'Wake Up, Rise Up and Stop it!?' - 3⧸12⧸18
Episode Stats
Length
1 hour and 51 minutes
Words per Minute
156.39832
Summary
Historically speaking, what happens when you run out of excuses who to blame? Who do you blame? always the jews. That s what happened with Vladimir Putin and his comments about the Jews.
Transcript
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love courage truth glenn beck historically speaking what happens when you run out of
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excuses who to blame it's really easy for governments it's always the jews that's what
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vladimir putin did in uh in an interview on saturday with megan kelly when answering a
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regarding who is responsible for interfering with the u.s election putin said well maybe they're not
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even russians maybe they're ukrainians or tartars or jews but but just with russian citizenship
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oh jews ukrainians tartars what do all those people have in common putin's remarks uh were
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surprisingly open notice he groups as non-russian uh and those who are living within his borders
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ukrainians which makes sense due to the current conflict going on between russia and ukrainian
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tartars the country's second largest ethnic group but if a complicated history with uh the russian
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government many russians blame the tartars for the mongol invasions of the 13th century and
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damn it is it too is it too soon to joke about that it is considered one of the darkest times
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in russian history so putin assigned blame to the uh uh to the ukrainians the tartars and jews
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russians have been using the jews as the ultimate scapegoat for over a century before hitler even
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had written mein kampf a group of russians maybe they were ukrainians or tartars had wrote the
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protocols of the elders of zion it was written in 1903 its contents claimed to be a document of a
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meeting between jewish leaders discussing their plans on how to take over the world how how can we
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how can we control the world's economy and control the press any of this sound familiar this is where it
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came from protocols of zion yeah yeah well they have to drink a lot of christian blood to do it
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the book was proven to be a complete and fabric a complete fabrication and a complete lie it is
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propaganda being preached all over the world for over a hundred years and every from the everyone
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from the alt-right to louis farrakhan still make the same accusations and arguments that are pulled
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straight out of this ridiculous and debunked book i mentioned before putin's statement was surprising
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and not because he showed anti-semitism but because he seemed to reveal it by mistake
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putin was trained by the kgb he knew exactly what he was doing he never says things to the media without
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purpose everything russia is doing right now whether it's with the far right in europe or the alt-right
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here in our u.s or within his own country with his own people everything revolves around the same
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tactic focus the rage focus the rage in the eu it's all about taking advantage of the immigrant crisis
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and stoking the rage here at home they're doing the same thing to us with immigration through racial
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tension and also through our left-right divide what is russia doing stoking the rage it's all about
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blaming current enemies historical and of course the jews the last time anti-semitism came out of russia
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a man named adolf hitler rose up and he channeled the rage the likes of which the world had never seen
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before the world is being primed right now in a very similar way we are being manipulated now by people
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who want to focus the rage putin's comments reveal the russian playbook and i pray that the entire world
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will wake up rise up and stop it this time before it begins
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it's monday march 12th this is the glenn beck program hello stew how was your weekend wonderful
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how about yours oh my it mine yeah it was great it was great i heard uh you know you said uh you've
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watched a couple of nazi propaganda films this weekend so i thought it went pretty well
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yes it did i i i'm doing research on some stuff and and uh so i watched two goebbels films this
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weekend that when i say to you a nazi propaganda film do you expect them to be good or eye roll
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many of them were eye roll right especially the early ones okay the two that were really really
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powerful were were actually if you put yourself in the mindset of the germans at the time
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they are effective really really effective one was on the jews and uh it was it was a movie that
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was banned uh right after the war and they wanted everything destroyed the germans did but east germany
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belonged to the russians so the russians saved it and now we have a copy of it um but it was one that
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was written and uh and edited uh by goebbels himself and it it's it's quite amazing quite amazing
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how they just made you hate the jew and it was if if you're in their mindset if you had been primed
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for years when that came out it was yes okay well that's why i guess so many of them went along with
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it right the other one i watched was uh i accuse this one was this one could be redone in america
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today and nobody would speak out against it and it's about assisted suicide but it takes on the
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children you know stew the handicapped children the ones who don't have a life worth living oh no
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and uh it makes a very effective heartfelt case and as i want to show on tv tonight
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the um the interesting thing was while they're deliberating this professor uh who killed his wife
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and the doctor who was just saving babies and he wouldn't kill the babies he he had a change of
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because then he saw what he was doing to these babies they were living these horrible lives
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and uh so he the the professor decides to kill his wife because she has ms and we all know that
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you don't live with ms and have any quality of life whatsoever so he killed her and they're in
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the deliberation the jury is deliberating they're sitting there talking about it and they're going
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back and forth on whether or not and somebody actually says now this is a german propaganda film
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and if you've been listening and watching over the last couple of weeks this will run your your your
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blood will go cold with ice water uh it actually stands up and says yes i know i know it's life
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but something has to be done something always has to be done always does and it never works out for
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the rights of the people no no it doesn't it never does what a surprise and you know and this you went
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back to you did a bunch of this on tv last week seeing how each one of our uh 10 rights in the bill
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of rights have been you know mowed over mowed over or at least pushed back against uh and now we're
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seeing it i guess this is the motivation for you watching several nazi propaganda films this weekend
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was this op-ed in the washington post talking about what a brave decision it is uh to abort your child
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if you know it has down syndrome do you remember stew when we first started working together in the 90s
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and we were i i kept talking about peter singer because he was one of the guys that i i put
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together of you know the the council of a serial killer you know i i went out and i i don't remember
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who i who balanced him it may have been billy graham and peter singer uh right and peter singer is a chair
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of ethics at princeton right uh and a guy who has some interesting thoughts on life yeah he thinks you can
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kill your children he said you you can kill your children up until two and then he apologized for that
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and said i'm sorry i didn't mean to i didn't mean to say that you had to stop at two i mean really there's
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no time limit there's no time limit you can kill your children at any time and the thought was uh
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consciousness right was the minute that they realize that there is a tomorrow that's when they become
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human right not at birth not at birth trying to extend that out a little bit and we talked about
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how horrifying that was and i remember at the time thinking you know it's this intellectual guy
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at princeton it's obviously horrifying but you know these crazy professors come out and say things
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sometimes and this is not how the american people feel you know here we are 15 years later and this is
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because this is being called this weekend brave ready a new anti-abortion is a new push in anti-abortion
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circles to pass laws aimed at barring women from terminating their pregnancies after the fetus has
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been determined to have down syndrome stop using the word fetus it's a baby and you know it these laws
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are unconstitutional unenforceable and wrong this is a difficult subject to discuss because there are so
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many parents who have and cherish a child with down syndrome many people with down syndrome live happy
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and fulfilled lives the new gerber baby with down syndrome is awfully cute i have two children i was
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old enough when i became pregnant that it made sense to do the testing for down syndrome back then
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amniocentesis performed after 15 weeks now we sample to provide a conclusive determination as early as
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nine weeks and i can say without hesitation tragic as it would have been to feel and ghastly as a second
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trimester abortion would have been i would have terminated those pregnancies had testing come back
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positive i would have grieved my loss and then i would have moved on what bravery i'm not alone more
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than two-thirds of american women choose abortion in such such circumstances isn't that the point or at
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least the inherent point prenatal test testing in the first place no no it's no it's not no it's to
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prepare you if you believe that abortion is equivalent to murder the taking of human life then of course
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you'd make a different choice but that's not my belief and the supreme court has affirmed my freedom
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yeah they also they also affirmed jim crow loss okay so they've affirmed all sorts of crap call they've
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done all kinds of crap um i respect and i admire families that knowingly welcome a baby with down
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syndrome into their lives why would you admire them why would you admire them certainly to be a
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parent to take risks that accompany parenting to love your child for who she is not what you want
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her to be but accepting that the essential truth is different from compelling women to give birth to a
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child whose intellectual capacity will be impaired whose life choices will be limited whose health may be
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compromised most children with down syndrome have mild to moderate cognitive impairment meaning the
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iq between 55 and 70 or 35 and 55 for moderate this means limited capacity for independent living and
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financial security down syndrome is life-altering for the entire family and i'm going to be blunt here
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that's not the child i wanted that was not the choice i would have made you can call me selfish or worse
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but i'm in good company yes i actually did some research she's in good company there's a couple
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movies you watch all the nazis agreed with you an entire nation yep the all the no actually no stew
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that's right there no the nazis passed a law in 1939 that you could kill these lives that aren't worth
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living you could kill these children with they started really with um the uh the down syndrome babies
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those were prime targets who did they start with again down down syndrome babies well they actually
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started with baby now or but down syndrome was the first because they were incurable how brave very
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brave of the nazis wow and you know it's really interesting um after parents started figuring out
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that the nazis were not taking care of their children but uh gassing them in hospitals by 1941
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the german listen to this by 1941 the german people stood up against the elites the doctors the hospitals
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and the nurses and said you can't kill children with disabilities and down syndrome so no she's actually
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doesn't have uh a lot of people uh agree with her she does have the nazis but not the german people
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of 1941 wow well that is not very brave of the german people of 1941 you're right that's not brave
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laws are inconsistent with roe versus wade blah blah blah think about it can it be that a woman have more
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constitutional freedom to choose to terminate their pregnant pregnancies on a whim than for the reason
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of the baby that has down syndrome and to the question of enforceability who is going to police
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this decision making doctors are now supposed to turn in their patients patients who they owe
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confidentiality for making a decision of which the state disapproves oh my gosh yes there there is
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creepy eugenic aspects of the new technology yes yes there really is yes yes and you know what you know
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what else you know what's really creepy is the germans the nazis okay the nazis were only doing it
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um because quite honestly most of the doctors were creepy freaks that had a death fetish uh but that
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doesn't excuse the nurses and the other doctors that went along the other doctors that went along
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were actually thinking that they were doing the right thing for the volk for the people they were
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doing something because they were going to through the creepy eugenics create the master race and eliminate
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all suffering that's what they thought by eliminating them now in a couple of decades we'll have nobody with
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any disabilities and we'll have a master race and everything will be great they at least in their sick
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twisted dark evil way thought they were doing something good yours is i just don't want that baby
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oh my gosh congratulations america we have passed the darkness gee who said this who i know there was
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somebody about five years ago that said if we go dark we'll go darker than the nazis i can't remember he
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was probably crazy and he certainly wouldn't have approved of the new york times starting a new podcast
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called the caliphate but anyway somebody said that we will pass the nazis in darkness congratulations gang
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that seemed like a sorry i think you misspoke too i think you meant to say that we passed the nazis in
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bravery oh yeah that's right sorry sorry yes we passed yep this is much more brave much more brave
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paying off debt can take forever and it piles up really fast but it doesn't have to be this way
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you know you know it's amazing none of it has to be this way life is life is not hard people are
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complicated but life is really not this hard we're better than this so listen you have a lot of debt
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that uh debt and pay it off that will make life a lot easier for your whole family now is it the
00:17:16.340
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00:18:16.760
glenn back mercury glenn back i'm really interested in this new podcast from the new york times sounds
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great about the caliphate what are they calling it they're calling it the caliphate they're calling it
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caliphate an interesting title yeah well they've been they've been recording it now for like three
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years three years wow i think it's a comedy or a parody of something because of course we all know
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the caliphate is nonsense uh right and well this is just a they're just documenting the creation of
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the caliphate that's all this is the good thing is you have to feel good about this coming in on a
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monday morning right yeah yeah you think to yourself hey you know i talked about this a long time ago
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the caliphate and at the time was mocked for it and now you're gonna get this this sort of like
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you know those winston churchill moment no where like the new york times gonna write op-ed after
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op-ed saying how wow glenn beck was right that whole time no because right now recognize your
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brilliance i mean yes it was years later and you had to go through a tough time but that was the same
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thing with churchill he went through this tough time and then at the end here he is decades later now
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we all look back at him in this real mastermind who did the right thing through that tough time
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which is it's really something he's been praised for you're gonna get that treatment now from the
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new york times no exactly the same treatment i've i've been getting for uh bringing up the nazis
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uh you know now that the nazi movement is really starting to take root but you know anybody who's
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paying attention could find that easily but nobody's paying attention and when it finally does rise up
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all around the world everybody will be shocked by it well we ran like the caliphate special february
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2015 which was how many years ago from right now about uh about three so how they couldn't have
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possibly known that's exactly right i wow it's weird congratulations new york times you're on top of
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it glenn beck mercury you're listening to the glenn beck program i had a interesting email exchange
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with my good friend don imus who is uh no longer doing the imus in the morning program uh and uh
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and that's a good thing i mean the world celebrated when that happened but uh he's an interesting guy and
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uh a good friend and uh i i've joked with him because you can't have a serious conversation
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with don imus he is he's absolutely everything he that he is on the air times 10 uh so you can't you
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can't have a serious conversation with him um but i expected him to be dead a long time ago and so did
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a lot of his well for many or many reasons but mainly from cancer uh and his doctors thought he would
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be dead uh as well we have a couple of friends who have been uh a friend of the movement and a friend
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of uh the blaze and this program and everything from for a long long time uh gwen and adam rich who
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have uh just written a new book called live a legacy on the go by implementing the five percent solution
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make your own luck welcome how are you guys good we're great good so gwen you were diagnosed
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diagnosed with cancer what kind of cancer and when okay so this goes back to 2012 in november it was
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a pretty uh a double whammy in our host household november 6 2012 so watching the election we saw that
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obama was going to get elected and we got a telephone call that i got the definitive diagnosis
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of stage four metastatic breast cancer you should be dead by now uh yes if you look at the stats the
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stats bear out that um my chances of being here i just met my five-year um marker and i am in the
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rare category of one out of every four women who make it to this lesson less than one out of every
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four women make it five years you have been you have been you've you look good now right you look
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like you feel good now and you have not i mean i don't mean to i don't mean this the way it sounds
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you have not always looked in look like you felt well right right what are you doing what's happened
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what it's a lot and that's what we talk about in the book it's small actions that i do on a regular
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basis that have led me to feel as good as i am and a huge portion is with my health you know when i got
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my diagnosis and of course i had a lot of reasons of why i didn't want to die i mean i have four children
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i have my my husband and i didn't want my parents to have to bury a child notice how i made the list
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there i did i noticed that i was at the bottom of the list but no actually parents but let's go ahead
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um and then you know through trying to live a life of meaning and it was very important for me to leave
00:23:14.380
a legacy um i forgot what i was going to say i'm sorry no you're just talking i said so what happened so
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you oh and so it was paramount for me to do anything that i possibly could to live beyond
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the expiration date beyond what the doctors said you know don't give that date such so much power
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so let's quit me to empower myself so let's quickly just go through that the the the diet thing that
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you're doing right this is this i think is the same thing that imus did and he's still alive today
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right yeah i mean from the moment from i left the doctor's office that i found out that i had cancer
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i stopped eating sugar i took it out of my diet and even right there at that appointment my
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oncologist said it doesn't matter and i had lost so much weight and they just want you to put on
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weight she said eat anything you want to and i left thinking okay yeah yeah yeah right no okay i'm going
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to stop eating sugar and from then also i stopped doing carbohydrates because you know if you get to
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the whole thing of feeding your body the sugar my cancer feeds off of sugar and the whole process of
00:24:16.660
the spike in glucose and so changing my diet was like a no-brainer i want to do whatever i can so
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i can see my kids and those life cycle events that we all take for granted that we're going to be here
00:24:27.720
for so what's your diet so i try to stick to as much as possible no sugar no alcohol no dairy
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um no gluten no wheat so we talk about i do a lot of juices so and mostly vegetarian with a little bit
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of um protein um uh what else am i missing here it's more than just the diet glenn yeah it's the
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whole protocol right there's a supplement and what what uh is important is that you first of all you
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don't give up traditional protocol that's paramount right but you can supplement it with functional
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medicine and and uh uh integrative medicine and that's i think what has really given her that
00:25:12.640
boost and what has given her uh helped her quality of life so tell me about because you the book is
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the five percent solution so tell me about a adam what is the five percent solution well it's it's it's
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small changes it's it's almost like a geometric progression people try to take too big of a step
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whether it's politics overton window stuff yeah okay you take small incremental steps
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and before you know it you're standing on the other side of the room right okay i mean so you can apply
00:25:46.040
this to health you can apply it to education you can apply it to politics um you know the audience has
00:25:54.300
all kinds of problems the one thing that she left out of the the uh title of the book is it says stop
00:25:59.660
complaining yeah okay so um as a jew i'm jewish we're jewish yeah okay uh that's one of my favorite
00:26:07.440
pastimes okay gwen is uh is a is a uh an anomaly everything is positive drives me out of my ever
00:26:17.580
loving mind so while you're alive today i think so i mean i people don't believe this but when i got
00:26:23.640
my diagnosis two things were apparent to me i was relieved and i thought it was a blessing
00:26:28.860
who usually thinks that i mean you have to look at what happened to being misdiagnosed over eight
00:26:34.200
years with eight different doctors and eight different radiologists who read my mammogram and
00:26:39.460
nobody found the cancer okay and i there's eight years so you are way beyond oh yeah yeah so when i got
00:26:47.440
my diagnosis and i i actually didn't think i was going to be here i mean i wanted to be and again
00:26:52.460
trying to do everything that i could to to lengthen my stay here to live longer than anyone thought
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possible so get back to your point about our book is about small actions well if you get a cancer
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diagnosis i mean you're up here you're overwhelmed okay all the things you need to do break it down
00:27:09.640
into small things what can you start to do today to make a difference everyone listening here today
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has problems right some can be a lot suckier than cancer and if everybody does one thing one small
00:27:22.420
action to move yourself forward that's how you get started it's it's almost i mean this can be
00:27:27.900
applied even to the gun thing we're talking about a constitutional change that that that's right i
00:27:34.000
mean that's insane to to think we should start there right there's so many little things that we
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can do to protect our children to protect our schools that we should if you want to talk about
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a constitutional convention good continue to talk about that right but do the other things as well
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and maybe start there first right yeah that was definitely a topic but i didn't want to go there
00:27:53.960
thinking yeah that's you know yeah i know so so um you know you said legacy and you've started your own
00:28:01.760
uh you know purse line and everything else what it would what role did that play that was a huge role
00:28:08.440
for me because when i got my diagnosis i was really struggling that i wasn't going to be able to live a life
00:28:15.620
of meaning that i wanted to and to leave a legacy for me the hardest thing was to know that i was going
00:28:20.660
to leave this earth without leaving a legacy so i quit everything i did with work everything and it
00:28:27.280
took me six months to figure out what i was going to do and it just by happenstance or not by happenstance
00:28:33.480
you know i started making purses at home and this is with leather i'd never done that before and i really
00:28:39.720
liked it and it was around the holidays and i thought okay i'm going to make purses for the women in my life
00:28:44.500
for the holidays and so when i thought about my mom you know and all the things that had to be special
00:28:49.080
and the functionality and she's a cancer survivor that's when the light bulb went on where i can take
00:28:54.260
my passion of sewing and take it towards uh handbags that raise money for breast cancer research bring
00:29:01.520
awareness and help comfort and connect with the cancer community so that was my first thing that
00:29:06.880
where i could be doing something i was passionate about because the key here to find a solution to your
00:29:11.760
problems is to use your passion find your passion find something that you love and so my handbags
00:29:17.180
were my legacy my children came up with the gwen marie we called it gwen marie collection and from there
00:29:23.780
and my journey i want to impact more people with my story i think so many people can be helped through
00:29:29.620
my story so then it was the website the rich solution and now it's the book and the and the the
00:29:36.220
purses are something tangible right that you that you can give to somebody that uh that
00:29:41.780
it has meaning has living meaning well if you want to share and connect your passion with other people
00:29:48.120
one way to do that is to create something tangible you both have the privilege of doing this every day
00:29:53.740
you are on the radio and tv and we create you have this plan nothing tangible you know when you talk
00:30:02.480
about the small things glenn this started back with us with you back with american revival these
00:30:08.840
were little small little things that motivated us motivated millions of people restoring honor
00:30:14.160
i mean i couldn't believe it i mean 500 600 000 people came from all over the world really all
00:30:22.560
across the country to meet in washington dc in one of the finest times of the year i mean it's not
00:30:28.860
like the heat's oppressive or anything like that no it's beautiful you know yeah so uh but it it was
00:30:35.820
motivating you have had great impact on our lives and it and these were all small through the restoring
00:30:42.740
events she got to speak at restoring love yeah and here in dallas that's right for me at the women's
00:30:48.900
conference the women's conference right sure right yes that was a life-changing event for us just like
00:30:54.040
most of the restoring so the so the so the the point here and and uh i enjoyed reading your guys
00:31:00.340
your work and your thoughts and and what you're doing and and it's a um entire uh healing process
00:31:10.840
it's not just it's not just food no it's it's and it's not just cancer right i mean listen you want
00:31:18.620
to do you want to know what's fun in the rich household on a saturday night i mean good god do i want to
00:31:23.080
hear this question i mean listen we have we have a son who's bipolar okay i mean you never know
00:31:28.460
what's coming down the pike there we have a daughter who is diagnosed with lupus we have a son who
00:31:33.420
was diagnosed with something called thoracic outlet syndrome who uh got hooked on opiates
00:31:39.220
fun on at the rich household on saturday night when he's going through withdrawals
00:31:43.600
man you haven't seen living when you're dealing with that that's some fun stuff and you say this with a smile
00:31:48.980
on your face which is i mean it just no this is the point of the book you're still positive body
00:31:53.960
has well you have to be and it's a mindset if you want to overcome your problems and i and we wrote
00:31:58.920
this because i think a lot of a lot of people complain and so it's it's you have two choices
00:32:03.940
when you have problems you can complain or you can find a solution or you can use the concept of
00:32:08.300
it's a principle in judaism of taking self-responsibility responsibility for your own
00:32:22.240
actions right and so i've done that in every area of my life to help me feeling as good as i am and
00:32:27.840
again living beyond my expiration date and so that's what we write about in the book so if i can you know
00:32:34.460
overcome cancer where i am with incurable cancer look what others can do with their problems how
00:32:40.240
is what's the diagnosis now you know what honestly i haven't looked because i'm going beyond that i am
00:32:45.640
going to i'm thriving to live as long as possible with anyone with my stage and type cancer what kind
00:32:53.520
of i don't want to hear that no there is no date on it yeah i'm here for the long haul god has me here
00:32:59.800
and i am not going to that's a good answer that's your own book man that's a great answer listen what
00:33:05.200
i tell you no no seriously um gwen her her um her uh cancer is is incurable it's inoperable
00:33:13.160
ultimately we know what's going to get her yeah and ultimately we all die and we all know it's just
00:33:19.140
under what time and under what what circumstances yeah so it is a mindset it's a it's it's faith faith
00:33:26.540
has played a tremendous role in our lives um and that didn't i mean we always had the foundation
00:33:32.840
but i remember saying the same things my kids are uh saying now yeah i don't believe in god
00:33:38.560
what little man mom and dad talked i mean but my folks her folks set the foundation and it has served
00:33:47.680
us well now that as we uh what mature is that something yes yes that's a good word that's a
00:33:53.720
good word i mean listen i haven't matured since uh diaper training it's uh we can move on from there
00:33:58.280
the name of the book is make your own luck by gwen and adam rich uh well worth the read and thank
00:34:05.340
you thank you for having thank you you bet god bless
00:34:07.660
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protect your family simply safe beck.com glenn beck mercury
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glenn beck there was a really interesting article that uh i read this weekend about the
00:35:59.860
uh psychology of progressive hostility that i think is really really interesting so a woman who
00:36:08.220
is a centrist and she said i don't have any fear of speaking my mind when i talk to conservatives on
00:36:14.560
about a political issue she said you know they listen i talk more and at the end we get along as we always
00:36:20.140
have but i've discovered uh when a progressive friend says something with which i disagree or i know
00:36:26.060
to be incorrect i'm hesitant to point it out the hesitancy is the different treatment one tends to
00:36:32.500
receive from those on the right and left when expressing a difference of opinion i am not as it
00:36:37.520
turns out the only one who has noticed this and she goes into the things that people were uh are saying
00:36:44.880
to her online people are saying to her uh in person and she says there's a real difference i think that
00:36:52.680
could be generally true except online i mean i've i find it pretty balanced online don't you
00:36:58.200
the anger of both sides i i'm no no not not well i mean you get if you do get it from both sides
00:37:06.520
you get it from both sides maybe you know progressives though are on both sides yeah yes thank you stew
00:37:13.400
thank you that is i heard that it was at the new york times told me about a few years ago
00:37:22.140
love courage truth glenn beck 1000 1000 that's how many children's lives have been destroyed
00:37:39.060
by a sex slavery ring in the uk that everybody turned away from the sun is now reporting that
00:37:45.480
this pedophile ring operated with little confrontation for 10 years despite the police
00:37:51.120
being very aware of the situation the police knew in fact the community knew and little was done
00:37:58.160
in police reports it's clear that the community treated these children like prostitutes rather than
00:38:04.160
victims 11 14 and 15 year old girls were labeled prostitutes by their own community
00:38:11.500
they weren't prostitutes they were children that were drugged beaten and raped multiple times every
00:38:19.380
day why was it that this horrible epidemic was allowed to claim so many victims
00:38:26.820
racism the police were afraid that they would be called racists for going after abusers of asian descent
00:38:42.920
they would be called abusers they would be called racists they would be called hate mongers
00:38:53.380
another british paper the sunday mirror spoke with a dozen victims who named more than 70 abusers one
00:39:01.380
victim explained the police tried to prevent her from discovering why her abuser was not jailed
00:39:07.220
and it was because they feared she would share her story with the press
00:39:14.180
not to stop this pervasive evil because someone is afraid of being labeled racist is evil itself
00:39:23.060
that's the thing about evil it comes in every color every shape every size every gender
00:39:29.980
we we we have to be brave and call out evil wherever we see it without thinking twice about what the
00:39:39.440
consequences are and what our society is trying to train us to believe not to speak is to speak
00:40:11.340
did a lot of reading this weekend about evil and then about heroes
00:40:21.660
people who who stood whose names we don't really know
00:40:29.340
whose names were recorded but have not been made into a movie
00:40:54.260
there we're being trained by something that george washington warned us against the two-party system
00:40:59.960
because the two-party system knows if we can get people to hate the other side
00:41:12.500
and we'll we'll be able to rally the troops for the next election
00:41:27.480
who had been told that mit romney was the most evil man alive
00:41:45.100
i know a lot of democrats who said boy we should have had mit romney
00:43:01.300
but i shall never say the things i do not believe
01:08:18.680
way of teaching it and I think you'll find that
01:08:25.740
conformity to an orthodoxy takes precedence over
01:08:30.080
intellectual method he talks about so what is so
01:08:34.540
what is the solution that you replace the the male
01:08:39.320
hierarchy with female hierarchy you replace the
01:08:43.900
white hierarchy with the black hierarchy that's not that's not scientific that's
01:08:52.260
not thoughtful that's that's nothing that's truly nothing just makes you feel
01:08:57.200
good for a little while until you realize that people are people there is an
01:09:03.140
interesting article try to get into it tomorrow that was written on Winston
01:09:07.960
Churchill and it was an op-ed in the Washington Post and it came out I think
01:09:14.700
yesterday and it was talking about what an evil sob Winston Churchill was and in some
01:09:23.240
regards yeah when it comes to India yep yep really bad he made some really bad decisions
01:09:32.020
and was pretty racist okay so does that make him evil
01:09:40.120
do we reject all of the things that he did to save freedom because he was so wrong
01:09:57.240
no we have to know all of the really bad things about Winston Churchill and we need to know all
01:10:06.040
of the really good things about Winston Churchill because it makes him human all of us all of us
01:10:16.780
have a really bad side and a really good side which one is in control of your life and are you getting
01:10:26.940
better you know what the author left out is by the time the 1940s were in Winston Churchill was
01:10:35.280
already regretting the things that he said and did in India he was already saying I shouldn't have done
01:10:42.580
that I wish I would have done this I he learned
01:10:46.380
what are we learning now what are we really teaching we're teaching that wins in this case
01:10:56.000
Winston Churchill is really really bad no he wasn't he was really bad here he was really good here now let's
01:11:04.780
have the discussion so what does that mean and what does that tell us about us and then what should
01:11:11.620
that tell us about power what should that tell us about how to make sure that we're careful with
01:11:18.780
power and who we give power to and how we restrain power but if we're only being indoctrinated that
01:11:26.200
Winston Churchill as one is an example is just a horrible human being that's just an overcorrection
01:11:34.460
and it takes us nowhere it takes us to nihilism
01:11:40.900
do you remember that big uh that big data breach with the uh credit bureau
01:11:51.060
well it turns out it was it was it was worse um than what they said what a surprise
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an additional 2.4 million americans were impacted and that brings the total to 147.9 million americans
01:12:06.500
this is the largest breach of personal information in history that means half of us half of us have had
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our identity stolen and could be on the black market the original 145.5 million americans had their
01:12:20.500
social security numbers impacted the additional 2.4 million had their their names and their driver's
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license stolen and so now what now what do you do it takes one weak link in the system
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01:13:31.560
glenn beck there's a lot yet to discuss today uh
01:13:42.560
you know stew has promised last week that he was going to drink uh i think roundup uh today yeah
01:13:50.680
yeah well i've already done it once so yeah that might not be a good idea to do it twice but we'll get
01:13:55.980
into that a little later also oj simpson uh did he confess on tv last night uh and elon musk
01:14:02.060
his plans his plans to launch a rocket to mars in 2019 did you see about the the volunteers that
01:14:08.000
are going did you see what he said yeah they might die yeah you might not come back
01:14:11.280
well i mean i think that's blatantly obvious isn't it yeah i mean i mean what's the difference
01:14:16.780
between that and the apollo except it's just a private you know it's just a private individual
01:14:21.600
and that makes you feel like oh you shouldn't do it same thing with the apollo would you go
01:14:26.520
would you go would i go yeah no no you you won't go to mexico it's very dangerous like would
01:14:35.420
you go to mars i apologize america for asking him that question glenn back mercury
01:14:43.100
love courage truth glenn back is elizabeth warren uh a science denier i mean when it comes to her
01:15:01.380
genealogy she says she just doesn't need it you know when you're on the you know the hard left is
01:15:07.960
a progressive it's best for your credibility if you can associate with a minority even if it's a bit
01:15:13.300
of a stretch so warren has decided to go with being a native american and that's her narrative and that's
01:15:19.600
her reality and that's her truth and she's sticking to it she doesn't have to prove to anybody that
01:15:24.760
she's part native american she knows it in her heart fortunately for warren there is science to
01:15:31.020
the rescue thanks to dna testing services like the popular 23 and me all she has to do is spit into a
01:15:37.440
little tube mail it off and presto you shut down all of the critics who have dared to question her
01:15:42.380
narrative so she's going to inject some facts about her native american heritage into the conversation
01:15:48.600
that she started right right i mean here's the thing why would you want to solve this
01:15:56.140
it's almost like the birth certificate that damn birth certificate thing was such nonsense but
01:16:03.300
the white house kept bringing it up the white house kept bringing it up the white house would
01:16:09.080
refuse to really just release the thing just release it it's over
01:16:12.720
no no why because it can it paints the people who are against you as somebody who is racist
01:16:25.060
and thus i can raise more money and get more power warren made her rounds uh sunday on the morning news
01:16:33.520
shows she was asked about the possibility of clearing up the issue of her native american heritage through a
01:16:38.180
dna test and she said i don't need to stoop to that i know who i am and i never used it for anyone
01:16:42.700
uh for anything i i uh you know she kind of told her west side west side story uh tarot of her life
01:16:50.300
uh her white father fell madly in love with her part native american mother and they had to elope
01:16:55.540
because the father's side was so bigoted and they opposed the marriage to this squaw
01:17:01.660
that that she knows who she is and that may be true and that's a great story in a speech to the
01:17:09.640
national congress of american indians last month warren said every time i somebody brings my story
01:17:13.660
up i'm going to use it to lift up the story of your families and your communities wow that sounds
01:17:19.580
like the perfect fundraising tool doesn't it classic politician pivot also sounds like somebody who might
01:17:28.480
be running for president but she denied that over and over again yesterday with hillary out of the way
01:17:33.460
uh you know and the benefit of the you know this being the year of you know hashtag me too and rabid
01:17:40.880
anti-forces anti-trump forces out simmering on the left people around warren have caught a a whiff of
01:17:50.260
history they're getting giddy about the prospect of her becoming the first female president in history
01:17:55.540
i don't know if she's going to run or not a lot of people are saying yeah she kicked off her 2020
01:18:02.420
campaign yesterday by going on three different sunday news shows to say she is definitely not running
01:18:07.900
for president it's monday march 12th this is the glenbeck program so what really happened to amelia
01:18:24.740
erhart's plane she disappeared over the pacific and it's been a intense debate ever since for 80
01:18:33.780
years nobody has known what happened to amelia erhart there are three main theories about her
01:18:40.120
disappearance and there's a reason why i'm bringing this up because there's news about amelia erhart
01:18:46.080
and her navigator friend newton the official government conclusion was she ran out of fuel she
01:18:52.260
crashed in the pacific ocean she sank or was eaten by sharks or whatever you know i don't know if she
01:18:56.680
had a lifeboat another theory is that uh uh amelia erhart and her uh navigator noonan were suspected of
01:19:06.440
being of spies and they were captured by the japanese and tortured and then died at a pow camp
01:19:11.460
and then there is a third theory and this one gained support last week in a new study
01:19:18.060
and the theory was is that she survived a crash landing on a tiny coral reef called gardner island
01:19:28.660
let me take you back to may 20th 1937 amelia erhart noonan they take off from oakland california and they
01:19:39.000
fly east she's attempting to be the first woman to fly around the world and by june 29th she had made it
01:19:46.140
three days later they took off on a 19 hour flight to their next fuel stop on an island called howland
01:19:53.040
island it was halfway between australia and hawaii but in the overnight the strong winds blew them off
01:20:01.420
course and nighttime navigation was poor because you couldn't look up at the stars because everything was
01:20:07.540
cloudy and you couldn't get above the clouds in those days
01:20:12.280
so at sunrise noonan was finally able to take sighting with his navigation equipment and recalculate
01:20:19.700
the course they typically cruised about 10 000 feet but even in the morning light it was still
01:20:25.220
overcast below and they they couldn't spite spot their tiny island destination
01:20:30.020
so erhart took the lockheed model 10 electra down to a thousand p a feet she was just above the water
01:20:39.080
the clouds were casting massive shadows on the water making it difficult to spot howland island
01:20:48.260
now near the island was a navy ship a u.s navy ship it was keeping an eye in the sky for
01:20:54.920
erhart's plane and at 7 42 she radioed that naval ship
01:20:59.920
we must be on you she said but gas is running low we've been unable to reach you by radio
01:21:11.980
we're flying at a thousand feet that u.s naval ship never saw her plane
01:21:18.620
she and noonan apparently weren't receiving the radio messages from the ship and she kept her eye on
01:21:25.820
the fuel gauge and tried to remain calm but she could tell that noonan was nervous he checked and
01:21:31.260
rechecked his charts and calculations and at 8 43 in the morning she radioed again we're on the line
01:21:37.840
157 337 noonan knew they were on the correct line but because of poor visibility they couldn't tell
01:21:46.160
exactly where they were on that line if they missed the island the next available island was gardner island
01:21:52.140
uninhabited island about 400 miles south if they had enough fuel to make it that far
01:21:58.300
erhart alternated her gaze between the fuel gauge and the vast imposing water below
01:22:05.260
fuel was now dangerously low she and noonan began to talk about the worst case scenario
01:22:11.020
we just ditch in the pacific how long can we survive
01:22:15.940
but then on the horizon they thought they could make out a speck of an island
01:22:21.360
just a little bit of land it had to be gardner island they approached it she circled the island
01:22:28.760
both of them straining their eyes for any possible spot flat enough to attempt a landing after a
01:22:34.680
second pass she thought one strip of coil or coral on the southwestern edge of the island would have
01:22:41.620
to do she took the plane down noonan brace for impact she lowered the landing gear the wheels
01:22:47.740
almost skimmed the water as their crude coral landing strip rushed into view the wheels slammed into
01:22:56.420
the jagged coastline one of them snapped off the the plane skidded on its belly violently throwing
01:23:05.620
but they lived and over the next week erhart used the plane's remaining fuel to run the engines in
01:23:15.180
order to charge the battery that would operate the radio for six days she sent radio signals for help
01:23:23.460
some shortwave radio operators in the u.s. say they heard erhart's voice saying that noonan was
01:23:29.780
seriously injured and that she had minor injuries and that they were on a reef southeast of howland
01:23:36.560
investigators have identified 57 credible reports of a distress call from erhart
01:23:44.300
but after a week the plane ran out of fuel and the radio battery died and the tides washed the plane
01:23:52.280
off the reef down to the depths and the world no longer heard nor was anyone looking for amelia erhart
01:23:59.240
the uss colorado was sent toward gardner island but by the time it got close the mysterious radio
01:24:05.640
signal stopped so it didn't actually go all the west of the way to the island to look on july 9th
01:24:12.540
1937 the navy had a plane fly over gardner island and the pilot reported signs of recent habitation were
01:24:18.840
clearly evident but there was no sign of erhart's plane so the navy moved on the strongest proponent of
01:24:26.140
this crash landing theory is rick gillespie he's a pilot and accident investigator and the director
01:24:32.280
of the international group of historic aircraft recovery he has made 11 trips to gardner island so
01:24:38.100
far and his team has found some improvised tools shoe remains pieces of a pocket knife bone fragments
01:24:47.340
and a small piece of metal that they believe is from the exterior of amelia erhart's plane
01:24:53.600
he plans on returning to the island to search underwater for to search underwater for her plane
01:25:01.060
now here was a thing that happened last week that was really interesting
01:25:05.680
they examined some bones that had been found on the reef
01:25:11.920
they said they belong to a woman of european descent and the right height and the right build is amelia
01:25:20.600
erhart here's the problem they didn't find those bones recently they found those bones
01:25:32.520
in 1940 and they were taken to a a fiji doctor who said no no these these bones are of a man
01:25:41.960
and he was a he was a stout man and so the world dismissed it
01:25:46.120
but now technology is different and we could measure those bones and look at what they are
01:25:54.680
and we can see that it was a european woman most likely amelia erhart well when i say we can examine
01:26:02.680
those bones i don't mean actually examine it we had to take the measurements from the fiji doctor
01:26:10.440
because once the fiji doctor said oh well these aren't amelia erhart's bones he just threw them away
01:26:21.320
so now all we have to go on is the measurements in his book and now through new medical forensics
01:26:30.680
we can see that it indeed looks to be the bones of a woman about the size
01:26:38.600
of amelia erhart until gillespie goes down to the coral reef and starts to really search the world may
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800-200-7163 or preparewithglenn.com glenn back mercury
01:28:29.800
glenn back deep in the bowels of our studios in las calinas texas in our underground vault welcome
01:28:45.400
to the glenn beck program uh i don't know if you saw south by southwest did you pay attention to elon musk
01:28:52.360
yeah it was kind of announced the night before so and there's a huge crowd that lined up to see him
01:28:57.160
speak oh i it was a q a for an hour which is you know i'm really any topic so kind of a it was a
01:29:03.800
big it was the high profile event of the weekend uh he talked about i i let's start here with uh with
01:29:10.520
the space stuff uh talking about flights to mars here's elon musk from this weekend what i know
01:29:17.320
currently is the case is that we're we are building the first uh ship the first mars um
01:29:23.400
um or interplanetary ship um right now and i think we'll be able to be able to do short flights
01:29:31.080
short sort of up and down flights um probably sometime in the first half of next year and this
01:29:36.520
is this is a very big um booster and ship the liftoff thrust of this would be about twice down
01:29:42.520
out of a seven five so it's uh it's capable of doing um 150 metric tons to to orbit it and be
01:29:51.960
fully reusable and that's the equivalent of like the union pacific railroad um or or having uh ships
01:29:57.720
that can cross across the oceans um until you can get there there's no way for all of the entrepreneurial
01:30:04.520
energy to um you can't you can't do anything there's no way for all the flowers to bloom
01:30:11.240
um once you can get there the opportunity is immense um and um
01:30:18.200
so we're going to do our best to get you there and then make sure that there's an environment in which
01:30:23.400
um entrepreneurs can flourish um and um and then i think it'll be it'll be amazing it's amazing because
01:30:33.880
he pretty much said yeah look we're gonna try to get you there we're gonna do our best
01:30:39.000
you may or you may or may not live i mean you have to be honest about it i think anybody who
01:30:42.840
who's going to mars knows that uh yeah i i i'll i i would say you could give me there i'm not sure
01:30:49.880
i'm coming back you know i mean that's a long way you get me there i'm like i'm i'm i'm not expecting
01:30:58.760
the return trip you know i'm that's a nice bonus yeah you know that's what happened to matt damon
01:31:05.000
um exactly right thank you uh now uh glenn's been talking about a ai uh quite a bit you've been on
01:31:11.160
this uh bandwagon uh elon is definitely one of the most negative people on artificial intelligence
01:31:16.680
here's uh what he's actually not yeah well he's he's very he's not the most negative okay that being
01:31:23.640
said listen to what he says about ai the rate of improvement is really dramatic we have to figure
01:31:28.360
out some way to ensure that the advent of digital super intelligence is one which is symbiotic with
01:31:35.560
humanity i think that's the single biggest existential crisis that we face and the most pressing one
01:31:42.520
and how do we do that i mean if we take it that it's inevitable at this point that some version
01:31:49.000
of ai is coming down the line how do we how do we steer through that well i'm not normally an advocate
01:31:57.160
of regulation and oversight i mean i think once you generally you're on the side of minimizing those
01:32:02.600
things but this is a case where you have a very serious danger to the public and therefore there needs
01:32:09.240
to be a public body that um has insight and then oversight on to confirm that everyone is
01:32:16.920
uh developing ai safely um like this is extremely important um i think the danger of ai is much
01:32:27.320
greater than the the danger of nuclear warheads by a lot um think of that and nobody would suggest that we
01:32:34.280
allow anyone to just build nuclear warheads if they want that would be insane and mark my words
01:32:41.400
ai is far more dangerous than nukes far so why do we have no regulatory oversight this is insane
01:32:50.040
it's because they don't understand it i talked to people in washington dc about it and their eyes glaze
01:32:54.120
over they have absolutely no idea they have no idea what it is how it works what's coming you know and
01:33:02.360
i've talked to several people who feel the same way on that what we we have to get involved as a
01:33:07.640
government there's other people that believe we have to do a manhattan project uh because china is
01:33:14.360
already doing this and whoever gets there first rules the world and china is way ahead now this
01:33:22.440
that's what they say that china is way ahead of us if we don't control this uh you don't want that in
01:33:30.120
the hands of totalitarian governments people who you know say i could just kill your baby because we
01:33:36.120
have a limit of two you don't want those people programming that's the problem we don't have any
01:33:40.520
regulatory oversight over what russia or china does i know it comes to this that's why the regular over
01:33:45.640
so the regulator oversight i mean is important we should we should have that perhaps uh scientists
01:33:53.080
are trying to police themselves in the west it's not going to stop everybody uh it's certainly not
01:33:58.440
going to stop russia and china uh but the the biggest problem is the brain drain you know we had the
01:34:05.240
einsteins we had everybody the oppenheimers uh for the manhattan project and that's what saved us
01:34:13.560
we may not be the ones we have them now but we should be draining those brains from all over the world
01:34:22.440
to get them here not the other way around elon musk also went on to say that uh
01:34:28.360
uh auto uh auto driving cars are going to take over by the end of next year which is about as fast
01:34:36.280
as a prediction i've ever heard even faster than you holy cow yeah end of next year he says the
01:34:58.440
this is the glenn beck program welcome to the program glad you're here
01:35:04.360
putin had an interesting uh conversation with megan kelly uh over the weekend where he blamed the jews
01:35:10.280
for hacking into the uh the election and causing all the turmoil i hate it when they do that
01:35:17.560
they do it every time don't they oh those darn jews darn it uh and then have you seen the video of the
01:35:24.040
missile that uh they launched the hyper the hyper speed missile i haven't seen the video 10 times this
01:35:31.240
uh the speed of uh sound 10 times the speed of speed of sound says it cannot be stopped by anything
01:35:37.160
um he test launched one uh it's off of you know one of their fighter jets uh you know it looked like
01:35:45.880
a regular missile to me you know coming off the bottom of the jet but i don't know apparently it
01:35:51.080
it's 10 times faster um and so he showed that that's you know that's that's that's a little
01:35:56.920
concerning i personally think that's reagan's star wars i think this is the the final push to get america
01:36:04.360
to spend itself into oblivion and and collapsed from the inside just as we did uh to them in the
01:36:11.320
1990s and and he would love that he would love that uh also tonight on television we're going to be
01:36:17.480
talking a little bit about the um the amazing uh op-ed piece in the washington post about how we should
01:36:24.760
get rid of down syndrome babies well how brave it is to do it and not just that we should do it but
01:36:31.960
that it's brave to do it yeah i i i'm going to show you some things uh that you've never seen before
01:36:37.960
uh that uh kind of take that on kind of take that on head on and it's it's time we decide
01:36:42.760
pat gray is joining us now from uh the pat gray extravaganza let me give you a hypothetical yeah
01:36:49.640
uh let's say my my wife thought i cheated on her uh years and years ago and and then somehow i i
01:36:58.120
convince her no i i didn't cheat on you but 12 years later i bring it up to her and i say
01:37:05.080
yeah you remember when you thought i cheated on you let me give you a hypothetical and then i say
01:37:11.560
to her if i cheated here's how i would have done it and then i described to her uh going to my
01:37:20.280
mistress's house and i described to her is this a different mistress or is this the same same
01:37:26.360
mistress this is hypothetically speaking hypothetic but it's all the same i cheated on her all the
01:37:31.480
same people okay yes yeah all right so i described to her what my mistress was wearing uh what the
01:37:36.840
temperature in the room was what kind of perfume i smelled and then i just went crazy because i was
01:37:43.240
just so overwhelmed and i went nuts and then there was stuff all over the place and
01:37:48.440
i woke up i woke up naked next to her and then you know hypothetically i got up and got dressed and
01:37:57.720
so my question would be uh i wonder if she would think i actually cheated on her if i did that yeah
01:38:03.880
i think she would you know the question would be why would you do that that's a really good question
01:38:09.960
because i felt so good about putting one over on her 12 years before that i just couldn't resist
01:38:17.800
telling her i did it i don't i am so narcissistic that i must have her know that yeah i had another
01:38:25.960
woman and uh i tricked you hypothetically speak hypothetically okay so what pat is doing is he's
01:38:32.120
recreating what happened last night on fox television with the quote lost oj tapes uh he wasn't lost he never
01:38:39.640
explained quite where they were lost or how they were they were lost in the fox vault yeah uh and uh
01:38:45.960
they were they were lost until now and did oj confess now this is the the weirdest thing i've heard
01:38:55.640
because he constantly continually says hypothetically hypothetically hypothetically
01:39:02.920
but he wrote a book called if i did it where he describes exactly what he would have done if he did
01:39:10.520
it but it's all hypothetical but listen to this interview you want to take it sure uh here he is
01:39:17.080
here's what you're talking about him constantly talking about how hypothetical this interview is
01:39:21.560
and you write in the book now picture this and keep in mind that this is pure hypothetical hypothetical
01:39:27.400
why don't you tell me what might have happened on the night of june 12 1994 and let's just walk
01:39:33.400
through the night well first of all it's this is very difficult for me to do this uh it was very
01:39:37.880
difficult for me because it's hypothetical i know and i accept the fact that people are going to feel
01:39:43.640
whatever way they're going to feel again like if you actually took the murder of the mother of your
01:39:50.040
children seriously even if you didn't do it why on earth would you go on television and and write a
01:39:57.080
book called if i did it and and try to profit or it makes absolutely no sense it's one of the
01:40:03.400
strangest things i've ever seen a person do i mean this is this whole life was this accusation and he
01:40:08.200
comes out and essentially admits it but just says it's a hypothetical you watched it last night yeah
01:40:11.960
did you watch the the conversation afterwards the round table uh wasn't there a conversation
01:40:17.400
afterwards yeah i think they expanded into like a two-hour well yeah it was a two-hour thing yeah okay
01:40:21.160
so where they were saying where she was saying the reason why he said it was hypothetical yeah uh
01:40:25.960
that was staggering to me because she basically said and they didn't really delve into this but
01:40:33.400
they might have but it might still be in a vault we'll find it right years from now
01:40:37.400
the most important thing that was said last night to as far as i was concerned was what um
01:40:42.840
judith reagan what judith reagan said he told her he said i want to do this hypothetical because i i
01:40:48.840
want to confess but i don't want my children yeah to know the quote was to he wanted to she he wanted to
01:40:54.760
do it in a hypothetical because he wanted to quote maintain deniability with his children
01:41:00.440
uh that's amazing so she's saying he actually confessed to her now i i don't know i mean it
01:41:08.440
seems like it's a confession but for her for him to say to her yeah i did do it so but i want
01:41:14.600
deniability with my kids is unbelievable let's go because um his his confession is just really weird
01:41:21.960
um here's here's where he describes how charlie uh went with him over to nicole's house this guy
01:41:28.040
charlie shows up the guy we had recently become friends with and uh i don't know why he had been
01:41:35.240
by nicole's house but it told me you wouldn't believe what's going on over there and uh and i
01:41:42.440
remember thinking well whatever's going over there's got to stop right so we kind of hooked up
01:41:48.360
together and uh you know i'm kind of broad stroking this we go over get into bronco and go over it
01:41:54.680
let's just go back and do the details where did you park to the details you park in the hypothetical
01:42:00.600
go in the alley right you park in the alley and you put on a wool cap and gloves uh in the hypothetical
01:42:11.480
i put on a cap and gloves right okay stop for a second can we stop for a second um you reached under
01:42:17.320
the seat for notice notice he he's drawn a weird line here she says can we stop can we go back on the
01:42:26.680
details where did you park the car and he said i don't want to talk about the details and then
01:42:31.160
you why not if it's a hypothetical why right yeah strange there would be no reason yeah he's
01:42:37.320
got a weird he's got a weird line there you're just making all this up why not tell us let me make
01:42:42.200
let me make a case in the other way he didn't do it and he's like i'm not going to use i'm not
01:42:46.840
going to i'm not going to tell you uh the cap and gloves thing because that's in the murder trial
01:42:53.640
and that's what everybody you know we talked about the gloves you know so i'm not going to
01:42:58.280
it'd be a good theory if he didn't oh go ahead and yeah and admit that he had a glove and that he
01:43:06.440
must have taken it off because they found it he admits that in in the confession part okay let's
01:43:13.240
continue uh in hypothetical i put on a cap and gloves right and um you reached under the seat for
01:43:22.520
um a knife i always kept a knife and not car for the crazies and stuff because you can't
01:43:29.240
travel with a gun and i remember charlie saying you ain't bringing that i didn't right but i believe
01:43:35.320
he took it charlie took the knife oh there you go yeah in the book yeah yes in the book because he
01:43:41.800
pat was making the case before we came on that maybe charlie is essentially his alter ego or is
01:43:45.320
you know is on the other side of him and he says i reached under the seat to get the knife and then
01:43:50.360
then he a moment later says i don't i don't think i took it i think charlie took it and then
01:43:55.960
i don't know if we have we get this far into his confession there's one more clip here here real
01:44:00.600
quick uh here it's fascinating how this transpires yeah listen as things got heated uh i just remember
01:44:07.960
the coal fell and hurt herself and uh this guy kind of got into a karate thing and i said well you
01:44:17.480
think you think you can kick my ass and i remember i grabbed the knife i do remember that portion
01:44:21.880
taking a knife from charlie and to be honest after that i don't remember except i'm standing there
01:44:28.120
and there's all kind of stuff around and um um what kind of stuff
01:44:35.080
i hate to say this but this is hard but come on i'm sorry i know we got to back up again
01:44:44.200
it's okay i'm gonna back up all right this is hard again it's really hard that's why i'm laughing it's
01:44:50.280
weird if you made a hypothetical in a book why would you write the hypothetical as you blacked out and
01:44:58.120
don't remember any of the details of the thing you're talking about like you could hypothetically
01:45:02.040
remember them right yeah i mean he's obviously he may have been again he play his side he may have
01:45:09.640
been saying well i don't want to upset my children and so i don't want to describe all of that i don't
01:45:15.880
believe him for a second i want you to know if he doesn't want to upset his children this shouldn't
01:45:19.480
have ever happened you just don't do this here but he's a weird he's got weird lines yeah he does
01:45:24.120
i i'll tell you charlie grabbed the knife but i won't tell you that i put the gloves on
01:45:28.200
i mean very very bizarre do you watch the whole thing pat yeah what was two hours what was your
01:45:34.120
impression at the end a hundred percent you did it oh yeah one hundred percent i mean that's what
01:45:38.920
judith reagan said by the way she said uh she absolutely is convinced that he was the murderer
01:45:44.120
there is no doubt in my mind and she was the one she was the person she was doing the interview
01:45:48.040
there but the other part of this which i think is kind of interesting is she was also the book
01:45:52.600
publisher and i think it makes an interesting case against our daily moral outrages that we all have
01:46:01.640
because this interview and this book was supposed to come out back in 2006 and everyone got like
01:46:07.880
super excited and angry about it and she got fired over it and the book pulled the the they pulled the
01:46:14.360
book they canceled the special this is a man essentially a confessing to a murder i wish we had this
01:46:20.280
information this many years ago instead everyone got so fired up for like two days and they pulled
01:46:25.320
everything wait wait wait wait because there's a difference i mean i guess we're watching it as
01:46:30.120
history now before we were watching it to sell a book yeah but it was also history it was 12 years
01:46:35.720
before and it was here's a man i mean it would have been nice to know i would have been i would
01:46:39.560
have liked did you really learn anything new here pat uh no not necessarily just cemented everything i
01:46:48.280
believed it just it made it it crystallized it in my mind that yeah there's i mean he did it when
01:46:55.640
he's looking he doesn't look at her he doesn't look at the camera when he's talking about hypothetical
01:47:00.840
he looks off and he looks down when he's talking about those things and then when he says you know
01:47:05.880
when he gives the details have you noticed that he's looking up and he's looking at her and he slips
01:47:10.040
into that first person thing he's scrapping and i mean he probably thought that he could make a lot
01:47:15.720
of money and and if he like if someone probably came probably judith reagan came to him and said
01:47:19.320
hey if you actually confess to this thing you're you're already cleared of it you've already you
01:47:23.640
know you've already gone through the whole trial and everything so you confess to it now it'll be
01:47:27.320
the biggest book of all time and he thought well i need to you know i can't admit to it but i'll do
01:47:33.720
it as a hypothetical either that or he's looking for some way to admit it without admitting it in
01:47:39.400
some psychological thing but i just don't think he's that guy i think i don't think there's some part
01:47:43.640
of him though that that wants to be loved that has to be loved yeah that um he made the comment
01:47:48.920
several times that i thought i built up enough goodwill and then i was really surprised how
01:47:54.040
quickly people turned on me well when you cut somebody's head off yeah i mean people were when
01:48:00.680
he was in the bronco chase everybody supported him go oj go and i think that was the case until all
01:48:07.160
the preponderance of evidence started you know cascading out in the trial that's when people turned yeah and
01:48:13.000
you see they were with him the whole time i was until it turned out to be uh you couldn't deny it
01:48:18.280
yeah i mean it shows that in the polling too over the years people have a actually even the african
01:48:23.720
american uh community which was very supportive initially has turned on him because we know that
01:48:29.400
that was about politics we we had made that about restitution we had made that about finally a black
01:48:37.160
man can beat the system and one of the jurors actually admitted that in one of the recent documentaries
01:48:40.920
right yeah um yeah that's that's the other thing that's interesting about this too is he says he
01:48:45.400
dropped the glove um which he's like i can't remember but i know i dropped it at some point
01:48:51.160
because it was in the trial right they found it yeah and they kind of gets rid of the whole defense
01:48:55.720
which was they planted the glove right right like he's saying he dropped it
01:49:00.200
very bizarre and he talks about how he took off the clothes and and apparently charlie disposed of them
01:49:06.920
for him uh really amazing stuff oj simpson aren't we glad we played political part of politics with a
01:49:14.600
guy that all people in america pretty much now would agree yeah he should have gone to prison he
01:49:21.000
chopped the head off of two different oh no no that was hypothetical that was that was just a
01:49:32.680
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slash back rules and restrictions to apply glenn beck mercury
01:50:48.120
on the washington post writer who says we need the right to abort babies with down syndrome
01:50:53.960
uh paul wrote in the average age that down syndrome patients live is now 60 that's up from 25
01:51:02.120
in 1980 largely due to the the fact that we no longer institutionalize them as for autism 54 is the
01:51:10.680
average life expectancy are we going to be like the nazis and rid society of all undesirables or
01:51:16.680
just those with down syndrome uh rick writes in now it's down syndrome next will be any sort of
01:51:22.520
birth defect genetic uh abnormality gender it will never be enough life is a gift it comes with
01:51:28.520
imperfections and frailties we're born we're not built tonight uh i'm gonna give you uh i'm gonna give
01:51:36.600
you 22 minutes uh a history lesson that i don't think that uh you will forget things that you have not
01:51:45.240
heard most likely before and why this is so dangerous to rid ourselves of the poor down syndrome sufferer