Victory! Trump Lands Trade Deal with UK on VE Day Anniversary | Guests: Rep. Anna Paulina Luna & Nicole Shanahan | 5⧸8⧸25
Episode Stats
Length
2 hours and 10 minutes
Words per Minute
163.67052
Summary
On today's show, Glenn Beck talks about China's takeover of our food supply and how we need a back-up plan in the event of a Chinese attack on our food supplies. He also talks about why we don't need to celebrate Victory Day.
Transcript
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Just when you think things can't get any weirder in the country, they usually do.
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We're going to start with a little bit of history, a little perspective, and how things just have not changed with the press.
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Well, it was on this day, it was actually May 7th, that Germany, in 1945, signed the end of the war.
00:05:09.800
But we didn't know about it, and we don't celebrate it until today.
00:05:13.920
In fact, Donald Trump said that we need to start celebrating this as Victory Day.
00:05:17.760
You know, it's VE Day today, the victory in Europe.
00:05:21.680
We had VJ Day, victory in Japan, a few months later.
00:05:25.140
But it was actually yesterday that is the anniversary of victory in Europe.
00:05:31.000
However, what happened was Stalin didn't like the fact that his people weren't there.
00:05:38.340
And so they had the armistice, and they had signed the peace treaty, but Stalin wasn't.
00:05:47.380
Stalin's people weren't there, and they said, we don't accept that, and we need one of our people there.
00:05:54.540
And so everybody knew that peace was coming the next day.
00:05:59.160
There would be another peace treaty, but no one could announce it.
00:06:02.840
And there was a guy that you've never heard of.
00:06:05.740
And if this doesn't just show you how things, the more things change, the more everything stays exactly the same.
00:06:14.740
There was a reporter, and he was there at the peace treaty.
00:06:34.360
Well, he phones in to New York, and he dictates, and he says, hey, there is peace.
00:06:46.520
And before he even hangs up the phone, it is already going out to media places all over the world because it's victory.
00:07:04.720
He's told, you can't say that because Stalin wants to have his people there tomorrow.
00:07:25.680
We have peace, and the United States government came to him and said, you can't say anything about it.
00:07:32.080
And he's like, wait, we have a rule here that if it's going to cost people's lives, then I can't say it.
00:07:45.000
You can tell us it's going to cost lives of our soldiers, and then you can keep it secret.
00:07:57.600
They went back and forth, and this reporter decided, I'm releasing it.
00:08:03.460
So, hours later, he does it again, and he releases it officially and says, peace.
00:08:09.060
Well, when he does it, now the Associated Press won't pick it up.
00:08:16.680
And by the next morning, all of the people that he was working for and working with, all of his friends, he was a huge war correspondent at the time.
00:08:29.780
But he was one of the biggest war correspondents of the time.
00:08:36.620
By the next morning, all of his colleagues are calling him a traitor.
00:08:46.760
All they have to do is affix the signature of the Soviet on there, and it's done.
00:08:55.440
I included that in my story, that Stalin wasn't there.
00:08:59.580
He wanted to make sure that his signature was affixed, so it's going to happen tomorrow.
00:09:02.940
But we are actually at peace, and we have been for 24 hours.
00:09:08.640
They all turned on him, and they all called him a traitor.
00:09:25.440
One person decides to give him a job, and I think it's in Santa Clara, California.
00:09:31.800
This was a very big guy, a huge war correspondent.
00:10:05.380
the Associated Press decides to come out and say,
00:10:39.780
Probably somebody, you know, in gender studies.
00:10:41.620
But they don't have a rule about resubmitting him,
00:11:01.180
the recognition, and Donald Trump just said yesterday
00:11:03.860
that America really needs to call this Victory Day,
00:11:07.720
because everybody in Europe commemorates this day.
00:11:10.520
Everybody in Europe is grateful for the United States
00:11:23.840
Because it was on this day that we defeated totalitarianism.
00:11:32.760
And we started a war with another version of that, communism.
00:11:42.780
This was the day that famous picture was taken in Times Square
00:11:53.720
By the way, that now, in our national archives,
00:12:14.040
Here's what I just want to leave you with this.
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Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh.
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Down the road where shadows hide, feel the dark on every side.
00:46:57.320
Stand your ground when times get dark, gotta face the dark and embrace the fire.
00:47:12.980
well president trump says he has struck a comprehensive agreement with the uk
00:47:19.420
they're supposed to be in the oval office at the white house in a few minutes
00:47:22.460
to announce it we are ready to take that feed uh when it happens but we're also going to
00:47:27.960
continue to cover everything else that is happening in the world you don't want to miss
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it and uh representative anna paulina luna is going to be joining us in a few minutes
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she's just introduced a bill to completely repeal the patriot act too good to be true
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well hello to uh stupor gear glenn executive producer on the program how are you sir very well
00:49:11.000
how are you well i'm pretty good i'm pretty good hopefully some good news today seems like in the
00:49:15.820
economy yeah coming up here in a few minutes okay so uh he trump is talking tariffs with the eu they're
00:49:22.940
supposed to announce something grand groundbreaking with the uk i'm sorry yeah with the uk um and uh
00:49:29.580
and so the uk is is at the white house and they're supposed to you know tell us some major major
00:49:35.500
announcement which would be great if we could get
00:49:38.000
cheaper toffee uh or whatever you know we do a lot of trade with the uk and it's uh it's a good thing
00:49:50.200
right there's jaguar right yeah there's a big car situation both ways by the way on that uh they
00:49:56.560
they had tariffs on our automobiles uh and uh we don't import nearly as many as we should in there
00:50:02.900
uh so going cars going both ways there's not a lot i mean the the british engineering of of
00:50:08.980
automobiles as a as an owner of an mg i can tell you not not necessarily the best as a former owner of
00:50:14.440
an old jaguar not really good yeah yeah yeah you know um but but look we should have a really free
00:50:22.000
trade relationship with great britain we should it's been in the works for for a long time it
00:50:27.180
almost been agreed on a million times i'm glad that we what do you think it's gonna be i hope it's that
00:50:32.380
i mean again you know you hope it's what a free trade agreement uh where we're knocking out all
00:50:39.000
these tariffs and you know and able to but that'd be great exchange goods i think it's great now i
00:50:43.940
mean that's not what everybody thinks obviously and that's that tends to be our view of of how the
00:50:49.880
economy should work is particularly with our allies that's not how everybody believes i mean i this will
00:50:55.040
do nothing to bring manufacturing jobs back if if that's if that's what this is is a you know a
00:51:00.460
situation where we're lowering tariffs on everything i have i mean that's not that's not what the way i
00:51:05.520
i was looking at that as a goal a lot of people do have that goal though so important to acknowledge
00:51:10.300
it but i i think what we'll probably get here is a really a good improvement in our trade relationship
00:51:17.540
with the uk and that's great that's what i wanted at the beginning and i'm i hope that's what we get
00:51:21.840
besides cars what do we get from the uk really look this up look this up what are the big because i
00:51:27.440
can't think of a single thing uh british teddy bears yeah well that's a big one is british teddy
00:51:37.140
bears you know what's that teddy bear movie that's stupid paddington paddington by the way
00:51:42.600
paddington the highest rated movie of all time did you know this the best reviewed movie of all time
00:51:48.180
paddington 2 reviewed the best reviewed movie of all time i didn't see one will i understand paddington
00:51:54.840
i would assume you would okay it's about a talking bear right you know in a in a raincoat in with a
00:52:01.420
guy from downton abbey i mean what what does that movie not have you know right now you're like oh
00:52:08.320
clenn i didn't know it was a about a talking teddy bear with a guy from downton abbey how did i how did
00:52:14.480
i miss it yeah you know no but it's that is an actual i mean and i think there they did wind up
00:52:19.900
finding one negative review from multiple years ago which changed this from a 100 rotten tomatoes
00:52:26.800
rating to 99 but like paddington 2 for whatever reason is like apparently the most amazing movie ever
00:52:34.980
made according to critics i'm okay i'm not fact check me on this is he a trans bear no he does have an
00:52:44.880
open raincoat though for a lot of it so there's a little bit too much showing all right this little
00:52:49.480
man bear love you know i mean that's all it is that's all it is paddington 2 well say and this is
00:52:57.040
uh as i said had a perfect 100 score a new negative review by a freelance critic from 2017 dropped it to
00:53:05.900
99 so uh this was due to review that was found on a blog post the movie's top spot was briefly replaced
00:53:13.480
by citizen kane oh my but a resurfaced hold on hold on orson wells i'm sorry yeah i'm sorry i know
00:53:24.140
i i mean i know what you went through do you have any idea what that bear went through a lot all right
00:53:30.520
that's very true um but so at that point it was citizen kane number one 100 paddington two at 99
00:53:38.080
however a a a resurfaced negative review from an 80 year old chicago tribune story caused the
00:53:46.200
citizen kane also to drop to 99 so same guy i think it might have been the same guy it might
00:53:52.420
have been paddington himself right okay okay so here's what here's oh oh i already did this because
00:53:57.000
i thought you were just gonna giving you paddington info which by the way it's the one thing you're
00:54:01.740
going to remember out of today's show it really you're not going to remember that's how sad our work
00:54:05.120
is i just want you to know we go home and we're like we said all those important things and all
00:54:10.120
they're going to take home was the paddington bear thing i will be out to i'll be out at like little
00:54:13.940
little league practice and one of the dads be like wait paddington too that's what i'll get out of
00:54:18.720
today's show okay pharmaceuticals and medical products prescription drugs vaccines medical
00:54:24.080
equipment and devices that's the number one thing we import i i think maybe we should i think maybe
00:54:30.860
we should play ball with that you know i mean let's keep the drugs rolling in um automobiles
00:54:36.440
and automotive parts luxury vehicles a jaguar mini land rover rolls royce still made in and bentley
00:54:44.880
is still made in england is rolls royce rolls royce is bmw now i don't know they've all bought each
00:54:51.980
other so many times i don't know and jaguar is stalantis what is it yes i think you're right
00:54:58.420
and then what country owns that i don't know is that an english and lotus and we've we talked
00:55:03.420
about this has now making some of their vehicles in china even though they're still a british
00:55:06.480
company so i don't know how any of that works it's gonna be a lot to unwind uh aerospace products
00:55:10.980
aircraft engines especially from rolls royce you know i i don't know about anybody else i just feel
00:55:16.540
better you're getting onto an airplane and you see the rolls royce logo on the jet feel a little
00:55:22.400
better than ge we bring good things to life yeah but really i mean it's an engine you know uh i mean
00:55:33.360
i don't want to see rolls royce on my cat scan you know what i mean i'm getting it we're gonna give
00:55:37.900
you a cat scan and it says rolls royce i'm like hi can we get something from g g e please
00:55:43.100
anyway uh machinery and industrial equipment precision instruments wow we are scraping the
00:55:50.600
bottom of the barrel here why precision instruments that's the best you could do you know what all
00:55:58.240
those precision instruments come from england what what for how many are we buying how many precision
00:56:04.140
instruments are we buying glenn the the economy is a bit complicated so there's a lot of uh we buy
00:56:10.340
all sorts of stuff from all over the place you don't think a precision precision instruments sound
00:56:14.860
important i don't know what they are it sounds important i just it just doesn't seem like it's a
00:56:18.480
very deep category you know what i mean uh-oh black smoke we don't have a pope yet black smoke
00:56:25.440
we don't have a pope yet uh now here's something important whiskey we get whiskey uh you know i we have
00:56:38.540
a lot of that here though let me tell you i was poor when i was an alcoholic generally a trend with
00:56:44.800
alcoholics i have found i've noticed yeah uh you might not start out poor uh but you know the deeper
00:56:51.580
into alcoholism turns out the poorer you become uh but anyway uh i you know i was in the uh airport
00:56:58.520
you know with all of the you know with all the duty-free stuff who i don't even i don't even know
00:57:03.760
who buys it but uh i realized i mean i was so american i only drank jack daniels you know i mean
00:57:11.440
and maker's what a patriot right and i kind of feel like i missed out a little bit there's a wide
00:57:17.820
world there's a wide world and i stopped drinking when there were all these specialty you know like
00:57:22.600
flavors and stuff i i don't know i mean sue you're always helpful on this i mean i don't think i'd be an
00:57:31.780
alcoholic on scottish whiskey right yeah i think yours was uh domestic only domestic yeah i'm pretty
00:57:38.360
sure so so any any foreign liquor right you should be fine with okay uh then the next thing is financial
00:57:45.420
and professional services what that's that's our thing glenn that's that's not how things work no
00:57:53.940
that's our thing we we said along that we're gonna stop selling stuff but we'll provide financial
00:57:58.700
services and now the uk is horning in i want them out of our space you'll be surprised to hear that
00:58:06.020
london has been a financial hub for a little while yeah it's not a brand new development but why
00:58:12.080
really i mean they haven't been good look maybe they were good in the time of like mary poppins
00:58:19.200
you know and they were they had all the bank executives singing about tuppence tuppence nobody knows what a
00:58:25.460
tuppence is anymore nobody cares i think i'm understanding your economic research a little
00:58:30.220
better right now thank you then they get chemical chemical products that again is our space
00:58:36.820
who are you to challenge dow chemical we make the best that's right we make the we can make better
00:58:45.100
more deadly chemicals than anybody else why do they have to be deadly chemicals are everything is made
00:58:51.680
of chemicals we're making stuff out of chemical like cereal we make that directly out of petroleum
00:58:57.920
now don't horn in on that that's us shovel it in my mouth that's us and then food food and
00:59:05.480
beverage oh guinness okay that i believe that goes into alcohol that's true well yeah so it goes into
00:59:12.440
alcohol and give me something else something else give me one thing food british british uh
00:59:21.940
don't forget don't forget crump nope what's our crumpet intake in this country it was very low
00:59:28.380
it's very low i mean not as low as blood pudding is there anything i have noticed i i like i mean we
00:59:37.200
were just trapped in london and if it's you're going to be trapped someplace by an airline london's the
00:59:41.960
place to be trapped in i don't know if it's worth going there but if you're going to be trapped there
00:59:46.820
it's a great place to be trapped you just don't want to eat any of their food it's kind of like china
00:59:51.860
you know except there's more dog and cat on the on the menu in china than there is in london
00:59:58.140
but they just eat that look i get it you were poor in the roman times you had to eat the blood and
01:00:08.020
everything i don't think you need to eat that anymore you know you're eating the parts of the
01:00:12.800
animals that the rest of civilization has said you know what that's i'm going to throw that away
01:00:17.760
i'm going to throw that away and i just like to america needs i i hope our tariffs are high on the
01:00:24.800
food i have a list here of the most popular british foods in the u.s now one i think quite clearly a big
01:00:31.640
one tea if you're going to have british tea okay we're importing some tea i could see that one
01:00:36.640
number two is meat pies no i don't know how many meat pies we're consuming here fish and chips well
01:00:43.440
there's number three okay we eat that but that that's not english we're not importing that cadbury
01:00:49.920
chocolate ah bad you know what that is that's socialist chocolate that's what that is the the eggs
01:00:56.060
oh cadbury eggs you don't know the story of cadbury not really i know that they they give
01:01:01.560
eggs that have some weird gooey filling in them yeah yeah well it all started out like fun and games
01:01:08.200
until the oompa loompas are all of a sudden all in socialized medicine and they're like what the
01:01:13.920
hell happened where's willie cadbury actually started out as a great company um but what they
01:01:20.740
decided to do is they were all progressives and they were like we should sterilize people but how
01:01:28.940
about we make how about we make easter cadbury eggs and then we can use that to fund our sterilization
01:01:37.120
programs but they actually built the whole town in the factory and they built the education everything
01:01:42.520
else they actually they were really honestly this part of cadbury is really good as well as the eggs but
01:01:48.580
there i mean please you there's two places that make chocolate okay switzerland maybe a little
01:01:54.180
germany i don't know if you need a little spice of a you know maybe a little nazi in it but there's
01:02:00.480
nazi chocolate there's nazi chocolate there's swiss chocolate you can't tell the difference between the
01:02:04.880
two and then there's hershey chocolate cadbury nobody likes you i nobody no i don't know what you're
01:02:10.440
talking about i nobody likes i support all chocolate choices no no no socialist so anyway they decided
01:02:18.040
to build this socialist utopia and the cadbury company was like this whole town they built the
01:02:24.180
whole town where people could live and everything else and now that's how they build these companies
01:02:30.540
in china so there you go let me wait you're gonna blow up the trade deal let me just tell you about
01:02:38.840
trump's like we had a deal until glenn beck just went on and talked about cadbury
01:02:42.420
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stand corrected stellantis is in the netherlands so there's another thing we don't well i'm really
01:04:21.240
i mean it could be that we're just stalling because we had planned having the president on telling us about
01:04:27.640
and so we have nothing right now but uh there's another thing you don't get stellantis
01:04:34.260
i don't know that's the netherlands there you go in the netherlands by the way we have a trade
01:04:39.120
surplus with the uk i don't know if that's important to people it's not particularly important to me but
01:04:43.420
it is something that a lot of people think about and so this is not one of those countries that we
01:04:46.700
have a trade deficit with right because they're shipping us blood pudding i mean who wouldn't have a
01:04:54.320
surplus the people of england are like please help us we we were eating blood pudding in the year 900
01:05:03.860
they're still trying to make us eat it that's what's happening over there and they're cadbury
01:05:10.480
communists what about like uh what is it the strawberries and cream um wimbledon little wimbledon
01:05:16.940
breakfast i don't know i don't i don't know anything about that stew i'm not one of the
01:05:23.040
elites i don't know your your strawberries strawberries and cream stories you just went
01:05:30.180
on a 25 minute rant about socialism in cadbury yeah that's right it's about the working people
01:05:35.420
it's about the working class okay tell you that right now not not the people who attend wimbledon
01:05:41.280
no not those people that's that tennis thing right it is a tennis thing that's right it's a good job
01:05:47.440
i thought it was either that or that horse race thing that they do where they all dress up
01:05:51.040
like they're in mary poppins the horse race thing that they dress up like yeah they've got that thing
01:05:57.180
what is it no that's the kentucky derby we have that that's in kentucky that's not
01:06:02.620
sarah's like it's a kentucky derby no we're my understanding is kentucky is owned still by
01:06:09.200
great britain great britain yes they did that was one of the things you know why do you know why
01:06:13.540
the kentucky derby runs the direction it runs i don't it runs in the direction it runs as a slap
01:06:21.900
in the face to england we run our horses the opposite really yeah oh that's interesting see
01:06:28.120
i didn't know that how could but you don't know what wimbledon is i don't i don't understand i know
01:06:32.620
what wimbledon is is that really angry guy used to play at wimbledon all the time john henry or
01:06:41.000
what was his name john mackenroll john mackenroll that guy yeah he was fun you are your your knowledge
01:06:47.900
i i just brought you the cadbury story just off the top of my head yes and we should be clear to
01:06:53.640
anyone from cadbury it was just off the top of his head i don't know anything you read that disagrees
01:06:59.660
with it propaganda communist propaganda are you uh what should we take from this uh trade deal we
01:07:08.440
don't know what it is yet but i mean is this going to be you think this is a big sign for more things
01:07:12.600
to come a bunch of other countries on the way i don't know i mean now i don't know did the british
01:07:17.380
burn down the white house how come we're not seeing him go into the white house with the british right
01:07:21.100
now i don't know what's happening that's a great point you don't know what's happening we could be
01:07:24.980
back in the revolutionary war part two who knows who knows well uh that's been fun we have
01:07:30.440
anna anna paulina luna uh on with us in just a second and uh she just filed a bill to get rid
01:07:38.640
of the patriot act any chance more with her next this is glenn beck and of course the president will
01:07:50.800
walk out as soon as we start with that interview anyway uh let me talk to you about uh lear capital
01:07:55.700
ever try to win a game where the rules keep changing while you're playing it you know they
01:08:01.640
devalue the dollar but you have saved uh responsibly you invest in stocks the market tanks on a tweet
01:08:08.620
you buy a house interest rates double out of nowhere you pay your taxes they talk about raising them
01:08:13.360
again it's like they're doing everything you know that they can because you're doing everything
01:08:18.020
right but they just keep moving the goal posts meanwhile the people who make the rules have you
01:08:23.280
noticed they're not really worried they're hedged they've got diversification they have hard assets
01:08:27.860
they have battles they have they have insider trading that you don't have because you'd go to jail
01:08:32.760
but maybe it's it's time that you have some of the things that they have and that is knowledge
01:08:38.980
lear capital makes it easy to add physical gold or silver to your retirement portfolio this is what's
01:08:44.880
happening all over the world there's a run on gold right now gold is what 36 3500 an ounce that was
01:08:53.000
insane 18 months ago i told you call lear capital get your 4200 gold report call before it's a history
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lesson 800-957-GOLD 800-957-GOLD get everything we talk about every day in the glenbeck email newsletter
01:09:11.980
congresswoman anna paulina luna is with us her first term as a representative for florida's 13th
01:09:34.560
congressional district she is with us now a member of the house freedom caucus and uh she's
01:09:40.380
just introduced the american privacy restore a restoration act that will fully repeal the patriot
01:09:47.640
act uh congresswoman welcome to the program hey glen happy to be back thank you so uh i mean is there
01:09:57.820
any chances going to happen well i think previously there likely wasn't an appetite for this but right
01:10:04.280
now especially with the momentum we're seeing out of the white house and then also you're seeing people
01:10:08.700
like um secretary gabbard even secretary radcliffe that are doing great and doing right by the american
01:10:14.000
people of the administration i think there's an appetite for it so i actually just got done
01:10:18.160
lobbying many of my colleagues on the floor and even talking to some democrats about this
01:10:22.400
and so we got a number of sponsors for this not just republican but democrats here to see those roll
01:10:27.920
out pretty soon but we're also reaching out to various constitutional rights organizations civil
01:10:32.800
liberty organizations that are going to be co-sponsoring this as well and i think that if we
01:10:36.740
create enough pressure that we can indeed not just bring this to the forefront of discussion but also
01:10:41.640
to push for there to be a floor vote on it we just have to get many people to sponsor it so
01:10:45.300
i'm not in the mentality of accepting defeat and i think it's something that has been well overdue
01:10:51.520
have you talked to tulsi gabbard about it i haven't talked to tulsi directly about this yet but i am
01:10:57.540
going to be speaking with her and seeing if she'd be willing to voice her support for it as well would
01:11:01.400
that eliminate her office because her office wasn't that part of the patriot act she's she was the go
01:11:09.220
between the dni which she is director of national intelligence is the one that is the go between
01:11:15.300
between all of the agencies to make sure that they're all talking to each other correct correct
01:11:21.340
and there obviously as you know are many other agencies that were created because of it
01:11:25.240
and so again um in in addressing this directly now also there's an issue of the timing for the votes
01:11:31.140
but i think at the end of the day if we are looking at overall what the patriot act did and how
01:11:36.560
it was rushed into law after 9-11 and the end effects of that i think that that is something
01:11:42.740
that needs to be addressed right so i actually even talked to representative crenshaw about this
01:11:47.140
and he's like look i'd be willing to look at the legislation and bill and obviously you know he
01:11:51.900
wasn't close to the idea of it i think that that's pretty telling because you have uh dan
01:11:56.220
crenshaw on the house intelligence community as well and so when you have people like that or that
01:12:00.460
are starting to address this um i think that we know that it's wrong and ultimately you have to
01:12:05.920
have someone that's going to help lead out the fight in this in congress and so um going back to
01:12:10.040
your initial question will it eliminate her office i don't think it would eliminate it immediately
01:12:15.040
but i do think ultimately if we're going to fully repeal it it will shut down different
01:12:19.620
organizations and different offices yes so is there anything in the patriot act that we should
01:12:24.540
have a bill ready to go if you could repeal this that has some is there anything good in the
01:12:30.180
patriot act um some people would argue that there is some good to it i would argue that it was a
01:12:37.180
mass overreach and an expansion of the surveillance suite yeah um i think right now i've been able
01:12:42.660
to chat loosely on the floor with people like representative andy biggs as you know he's a
01:12:46.840
privacy hawk as well right and a constitutional advocate for constitutional rights and so we are
01:12:52.320
open to working with other members to come up with the legislation that could overhaul it yet
01:12:57.300
have you do you know the history of the patriot act when it was written yeah isn't that crazy so i
01:13:04.640
yeah so what's interesting glenn is um part of the reason why i know about it is because
01:13:09.040
after 9 11 i remember hearing my dad talking about it and i remember hearing my dad being really
01:13:14.760
stressed out about what it was going to do to our personal freedoms of this country right and you
01:13:21.160
know that whole idea notion that big brother is watching i think it's you know people say oh well
01:13:26.040
that might be a conspiracy theory mindset and i would argue that it's not our our job to just blindly
01:13:30.500
trust government and as you're seeing not just with president trump but with other members of
01:13:34.780
congress and then the more that's flushing out about the deep state really what's happened within our
01:13:38.620
intelligence agencies i can tell you after even just on my own um going through some of the
01:13:43.600
declassified documents going back to rfk jfk and mlk that we are seeing that there's been a systemic
01:13:49.900
problem and so when you give that type of power to the federal government and then it's it's codified
01:13:55.800
into law it's an issue and so if we're really going to live in a free and fair society we have
01:13:59.520
to make sure that we are reversing some of this bad those put forward in the name of safety and
01:14:02.540
security yeah and this was uh this is something that was written to stew you can maybe
01:14:06.280
correct my memory on this i mean i'm going back 20 years but i think that the patriot act was written
01:14:12.080
by a guy in virginia in the 90s like 98 97 99 somewhere in that area uh before we had any problem it was
01:14:23.380
it was to uh and and nobody would nobody would hear of it no and so they that's why when you say it was
01:14:30.220
rushed it really it was rushed to the average american and to most of the people in congress
01:14:36.040
but it wasn't it was they blew the dust off of something that they had been trying to do in the
01:14:40.780
past and no one would hear of it because it had such vast overreach in it um but we just named it the
01:14:47.500
patriot act and there was like that's patriotic i gotta do that uh congress does many things with
01:14:54.220
you know the inflation reduction act doing quite the opposite so yes there there are some serious
01:14:58.540
issues and concerns on it and after we introduced it yesterday i think a lot of people actually
01:15:03.060
separately on the floor were like are you serious about this and i said well i introduced it aren't i
01:15:06.600
so um there is conversation and i think before previously where people thought it would be you
01:15:11.680
know career suicide to even touch the sacred cow of the patriot act i think now people are actually
01:15:16.920
inclined to take it on and so i think it's a small window of time and opportunity but we're not here
01:15:21.760
to um do the small things to placate to yeah to placate to any special interest and definitely
01:15:27.380
not the intelligence communities and i hope that people listen to their constituents so phone your
01:15:31.580
rep tell them to sponsor it so you're you're seeing um congress now with the big beautiful bill
01:15:37.160
uh and i'm hearing that they just don't even want to cut what doge is saying to cut i mean are we
01:15:43.600
going to see real cuts at all coming from congress and are we going to see the reigns act coming from
01:15:49.360
congress is there anything that is real that is going to come out of congress it will if the
01:15:56.280
members pressure the leadership and some of these appropriators to do the right thing so you're
01:16:01.160
probably going to see a messy fight um spill out into the public apparatus here pretty soon but what
01:16:06.440
i can tell you is there are enough of us currently and a slim majority to where if they don't do what
01:16:12.820
president trump is asking and what doge is doing then we will make sure that we hold their feet to
01:16:17.640
the fire but it's again this is kind of an opportunity of a lifetime here i don't think
01:16:21.540
this is going to come around anytime soon no it's not and if you guys blow it it will it really will
01:16:27.080
be the problem of congress it will be the fault of congress if you you have one chance to correct this
01:16:33.020
um and if i mean if you correct it you'll have the american people go out in droves and say oh i
01:16:40.180
actually believe in you guys you're going to actually do something uh and if not i just think
01:16:45.460
there's going to be a big loss um well if it's any consolation glenn and and for the listeners i was
01:16:52.120
at the white house yesterday for something unrelated and um i definitely saw soon and um jason smith and
01:16:59.420
the speaker all leaving and what i can tell you is many people might not be aware about the involvement
01:17:05.820
to the extent of the involvement in which the president has been and what i will tell you is i've
01:17:10.120
you know i've been with president trump since 2016 on and off the campaign trail and you know
01:17:15.540
seeing how he operates not just as the president but also behind the scenes and he really is the
01:17:21.040
best person to help negotiate this so what i will say is there are many people you are right that are
01:17:26.340
in congress that are saying you know we can't cut this we can't cut that what i would say is we have
01:17:31.000
a pretty easy win here you remember all those subsidies and programs that went out in the
01:17:34.780
inflation reduction act that were literally giveaways taxpayer funded trash um that needs to
01:17:40.700
completely be pulled back but there are people that are weak at the knees with this but remember
01:17:44.960
most bureaucrat and long-term elected officials just want to get re-elected so if they know that
01:17:53.380
they are facing not being re-elected by their republican base for not doing their jobs and they're in a
01:17:58.160
republican seat they'll vote in favor of what we put on the floor and so what i'm hoping for
01:18:04.460
is president trump's negotiating powers to come through but as you're seeing he's pretty much
01:18:10.180
not faced any losses in the house in regards to what he wants the speaker to do and i don't think
01:18:16.540
that some of these more moderate members that are saying you know they're not going to cut this
01:18:20.220
they're not going to cut that they love this job more than sometimes i think they love their own
01:18:23.300
families and so i think they'll be willing to do whatever it takes for them to get re-elected you
01:18:26.640
know i saw um cash patel came out yesterday and he said we can't cut the fbi um the way the
01:18:34.200
white house wants us to cut the fbi and i was a little um shocked by that because it was cash
01:18:40.280
patel who used to say you know if they were not building them a new building they want a new
01:18:44.940
building they can just go you know work out of their cars if they have to we're not doing a new
01:18:49.080
building and now that he's a director he's now saying we can't cut and there's an awful lot i think
01:18:56.100
we can we can cut i mean they're not doing the job in the first place uh i don't think um they're so
01:19:04.300
miss uh i don't know miscalculating and misguided on everything they're doing yeah um that i mean the
01:19:13.140
only way to get rid of these things is to cut the spending to cut the people out that need to go
01:19:19.900
i'd rather you know i'd rather be with a group of you know 80 people that really get it than 150
01:19:26.420
people that i don't know i don't know which of the 150 people are really on our side and is anybody
01:19:32.600
sabotaging us well what i will tell you is um i agree with you right the fbi especially from some
01:19:40.240
of the stuff that we've seen now flush out and we just heard recently that the fbi was complicit in
01:19:44.200
covering up the congressional baseball shooting that literally resulted in at least getting shot
01:19:48.060
there is a lot that the fbi needs to be reformed on and yes that does have to do with funding
01:19:54.260
i would also argue that if their concern is spending here in washington well guess what the
01:19:59.320
fbi should probably be decentralized and work in parts of the country where they can focus on doing
01:20:03.720
their job and so i would disagree with director patel and cash is one of my friends on that and
01:20:09.360
that yes we need to look at across the board savings for the american people but what i will also
01:20:14.160
tell you is there's this idea that the democrats are really hoping that
01:20:18.060
you know low information um voters will not understand and that they're saying you know
01:20:22.720
we're going after people's social security because we're getting rid of fraud waste and abuse and
01:20:26.360
that's simply not the case so what's going to happen in the midterms and look i think that we
01:20:31.040
will win the midterms if congress specifically the republican majority can stick together and codify
01:20:36.400
those ending taxes on tips social security and then also deliver wins on getting back a lot of the
01:20:42.900
fraud waste and abuse and spending right and i think that we will i'm cautiously optimistic because
01:20:46.660
i've seen what's happening behind the scenes but what i will tell you is again going back to some
01:20:51.980
of these members that are just paranoid about re-election that is part of what i would say
01:20:56.540
the biggest problem here is in dc so instead of them doing the right thing right being fiscally
01:21:01.160
conservative or at least just common sense approach to how they spend money they're doing quite the
01:21:06.180
opposite and they are looking to you know again further their own careers here in washington so what i would
01:21:11.760
say is again small majority the time that we can actually deliver these wins but also we can't do
01:21:17.640
this if the american people don't actively get involved and making their voices heard to their
01:21:22.200
representatives in congress and because of my social media glenn i hear commentary from across the
01:21:27.140
country and what i realize is a lot of people don't even know how to find their representatives so
01:21:31.580
you can actually find your member of congress by going to house.gov and you can type in your zip code
01:21:35.820
and find out who represents you and you can actually request meetings from their office show up
01:21:39.860
but make sure that they are working on behalf of you and not special interest here in washington
01:21:43.600
yeah i have some things coming up uh in the near future that are gonna
01:21:47.760
be a little helpful for people to contact uh good uh and thank you so much god bless you
01:21:55.440
thank you god bless you people talk to you about representative ann paulina luna from uh florida and the
01:22:01.180
patriot act uh all right let me tell you about real estate agents i trust last time you bought a coffee
01:22:08.220
maker you probably watch comparison videos right you read reviews you filtered by price brand whether
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or not had it you know a built-in frother all for a machine that was like 89 makes hot bean water
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now how much time have you spent picking your last real estate agent if you're like most people you went
01:22:27.780
with a friend of a friend or whoever's face you saw on a local tv ad or a billboard somewhere
01:22:33.080
or a park bench you know only the best people are advertising in the back of park benches
01:22:38.260
maybe you got lucky maybe you didn't when you're talking about buying or selling a home which is
01:22:44.440
probably the biggest financial decision of your life maybe isn't good enough real estate agents i trust
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is a free service that connects you with those who are experienced vetted agents who actually know
01:22:56.720
what they're doing who share your values these are the pros that have been through the ups and the downs
01:23:01.700
and the oh no what is the fed doing now years and who know you know how to fight for you to get the
01:23:09.420
best deal in this market these are the pros and you can find them at realestateagentsitrust.com just
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tell us where you're moving to and from we'll help you find the right agent at realestateagentsitrust.com
01:23:22.320
that's realestateagentsitrust.com you know the left's got a road map straight off a cliff
01:23:31.560
let's take the right trail glenn beck returns shortly
01:23:37.880
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they forge your signature on a transfer document and then suddenly they own your home at least on
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paper from there they can take out loans against your property and drain your equity and make your
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life basically a living hell you might not even find out until you start getting foreclosure notices
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on a house that you thought was paid off this is why home title lock exists why they created it in
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01:24:34.000
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01:24:45.480
own banks don't even cover it insurance doesn't cover it and they don't deal with this home title
01:24:50.040
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both ways the final details are being written up in the coming weeks
01:25:50.080
this is the president live from the oval office
01:25:52.000
conclusive but the actual deal is a very conclusive one we think
01:25:57.840
deal on uh so good for both countries and we'll also receive announcing a deal with the uk
01:26:03.380
american chemicals machinery and many other industrial products that weren't allowed
01:26:08.480
and they'll end up getting products that they'll be able to price and
01:26:12.580
if they like them better and we make great products they'll be buying those products but
01:26:16.580
they were not available in the uk furthermore in a historic step the deal includes plans that will
01:26:23.420
bring the united kingdom into the economic security alignment with the united states
01:26:28.940
that's the first of its kind so we have a big economic security blanket and that's very
01:26:34.940
important and we feel uh very very comfortable with that because it's been a great ally truly
01:26:39.820
one of our great allies i mean a lot of people say our greatest ally i don't want to insult people
01:26:44.780
by saying that but i can say it's certainly one of our greatest and right at the top and they're the
01:26:50.940
the first one we're talking about and by the way we have many meetings planned today and tomorrow
01:26:56.300
and every country wants to be making deals and we have a meeting as you know scott will be going
01:27:03.340
over to what the president has said so far that we know is uh first the rare earth minerals deal
01:27:10.540
which was signed by zielinski now been ratified by their political bodies and so we now have an official
01:27:18.060
rare earth mineral deal with uh ukraine also he says major breakthrough in the uk on ve day
01:27:24.940
with uh starmer he says this is the first in a series of reciprocity uh there will be reciprocity
01:27:32.460
for our farmers uh ag uh oil um and machinery um something else maybe automobiles i think he mentioned
01:27:43.900
as well anything else i'm missing that you or you're seeing it also just doesn't seem like it's
01:27:48.540
really sorted out yet it seems like it's a it's a an announcement of a framework right he said the
01:27:53.500
details are going to be worked out so we don't really know exactly where this lands it does seem
01:27:58.300
to be that we are keeping the tariffs on them uh so that i don't know it's a ten percent that ten
01:28:03.180
percent blanket tariff that has been put on seems to still be part of this at least this initial
01:28:07.500
reporting but we'll see they're going to sort it out over the next few weeks all right so quite possibly some
01:28:12.700
very good news as he said that there's more companies or more countries that are coming to
01:28:17.900
negotiate in the next couple of weeks he said there will be many more of these style announcements this
01:28:23.260
is glenn back let me tell you about oracle cloud you know that feeling when you scan your credit card
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01:30:03.100
the fusion of entertainment and enlightenment this is the glenn beck program
01:30:33.100
so just listening to howard lutnik here just a second ago he's with the president in the oval
01:30:39.020
and they're talking about a new trade deal with the uk and as trump was talking about it it it didn't
01:30:46.220
sound all that great because i i didn't understand he's saying you know we've been trying to do this
01:30:50.540
for 25 years well what exactly did you do and then lutnik stood up and he said let me explain what
01:30:55.980
we've just done and it's it's pretty amazing and we'll get to that here in just a second also nicole
01:31:01.260
shanahan is with us she is the former rfk junior running mate and uh host of the podcast back to the
01:31:08.220
people she said something uh yesterday uh that i i don't i i'm not sure where she stands on the
01:31:21.260
the new appointment uh for hhs and uh also uh for the new surgeon general and i don't know if i've
01:31:34.380
misreading what she's saying but she'll give us all the details is this a good thing or a bad thing
01:31:38.460
according to maha nicole shanahan joins me in 60 seconds standby first someone's coming towards
01:31:45.180
you very fast very aggressively you don't know what they want but you know it's not good now here's a
01:31:50.540
question do you want to kill them probably not but you don't want to stop them right in that split
01:31:56.060
second you're stuck between two options that are both terrible do nothing or do something lethal
01:32:01.660
that's why there's a burner launcher burner launcher is a non-lethal self-defense device that fires
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01:32:50.860
nicole shanahan nicole how are you very good glenn how are you doing i'm very good it is uh
01:32:57.900
it's great to have you here so um i want to ask you the surgeon general thing um are you for
01:33:08.540
casey means or not for casey means well i'll tell you who i am for glenn okay um i'm for all of those
01:33:17.340
americans the hundreds of thousands of doctors um seeking uh truth honesty and dignity in our
01:33:26.940
medical system once again that is what i'm for that is what propelled maha into existence that is
01:33:33.260
what propelled bobby kennedy into the position of running for president of the united states that's
01:33:39.500
why i joined uh the campaign it really is about listening to this group of doctors that did the
01:33:47.740
right thing during the coveted pandemic that spoke up when it was dangerous to speak up that lost their
01:33:54.620
licenses and so when i hear from that base concern or research about individuals in and around maha
01:34:04.140
i have to listen to them and i do listen to them because oftentimes they are right um they're brave and
01:34:11.580
they're principled so the concern i've been hearing from that group of people is that um maha has had
01:34:19.340
had you know any movement maga had this issue too um of infiltration by different groups that are more
01:34:28.140
self-serving than they are for the movement itself and so just one example um casey means is is uh
01:34:38.940
a founder of a um company that does biometric harvesting she's very close with um many of the big
01:34:47.260
data biometric harvesting companies in silicon valley um and and this i i know several of these
01:34:54.300
people you do not want them running in a government position that is responsible for everybody equally
01:35:00.940
right there's so wait wait wait what is bio what is that they're harvesting what well so biometric data
01:35:10.060
is anything between heart rate data um to all of the data that is collected from your fitbit or high
01:35:19.180
glucose monitor um it could be labs it could be um yeah and then there's all the dna harvesting um and and
01:35:28.780
big data that's being done so you know i think that the the base maha really came from medical freedom and
01:35:36.620
medical sovereignty and the idea that we have to keep conflicts of interest out of the government um
01:35:43.580
and so when i you know see some stuff going on that we could be doing better right our job and i learned
01:35:51.660
this from the maga base our job is to continue to seek the best possible people for government that are
01:35:58.860
truly um putting the principles of this country first the principles of american sovereignty first
01:36:06.860
so you wrote yesterday it's very strange it doesn't make any sense i was promised that if i supported
01:36:11.500
rfk jr in the senate confirmation that neither of these siblings would be working under hhs or an
01:36:17.340
appointment and that people much more qualified would be i don't know if jok jr sorry rfk very clearly
01:36:24.700
lied to me or what's going on it has been clear in recent conversations that he is reporting to
01:36:29.580
someone regularly who is controlling his decisions and it isn't president trump with regards to the
01:36:35.980
siblings there is something very artificial and aggressive about them almost as if they were bred
01:36:41.100
and raised as manchurian assets wow yeah so to keep in mind that was not i was responding to doc uh
01:36:51.180
dr suzanne humphries who was also expressing very similar sentiments yeah yeah yeah concern there's
01:36:59.020
better candidates so what's going on um i also heard from other mds in the field that there was a another
01:37:07.660
doctor that rfk had wanted for the position um very very qualified doctor and and and you know she was
01:37:16.060
caught by surprise as well um by this other choice so you know there's again they they don't call it
01:37:24.620
the swamp for no reason right and and i'm i you know i'm not officially within the administration at
01:37:31.260
all in fact i've decided to take the path of staying an independent um uh media person which i think
01:37:38.860
i i think and you know this glenn it's really important that um when you are an independent
01:37:45.180
media voice um that you you stick by your principles and that you're not just a mouthpiece for
01:37:52.940
any government organization but you're really on the outside reflecting back um the hopes and wishes of
01:37:59.100
the constituents yeah there is it's and it's very hard to do i mean i i take stances against the president
01:38:05.660
and for the president and you always have to you always have to balance uh you know i have my
01:38:12.300
opinion and i'm never going to be bought out by anybody i'm never but but you also want to make
01:38:18.300
sure that you're being fair to the people that you trust and i know you have trusted rfk for a very very
01:38:23.740
long time and for what struck me on this is you know i don't know if our rfk lied to me which i don't
01:38:30.140
i hope he didn't or what's going on it's been clear in recent conversation that he's reporting to
01:38:34.540
someone regularly who is controlling his decisions that's a remarkable thing to say especially about
01:38:42.380
rfk because he does not strike me as somebody who is afraid of somebody else you know i don't know if
01:38:50.700
it's fear or what he's called political 4d chest um and you know again they they don't call it the swamp
01:38:59.980
for no reason it's just at some point there's certain decisions that i think are worth fighting
01:39:05.500
for um when you are in a very and i do appreciate what a very complex political environment this
01:39:12.220
is um and i do understand uh that even within these agencies um there are groups that are intentionally
01:39:21.100
keeping and withholding information from the new leadership so you know i i fully appreciate how
01:39:28.140
complicated it is it all is um but there are definitely things that the base is is you know
01:39:37.340
is like this is an easy one this could have gone better right we don't truly um you know and everyone's
01:39:43.900
guessing what what precisely this 4d chest is all about and why these moves are being made and trying
01:39:49.020
to anticipate the next one um but it's uh it's something that i think you know there's there's just
01:39:56.380
certain things that indicate that whomever he's getting whoever his chess coach is um could be
01:40:02.860
making some better decisions for him so and but but casey i mean when i talked to the twins during you
01:40:11.100
know or after covet they seemed pretty clear on what was bad and what was good they they they both seem to
01:40:19.100
be good on uh on covid and the vaccines didn't they where's my memory talk a great talk let me tell
01:40:27.580
you i will say i was once a fan of the means is as well um it was only after i received many comments
01:40:35.980
from individuals and around the transition team um as well as new research uh that came up and then really
01:40:44.060
like you know when the base expresses these things and provides that degree of inquiry um and shows that
01:40:53.660
kind of concern i think we owe it to them to listen yes i agree i agree yeah so overall how do you feel
01:41:03.100
things are going i think um you know again it's there's been a lot of focus around food dives um meanwhile
01:41:13.660
there's millions of people suffering from vaccine injury that still feel very neglected yeah um so
01:41:20.460
i i do think i do appreciate the recent executive order regarding gain of function and limiting
01:41:25.980
overseas um research and shutting down a dangerous brainer and shutting down a very dangerous biolab here
01:41:34.860
yes and there are many of these biolabs that are kind of flying under the radar
01:41:39.740
right so it is a big step in the right decision i'm a huge jay bodhacharya fan um probably one of
01:41:47.020
his biggest i i really am um excited for him as he builds out his team i hope that he has a very
01:41:54.700
very strong team around him and in the next coming weeks because um he's going to need it um as far as
01:42:01.660
hhs goes you know i'd love to see uh bobby bring in more of those doctors that that have been around
01:42:10.060
him for the last 10 years very regularly because these are the individuals that you know i i trust
01:42:16.380
these people with my life um they have sacrificed everything to do the right thing time and time again
01:42:23.500
they are so deeply principled they will never take a check over helping a patient out um and and they
01:42:31.420
actually do have the answer so i'm hoping to see more of those people around bobby so i'm i'm wondering
01:42:39.340
because this way i feel about a couple of things with the fbi and and uh intel that if i don't see
01:42:45.500
some people in the next year or so go to jail or at least brought in for a fair and honest trial you
01:42:52.460
know i don't want to just scoop people up and just assume that they're guilty but you know if
01:42:56.540
build a good strong case bring it to trial have it a fair and honest trial and let the chips fall
01:43:02.860
where they may but if i don't see some prosecutions at least i think i'm i'm very upset at the doj um
01:43:12.060
pam bondy and the head of the fbi cash patel um and i don't and i'm trusting them so far that they
01:43:19.740
are doing that do you feel the same way at all about you know if i if you don't see some people
01:43:25.340
go to jail that clearly lied about the vaccines if they don't go to jail you haven't you you really
01:43:33.900
haven't fixed anything you're just eating around the edges yeah yeah maybe i think that really
01:43:40.940
explains it and and this is why i think it's important to continue to voice those concerns
01:43:47.020
because they're only going to grow and mount and it really is the american people that were
01:43:53.340
sold this vision of accountability um and and we want to see it we have to see it i mean we're
01:44:00.220
several months into the administration now hhs you know lags behind the oval office in terms of getting
01:44:06.860
going but um there people were seriously injured there were many crimes committed against the american
01:44:14.860
public crimes committed against our bravest doctors crimes committed against children um we need
01:44:23.660
accountability we really really need to see that um because you know there's there's a preciousness in
01:44:32.300
this moment we have to we have to deliver this country deserves that and um i mean if we're if if we
01:44:43.180
can't correct the things you know for instance washington state just passed a law where if there is another
01:44:51.500
pandemic everybody seems to be you know claiming there's another one right around the corner
01:44:56.780
but if there is another pandemic that they will have absolute control over what you put into your
01:45:02.300
body and what you do that's terrifying they do and and those emergency orders no one's scrutinized them
01:45:11.180
there haven't been revisions no the washington state just revised it to codify it washington state just
01:45:17.900
codified it it's crazy yeah yeah so i i'd like to see more focus around that's not red dye 40 and not
01:45:28.940
kellogg's um i'm totally fine leaving kellogg's load in favor of of hhs um spending all of its energy and all of
01:45:39.180
its focus and all of its leverage um making sure that we are actually properly ready for the next
01:45:45.420
pandemic um and not to cause the catastrophic harm that was caused during kobe 19.
01:45:52.460
nicole shanahan she's uh got the podcast back to the people and it's now coming to blaze media it's
01:45:58.460
the same podcast that she's been doing just now as she says with a wider reach um glad to have you
01:46:04.540
nicole thank you very much thanks guy it was a pleasure to come on we'll talk to you again uh
01:46:10.140
all right let me tell you about relief factor let's talk about the human body specifically your
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i tell you i i was at a um i was at a fundraiser a few weeks ago and i'm meeting the people
01:47:50.540
who were there and this guy comes up to me his name is dr larry miller and he comes up to me and
01:47:55.660
he introduces himself and he's an older guy and uh he says i almost didn't come today but i was hoping
01:48:02.700
i would get a chance to shake your hand and i said well here we are and he said i have to tell you
01:48:09.340
something i almost didn't make it because on tuesday my son set himself on fire in front of the va hospital
01:48:22.940
that's not something i expected to hear he's joining us in a minute because i wanted you to hear him
01:48:30.300
because he says and he's right the va is just not doing enough for our men and women the va sucks
01:48:37.180
we all know that i mean look at canada you want that you want that kind of health care you want
01:48:45.020
do you want obamacare because look how great it is i'm supposed to solve all of our problems look
01:48:48.780
how great it is the solution will be given more of it well the more you give the more you'll become
01:48:53.980
like the va and we are abandoning our veterans and they are killing themselves at a at an unbelievable
01:49:03.980
rate so we're going to talk to him in just a minute also uh i was in the break i was listening to
01:49:11.420
uh howard lutnik about the the white house announcement that they just made and here's
01:49:17.420
here's what this deal was you know he just made a deal for the uk um a trade a tariff thing and
01:49:25.100
they've been trying to make this kind of a deal for 25 years but they haven't been able to do it
01:49:28.540
because great britain has so many protectionist things on it for their farmers and everything
01:49:33.180
else and so it was trump that came in according to lutnik and said wait a minute wait a minute
01:49:37.820
let's rethink this let's let's just work on the things you buy from other countries and give us
01:49:44.220
full access to those things buy them from us before you buy them from somebody else and so that's what
01:49:50.220
this deal is we still have the 10 tariff on them uh which they say will be bringing six billion dollars
01:49:56.300
a year we have opened up their markets mainly for our ag um and also i think for steel and aluminum
01:50:04.700
etc etc but we've opened up their market on things that they were already doing that way starmer wins
01:50:11.420
because he's going to get better and probably cheaper goods from america we're streamlining uh
01:50:18.460
our customs so nothing's going to sit at a port and so it'll be good for his people while not hurting
01:50:25.020
the industries because they're a protectionist state so that's what happened today and and that
01:50:31.260
just shows you to me that's a good negotiator that's somebody who's like okay i know we literally they've
01:50:39.020
been trying to do this for 25 years and they've over complicated it and let nick said until donald trump
01:50:44.860
came in and said why don't we just go for the things they're buying from other people
01:50:49.180
oh okay and starmer said oh we could do that and so that's the trade deal that you have coming from
01:51:00.300
england dr larry miller is with us in just a minute this is glenn beck nmls 182334 nmlsconsumeraccess.org
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i want to introduce you to dr larry miller and um i have to tell you it was the weirdest thing i did
01:53:01.900
two events back to back and i had two people come up to me one their son set themselves on fire the
01:53:09.980
other told me a story about uh a son that shot himself they were both staggering and they happened
01:53:17.980
24 hours apart from each other and it was remarkable larry uh dr larry miller he's a emergency medicine
01:53:28.060
physician uh and uh it's his son that if i may let me just let me just read from his facebook because
01:53:37.500
this is it's amazing his his son is you know just left a va appointment um they're so nice they
01:53:46.780
prescribed me i don't even know if this is seroquel uh wow how nice they didn't even listen to my story
01:53:53.900
just like a robot that hands out poison to every soldier um anyway um larry wrote on his facebook
01:54:01.340
on april 8th today i heard the words no father can imagine your son mark is dead yesterday mark
01:54:07.500
text me at 12 34 p.m with the words papa i love you very much and i always will
01:54:12.540
i texted him back i love you too with all my heart i don't know if he read my reply or not
01:54:20.380
because minutes later the taxi dropped him off at the va hospital in san antonio walking up to the
01:54:25.340
door he shot himself in the head i only learned about his death this morning my heart is broken
01:54:30.300
my soul is crushed there are no words yet something has to be said so um dr larry miller is on with us now
01:54:39.100
dr larry how are you hello glenn thank you so much for having me uh it's been tough but um you know
01:54:48.300
god is good and we're moving on with mark's mission and so this is what's keeping me going right now
01:54:56.220
so tell me who mark was before all of this was happening
01:55:01.500
i think every father is proud of their son i was especially proud of mark he was a
01:55:09.020
loving kind young man everybody that met him said he was an unusually amazing guy he loved god
01:55:16.060
he loved jesus he um helped everybody he could uh he uh enlisted in the navy as a very young man
01:55:23.580
and he became a sniper in the navy for many years he was a sniper because he was a good shot but you
01:55:31.660
know being a sniper he had to do things that went against his personality against his moral beliefs
01:55:38.140
against against his ethics but he did it because he wanted to um he wanted to um fight for his country
01:55:46.540
help us yeah help the country absolutely so he did it and then as soon as he got out of the war zone
01:55:54.780
he said the war did not get out of him he began to think of all these things he became very depressed
01:56:00.620
and so he went to see the military um psych doctors back in 2007 and they placed him on prozac
01:56:09.820
which is an ssri drug and as soon as he started taking that prozac he became
01:56:17.340
uh absolutely um empowered and convicted to commit suicide and so he went back to them gave
01:56:25.180
him more and more and the more they gave him the more he began to drink and he uh planned his suicide
01:56:30.940
attempt at that time it was a it was a miracle that we actually caught him back there in 2007
01:56:38.940
uh but we did and we got him off from his prozac and we got him into treatment and he improved
01:56:46.700
quite a bit over the next few years and uh he's a painter so he painted some beautiful
01:56:54.460
paintings that all express different bible verses and scripture and so on and were very inspiring to
01:56:59.900
people and recently uh his mom died he had a big fire around his house he had an increasing back
01:57:08.540
pain and he went back to the va for for some help and they gave him tramadol which is an opioid
01:57:15.100
for the pain got him hooked on that and then he felt he should go in for admission and he never told
01:57:23.660
me about that he kept this from his family but he went into the va for for pain management and then on
01:57:31.180
on the first of april just a little over a month ago he went in to the va and he wanted to be admitted
01:57:40.860
telling them that he was suicidal he's in horrible pain and they just didn't even listen to him and so
01:57:48.140
he he reported in uh in a text to me that they didn't even listen to me dad they just uh passed out
01:57:56.700
poison they're murdering our heroes our men and women in service are murdering them what is what
01:58:04.780
is seroquel what is seroquel seroquel is a psychotropic drug that's for um major mental health problems such
01:58:13.900
as schizophrenia and bipolar and my son had neither one of those he was just depressed but they placed him
01:58:22.060
on that and uh that's he said it was after five minutes he texted me and said you know in five
01:58:29.500
minutes he gave me the seroquel and sent me home didn't even listen to my story and that's when he
01:58:35.020
decided i'm sure that he was going to have to take his life and make a very powerful statement because
01:58:41.580
you know during the back up a little bit uh in the in the past four years we wrote a book together
01:58:47.420
called suicide stalks the sniper and that was mark's way of getting out to the public what
01:58:53.660
he had gone through how he had found relief and the things that had happened to him and so we went
01:58:59.980
around south texas meeting with different veteran groups helping the veterans and many of them heard
01:59:06.300
his story and they got off their psychotropic drugs and they were doing so much better and just
01:59:11.420
putting this together so this was something that he had had as a mission and so um when he wasn't
01:59:20.140
heard by the va i think he just felt desperate and felt this is the only way he could protest
01:59:28.700
so larry you know we we've world war one i think is the first time at least that i'm aware of it i'm
01:59:38.380
sure this has happened in every major war but world war one was such an awful war um and the bloodshed
01:59:44.940
was just overwhelming that um guys came home from world war one and they just weren't the same and
01:59:51.580
then it got worse with world war ii but those guys just never talked about it then then korea and then
01:59:58.380
the vietnam war was so bad and we abandoned our veterans and they didn't come back as heroes and
02:00:03.900
and and this just this problem seems to be getting worse and worse and worse what's the answer
02:00:11.820
we absolutely right in world war one they called it shell shock now they call it pdst and you know
02:00:17.500
it's um it's something that the military trains them to be uh good soldiers in my son's case he
02:00:24.540
trained him to be an assassin all right but when he got out of the military they gave him a
02:00:28.860
a five-minute questionnaire to reorient him to civilian life now how is that going to help him
02:00:35.340
at all the military just throws these veterans away doesn't take good care of them they use them and
02:00:43.020
they should take months or years to retrain them to be good citizens and how to operate in normal
02:00:48.300
society again and they don't do that and then the they have to go to the va and the problem with the va
02:00:55.100
is that the psychiatrists universally have succumbed to the big farmers um propaganda to give out pills
02:01:03.900
instead of psychotherapy now years ago the psychiatrists used to do a good job of talking to the
02:01:09.820
patient talking to the soldier with uh ptsd and so on and finding out what it was and then helping them to
02:01:16.300
design a plan to get a purpose in life and to to help them with with the future now they just spend five
02:01:23.420
minutes and pass out pills like candy and these psychotropic drugs have been proven over and over
02:01:29.260
again with meta-analysis that they do not work they're no better than placebos but they also have
02:01:34.940
been proven that they increase suicide by at least two and a half to three percent so my question is why
02:01:43.500
do psychiatrists give out ssris to suicidal veterans that increase their chance of suicide
02:01:52.300
it's just something that's hard for me to understand
02:01:57.420
you you wrote a message to the military you said um halfway through yes you should be humiliated
02:02:04.540
not for what you made him do but for not respecting him or valuing him as a human being for not attempting
02:02:11.260
him to put him back together the way you found him kind loving trusting with a plan and purpose for his
02:02:16.380
life you need to train him no matter how long it takes not to jump when he hears a car backfire or
02:02:22.060
panic when he finds the door in his home unlocked teach him that we're not the enemy and that he is safe to go to sleep in
02:02:29.500
that's right uh that's absolutely right and it's not only mark um after i posted that on facebook when
02:02:40.860
i lost my son the day i posted it i've got over 25 000 shares and i got thousands of replies to me i
02:02:49.260
haven't even gotten through them all yet but there's hundreds and hundreds of exactly the same story my
02:02:54.700
son was depressed he went to the va they gave him an insect you know these psychotropic drugs and he
02:03:00.380
committed suicide my father my husband my brother the story is over and over again it's a repeat of
02:03:08.300
what mark did and it's so widely spread it's been swept under the rug we need to wake up to this this
02:03:16.220
fact of how egregiously horrible our veterans are being treated for mental health and it's not just
02:03:23.340
that the va is you know just a horrible system you also are saying ss ssris are horrible
02:03:35.100
poison yes they are they're they're they're no better than placebos on the good side and the bad
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side they increase suicide so why would they use them well they've been brainwashed and that's easy
02:03:47.180
to do big pharma has a number of ways that they can create studies that look good but the meta-analysis
02:03:52.860
done by independent um researchers have shown that ssris are not beneficial to most people
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but they do have a very high risk of many side effects including science uh including suicide
02:04:05.980
so this is something we have to change and it's all funded by the big pharma who spends billions of
02:04:11.820
dollars on a number of ways and they influence legislation uh they influence the big uh the fda because
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they pay for 74 percent of fda's budget that seems to me a conflict of interest kind of they sponsor most
02:04:28.060
of of advertising on tv why should pharmaceutical companies advertise drugs on tv most countries are
02:04:35.500
not allowed to do that and they pay directly to psychiatrists to use their drugs there are eight
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psychiatrists last year that received over a million dollars to promote their ssris
02:04:49.100
that should be a conflict of interest that should be outlined by congress in my opinion larry thank you
02:04:54.700
for talking to me i really appreciate it thank you for sharing your son mark with me as well
02:05:02.460
thank you so much i hope the message gets around to the people that can make a big difference for my
02:05:07.020
son and i appreciate your kindness thank you you're a good man thank you so much for what you do make a
02:05:12.220
change in the world dr larry miller emergency medical uh physician uh and the co-author with
02:05:18.780
his son suicide stalks the sniper if you are somebody that is suffering with suicidal tendencies or suicidal ideation
02:05:28.780
please please i urge you to get help call suicide hotline if you are a if you are a veteran that is
02:05:36.940
struggling with this there are places that can help you the mighty oaks foundation is one of the best
02:05:43.420
ones that i know of please please millions claudia was leaving for her pickleball tournament i've been
02:05:52.300
visualizing my match all week she was so focused on visualizing that she didn't see the column behind
02:05:57.820
her car on her backhand side good thing claudia's with intact the insurer with the largest network of
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auto service centers in the country everything was taken care of under one roof and she was on her
02:06:08.940
way in a rental car in no time i made it to my tournament and lost in the first round but you
02:06:14.780
got there on time intact insurance your auto service ace certain conditions apply
02:06:25.980
deeply care about you please don't give up more in just a minute
02:06:37.340
let me tell you about uh pre-born some dangers are obvious others come in a small pill handed over
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casually and marked as safe easy normal this time we're talking about the abortion pill more poison
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the new research from the foundation of the restoration of america is laying bare a truth that
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the media refuses to acknowledge the abortion pill is far more dangerous than advertised in 2023 alone
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11 of the women who experienced who took it experienced serious complications that's not
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speculation that's from a study of more than 150 000 women 11 serious complications but we get
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silence from the media isn't that weird or maybe the word i'm actually looking for is disgusting and
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despicable pre-born is the largest pro-life ministry in america they don't just advocate they act they
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they're sounding the alarm on a growing health disaster that is taking lives on both sides of the
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help pre-born save lives and tell the truth get involved today just dial pound 250 say the keyword
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sponsored by pre-born what you're hearing are your thoughts
02:08:04.540
your thoughts via the mind and mouth of glenn beck more next
02:08:24.460
on this day in 1945 if you turned on your radio you heard this 12 o'clock binion news the service of
02:08:43.580
binion optometrist while much of the allied world is already celebrating ve day the official announcement
02:08:51.100
that the war in europe has ended will not be made until tomorrow the british ministry of information
02:08:57.020
announced less than an hour and a half ago that tomorrow will be ve day just an hour ago president
02:09:03.660
truman announced in washington that he has agreed with london and moscow to make no announcement on
02:09:09.260
the final surrender of germany until a simultaneous announcement can be made by the three allied
02:09:14.620
governments the british ministry of information said that prime minister winston churchill
02:09:19.980
with broadcast at 3 p.m british time that's 6 a.m pacific wartime king george will speak to the
02:09:26.620
british people at 9 p.m british time which is 12 noon pacific wartime earlier cbs correspondent edward
02:09:34.380
murrow in london said that president truman and prime minister churchill were ready to announce the
02:09:39.340
official news of the german surrender at 9 a.m today but he said that they were delayed because premier
02:09:45.420
stalin scheduled to speak at the same time was not ready we started today's podcast with that story on
02:09:54.060
why that happened somebody lost their job their career their credibility over that story he said
02:10:01.900
people are already celebrating but it's not happening yet if you missed any of today's show make sure you
02:10:08.060
get the podcast wherever you get your podcast and listen to it it's a fascinating hit the more things
02:10:15.020
change the more they stay exactly the same especially with the associated press it's on today's podcast