140
exactly calling for a civil war against Albany. I don't think, are you? I want to make sure here.
01:40:12.300
Because, I mean, you're talking about this was the motivation at the time. You have to follow
01:40:16.320
these traditions and these rules. But this is a much, much different case here as we're talking
01:40:21.120
about it now from some statement from a meaningless, you know. I'm just, yeah, I'm just talking about
01:40:27.620
how ironic it is that that's what the founders, you know, said that that's really important because
01:40:34.620
if they're, you know, as George Washington said, when the people fear the government, there is
01:40:40.440
tyranny. When the government fears the people, there is liberty. And, you know, part of that is being
01:40:47.380
able to question them, to speak out, to have a free press, to assemble, and also to own a gun.
01:40:54.840
Anyway, Josh, anything else that you see that came out today that you think is good news in a far-reaching way?
01:41:08.300
Well, first of all, let me just chime in briefly on the conversation that you and Stu were just
01:41:11.680
having. I obviously could not agree with you guys more on the philosophical underpinning of the
01:41:15.940
Second Amendment. Glenn, I know that you will uniquely appreciate this, just because I know how
01:41:20.920
much you care about this issue. But, you know, I'm Jewish, obviously. I keep on my desk at all times
01:41:26.540
a rock that a rabbi gave to me years ago that he smuggled out of the crematorium of Auschwitz.
01:41:32.260
And I keep next to that rock a rock that I myself took from Treblinka. And then across my room,
01:41:40.320
I have my, you know, my Daniel Defense AR with lots of ammunition and mags and all that.
01:41:45.180
And to me, I refer to that, to my friends, as my Warsaw Ghetto gun. I mean, so no one understands
01:41:51.080
the philosophical underpinning of the Second Amendment more than I do. So I just want to echo
01:41:58.060
And, you know, the Germans gave all of the information of where their guns were to the
01:42:04.900
Weimar Republic. You give it in good faith because the Weimar Republic said, oh, we'll never use this.
01:42:10.520
Well, then the Nazis came in and guess who took all the information and knew where all the guns were?
01:42:14.480
That's why you just don't do these things. But anyway, go ahead.
01:42:18.720
Exactly. Shifting a little bit as far as the other cases that came across the transom today.
01:42:24.360
So there's an Eighth Amendment case about a method of execution that I have not had the chance to
01:42:29.600
review yet. It's a case out of Georgia called Nancy V. Ward. Long story short, there's been all sorts of
01:42:35.580
kind of activist litigation for many years now where, you know, the predictable groups, the ACLU groups
01:42:41.120
like that will sue. And they have the effect of incrementally outlawing or seeking to outlaw various
01:42:48.000
forms of execution, which only then make you have to look harder and harder to find the right
01:42:52.860
cocktail. It's a very pernicious legal tactic with the obvious and not so subtle end goal of trying
01:42:58.000
to reabolish the death penalty in America. It looks like the wrong side won today. But a glimmer of hope,
01:43:04.680
though I see that Justice Barrett actually filed a dissenting opinion in that case. So even though
01:43:08.980
Kavanaugh defected, it's good to see that Justice Barrett at least is on the right side of this Eighth
01:43:13.460
Amendment issue. Another case that I have not really fully had the chance to break down,
01:43:18.480
it's out of the Fourth Circuit. It's a case in North Carolina. Basically here, it's a case called
01:43:23.640
Berger versus North Carolina State Conference of the NAACP. The court ruled, and it's notable because
01:43:29.580
it's an eight to one ruling. It's an eight to one ruling. They ruled that Republican state lawmakers
01:43:33.860
in North Carolina are able to intervene to defend their state's voter ID law that the NAACP challenged.
01:43:41.940
So the procedural posture there is it's not it's not a substantive claim. It's more of a procedural
01:43:46.580
claim. Rather, the reason I want to flag it for your listeners, I think it's worth discussing at least
01:43:51.580
a little bit, is because it's an eight to one opinion. The only person who dissented here is,
01:43:56.180
predictably speaking, Sotomayor. And that's a real rebuke to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the
01:44:01.200
Fourth Circuit, the lower court that heard this when you get reverse E1 by the court,
01:44:05.400
when everyone but Sotomayor disagrees with you. And it really paints a stark picture as to how much
01:44:10.240
the Obama presidency changed the Fourth Circuit among some other circuits. So we really do have a
01:44:15.060
long road ahead of us to get some of these lower courts back in order, unfortunately. But this case,
01:44:19.900
they come out the right way. Josh, thank you so much. This is Josh Hammer. He'll be joining us again
01:44:25.280
tomorrow because more rulings are coming out tomorrow and we're we're coming close to really
01:44:31.060
big ones. The Glenn Beck Program. All right. Real Estate Agents I Trust is my company. It has my name
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This is the Glenn Beck Program. We're glad you're here.
01:46:08.660
Thank you so much for listening. I can't think. I mean, you know, I did a painting.
01:46:16.300
I did a painting of Christ based on the Holy Shroud of Turin. And on it, I put love because
01:46:28.120
it's the ultimate love. And I had been in a really dark place and I was doing some kind of dark
01:46:34.240
paintings. And at the end, I did that one. It's a series of three. And I did that one.
01:46:42.100
And it was kind of a reminder of, you know, there's some really dark things happening, but
01:46:48.780
there's also some really good things. And I followed that with a painting called Better Days.
01:46:54.180
If you want to see any of these, you can see them online. Just go to Park City Fine Art or
01:46:59.260
my Instagram. But you can, Better Days happened on the day, actually the night of D-Day in France.
01:47:12.140
And it's a painting of all these allies standing together. And they were in France. They had
01:47:17.420
got off the boats. They had survived the beach, survived the cliff, survived the pillbox, survived
01:47:24.380
what was waiting after the pillbox, survived the fields, and then went in and fought another town.
01:47:31.020
It was like 10 o'clock at night that they got all the Nazis out of this little teeny town that they
01:47:35.020
were supposed to take by midnight. The people were so excited. They came out with wine. And so I have
01:47:40.860
these guys pictured together just pouring wine into their cups. And I thought, you know, that's
01:47:46.920
probably the worst day of their life. But if you could find a way to ask those guys, you know,
01:47:52.900
about that moment, I bet they would remember that as those were the good days. That was a great day.
01:47:59.940
And so we have to take the time to look for the good things that are happening. And I'm telling you,
01:48:05.620
I think this is really good, what happened in court today. There's some decisions that seem to be
01:48:13.600
really coming our way. We'll know tomorrow. But this New York gun law that's now been overturned
01:48:20.080
is excellent. Stu, do you have some quotes from the ruling?
01:48:25.220
Yeah, Clarence Thomas, on his birthday, by the way, getting the big Second Amendment case today
01:48:30.820
is his birthday. He did. It's amazing, as it usually is with Clarence Thomas. He writes,
01:48:37.740
the constitutional right to bear arms in public for self-defense is not a second class right subject
01:48:42.920
to an entirely different body of rules than the other Bill of Rights guarantees. We know of no
01:48:49.100
other constitutional right that an individual may exercise only after demonstrating to a government
01:48:54.780
official some special need. That is not how the First Amendment works when it comes to unpopular speech
01:49:00.260
or the free exercise of religion. It is not how the Sixth Amendment works.
01:49:07.040
And this is a nice big stop sign, I think, on that road. It is not how the Sixth Amendment works
01:49:13.100
when it comes to a defendant's right to confront the witnesses against him. And it is not how the
01:49:17.100
Second Amendment works when it comes to public carry for self-defense. New York's proper clause
01:49:22.380
requirement violates the 14th Amendment and that it prevents law-abiding citizens with ordinary
01:49:29.060
self-defense needs from exercising their right to keep and bear arms. And we therefore reverse the
01:49:34.400
judgment. It is so ordered. It's so true. It's the only right that is treated that way. He also
01:49:41.600
attacks the way that they implemented this because there is some conversation about, well, are we going
01:49:46.140
to be able to prevent people from carrying guns in courthouses and, you know, in schools or whatever.
01:49:51.760
And they, he writes that that's basically the sensitive place part of this. Like, can you
01:49:58.420
still force guns into sensitive places? They say, of course, you can still restrict guns
01:50:03.100
in certain places if there's, you know, minimal use, right? He writes, we do think the respondents
01:50:10.680
err in their attempt to characterize New York's proper cause requirement as a sensitive place
01:50:15.160
law. Put simply, there is no historical basis for New York to effectively, effectively declare
01:50:26.540
Very good. He's by the way, the governor of New York has said that they are going to fight
01:50:32.000
this ruling and they will pass legislation. They're going to find a way around it. And that's
01:50:38.380
what, you know, that's what they do. And I have no problem if they're going to do it through
01:50:42.480
legislative action. You know, it'll be challenged in court, but that is the role of the Supreme
01:50:48.160
Court. No, you can't do this. You can't make that ruling this way. Now, if they find a way
01:50:54.700
that the court says is constitutional, well, then they'll find a way. But I doubt they'll
01:51:00.660
be able to find a way. But this is what the left does. It's fine to fight it legislatively.
01:51:07.720
It's fine to do that. Where the problem is, is when you just will do anything to get around it.
01:51:15.620
And that's what I'm afraid will happen if they if they still go Alito and overturn Roe versus Wade.
01:51:22.800
The worst thing that could happen is that that that case, the majority opinion is not written by
01:51:30.160
Alito, but Justice Thomas. That will mean a compromise. No, Justice Roberts, you mean,
01:51:34.820
Robert, Justice Roberts. Yeah, I'm sorry. Yeah, Justice Roberts. But already the White House is
01:51:41.140
working on ways to get around that ruling, no matter what it is. You know, the left, it kills me.
01:51:48.000
They love the Supreme Court when it verifies their morality. When it doesn't, they discredit the
01:51:57.020
Supreme Court. I will tell you, the Supreme Court, when they rule constitutionally, sometimes it cuts the
01:52:04.240
other direction. And it goes against, you know, what I would deem my side, if you will. But my side
01:52:10.880
is the Constitution. So as long as it's being ruled by the Constitution, I don't have a side. I have an
01:52:16.560
opinion. I have what I'd like to do. But what the Constitution tells us we can and cannot do, that's
01:52:22.900
where we're supposed to come together. But they are, you know, they're they're up in arms about Roe
01:52:28.760
versus Wade, even though Justice Ginsburg is on record saying basically what Alito said.
01:52:38.020
When the Supreme Court decisions or proposed legislations don't go their way, they riot,
01:52:44.900
they stalk judges, they firebomb clinics, they work around the rules, they do executive orders. This is
01:52:51.660
why I was against the executive orders, not just with Obama, but also with Trump. And I'm against
01:52:57.400
executive orders with George Bush and Ronald Reagan and everybody else. That's not the way
01:53:03.920
to do it. But they are putting their hope in executive action by President Biden. I already told
01:53:11.660
you that Biden is on track to be the most prolific executive order president since FDR. And since the
01:53:18.920
final ruling on Dobbs versus Jackson, you know, Jackson Women's Health Organization is expected possibly as
01:53:26.460
early as tomorrow. Plans are underway for President Biden to take action if it is officially overturned
01:53:34.420
as it is currently expected. Now he's going to do it through executive orders. According to the New
01:53:41.720
York Times report, Biden has already put together a team to come up with options, including and warning
01:53:48.740
whenever you see this. These two words run for the hills national emergency. So one of the options
01:53:59.880
they're looking at is declaring a national public health emergency. That means that the the president
01:54:08.220
of the United States has wide lateral can do things that are really unconstitutional. But because it's a
01:54:16.000
national emergency, he can do it. Also, another one, make sure the FDA approves abortion pills that
01:54:22.600
would override any state bans on abortion. Biden's crack abortion team overseen by the White House
01:54:29.680
lawyer, Dana, Dana Remus. She's the director of the White House Gender Policy Council and Jennifer
01:54:35.380
Klein, director of the Domestic Policy Council with Susan Rice. Now, one of the plans under consideration
01:54:43.660
is to bring abortion doctors to work on U.S. military bases. Oh, my gosh, our military, it will we will
01:54:53.900
never win the next war if this doesn't stop. Get the doctors to come into states where you can't get a an
01:55:04.360
abortion and declare the military base a federally protected zone. Oh, my gosh, they're also skirting
01:55:16.340
around the Hyde Amendment. They want to provide federal funds for travel expenses to get an abortion
01:55:21.800
rather than funding the abortion itself. They are going to do whatever it takes. Now, how do we respond?
01:55:31.920
If you've listened to me for any amount of time, you know that I believe we have to be people of
01:55:40.720
merit. I believe that this audience will be the ones that open the doors of manifest destiny
01:55:50.780
if we choose to be those people. But we have got to do things that the Lord can find favor in us.
01:56:01.920
I mean, he's got to look down and go, you know what? It's a group, good group of people here, and
01:56:07.620
they're trying to do the right thing, and they're not engaging that in the ways everybody else is.
01:56:12.940
I don't think there is anything better as the cities burn down. I don't think there's anything
01:56:18.940
better than we can do to save our nation and to ask for God's help than saving babies that are
01:56:27.640
about to be aborted. I started something. Now, this is not a commercial. I just believe in this
01:56:33.860
so much. I started a partnership, and this partnership is amazing. It's with Preborn,
01:56:44.160
and they are one of the leaders in pro-life pregnancy centers. These are the guys who are
01:56:50.600
really, they're the ones that are targeted. And they're targeted because they found a way to
01:56:57.300
get moms to choose life. And they found if they can get them into the clinics, they just do.
01:57:07.080
Mom comes in and says, yeah, I'm thinking about having an abortion. Great. Well, let's do an
01:57:11.500
ultrasound. Once they do an ultrasound, this is why Planned Parenthood hates this so much.
01:57:17.600
Once they do an ultrasound, the mother has about an 80% chance of saying, no, I want life.
01:57:26.420
And if I could just play, no names or anything is exposed on this. Let me just play this video
01:57:34.360
of an ultrasound with a nurse and a mom who came in for an abortion. Listen to this.
01:57:40.280
So if we could see that. Look at that heartbeat. That's the heart. Look at that, the heartbeat.
01:57:48.500
Like you could see it all. Oh my God. And the baby was so beautiful.
01:57:55.140
Do you hear mom's reaction? That baby is huge. I mean, that is a late term abortion.
01:58:03.140
That baby was saved. And I really believe that if we want to save ourselves, there is nothing we can do
01:58:16.000
that is more important to God. Anytime you are saving his children. And I mean, from sexual slavery,
01:58:24.580
some place in Afghanistan or Ukraine, you are stopping someone hurting children. Um, no matter what it is,
01:58:35.720
there is nothing more spiritual and nothing more important than that. Uh, and we have this chance
01:58:47.280
to do it. And again, this is not a commercial, but if you want to help save these babies,
01:58:53.400
you can make a donation for, uh, let's see, $28. You can sponsor one ultrasound, um, for 140,
01:59:02.120
you can rescue five babies lives. If you have, you know, a lot of money, you want to donate $15,000,
01:59:08.420
I think buys an ultrasound for another clinic, but we can save. We have a goal of 50,000 babies saved.
01:59:16.880
Uh, this year. And I just got a note from, um, pre-born last night and they said, Glenn,
01:59:24.860
I can't believe it. We, we are going to, we're on, uh, on route now just with blaze and this program
01:59:31.640
to save a hundred thousand babies by the end of this year. And I think we can do better than that.
01:59:37.500
And there is nothing greater than we can do than that. Just check it out for yourself. Go to
01:59:43.680
pre-born.com slash Beck. These are the people on the front lines in a real trouble next week. Um,
01:59:49.740
it's pre-born.com slash Beck, or just hit pound two five zero and say the keyword baby. Um, all right,
01:59:56.860
now, now let me tell you, um, about, uh, our commercial sponsor this half hour. It is gold line.
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they are going to do everything they can to continue to raise interest rates. Um, because they got to slow
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02:01:06.880
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Anyway, uh, here's the latest from, uh, the neighborhood psychopath, uh, Keith Olbermann.
02:02:14.480
It has become necessary to dissolve the Supreme court of the United States. The first step,
02:02:21.520
uh, uh, is for a state, uh, is for a state. The court has now forced guns upon to ignore this
02:02:29.780
ruling. Great. You're a court. How and why do you think you can enforce your rulings? Hashtag ignore
02:02:36.400
the court. Even if Roe versus Wade is not overturned. Do you think that we would say ignore the court?
02:02:43.360
That is that sedition. What he's saying here, that is, uh, calling for the end of the Republic.
02:02:51.060
You don't dissolve a Supreme court because you disagree with the rulings. This is craziness.
02:02:58.400
I mean, you know, Roe versus Wade not overturned. I don't see the right rioting. I mean, I don't even
02:03:04.700
see most of the right even marching because it's really hot. Maybe in October, but.