We Went from America First to America DEAD Last | Guest: Asra Nomani | 5⧸13⧸22
Episode Stats
Length
2 hours and 2 minutes
Words per Minute
149.8049
Summary
Glenn Beck talks sweat blockers and why they work. Plus, the Washington Post debunks the Biden administration's claim that baby formula is being sent across the southern border by the government to make up for a shortage of baby food.
Transcript
00:00:00.000
Okay, I have to tell you the most amazing thing that I have ever experienced.
00:00:04.640
It is so hot in Texas, and I, when it's hot outside, I sweat like a nightmare.
00:00:13.500
I tried the industrial strength sweat block where you apply it once.
00:00:19.760
I applied it two days ago, and I haven't sweat.
00:00:41.160
I wanted to try a cinder block on his head, too.
00:00:45.560
Seriously, if you sweat, especially in the summer, if you, like, really sweat, this is amazing.
00:00:54.380
I've been using the deodorant stick, which is just the best antiperspirant deodorant.
00:02:04.660
What you are about to hear is the fusion of entertainment and enlightenment.
00:02:20.700
We begin with baby food in the border in 60 seconds.
00:02:25.260
Patrick wrote in about his experience with Relief Factor.
00:02:31.060
My knees were hurting so bad that walking and getting in and out of the car even was difficult
00:02:36.840
So, three months in now, and I don't even think about my knees anymore.
00:02:48.820
I have such pain in my hands that they were almost unusable in many things.
00:02:53.760
My wife, actually, in one of the most humiliating, emasculating things I have ever gone through,
00:03:00.540
my wife, I'd have to wake her up in the morning to tie my shoes or button my shirt.
00:03:07.460
And if I feel emasculated, I mean, there's really, there's very little masculinity left in me.
00:03:24.400
70% of the people who try it go on to order more month after month, just like Patrick, just like me.
00:03:42.880
The Washington Post, the faux outrage that Biden is stockpiling baby formula for undocumented immigrants.
00:03:54.800
Kat Kamek, she's a congressperson from Florida, said,
00:03:59.040
While mothers and fathers stare at empty grocery shelves in panic,
00:04:02.000
the Biden administration is happy to provide baby formula to illegal immigrants coming across our southern border.
00:04:07.700
Yet this is another in a long line of reckless, out-of-touch priorities from the Biden administration.
00:04:12.040
All right, Governor Abbott came out and said the same thing.
00:04:16.540
You see the American government sending by the pallet thousands and thousands of containers of baby formula to the border.
00:04:28.000
So, the Washington Post decides to debunk this.
00:04:37.440
They called the Department of Homeland Security.
00:04:41.120
CPB takes seriously its legal responsibility to ensure the safety and security of individuals in our custody.
00:04:51.080
Ensuring migrants, including children with infants, in our custody have their basic needs met is in line with the administration's commitment to ensuring safe, orderly, and humane processes at our border.
00:05:05.200
CPB complies with all applicable regulations for the purchase of products used in our facilities.
00:05:23.280
The shortage of baby formula is a serious issue the administration is seeking to address.
00:05:29.040
But at the same time, the administration can't be faulted for following the law, providing baby formula to undocumented immigrants.
00:05:36.760
And anyone who suggests this is a result of specific Biden policies is reckless and out-of-touch, and they earn four Pinocchios.
00:05:49.820
So, the accusation is, we say Biden is doing X, and the Washington Post says, that's a lie for Pinocchios.
00:05:59.380
They're doing X, but they think it's the right thing to do.
00:06:04.800
There are pallets of baby formula going to our border and being hoarded for illegals.
00:06:19.760
Look, I don't want any babies anywhere to not have formula, even illegals on our border.
00:06:25.080
However, why follow that law when you're not following other laws, like don't let them here in the first place?
00:06:35.440
This is, we have gone from a country where our president was America first, okay?
00:06:54.000
This is honestly, this is what you do if you hate your country and your fellow countrymen.
00:07:09.480
You apply the law at the border on baby formula, but you don't apply the law and you have millions of people coming in.
00:07:22.360
And when you're struggling, it's the time to make sure those border laws are even more strict, right?
00:07:29.760
Like to make sure that we don't have resources that our people need applied in the wrong areas.
00:07:35.560
We are about to pay the highest gas price anyone in America has ever paid.
00:07:41.660
Yesterday, we found out that the Biden administration decided to not auction off leases at a very, very oil-rich area.
00:07:57.140
And instead, we are tapping into our strategic oil reserve.
00:08:01.980
We're on the verge of war, and they're tapping into the strategic oil reserve.
00:08:13.320
They're sending our strategic petroleum over to Europe.
00:08:49.740
You want to judge Christians, and you can, rightly so, judge Christians, as really, a lot of them are hypocrites.
00:09:10.020
Your actions are everything you're doing is destroying our nation, and your learning curve is beyond flat.
00:09:26.980
So, I don't, I don't know what to, I don't know what to say.
00:09:33.220
Let's just start calling a spade a spade, and that is the truth.
00:09:36.540
This administration, every single policy, is helping to destroy this nation.
00:09:43.000
And, you know, judging by your actions, you hate America.
00:09:49.700
By the way, just to give you some real news from the Babylon Bee, reports yesterday poured in that thousands of babies have been smuggling themselves into Ukraine, dressed as Ukrainian soldiers.
00:10:05.320
The refugee infants say they are seeking leftovers from the federal aid Biden has sent over to Ukraine.
00:10:11.640
Other babies at the border, the oldest baby speaking for the group through a baby translator, said,
00:10:17.720
We trust our leaders to prioritize aid distribution, as they did with the billions to promote worldwide gender equity, billions in weapons as a going-away present for the Taliban in Afghanistan,
00:10:29.040
or this breathtaking act of generosity amid America's most severe recession in years.
00:10:39.900
The only thing that's absurd about it is that it's a baby saying that.
00:10:55.580
We are now so generous to the people of Ukraine.
00:11:01.940
I mean, I like the fact that America is always the first to help.
00:11:11.800
How are we going to help anybody when we're crippled?
00:11:15.200
How are we going to be the most charitable nation on earth when you don't own anything?
00:11:26.220
You know, they're talking now about this summer, probably going in, possibly going into gas rationing.
00:11:32.420
If you can't afford to drive across the country, if you can't afford to go on vacation in your car, you're not truly free.
00:11:50.960
Look, there's no such thing as you have a guaranteed right to be able to fill up your gas tank.
00:11:59.500
But, when the government intentionally sabotages the oil and gas industry,
00:12:07.500
well, they are taking away your God-given right to free movement.
00:12:27.540
He didn't know this, but have you seen his show, Afterlife?
00:12:40.360
There's this little teeny newspaper, and they always just do stories about local people in the news in England.
00:12:46.880
And he and his photographer go out at one point because, well, it's a baby milk episode.
00:12:54.100
And this woman has decided she can do all kinds of things.
00:13:16.900
And it's more natural, if you think about it, isn't it?
00:13:19.120
For people to eat a pudding made from human milk.
00:14:17.300
You never need to use your own vaginal yeast to make bread.
00:14:42.220
Oh, wait until I tell you something else that they're now doing at Mattel.
00:14:48.740
And, you know, I don't have a problem with this, but, you know, the slippery.
00:15:00.360
We're trying to answer that question, looking at the state of decaying and our public education
00:15:05.760
system and the fact that kids don't are not being raised to risk anymore.
00:15:10.840
Don't skin your knee, let alone risk enough to start your own business.
00:15:15.800
There's a growing number of kids out there who are getting the right message.
00:15:19.940
Kids who are reviving the notion of opening that lemonade stand, except they they now have
00:15:26.720
Kids who are starting up the lawn mowing business.
00:15:28.860
Kids who are starting the online merchandise store.
00:15:31.860
Kids who are already on the path to shape the future in a positive way.
00:15:35.900
If you think that this is inspiring and you think kids need to be inspired by entrepreneurs,
00:15:44.980
their age, look no further than the pages of the Tuttle Times.
00:15:49.800
It's a magazine dedicated to teaching our children about entrepreneurship and other freedom related
00:15:55.320
You can get access to the magazine right now at a reduced price for forty nine dollars for
00:16:04.580
Give them examples of other kids doing great things.
00:16:18.220
So Mattel is coming out now with inclusive dolls, including prosthetic leg Barbie and, you
00:16:38.760
know, Barbie with hearing aids and Ken with the skin condition vitiligo.
00:16:53.620
Again, I guess you could see if you if you were a kid that had one of these conditions.
00:17:14.080
See, this is where's Ken 10 years into this thing with Barbie where he's sick of her.
00:17:18.660
And he's got a beer gut and he hasn't, you know, he's got ear, you know, he's out fixing
00:17:27.820
Because Barbie, she was great when, you know, she was nine feet tall and weighed 110 pounds.
00:17:39.160
And you know, this is going to end in, you know, binary Barbie, you know, or, you know,
00:17:57.160
Now, some might find these a little harsh, but I'm, I mean, for instance, the abortion Barbie.
00:18:09.400
You, you just flush out the pieces of the lumps and clumps of cells.
00:18:15.320
And then the kids can see if they can make anything other than a dead baby with them.
00:18:33.400
Comes with experimental drugs and experimental surgery and a noose in case the experts were
00:18:40.960
And Ken was part of the 88% that would have grown out of his dysphoria.
00:18:48.520
Well, you know, if you're offended by that joke, maybe you should pay attention to what's
00:18:59.460
Uh, then there's, uh, you know, cause everybody's getting into the boat.
00:19:02.900
So the Scooby Doo people, I'm just, I'm just suggesting some dolls for them.
00:19:07.400
Uh, you have San Francisco Shaggy, which, uh, lives in craps in the street.
00:19:13.240
Uh, then you have S and M Fred, uh, because he can do all kinds of things with that neckerchief.
00:19:18.400
Um, then you have genderqueer Daphne in transition, scrappy and Velma.
00:19:31.420
I mean, she actually, we, I mean, she was the, I think it, I think this started in universities
00:19:39.320
You know, what is she, uh, why is she always wearing a turtleneck?
00:19:48.860
That was what the mystery van was really all about.
00:19:52.120
No, it was in, they were in the van and they're like, okay, Velma, what the hell are you?
00:20:01.360
That's pretty, that's deep analysis of the Scooby Doo universe.
00:20:07.680
Is there, at some point, do these companies need to try to develop products that they would
00:20:15.520
Like, I don't, would this be a, would any of these things be a popular product?
00:20:21.820
Like, that can't be a thing that we're like, I got to get that one.
00:20:25.900
You, the people who are shouting their abortion, they should be running out to get these, give
00:20:35.120
That one actually would be one they would try to get.
00:20:37.240
But it would be kind of, I don't know, eye-opening as you just, there's nothing else you can
00:20:57.560
And so, it might be confusing to kids whose parents are shouting their abortion.
00:21:03.940
But if your parent is shouting for their abortion, what isn't confusing in your life?
00:21:18.840
They say something like 60% of abortions are mothers who already have a child.
00:21:24.140
Which, I mean, if you find out about that later on, aren't you kind of like, wow, was
00:21:30.820
Like, was I, did I not clean my room that many days in a row?
00:21:37.220
I mean, I thought we had a cool thing here, and apparently, apparently not.
00:21:41.920
By the way, anybody who is like, slippery slope.
00:21:45.440
I mean, have we not proven the slippery slope to be actual?
00:21:49.520
I mean, with absolutely rare, safe, and legal is shout your abortion, okay?
00:21:59.400
Gender, non-gender bathrooms is now men can have babies.
00:22:05.440
Medical marijuana is now you can have it anywhere you want.
00:22:10.460
Again, like some of these things you might not even disagree with.
00:22:13.120
But, like, the argument explicitly when medical marijuana was coming into fashion was it would
00:22:22.960
Remember when they said we were crazy because we said, you're going to start tearing down
00:22:29.560
This is from the Washington Post opinion page today.
00:22:43.560
No, I'm sure they're thinking that it was just named after the city, which I'm sure the
00:22:47.400
city was named after something entirely different than George Washington.
00:22:57.760
So what are you doing today to make sure your information is safe on the internet?
00:23:02.740
And I'm guessing you're doing zip on it as well.
00:23:06.580
Now, I'm doing zip on it because I've got LifeLock.
00:23:09.780
If you don't have LifeLock and you're doing zip about it, well, then there might be a problem
00:23:22.260
Cybercrime is going to affect all of us at some point.
00:23:25.240
And all of this information is out about all of us waiting to be assembled by people on the
00:23:31.360
That is where I don't even know how to access the dark web.
00:23:41.500
Anyway, that's where the bad guys are assembling all of the information that is out about you.
00:23:48.520
And that's where the people at LifeLock, that's where they live, nine to five.
00:23:54.600
And if somebody has your information and tries to destroy it, they'll alert you and got a team
00:24:13.520
You can read the first chapter for free at glensnewbook.com.
00:24:33.580
When he walked into the studio, his eyes immediately ran to my beautiful, beautiful shirt today.
00:24:45.540
He was in, still in, literally in the doorframe.
00:24:52.220
And I said, you're judging me for my shirt, aren't you?
00:25:01.660
But my shirt distracted him from a couple of the other things that happened to be in the studio today.
00:25:07.740
The only thing we're going to show you right now, it's going to be show and tell in the third hour today.
00:25:13.500
But right now, I guess you can tweet at us, what's in the box?
00:25:20.960
What's in the box is probably, it is game changing.
00:25:32.420
Without that thing, the world would be a very different place.
00:25:40.500
Oh, is it the Dean came in a little scooter thing?
00:25:46.700
You just have to unfold it when you take it out of the box.
00:25:52.860
Do you remember when, yeah, that is, what is that thing called?
00:25:58.540
When that came out, if you don't remember, because we were everybody.
00:26:01.860
Oh, it's going to change civilization as we knew it.
00:26:04.240
Like Bill Gates was in Dean Kamen's office and he saw it and he came out and said, that changes everything.
00:26:15.220
The only thing it changed was the way mall cops get around the mall.
00:26:23.680
I mean, it changed that one movie called Mall Cop.
00:26:35.900
I will say it's good for tourists who normally would take a walking tour.
00:26:43.600
Um, there is, there's something behind me that we're going to show you in our number
00:26:49.240
There's a really beautiful, uh, that is amazing, amazing, amazing.
00:26:58.660
I like to think I rescued this, um, everything that, um, you know, I, I, um, I started collecting
00:27:07.940
I mean, uh, sorry, American items, uh, because I think we're really actually dealing with
00:27:15.520
And I, I think we're going to start seeing stuff, you know, there's a, I can't tell you
00:27:19.340
what the item is cause we're still trying to get it.
00:27:21.240
Um, but, uh, uh, there is an item that is one of a kind and really the only thing that testifies
00:27:33.080
And, uh, it, uh, went up for auction and it was pulled at the last minute because the
00:27:39.740
owner found out that two of the bidders were trying to destroy it.
00:27:44.860
They only wanted to own it to destroy it and that kind of stuff is starting to happen and
00:27:55.240
Uh, yeah, well, this is the only piece that was the thing that's sitting behind me now.
00:28:01.740
Truly one of my concerns, uh, is, uh, when you find out where it came from, uh, and why
00:28:10.460
I mean, would you be surprised if that was destroyed at some point?
00:28:14.100
No, we have seen similar types of things happen.
00:28:27.300
And you've been, uh, you've been, well, you are the, I mean, not only the cookie king,
00:28:31.540
uh, with Kexi cookies, but you are also, uh, sitting on just a mountain of, uh, baby formula.
00:28:43.440
Well, I immediately thought I had babies and it's been 20 years since I've had a baby.
00:28:49.040
Well, my wife had the baby actually, but I, but you could have a baby.
00:28:54.200
If I wanted, you know, men can, of course, have a baby.
00:28:58.340
Uh, and, uh, I immediately thought of you and your hoarding of baby formula.
00:29:02.220
When I heard the white house, uh, blame, uh, parents for hoarding, uh, baby formula.
00:29:15.480
Uh, let's blame the parents of babies who are concerned about having baby formula.
00:29:24.960
And they've been trying to prepare and make sure they had enough baby formula.
00:29:38.160
I lost a, I mean, almost all of mine fell into the same body of water that my guns fell
00:29:46.260
I was planning on fishing for a very long time, like a year for my whole family.
00:29:58.200
So I loaded all my guns on the boat and then I was just fishing and lo and behold, you know,
00:30:05.400
I, uh, I got a fish and I started, it started to tip the boat and everything went into the
00:30:14.740
That's a very similar fishing trip to what I experienced.
00:30:22.140
You know, all the food, all the food storage, baby formula, guns, all in the same bottle,
00:30:28.400
That's sad because the only reason I say that is because I also shut up.
00:30:38.720
And when I get home, I'm calling the sheriff to report it.
00:30:45.480
I don't remember which one, but I know it was deep.
00:30:53.200
And I will tell you that I have seen the photos of Nessie and I don't know what she eats.
00:31:00.080
Well, you realize how she's that big because she keeps eating all the food storage at the
00:31:04.020
bottom of the, uh, the bottom of the lake and she can shoot you with her eyes.
00:31:11.120
I just wouldn't go around or go looking in that lake.
00:31:14.040
Well, Nessie just wants her privacy, be able to occasionally pop up and show her head.
00:31:18.780
And, and, and instead, no, people are always spying on her and inviting her private space.
00:31:25.440
You never want to violate private space unless the teacher says they can.
00:31:36.960
Uh, let me, uh, let me tell you, I was, um, I was planning, uh, on taking three days to
00:31:43.280
go over and look for all the stuff in the lake.
00:31:45.860
Uh, but then I realized, um, hate mongering America does not have this law yet.
00:31:51.860
Uh, the Spanish government is now passing a law offering three days of menstrual leave.
00:32:03.660
Uh, I mean, it's Spain, you know, they have those guys.
00:32:06.760
Um, so it's for anybody who experiences severe period pain, otherwise known as according
00:32:13.900
to the article, uh, dysmenorrhea, dys, dysmenorrhea.
00:32:25.240
I'm even kind of worried about Korea, you know?
00:32:29.580
Uh, but, uh, we should probably not call it that.
00:32:32.280
I'm just, I'm comfortable with uncomfortable cramps.
00:32:34.960
But, uh, now anybody who, you know, has, uh, painful cramps and men can get pregnant.
00:32:49.500
And it's, what's weird is they never happen on the weekend.
00:33:29.060
Um, in a section called artistic expression that states, it will not censor specific artists
00:33:36.720
or voices, even if employees consider the content harmful.
00:33:41.060
They said, if you find it hard to support our conduct, our content breadth, which is so
00:33:48.540
wide, I get those conservative shows all the time.
00:33:57.540
It goes from all the way from ultra liberal to socialist.
00:34:03.800
And once in a while, just a deep, deep progressive.
00:34:12.300
Uh, Netflix may not be the best place for you if you don't support our breadth.
00:34:19.140
Um, the memo states that employees may, uh, may be required to work on projects that
00:34:26.740
And if they have a hard time accepting their work assignment, they might want to consider
00:34:43.300
Can you imagine if Stu said to you and me, Pat, you got to change your show because what
00:34:50.420
you're doing is harmful and I cannot work around it.
00:34:57.760
I just said, okay, so who's got the problem here?
00:35:06.300
It seemed, seemed to change because Disney's employees kind of forced them and forced their
00:35:12.180
But this, I really think this, they say this is because of the Dave Chappelle thing.
00:35:16.500
Um, and that wasn't, I mean, that's not exactly, that wasn't, that was just common sense.
00:35:26.740
Um, and, uh, and so I think that this is what they say this came out because of that.
00:35:38.720
Uh, what's happened in between Disney, uh, what's happened in between Netflix getting
00:35:45.000
canceled, uh, their, their, um, uh, subscriptions are way down.
00:35:51.700
It's funny when conservatives actually play the game that has been played on us for decades.
00:36:08.720
They start losing money and all of a sudden they're like, you know what?
00:36:13.440
We're, we're, we're not as inclusive as we thought we were.
00:36:17.240
The Spotify one is particularly, I think, and this was not really, I don't think conservatives
00:36:21.680
stepping up, but the, the, the Spotify one was an interesting example because it just showed
00:36:29.720
They didn't, they didn't come out and say, cause they didn't even stop talking out about
00:36:33.440
They just said, you know, no, we're just going to do what we're doing.
00:36:37.360
And now, and part of this, I think is because they're very disconnected to us politics.
00:36:42.360
This is a, this is a European company and they weren't as involved in our back and forth
00:36:48.260
And they just sort of said, yeah, no, we'll just, we'll just, we don't have half of their
00:36:53.060
employees that, you know, had worked for the Obama administration.
00:36:58.080
Only us, but it's interesting because they just kind of didn't do anything.
00:37:04.500
They came out and said they pulled off episodes.
00:37:06.460
They mean, they weren't perfect by any means, but they just didn't over.
00:37:13.860
I don't know if you saw this black rock who is ESG central because of Ramaswamy's new
00:37:21.140
hedge fund that he is introducing, which is against ESGs, black rock voted for fewer climate
00:37:35.080
They said, you know, it might be in our assessment.
00:37:39.460
Maybe we shouldn't micromanage companies quite so tightly.
00:37:48.980
Um, but, uh, they're at least saying these things now there with the tide is changing.
00:37:55.860
And when you have a revolutionary with no hope of reelection and they're in power, I warn
00:38:04.460
you, that's when they feel cornered and they become extraordinarily dangerous back in just
00:38:14.000
Kurt writes in about his dog's experience with rough greens.
00:38:16.480
Our five-year-old healer, uh, named pepper loves rough greens on her food.
00:38:21.480
After about a week of using it, we noticed that she seemed to have more energy and was
00:38:24.880
wanting to play more rough greens have turned black back the clock on her activity level.
00:38:36.860
When your dog licks their, their feet, that that's a sign that they have some deficiency
00:38:42.860
and I don't know what, but, uh, that was the first thing Dr. Black told me when I started
00:38:53.120
What if you have a, uh, a president that licks his feet?
00:38:55.240
Um, in the middle of a press conference, rough greens, confident that your dog is going to
00:39:08.660
Go to rough greens.com slash Beck rough greens.com slash Beck 833 G L E N N 33.
00:39:45.440
I want to talk to him about this new poll that shows that apparently, um, wide
00:39:55.140
If they, uh, if abortion is outlawed, I'm willing to make that trade.
00:40:03.660
How, how, how many condoms would you like delivered to your home on a daily basis?
00:40:08.740
If you'd like 1000 condoms to your home every day and you want to trade that for abortion,
00:40:29.860
If you want to start a condom company, we will buy all of the condoms from you and you
00:40:40.860
And then do it, you know, by professionals, not vets.
00:40:43.740
And look, we agree with you that you should not have children.
00:40:48.300
We just don't want you to start the process and then kill them.
00:40:51.820
So seriously, I am not for government programs and I think the churches would be more than
00:41:08.700
And you can tell the left needs to figure out a way to expand this outside of the shout
00:41:14.240
They're trying to say, well, this is actually about birth control.
00:41:20.700
Now they are the ones giving the transgender kids the drugs at Planned Parenthood.
00:42:13.700
What you are about to hear is the fusion of entertainment and enlightenment.
00:42:24.980
Well, yesterday the White House blamed parents for the baby formula shortage.
00:42:32.500
The Washington Post came out and said for Pinocchios that the Biden administration has shipped
00:42:39.820
pallets of baby formula down to the border, although it actually said, yes, they did do
00:42:47.540
that, but they were required by law to do that.
00:42:51.580
And so you can't hold them responsible for upholding the law.
00:42:55.500
No, but can we hold them responsible for selectively upholding the law?
00:43:05.920
He is, by the way, an 18, number one New York Times bestseller.
00:43:10.640
His book, Killing the Killers, just came out this week.
00:43:14.400
I don't know how you do that on the New York Times.
00:43:19.920
But the New York Times, he might be a secret progressive.
00:43:25.960
Number one book in the country now, Killing the Killers by Bill O'Reilly.
00:43:36.360
So I had a really disturbing conversation with an industrialist, and we were talking about,
00:43:43.120
you know, the future of our country, and he talked about immediately our schools, what
00:43:49.480
we're teaching, how kids don't go out and play baseball anymore.
00:43:54.120
So, you know, they go out and play in a, you know, in a league, but they don't go out, and
00:44:04.760
They have to make the calls and settle fights and everything.
00:44:07.060
And he's like, they're not learning anything to actually be brought to a business world.
00:44:13.780
And they're not, they're being sheltered, so they're not risking.
00:44:17.880
How do we get the next generation to risk and understand how exciting it is and how good
00:44:23.280
it is to be an entrepreneur and follow your path?
00:44:26.740
Well, the Tuttle Twins have a magazine that comes out monthly.
00:44:30.740
It's called the Tuttle Times, and it is dedicated to teaching your kids about entrepreneurship and
00:44:36.740
other freedom-related things, and they show kids that are just inspiring, kids that have
00:44:42.560
started their own businesses, who are living the American dream at their age.
00:44:48.800
Get access to this magazine now at a reduced price for your kids or your grandkids, $49 for
00:45:02.980
Bill O'Reilly, congratulations on your number one status.
00:45:11.380
It is on the New York Times list as number one, and that's not easy to do, as everybody
00:45:21.060
I was in Manhattan, and I immediately went to St. Patrick's Cathedral, where my parents
00:45:29.280
I mean, even though this is the 18th time I've been number one with the books, it's
00:45:35.280
still, to me, almost a magical occurrence that that happens.
00:45:43.180
And they're good, and they're interesting to read, and you'll learn a lot.
00:45:48.200
I mean, it's not like I take being on with Beck on Friday for granted either.
00:45:56.760
You're, you know, our relationship on air is fun.
00:46:05.900
When you found out, you were very humble, which I really thought Makita had written the
00:46:18.480
Well, look, people, they don't understand how hard this is to do, number one.
00:46:24.100
And when I get a guy like you who's got millions of listeners, and he says he likes the book,
00:46:29.200
and people know that you barely read any books, that means a lot.
00:46:38.260
Anyway, so, Bill, what is the number one story this week in your mind?
00:46:43.620
Yeah, the total collapse, you know, I want to advance this story now, the Biden story.
00:46:52.940
If you in your life have a person who still thinks that Joe Biden is doing a good job as
00:46:58.280
president, then you might want to reevaluate that relationship, because it's a delusional
00:47:06.060
You're not dealing with a person who's got a grasp on reality.
00:47:09.620
So when a wholesale price index comes in at 11.3, and nobody knows what that is, but it's
00:47:18.560
what all of the vendors that you use, your grocery store, your 7-Eleven, your Subway sandwich
00:47:26.580
shop, whatever it may be, those are the wholesale vendors.
00:47:30.760
When they're paying 11.3% more for their product, guess who's going to have to pay that down the
00:47:47.560
The media is just embarrassed because they were all behind Biden.
00:47:56.200
And I remember those conversations in the fall of 2020 with you.
00:48:00.720
We both said, you may not like Trump, and there are many good reasons not to like him, but
00:48:08.140
if you put this guy in, we're all going to suffer.
00:48:13.880
So now we have to advance the story because people, if you don't earn a lot of money, if
00:48:19.600
you are a service worker, if you are in a union, okay, your salary isn't going up in
00:48:44.260
We've gone from America first, which the left and the media thought was just so horrible.
00:48:53.660
And I said, the people who are designing the policies for Biden, it is clear they hate America.
00:49:05.300
Yeah, I know this is circulating around on the Internet, that Biden, in conjunction with
00:49:17.940
I don't think he's that important, in my opinion.
00:49:20.420
It is the people who are writing, whoever it is that are designing these policies, you
00:49:31.680
So, on the right-wing websites, the conservative, you know, the real hardcore right, they basically
00:49:38.000
say, this is intentional, to tank the economy so that socialism rises up and the progressive
00:49:48.520
We whip out the capitalist system so they're doing it on purpose.
00:49:53.640
What I think is happening is James Buchanan is back.
00:49:58.500
So, the White House is supposed to be haunted on the second floor of the rest of the rest.
00:50:03.140
And all the past presidents are supposed to be floating around in apparitions.
00:50:07.560
So, I write today in my message today on BillOReilly.com that Joe Biden should summon James Buchanan.
00:50:14.640
Nobody knows, because that would require history teachers to actually teach, and that's, of
00:50:22.020
Fifteenth president of the United States, Lancaster, Pennsylvania, lifelong bachelor.
00:50:34.480
He gets elected president after the immortal Pierce, Franklin Pierce, who was drunk pretty
00:50:40.500
much every day he was in the White House, Franklin Pierce.
00:50:48.800
Buchanan then allows the South to loot and steal all the federal armories, to take all the
00:51:00.240
But, seven states secede in his four years, basically say, blank you, James Buchanan, we're
00:51:07.340
leaving, because we like slavery, and that's what we're doing.
00:51:11.600
So, then Buchanan leaves after doing nothing back, nothing, for four years, allowing chaos
00:51:26.320
Hundreds of thousands dead and maimed, and it's all on James Buchanan.
00:51:30.880
And then he goes back to Pennsylvania and says, oh, it wasn't my fault.
00:51:38.500
So, when you say he did nothing, that was the last part of Obama's term.
00:51:47.000
What Joe Biden is, or his administration is doing, is not nothing.
00:51:52.380
They are, I mean, look, we are depleting our strategic oil reserves, sending the oil over
00:51:58.900
to Europe, putting us into a very dangerous situation.
00:52:03.140
They are canceling another oil auction for really oil-rich property.
00:52:11.840
While we have the highest gas prices, we have baby food shortages, and they're just blaming
00:52:19.480
While there are pallets of baby food down at the border, which are required by law, if
00:52:25.360
you're going to have people, you have to make sure you can take care of the infants, and
00:52:29.820
But why are they selectively doing that law when they have an open border policy?
00:52:35.880
They're killing us every single way, every way possible.
00:52:41.720
Number one, those kids are eating too much, Beck.
00:52:44.620
We got to cut back on that nutrition to those kids.
00:52:48.680
They're lucky they got out of the womb after Biden.
00:52:52.500
He wouldn't have any, he doesn't want any limitations on.
00:53:00.960
Look, Biden gets in there, he doesn't know what he's doing.
00:53:08.900
Yeah, he definitely does not know what he's doing.
00:53:17.040
People come to Biden, they walk into the Oval Office, and they say, hey, let's cancel the
00:53:30.260
Then they come in and they say, let's not enforce border law because that's mean to the migrants.
00:53:40.140
Then they say, hey, under Trump, inflation was just 1.4% and Trump had to deal with the
00:53:51.260
Now, under you, it's 11%, but let's blame COVID.
00:53:56.220
And he goes, okay, this is a man who cannot think in the office.
00:54:04.700
I agree with that, but I'm talking about the people who are coming into the office.
00:54:11.180
All right, but he's not going to make a personnel decision.
00:54:14.600
He's not going to say, hey, Larry, you're an idiot, and the last seven things you've told
00:54:22.780
People don't understand what the word incapacitated means.
00:54:33.820
Whether he knows it or not, he is overseeing a group of people that are in a death cult.
00:54:44.960
We have now the CDC's national vital statistics from 2021.
00:54:50.280
There were 107,622 Americans between 18 and 49 that died from fentanyl, okay?
00:55:01.200
That's the largest number of Americans who have died from drug overdoses ever, and an increase
00:55:08.320
of about 15% from 2020, an increase of 50% from 2019.
00:55:22.840
Same time period, 18 to 49 in 2021, so I'm giving it at the height, 1849, one year, there
00:55:30.200
were only 41,000 deaths, and we shut down everything, everything.
00:55:35.920
We are killing our 18 to 49-year-old adults, and they don't give a flying crap.
00:55:42.720
Okay, that's all true, but do you think Joe Biden has a sheet of paper with those
00:55:48.060
stats in front of him, and he's actually thinking about how to solve the problem?
00:55:51.840
No, but I do think the people who are making policy, for instance, the safe smoking kits
00:56:08.420
And now we do know that, yes, five cities got free crack pipes.
00:56:18.360
You can, you can, every policy, everyone that the federal government has dealt with in the
00:56:30.260
So you might think that there'd be some firings, right?
00:56:37.020
No, because Biden doesn't know the difference between success and failure.
00:56:42.680
See, people, when I say this, they don't believe me.
00:56:54.180
But you, you might think that you and I disagree.
00:57:01.960
What you're saying is, these incompetent people around him doing these crazy things,
00:57:06.920
all right, yes, yes, but nobody's going to replace them, all right?
00:57:17.380
And he doesn't know what they're doing, doesn't care particularly what they're doing,
00:57:32.600
All right, back with Bill O'Reilly here in just a second.
00:57:35.880
I want to talk to you about the new press secretary, Bill, when we come back.
00:57:45.880
When I received my trial bag, I dipped a spoonful of Rough Greens in and held it out in front of her nose.
00:57:51.420
She immediately lunged forward like she does when I hold out a meaty treat.
00:57:55.680
I dumped the spoonful on top of her existing food.
00:58:01.680
She ate everything in her bowl in five minutes.
00:58:09.440
So you can try it just to make sure your dog eats it because that's the number one thing.
00:58:15.800
Probably 10 or 20 percent of people who are like, my dog won't eat it.
00:58:21.400
But your dog usually loves this stuff and and your dog needs all of these things so you can get a free bag just to make sure your dog eats it.
00:58:32.720
And the longer you put Rough Greens on their food, the more changes you will see in your dog.
00:58:37.460
I am telling you, I'm still seeing changes in Udo in Uno.
00:58:44.020
If you like it, all you pay for is the shipping.
00:58:46.600
Just go to roughgreens.com slash Beck, roughgreens.com slash Beck or call 833-GLEN-33, 833-G-L-E-N-N-33.
00:59:12.460
I would love to hear your analysis of her quickly and then what you expect from Corrine Jean Pierre.
00:59:22.020
Okay, Psaki did an excellent job for Biden and a terrible job for the country.
00:59:26.380
But that job now, White House Press Secretary, is just propaganda.
00:59:31.880
I mean, it's not like these people are going to tell anybody the truth.
00:59:34.700
They tell us what they are told to say by Ron Klain.
00:59:39.260
Ron Klain is the top advisor of Biden in the White House.
00:59:45.460
He tells Psaki every day, this is what you're going to say.
00:59:49.640
All right, these are the anticipated questions.
00:59:53.440
So Psaki goes out in an excellent manner and with authority and, you know, calm.
01:00:16.340
So Psaki is the only person now who is benefiting from inflation.
01:00:23.300
So when Psaki saw that this was going to be a disaster, her people started negotiating with MSNBC for a job.
01:00:34.440
But as inflation went up, so did her salary demands.
01:00:39.240
And she got a lot more money now than she would have gotten, I don't know, eight months ago.
01:00:48.300
Now, the new one is not nearly as smooth and experienced as Psaki.
01:01:01.860
But if any question comes to her that she can't answer or she doesn't look good, it's going to be racist.
01:01:14.740
She said Donald Trump is a deplorable, illegitimate president.
01:01:21.300
Well, I mean, she has said some awful, awful things.
01:01:28.880
Brian Kemp stole the gubernatorial election from Georgians and Stacey Abrams.
01:01:33.620
She still has said that Stacey Abrams is a legitimate winner of that.
01:01:37.300
There's nobody that is intelligent at all that believes that, unless you're intelligent and you're just a bald-faced liar.
01:01:45.980
But that's what she got the job for, because she delivers propaganda, and that's what they want.
01:01:50.480
They don't want anybody who's going to actually level with the folks and say, you know what?
01:01:54.860
The 11.3 wholesale inflation rate, that's going to really hurt every American in the next five months.
01:02:02.300
No, but you don't have to say it that way, but you can say the truth.
01:02:08.880
I mean, you can spin the truth, but the truth doesn't even matter with these people anymore.
01:02:14.480
Are you going to watch Jen Psaki at 9 o'clock on MSNBC?
01:02:22.820
I mean, I don't even know where MSNBC is in the cable box.
01:02:27.300
Yeah, but look, this is the country we live in now.
01:02:31.220
Bill O'Reilly, his new book is Killing the Killers.
01:02:35.880
It is the true story about how we got the terrorists and what we did and the truth on enhanced interrogation and so much more.
01:02:48.300
Killing the Killers, available in bookstores everywhere.
01:02:53.240
Carol just wrote me in about her experience with relief after she says, I have arthritis in my left foot.
01:03:13.380
Ever since I started taking Relief Factor on a regular basis, the stiffness is remarkably better.
01:03:26.380
I mean, I don't know if you were like this, but I was.
01:03:28.880
I just didn't think it would work for me, but it does.
01:03:31.800
Relief Factor was created by doctors to help your body reduce inflammation.
01:03:35.600
That's a source of most of our pain, and it has four different ways it attacks inflation working together with your body.
01:03:43.560
And, you know, like ibuprofen attacks it one way.
01:03:48.000
This is four different lines of attack, and I think that's why it works when, you know, ibuprofen 800 never works for me.
01:04:00.200
Hundreds of thousands of people have ordered Relief Factor, and about 70% of them go on to order more.
01:04:05.220
It's relieffactor.com, relieffactor.com, or call 800-4-RELIEF, 1-800, the number 4-RELIEF, relieffactor.com.
01:04:35.220
I have to tell you, the Amber Heard, Johnny Depp thing, they deserve each other, quite honestly.
01:04:44.600
I mean, I know very little about it, except there was poop in a shoe or poop in the bed.
01:04:53.540
There may have been poop in the bed and poop in a shoe.
01:04:58.440
It is fascinating to watch this thing play out, though, because most Americans, you know,
01:05:05.800
not the smarter Americans, just care so deeply about Johnny Depp or Amber Heard or blah, blah, blah.
01:05:13.640
Well, I read the first article that I cared about from Azra Nomani.
01:05:18.820
She was a frequent guest on this program, good friend of the program.
01:05:23.180
How the Washington Post and ACLU Helped Amber Heard Attack Johnny Depp.
01:05:36.120
You can hear me clinking away while I warm some water so I don't cough through this interview.
01:05:47.800
Because I don't think most people even know any of this.
01:05:51.560
That's important, and I'm glad that you, you know, are, had a full disclosure that you
01:06:03.040
And, but the thing is, this is so important as a window into money, politics, and Hollywood.
01:06:12.800
So what we have playing out is our two celebrities, right, with a terrible relationship, both of
01:06:26.620
And so, you know, our humanity has to extend to all people.
01:06:29.260
Well, then what we have is a non-profit, a quote-unquote non-profit, right?
01:06:38.580
The ACLU, 501c3, multi-million dollar organization, right, that has lost its way, according to even
01:06:48.740
an Atlantic article last week, taking advantage of this story and catapulting then Amber Heard
01:06:59.680
to become their poster girl for women's rights.
01:07:04.480
Okay, so now they did this, didn't she say that she was giving, I think, $3 million to
01:07:15.260
And she only gave, like, $500,000, and then others started to pay for her, but...
01:07:21.080
So what I did is, to back up a little bit, right, I, as you are, like, we've written op-eds,
01:07:28.800
We know how they are written, we know how they are placed, we know how they are promoted.
01:07:35.080
So what I did is, I just analyzed how it is that Amber Heard's op-ed appeared in the Washington
01:07:42.740
post, and I broke it down into six phases, and the first phase was establishing her credibility,
01:07:51.900
because, you know, at the end of every op-ed, you have two lines that are in italics, and
01:07:58.700
they establish who the person is and why they are a subject matter expert, right?
01:08:03.100
So what happened is that Amber Heard, her italics says that she is now, you know, working as
01:08:14.520
Well, it was a classic pay-to-play operation, where she said that she was going to donate
01:08:20.680
her $7 million of divorce settlement, you know, this altruistic act, to the ACLU and a children's
01:08:30.120
But indeed, just as you just said, she only donated a very small portion, and then the
01:08:36.000
court testimony reveals that, in fact, Johnny Depp paid $100,000 directly to the ACLU, because
01:08:42.940
he's like, why have a middleman, you know, in this operation, and she's going to be so
01:08:48.360
And then who does she end up also having donate?
01:08:51.420
She had none other than her next boyfriend, Elon Musk.
01:08:58.580
She established her credibility, and the ACLU established her credibility, but behind the
01:09:10.620
Okay, so they've established her as a ambassador for women's rights.
01:09:16.060
And now they have, this is, I'm going to take people back to the fall of 2018.
01:09:22.160
It's a long time ago, but just think about, we have President Trump, okay, in office.
01:09:31.440
We have just had, you know, Betsy DeVos named early on in the administration.
01:09:45.080
It's supposed to have given women equal rights in schools, right?
01:09:50.540
But what happened is that through politics, it ended up becoming a hit job, which is a
01:09:58.320
term that you're going to hear again, on men oftentimes on college campuses, where they
01:10:05.140
And so you're going to hear a theme here now, because what they did is in November 2018,
01:10:16.960
a communications staffer for the ACLU sends a pitch to Amber Heard's PR person and says,
01:10:26.560
hey, wouldn't it be great if Amber Heard wrote an op-ed?
01:10:32.300
And Title IX was one of the issues that this communications staffer said.
01:10:39.240
I'd like your and Amber's thoughts on doing an op-ed in which she discusses the way in
01:10:44.780
which survivors of gender-based violence have been made less safe under the Trump administration
01:10:53.200
If she feels comfortable, she can interweave her personal story saying how painful it is
01:11:00.040
as a gender-based violence survivor to witness these setbacks.
01:11:07.320
So you and I know as writers, and I'll give folks context, that I taught writing the reported
01:11:20.480
So I've been writing op-eds myself for 20 years, and I taught it.
01:11:25.800
And one of the first things that I always taught students, as you know too, Glenn,
01:11:36.180
And I didn't study my rhetoric, but later in life I learned pathos, ethos, logos, right?
01:11:42.360
So you have to have logic, you have to have rationality, and you have to have the personal story.
01:11:47.660
And that's what they then grabbed for Amber Heard to amplify.
01:11:52.360
So I've got about three minutes to finish this story.
01:11:55.500
So the writer, the ACLU writes back, tried to gather your fire and your rage,
01:12:00.820
and really interesting analysis and shaped that into an op-ed form.
01:12:08.760
Your lawyers should review this for the way I skirted around talking about your marriage.
01:12:17.840
And then the rest of the story that's so important is the ACLU communications staff
01:12:24.460
pitched it to Michael Larrabee, op-ed editor at the Washington Post.
01:12:33.160
And they are complicit in this hit job on Johnny Depp.
01:12:37.660
And this is not just about celebrity, but this is about the abuse of power by a nonprofit organization
01:12:44.120
and a journalism operation, a complete breach of ethics.
01:12:49.860
There's no transparency in who wrote this piece.
01:12:52.520
And if any one of my students had presented an assignment written by another student, they would have failed, right?
01:13:00.100
And so they owe Johnny Depp an apology, their readers an apology, and they should just retract the op-ed.
01:13:06.560
But it's an important, critical window into how it is that these special interest groups place their, quote,
01:13:15.640
subject matter experts in there to push their own talking points.
01:13:22.580
The Washington Post did publish this in their opinion section under the headline,
01:13:28.040
Amber Heard, I spoke up against sexual violence and faced our culture's wrath, and that has to change.
01:13:36.540
There's a lot of things the Washington Post should maybe take under advisement, in my opinion,
01:13:50.780
If your car breaks down, you'll have the right tools on hand.
01:13:54.820
I can, I know I'm going to do it, not because I have a toolbox, not because I, you know, I can't,
01:14:00.540
I could take it apart, but I never put it back together.
01:14:09.620
They will pick me up on the side of the road if my car breaks down.
01:14:13.520
They will get it to the dealership or your mechanic, whichever you choose.
01:14:26.480
So the wages of the mechanic and the dealership and the prices of the parts and everything,
01:14:32.840
But you won't have to worry about it if you have CarShield,
01:14:35.440
because you're going to lock in your price today.
01:14:38.340
And it won't go up for as long as you have this policy.
01:14:41.040
When your car breaks down, count on CarShield for your help.
01:14:46.200
Get the coverage that I have on my old trucks up at the farm.
01:15:23.260
This is a time you really want Blaze TV, just for fun purposes.
01:15:29.260
Coming up in just a few, I'm going to be doing show and tell.
01:15:32.960
There are some items that I have been blessed to be able to acquire and hold for the Mercury
01:15:43.360
And I'm going to show you some things that you just won't believe.
01:15:49.920
You'll be able to watch it on Blaze TV, and I'll describe it if you happen to be listening
01:15:55.820
One thing I am really, really tired of this week is everyone saying that cryptocurrency is over.
01:16:14.660
Now, all of these people have written this article already years ago.
01:16:18.380
Every time cryptocurrency goes down, they write the same article.
01:16:24.780
All the people, they find one person who bought at the absolute peak and is down 50%.
01:16:30.120
And they highlight their life and how it's been destroyed.
01:16:34.400
And this is over, and it's never going to come back.
01:16:36.960
And it's amazing because none of it coincides with anything of anyone in the government.
01:16:42.980
And their wishes and what they're trying to do.
01:17:16.700
Now, people would note that if you invested that same $10,000 a year ago in Bitcoin, you
01:17:32.180
We should stop there and not look at any other time windows.
01:17:35.760
It's interesting because that seems to be what all of these articles are predicated on.
01:17:39.740
If we look at one, the worst possible time window for cryptocurrency, it looks pretty bad.
01:17:45.560
But I thought maybe, how long do you invest in it?
01:17:51.120
My idea was when you invest in something, you're usually holding it for multiple years.
01:17:58.500
Now, the two years ago timeframe is interesting because it would basically encapsulate what we
01:18:08.600
So this is when we're just starting to dump trillions of dollars into the economy.
01:18:21.020
We've been told in these crypto-is-dead columns that cryptocurrency is not working as a hedge
01:18:25.880
against inflation because look at this one day where inflation numbers came out high
01:18:31.340
Instead, let's look at the entire inflationary period from two years ago.
01:18:34.600
If you invested in the Dow, $10,000, you would have $13,400.
01:18:41.020
It's a good, much better than a bank account or something.
01:18:43.600
If you invested that same $10,000 in Bitcoin two years ago, you would have $33,500.
01:19:08.260
Three years ago, if you invested $10,000 in the Dow Jones Industrial Average, you would
01:19:16.880
However, if you invested $10,000 in Bitcoin three years ago, you would have $35,900.
01:19:35.480
If you invested $10,000 in the Dow Jones Industrial Average four years ago, you would have $13,300.
01:19:47.600
It's not unbelievable, but it's not a bad return.
01:19:51.620
If you invested that in Bitcoin, you would have $34,600.
01:20:01.120
If you invested in the Dow Jones Industrial Average, $10,000, you would have $15,800.
01:20:09.460
That's pretty good return on the Dow over five years.
01:20:15.380
If you invested $10,000 in Bitcoin five years ago, you would have $144,200.
01:20:29.380
So you can have, the risk is you could have slightly less than the Dow in the last year,
01:20:35.740
or you could have three times as much in every year in between, and in the fifth year,
01:20:44.400
Because the Dow Jones Industrial Average looks like a solid investment, and certainly less
01:20:57.100
You know, you've got the Fed pouring in the money, and the government supporting all of
01:21:21.600
I mean, I know this is a showdown, the showcase showdown here, but I'm going to say,
01:21:33.300
Recognizing that maybe you might lose in the short term with Bitcoin, but man, 9,000 in
01:22:02.160
What you are about to hear is the fusion of entertainment.
01:22:07.340
What you are about to hear is the fusion of entertainment and enlightenment.
01:22:43.900
And I have some amazing history to share with you.
01:22:52.280
In big ways, in small ways, you help to shape the America of the future with the way you
01:23:04.520
It matters what companies you choose to do business with.
01:23:08.600
And we've never really had a choice, but those things are changing more and more.
01:23:16.240
And when they're on our side, if they are offering a good service at a fair price, we
01:23:24.240
That's why I'm proud to have as a sponsor of this program, Patriot Mobile.
01:23:28.640
And I'm proud to actually call the team at Patriot Mobile friends of mine.
01:23:37.960
First, you got to build a good company, and they built a great company.
01:23:42.260
Patriot Mobile has the same service everybody else does.
01:23:46.620
You get free activation if you use the promo code BECK.
01:23:54.920
Then they spend their time and money working for and supporting the causes that we hold near
01:24:01.600
You know, like the things that are helping support the Bill of Rights.
01:24:08.820
Stand with the people who are standing with you.
01:24:25.680
Now, I want to start with a little story that I was looking up the opium wars yesterday.
01:24:43.880
Do you even know who was involved really in the opium wars?
01:24:46.980
I remember it was two sides, and there was a war about opium.
01:24:56.620
Mid-1700s, British Empire and China, and the British have found Chinese tea, and they're
01:25:09.680
I don't know what it is with the tea thing and the English, but it is their catnip.
01:25:18.220
You take it away from them, and they're like, I don't know what to do.
01:25:23.500
I mean, they could start an entire war of us throwing some of it in the harbor.
01:25:31.440
I would go into the harbors and just slowly slop up all of that lovely tea with a biscuit.
01:25:42.540
Anyway, British Empire has a trade imbalance because they like tea.
01:25:49.940
China makes a lot of tea, and the British love the Chinese tea, but they also have something
01:25:58.620
These amazing worms that make silk, and they're like, this is great.
01:26:07.360
That is a quote from King something or other, the seventh.
01:26:17.160
But when the ships came full with Chinese stuff, usually, and see if this sounds familiar,
01:26:23.700
countries don't like it when those ships go back empty because that implies a trade balance.
01:26:32.920
And then it costs more to get the ship to come and deliver your worm thread and your drinking slop.
01:26:44.120
And because the ship has to be paid to go back empty.
01:26:48.400
So the English were like, look, you need to buy some of our crap.
01:26:52.460
And the Chinese were like, nah, we don't need any of that stuff.
01:26:56.200
And they're like, no, you need to buy some of our crap.
01:27:01.500
So Britain came up with a new idea because they had conquered India.
01:27:08.900
They had just they just gone over to visit India.
01:27:11.580
And everybody was like, please, you guys speak with an English accent.
01:27:15.120
And that always makes you smarter than everyone else.
01:27:20.200
The English come to your shore and you're like, you got it.
01:27:30.160
So so they had India and India can grow poppies.
01:27:37.600
Now, this is before the Wizard of Oz, where you realize that poppies make you sleep if you lay down in a forest of them.
01:27:45.120
So what they did instead was they used it to make opium.
01:28:02.500
And so they started putting opium over the border.
01:28:15.120
And nobody's going to come across our border, drug smuggling.
01:28:19.640
Well, as you probably know, that's pretty hard to do, you know, and very expensive.
01:28:27.960
And it didn't stop the flow of illegal opium across the border into China.
01:28:50.860
And I just, you know, I was thinking about this because now fentanyl is coming to the Mexican ports in Chinese ships.
01:29:12.200
I mean, I'm sure the Chinese are not trying to get us all hooked on opium or rot us, you know, from the inside out like the British tried to do in the 1700s.
01:29:25.100
Because that would, if that was their plan, that would require that they would look at things long term, you know, that would require them to remember things of the past.
01:29:37.080
And we all know the Chinese are nothing but now, now, now I've got to have it right now.
01:29:43.640
So, okay, next little piece of history, because it's show and tell Friday, I wanted to bring some things in that I have, my wife and I have, we are very, very, very fortunate.
01:30:00.420
And it is because you listen to this broadcast or you listen to a podcast or whatever.
01:30:06.800
This is you and everything that I am collecting.
01:30:15.900
In 2008, I had a prompting in my prayers and all I heard was clay pots, clay pots.
01:30:22.820
And I'm like, I don't know what clay pots mean.
01:30:26.820
I'm maybe not as smart as everybody else you're talking to at night, but clay pots.
01:30:33.720
It took me a few months to figure out, and I figured it out because I was talking about our Constitution and our founding documents as sacred scripture.
01:30:43.560
And I don't remember when it was, but I was like, wait a minute, I just said sacred scripture.
01:30:52.440
They were kept in clay pots in the back of some cave, and they weren't found for a thousand plus years.
01:30:58.280
But that's why we know extra books of the Bible because of those clay pots.
01:31:03.960
We know a fuller and have a fuller understanding of the time period.
01:31:07.940
So I thought, I've got to find me a cave and get me some of those Chinese clay pots.
01:31:13.860
And that's why I started The Vault at Mercury One.
01:31:24.400
But together, and with the Library of Mercury One, we have more documents on American history than anyone except for the Library of Congress and the National Archives.
01:31:40.280
And I have felt an increased pressure personally because I think we are dealing with people that will truly destroy it.
01:31:54.420
If they have power or they have the means, they will not just bury it in a basement.
01:32:07.180
We are currently in negotiations for a piece of history that is one of one.
01:32:16.700
And it is the only remaining piece of physical history that this event even happened.
01:32:51.840
And he pulled it from auction because he found out that two of the bidders were only buying it to destroy it.
01:33:31.180
And he's like, no, you were supposed to buy that guy a soda back in 1979 because you had money in your pocket.
01:33:42.420
Anyway, it is my goal to preserve these things and clay pots.
01:33:55.800
So I want to show you some things that we have rescued.
01:34:03.220
Anyway, this is an amazing piece that is everybody who has walked into the studio has gone, oh, my gosh, that's the real one?
01:34:23.240
This is a painting, probably one or two of the most famous paintings of George Washington.
01:34:32.160
Many of us grew up having this in our history books.
01:34:44.100
Portland, the place that's always lighting its buildings on fire?
01:34:49.120
Remember we said they're eventually just going to tear down statues of George Washington and they're going to destroy George Washington and blah, blah, blah.
01:34:55.140
And, well, the Portland Museum, I guess, didn't have this on display anymore and it was part of a foundation.
01:35:11.800
And hopefully we will find a very appropriate place, if not the museum, for the rest of our lives, children's lives.
01:35:24.200
It's like a painting I feel like I've just seen a thousand times.
01:35:27.960
It's like the classic George Washington portrait.
01:35:32.680
Yeah, it would be one that could sit in a room by itself in an art museum and you'd go, wow.
01:35:40.200
You've seen it a million times, but probably don't know where.
01:35:51.320
Let me take a quick break and I want to tell you an amazing letter that we just preserved from John Adams.
01:36:00.800
It is so today that I, I mean, it's crazy how it reflects today.
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01:37:27.740
So I just, uh, I just got this, uh, yesterday it was delivered to me.
01:37:45.480
So we have not done all of the research on all of it.
01:37:48.180
So I'm, I'm sketchy on some of the details on exactly what he's talking about, but this is a letter from John Adams written in his own head.
01:38:12.400
So this is John Adams and he is writing to the then vice president, um, Elbridge Gary, who is also a signer of the Declaration of Independence.
01:38:22.020
And there was some problem going on, and I'm not sure I, I know all of it.
01:38:28.340
I know some of it, but there was some problem going on with the politicians being a little crooked, a little crooked.
01:38:35.920
And he starts talking about, you know, how these politicians, uh, work and it'll be found, uh, at some time or another selfishness has disappointed the hopes of patriotism and philanthropy in all ages.
01:38:51.580
Um, the few, if they are not more selfish than the many are more cunning and all in all of the ages of the world have not produced such glaring proofs of it as the history of this country for the last 30 years.
01:39:13.940
I look back at the astonishment with astonishment at the height and the depth and the length and the breadth of this fabric of artifice.
01:39:24.860
I had suspicions of the depravity of our politicians, but I had no idea of the genius.
01:39:40.540
We suspect our politicians, and this is an important word, are depraved.
01:39:47.660
They're not just corrupt, but some of them are depraved.
01:39:54.700
But how many of us talk about the genius of those?
01:39:59.280
It is why I have said for a long time, in a hundred years, the truth will be known,
01:40:04.720
but historians will look at what's being done right now and how this all came about and look at each other and go, it was genius.
01:40:14.920
It was evil, but it was truly genius on what they did.
01:40:22.380
He said, now listen to this, because I want you to hear this and know that this is our lives.
01:40:43.020
We've sacrificed our families, our popularity, our reputation has been sacrificed.
01:40:49.500
The pleasures, our comforts, while the politicians have accumulated fortunes, palaces in the city, and become pillars in the country.
01:41:03.580
Don't you feel like, I have to sacrifice my reputation if I'm going to stand up?
01:41:08.680
I, I, I, you know, just the pleasures and comforts, I just, I just, leave me alone.
01:41:16.380
Meanwhile, all the people in Washington are getting rich.
01:41:21.280
He was then in the letter from Elbridge, he, he, he says, you shouldn't, you need to write a history book.
01:41:27.860
And he says, you talk to me at 77 years of age of writing history.
01:41:32.200
If I was only 30, I would not undertake a history of the revolution in less than 20 years.
01:41:37.880
There are a few facts that I wish to put on paper, and it's an awful warning to do so that has just been given to me by the sudden death of our friend, Benjamin Rush, another signer of the declaration and climber.
01:41:49.500
Another signer preceded him in the same year, the same spring.
01:41:54.880
Um, I believe the majority of surviving, we are the majority of surviving signers of a declaration, which has given, been given so much credit in the world at the expense of most of its signers.
01:42:12.300
Um, he, he, he, he talks about how the British said, yeah, the tea party, when they actually start fighting, they're going to be so meek.
01:42:26.480
Um, and to that, uh, Adam says that, uh, the birth of America's independence started with the seeds of the, of the revolt.
01:42:36.200
And then he starts talking about what he calls in the letter and X, Y, Z affair.
01:42:40.700
This is an affair that, um, um, Elbridge Gary went over to France to be an ambassador.
01:42:49.240
And the ambassador said, yeah, I'll help you guys, but you're going to have to pay bribes.
01:42:56.360
And Adams, when he was president, he said, no, we're not.
01:43:03.620
And the American people were disgusted that anyone in government would offer or ask for a bribe for any kind of help.
01:43:19.980
I mean, then that, that hits almost everything today, doesn't it?
01:43:25.540
What are you doing to help others out who need it?
01:43:30.400
Ones that you trust one you should seriously consider is tunnel to towers foundation.
01:43:36.080
Since nine 11, they have been there neck deep in it and they are a four plus charity.
01:43:43.620
I mean, they, they get the highest, highest rating, catastrophically injured veterans, first responders, tunnel to towers, builds mortgage free smart homes.
01:43:53.180
Uh, when somebody dies in the line of service, they take care of the mortgage.
01:44:00.180
The pressure is off the surviving members of the family.
01:44:03.760
And now they're gifting tiny homes to homeless veterans with operation home base, but they need your help.
01:44:10.420
Please donate $11 a month to T the number two T dot org.
01:44:21.200
Please join in this heroic effort and take care of our first responders and our wounded veterans.
01:45:00.260
As I told you a few minutes ago, I am doing everything I can to preserve and protect our history.
01:45:06.320
And if that means just burying it somewhere in the center of the country where it's lost, you know, for a thousand years, but we'll be found again.
01:45:15.660
I think we are dealing with people now that, um, are very dangerous and would, would love to destroy American history and proof.
01:45:25.100
If we did anything, by the way, if anybody knows, uh, how to get a space suit, an American space suit, I am in the market for a space suit.
01:45:39.660
I do, um, uh, we have the, we have the original blueprints of the Mercury module, uh, and a lot of stuff from Apollo 11.
01:45:50.820
Um, and I just think there's coming a time where people will say America never went to the moon.
01:46:02.620
I mean, can you even buy a space suit from like auction?
01:46:10.940
If anybody, if anybody knows, uh, please, I'm looking for that.
01:46:16.640
We are looking for things that are happening today.
01:46:23.200
We are now collecting, and I'm not asking for this because the last, please don't say, um, we are collecting now all of the encyclopedias as they are updated.
01:46:34.180
So we're starting with the first set of encyclopedias and we're documenting what's in there.
01:46:39.880
And then the next set, we're seeing how it has changed.
01:46:44.020
And so we're documenting all of the changes in, uh, in history.
01:46:48.920
Uh, we're about to, uh, start looking for 300 writers.
01:46:54.160
Mercury one will be hiring, um, hopefully in the next year or so.
01:46:58.860
Uh, we need 300 writers, um, but I don't even know, we're still trying to decide how are we going to pick the writers?
01:47:06.520
Cause they, we have to know that they understand American history, know what they're looking at.
01:47:12.240
And, uh, I don't want to give you any more than that, but if you are a great writer, stand by cause we will, um, we, we are looking for help.
01:47:23.160
Now I want you to know that your money is not going to the, I mean, your money by listening to this show.
01:47:31.900
Um, because you listen, ratings go up, commercials, um, you know, are charged for more.
01:47:37.400
And then it gives me the ability much to my wife's chagrin, um, uh, to preserve all of these things.
01:47:52.460
It's from independence, Missouri, November 21st, 1961.
01:47:57.260
Now this, I was hoping people didn't realize how important this letter was, but I was wrong.
01:48:03.580
Um, it was a, to a guy that wrote to him about Pearl Harbor and the atomic bomb.
01:48:09.820
So he writes, dear Dave, I appreciated very much yours of the 17th.
01:48:16.960
I wish I could write to tell you about the 20th anniversary of Pearl Harbor.
01:48:21.500
I have very little to say about that, except that the tears that have been shed on the account of the atomic bomb should have been shed on Pearl Harbor's attack.
01:48:32.020
All you have to do is go to Pearl Harbor and stand on the upside down battleship with 2000 youngsters beneath it.
01:48:41.080
And you can understand why I don't sympathize with the tear shedding of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, because dropping those bombs is what ended the war.
01:48:53.640
Um, that's another thing that is, uh, is so important.
01:49:01.180
This is starting to be completely dismantled and we are really working hard on trying to get, um, Nagasaki and Hiroshima.
01:49:11.940
We have, we have things from the bomb site that I felt a little uncomfortable.
01:49:17.640
I was like, does anybody have a Geiger counter?
01:49:20.620
Um, but anyway, um, you can help history books that are being changed.
01:49:29.980
Um, you get, uh, memos from school boards or anything.
01:49:39.620
Um, and I know my staff right now is like, no, but we have to collect the things.
01:50:05.900
Uh, I don't know if we can put it someplace where you can see it.
01:50:08.560
Do you want to take it and put it in front of you?
01:50:10.460
Maybe because maybe the camera can pick it up in front of you.
01:50:17.720
What's in this box chain literally changed the world.
01:50:25.960
This is the birth of, um, where are you going, man?
01:50:31.400
Are you taking, wait a minute, you shouldn't leave.
01:50:37.200
This gave us the birth of, uh, gosh, uh, AI, artificial intelligence, all of it.
01:50:48.140
If the camera can pick up on it, uh, you open the box and inside is the enigma machine.
01:50:57.100
I can't, I'm telling you right now, press, people online, everything.
01:51:10.700
No, I just wanted to, I just, I'm going to be real frank with you.
01:51:15.140
Now I can translate all of those secret dog whistles from the RNC.
01:51:25.020
This machine is what the Nazis used, the code that we could not break.
01:51:31.620
The imitation game, uh, with, uh, Benedict, uh, Cumberbund is the story of the guy who broke
01:51:40.900
However, that is an impressive story because he builds a computer.
01:51:46.820
Um, and that is truly an impressive story, but people don't know the story of America.
01:52:11.140
The way you, they give you the code and they have three wheels in there and you turn one
01:52:16.680
to like number 22, one to number three and one to number 38.
01:52:23.740
And that changes the alphabet and it's, it, it processes the whole thing.
01:52:29.380
And then when it's plugged in the keyboard up above changes.
01:52:35.940
So you can see how one letter is now the other letter.
01:52:40.880
And then you just type on it and we could not break it because they would change it every
01:52:46.660
They would change all three, um, wheels in 1941.
01:52:57.820
England got one and they were like, Oh my gosh.
01:53:07.300
You have to have all of them and you have to know which setting it is every day.
01:53:13.380
And there's too many, there's too many combinations.
01:53:15.980
So even having the machine, they couldn't figure out the code.
01:53:20.300
And that's in the imitation game, that gigantic machine that they built a computer, the first
01:53:29.800
Americans, there were two Americans that were in the Pacific.
01:53:34.660
And knew about the machine, had never seen one, didn't have one.
01:53:43.560
Two guys sat down and they broke the Enigma, the Enigma code before the British did.
01:53:52.160
And we never told them that we had broken the code.
01:53:55.880
I think that's kind of a cool story, although it probably won't be as dramatic as the imitation
01:54:03.300
game because they were just two guys on a ship.
01:54:07.580
Uh, I mean, we got a few, we got a few days on the ship.
01:54:18.040
I mean, you could end it with a star spangled banner, but then Disney wouldn't sell it to
01:54:22.080
And that makes it sound easy or less impressive than it really was.
01:54:44.480
You know, some were on submarines, some were in Germany.
01:54:56.800
Uh, and we'll try to find out what messages did this thing send?
01:55:05.140
It's amazing that we were able to actually break that.
01:55:08.240
Uh, I guess you think it just, just, you know, the, I mean, modern encryption is one
01:55:12.920
thing, but like to do all this without computers, I know to come up with this machine, somebody
01:55:21.080
We'll make a typewriter that will have, you know, 5,000 different combinations of keys
01:55:36.620
We couldn't, we could not decipher anything, anything.
01:55:40.880
When we, when we landed on the beaches of Sicily, we had just started to, uh, have the information
01:55:50.800
for the Enigma machine and they suspected they didn't know.
01:55:55.700
So they were really dicey and they didn't really, they weren't sending really critical
01:56:01.060
When we landed in Sicily with the great deception, which by the way is operation mincemeat.
01:56:13.900
It's the story of world war two and Ian Fleming plays a kind of critical role.
01:56:21.820
Um, he is the guy for operation mincemeat where we, we fooled the Germans with an old
01:56:29.240
We fooled the Germans and everyone said, this won't work.
01:56:34.820
You're going to, you're going to have somebody wash up on shore with secret plans of an invasion.
01:56:40.620
And because we're going to do much more than that, they'll never believe that we would try
01:56:48.800
it because it would be so stupid for us to try it.
01:56:52.360
So, so, so Ian Fleming was like, let's go the extra mile and be so audacious that the
01:57:01.300
average person would go that this is ridiculous.
01:57:04.980
Like we're going to believe that his thinking was some German would go, yes, but they are
01:57:15.100
Uh, some looking up online, some of these machines, um, and, uh, the cost of, of these
01:57:22.460
machines and, and, and your, your wife must hate you.
01:57:28.840
This week was not necessarily a banner week of our relationship.
01:57:33.500
Cause I see this incredible painting, the multiple letters that you've protected.
01:57:39.700
And then this Enigma machine, which does not seem to be a lot of these available in the
01:57:46.020
Try being married to me with, this is my mission and I'm coming home every day going, yeah,
01:58:03.800
I said, um, really, luckily though, you're just, you're, you're so sexy that she just,
01:58:09.420
she just, she's like, I can't keep my hands off him.
01:58:12.560
It's worth, it's worth it just for the hot, hot times.
01:58:17.360
Everything else is just awful, but she gets to come home and get a piece of that.
01:58:30.220
I mean, this is deeply, it's not just you deeply.
01:58:32.200
She was, you know, cause she said, cause you know, you, when you go to an auction, you
01:58:51.400
And I told her and, uh, and, uh, and she didn't take it well at first.
01:58:55.160
And then she came back, uh, about an hour later cause she had to go for a walk.
01:58:59.460
And, uh, she came back and she was like, sorry, I, I was just a little in shock.
01:59:11.760
I mean, this is stuff that, you know, will be on display at the museum eventually here.
01:59:17.380
I make, I might take some of these things on tour.
01:59:22.040
There's always the risk that, you know, something happens to it.
01:59:26.080
I know I'll find it at your house if it ever something happened and we had to throw it away.
01:59:32.700
Uh, let me tell you about a gold line, a smart investment strategy.
01:59:39.840
Invest in whatever it's weaker than commodities that can be food.
01:59:45.980
That can be art, uh, that can be precious metals.
01:59:50.820
Really silver is something you should look at gold and silver.
01:59:55.680
Uh, and you know, we were talking about Bitcoin today, not talking about take all your money
02:00:01.300
Take 10% of what you have saved and put it into precious metals.
02:00:09.560
Right now, gold line is having a, I mean, uh, uh, just a remarkable, um, uh, sale going on
02:00:17.820
They're giving away the silver maple flex bar with every gold legal tender bar pack that
02:00:27.860
These are things that I designed years ago with the Canadian mint and gold line.
02:00:31.860
Um, I think they are just the way to own it myself.
02:00:34.960
Um, but you get the, every gold legal tender bar pack you get, you get the silver maple flex
02:00:43.960
The last time this was, uh, presented, they ran out right away.
02:01:06.880
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02:01:31.140
Uh, NATO has said Finland, uh, can join NATO right away.
02:01:37.080
They just have to apply and that, that'll, that'll, you know, that'll, well, that'll be
02:01:41.480
great, uh, Russia, not thinking so, um, you know, not an active war, but, uh, they're