The Glenn Beck Program - July 12, 2019


What Would Jesus Do? | Guests: Bill O'Reilly & Charlie Kirk | 7⧸12⧸19


Episode Stats

Length

2 hours and 3 minutes

Words per Minute

153.98677

Word Count

18,982

Sentence Count

1,704

Misogynist Sentences

41

Hate Speech Sentences

18


Summary

Charlie Kirk and Bill O'Reilly join host Glenn Beck on the Glenn Beck Program to talk about the Epstein scandal, Heidi Fleiss and her prostitution ring, and a new development in the Jeffrey Epstein case that could change the way we look at sex trafficking.


Transcript

00:00:00.000 I'm Hillary, that's your 4-Minute Buzz, and now here's Glenn with the start of our show.
00:00:03.300 Happy Friday!
00:00:04.800 Happy Friday. Thank you so much. Welcome to it from our studios in New York City.
00:00:10.140 One more day. This is the Glenn Beck Program.
00:00:14.060 We're thrilled about the guests we have on today.
00:00:17.280 We have Charlie Kirk, we have Bill O'Reilly,
00:00:19.560 and some really fascinating stuff coming out of the left today that you need to know about.
00:00:25.880 I was asked to plan a cruise.
00:00:27.780 I've been asked for almost a decade now to do this, and I've never wanted to do it.
00:00:33.860 And then they came to me and they said,
00:00:36.140 no, where do you want to go, what would you like to do, and how would you plan it for others?
00:00:42.580 So I planned it for my family, and now you can come.
00:00:47.800 I really like, when I go to places, I like to know all about them, and I like to see the connections.
00:00:54.260 The only reason to learn history is to see where we've been and where we're going.
00:01:00.380 So what we've done is I put a cruise together to go to Venice, to Athens, and then to the Middle East
00:01:07.260 to be able to see the birth of our nation, birth of the Republic, birth of our faith, birth of capitalism.
00:01:16.000 And it's happening next spring.
00:01:17.860 Bill O'Reilly will be with me.
00:01:19.400 Get your tickets now.
00:01:20.580 Make sure you come.
00:01:21.460 Go to comesailaway.com.
00:01:23.460 comesailaway.com.
00:01:25.000 The fusion of entertainment and enlightenment.
00:01:32.280 You remember the case of Heidi Fleiss.
00:01:34.340 She was the Hollywood madam in the early 1990s.
00:01:37.000 And everyone was waiting with bated breath to find out who just might be identified in her little black book.
00:01:45.660 Most of her clients remain a mystery even today.
00:01:50.000 Fleiss ended up serving some time in prison.
00:01:52.720 The curiosity regarding her clientele eventually faded.
00:01:56.700 I mean, we all know there's sleazy people in Hollywood, right?
00:02:00.380 We get that.
00:02:01.320 So the fact that one of them would call for a prostitute was not really a big shock.
00:02:08.380 It was more of slowing down on the freeway to see who was in the accident and how bad they were going to be injured.
00:02:17.660 This is different now.
00:02:19.720 Imagine how different it would be if Fleiss' operation involved human trafficking.
00:02:25.680 High-profile people in her little black book.
00:02:28.660 When it came to human trafficking, and if they were political, the ground would be shaking.
00:02:37.700 And it is shaking.
00:02:39.280 But there's a new development in this story, and we'll tell you all about it.
00:02:45.260 Jeffrey Epstein, coming up in one minute.
00:02:48.980 This is the Glenn Beck Program.
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00:05:07.300 So the Heidi Fleiss story has been turbocharged now with Jeffrey Epstein.
00:05:28.040 The case is getting uglier and more weird the more we look into it.
00:05:33.520 Back in 2007, the charges brought against him were brutal.
00:05:37.260 I want you to listen to this quote.
00:05:39.080 The FBI and the U.S. Attorney's Office determined that from 2001 to September 2007, Epstein has conspired to persuade minors to engage in prostitution, conspired to transport minors across state lines for the purpose of illicit sexual conduct, and recruited a minor across state lines to engage in a commercial sex act.
00:06:02.840 The government has everything they need to put this guy away for life.
00:06:09.140 Court documents have revealed now that Epstein was partnered with a British woman at an international model agency.
00:06:16.180 They allegedly promised girls modeling gigs as a trick to groom them into trafficking.
00:06:21.660 Law enforcement has the names of the victims, lists of several of the accomplices, everything, again, they need.
00:06:30.260 But despite what appeared at the time to be a slam dunk case, the government chose to offer Epstein a plea deal.
00:06:40.740 They slapped him on the wrist with a lesser charge and serving minimal time.
00:06:46.360 Now, not only did this deal get him off easy, but it also immunized him and his co-conspirators from prosecution.
00:06:56.080 Now, I don't think I've ever heard of anything like this happening before.
00:07:01.280 This was a potential of unveiling of a system of elites all over the world, bartering in underage human beings, and nothing was going to happen.
00:07:14.580 No justice was going to be served.
00:07:17.240 How is this possible?
00:07:19.340 Now, the obvious thing is to say, well, this guy just has a lot of clout and a lot of power, and he gets off with a slap on the wrist after being implicated in a major child sex ring.
00:07:35.040 But I wonder if it stops there.
00:07:43.300 Does it include just the names of the people in the little black book of associates and clients?
00:07:51.920 Can he get off with this because he is friends with so many people, and he has blackmail ability on so many important people?
00:08:03.940 I mean, how many powerful people were involved in this?
00:08:07.320 So are they the real reason he's being able to avoid justice for these poor little girls?
00:08:14.540 Well, there's a woman that has been a journalist and been covering this case since 2003.
00:08:19.760 Her name is Vicki Ward.
00:08:20.960 She wrote an article this week that mentions something that I think might be explosive, explosive enough to blow up a good portion of our system.
00:08:34.960 In an interview she had with a former White House official, the topic of Labor Secretary Alexander Acosta came up.
00:08:42.940 Now, Acosta was the U.S. attorney in Miami that offered Epstein that ridiculous plea deal.
00:08:48.740 And everybody's saying, I've never heard of anything like this.
00:08:52.420 How could this have happened?
00:08:54.440 Now, the media is insinuating that this was because, you know, that's why Trump paid him off with this big, you know, with his big job.
00:09:03.700 Because he was hiding things for Donald Trump.
00:09:06.580 Well, the Trump transition team apparently asked Acosta about the plea deal.
00:09:13.900 And this is how he responded.
00:09:16.400 He said he was told by someone in power to back off that Epstein was above his pay grade.
00:09:25.140 I want to give this to you as an exact quote.
00:09:28.200 I was told Epstein belonged to intelligence and to leave it alone.
00:09:33.760 Now, wait a minute.
00:09:37.960 Is this implying that Epstein was working with an intelligence agency as some sort of asset?
00:09:48.060 Was this sex ring being used as blackmail material for powerful people all over the world?
00:09:54.120 Is somebody in the government using and protecting someone like Jeffrey Epstein, using these girls to gain power over very powerful people all over the world?
00:10:08.820 Is it somebody who is listed as clientele in the little black book who would tell a state's attorney to back off?
00:10:35.540 This guy is in Intel.
00:10:40.640 I know this.
00:10:42.060 This case cannot go the way of Heidi Fleiss.
00:10:44.620 This case cannot just disappear.
00:10:47.520 Because when all is said and done, the ground is already shaking.
00:10:53.000 Powerful people and powerful organizations will fall.
00:10:59.020 If this is pursued, they will fall.
00:11:03.620 We have to ask ourselves, do we care that much?
00:11:08.980 Are our politics more important than these kids that have been put in peril and been preyed upon and been used as sex toys?
00:11:21.580 Anyways, where are our real priorities and what does it mean?
00:11:26.780 We all know that our government is very dirty.
00:11:30.340 We all know that there are predators in our government.
00:11:33.540 We know that.
00:11:34.920 So now the question is, now we have the guy who has the decoder ring.
00:11:40.260 What is it we're going to do about it?
00:11:46.240 More in a second.
00:11:47.340 So 5G is going to be a giant leap for mobile communications, offering lightning speeds, more reliable connections, and the ability to stream higher quality video.
00:12:09.540 But it will also mean that there are more targets for attacks.
00:12:14.740 And with more accurate location data, it's going to give 5G hackers the exact address of you.
00:12:21.520 Plus, the risk of state-sponsored surveillance will become more popular.
00:12:26.360 5G is going to change our future.
00:12:29.400 Now the question is, are you going to be the rat in the cage?
00:12:32.860 There are so many threats right now in today's connected world.
00:12:36.320 It takes one weak link for criminals to get in.
00:12:39.540 And when personal information is exposed, someone uses it to commit identity theft.
00:12:45.240 That's why LifeLock exists.
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00:13:42.920 We pause for 10 seconds.
00:13:44.860 Station ID.
00:13:45.440 I'm going to be very glad to go home.
00:14:06.100 I mean, I love New York.
00:14:07.240 It is a great city.
00:14:09.900 I mean, it's just the access to minds and to thinking and to everything is just incredible in New York.
00:14:19.480 But your access to, excuse my French, and I don't think it's French, a-holes is enough.
00:14:27.580 I mean, it's overwhelming.
00:14:30.120 Yesterday in an elevator, I wasn't in an elevator, but some friends were in an elevator, and they had a five-year-old and a nine-year-old.
00:14:38.820 Now, they have eight kids, and they were all out running around all day with these kids.
00:14:44.140 They get into the elevator of this hotel, and two of the kids take and push three extra buttons, okay?
00:14:53.160 And they're like, stop it, stop it.
00:14:55.180 And so the kids stop.
00:14:57.840 Now, as the elevator doors are closing, a woman sticks her hand into the elevator and opens the doors again.
00:15:05.820 And the guy, my friend, said immediately, just so you know, kids pushed some extra buttons here.
00:15:13.900 So if you want to take another elevator, you might.
00:15:17.380 And the woman gets in, and she just does this.
00:15:20.440 Oh.
00:15:20.920 So their first response is, oh, no, not a problem.
00:15:27.180 You know, I got kids.
00:15:28.440 I know what it's like.
00:15:29.160 No, uh-uh.
00:15:30.300 Oh.
00:15:31.780 So she stands there, and they stop at the first floor.
00:15:34.780 It opens.
00:15:35.580 It closes.
00:15:36.660 They continue on.
00:15:39.020 Oh, my gosh.
00:15:41.020 Oh, this is so irritating, she says to herself.
00:15:46.680 So my friend's wife says, wow, some people's lives are really, really hard.
00:15:55.520 That's when the woman turns around and says, you know, I have children.
00:16:03.440 And so my friend tries to lighten things up and says, oh, so then you understand.
00:16:09.240 I mean, kids do stupid stuff sometimes.
00:16:11.580 And she says, no, I have children, and I taught them not to do things like this.
00:16:21.780 First of all, really, did you?
00:16:25.860 You're perfect little angels.
00:16:28.260 Now, if I were on the elevator, I would have started engaging right now.
00:16:33.440 So my friend does not engage when she says, I taught them not to touch the buttons.
00:16:43.040 Oh, and she turns around.
00:16:46.060 That's when my friends just start to laugh.
00:16:49.040 And she doesn't say anything except a few more grunts.
00:16:53.820 Then the elevator doors open.
00:16:55.600 Now, this is the third time it has opened.
00:16:58.240 They only pushed three extra buttons, so she's got an extra floor to go.
00:17:01.660 But they're getting off on this floor.
00:17:04.400 And as they get off, they say, we're really sorry for the hassle.
00:17:08.520 And as they're walking out of the elevator, she says loudly, and yet you laugh about this as if it is no big deal.
00:17:22.320 Now, that's when my friend puts his hand in the elevator to stop the elevator door from closing.
00:17:28.120 And he told me last night, he said, Glenn, I had a choice.
00:17:33.360 I could either tell her exactly what I was thinking, or I could be Christ-like.
00:17:41.340 So when I said to him last night, please tell me you didn't choose Christ.
00:17:50.800 Please tell me this is the one time you said, you know, Jesus, I'm not going your way.
00:17:58.580 And he said, no, I chose Christ.
00:18:04.580 And I said, you know, I'm really sorry.
00:18:07.740 We apologize to you.
00:18:09.980 You know, we're sorry that this has affected your day.
00:18:13.340 And I said, you're pathetic.
00:18:17.320 You're pathetic.
00:18:18.780 This is when my son chimes in, who is really good at accents.
00:18:22.860 I'm not.
00:18:23.440 He's really good at accents.
00:18:24.980 He does a really good Scottish accent.
00:18:27.140 And he said immediately, I would have said, don't get your tit in a ringer.
00:18:37.300 I said, boy, you know, we should have been on that elevator with you.
00:18:42.580 Because I would have looked at her.
00:18:45.140 I would have had a few choice words for her.
00:18:47.560 And then I looked at my son.
00:18:49.280 And I looked at Rafe.
00:18:50.920 And I said, I just would have looked at you and shook my head.
00:18:54.400 And what would you have done?
00:18:55.940 And he said, as you are walking out, dad, I would have hit all of the buttons on the elevator.
00:19:04.220 That's what you're supposed to do.
00:19:06.680 Hey, I know Jesus is wonderful, but there were no elevators with crappy people in them at the time of Jesus.
00:19:16.960 So elevators don't count on the Christlike time.
00:19:20.460 I just I just want to throw that out there.
00:19:25.000 I might be wrong.
00:19:26.100 I have to admit, I was hoping for the I was hoping for the no, I ignored everything I've ever been taught.
00:19:34.280 Right.
00:19:34.520 Lesson two.
00:19:35.100 Yeah.
00:19:35.400 Because I would have.
00:19:36.440 Right.
00:19:37.720 You would have gone.
00:19:38.840 I would have crazy.
00:19:39.960 I wouldn't have been nice.
00:19:41.060 Would not have been nice.
00:19:42.100 No.
00:19:42.740 Although I will say, I mean, the first lesson I taught every one of my children.
00:19:46.420 And I reinforce this year after year.
00:19:49.520 Don't touch the elevator buttons.
00:19:51.960 That was, you know, the uppermost thing in my mind.
00:19:56.460 And I can't believe it wasn't in these parents' minds.
00:19:59.540 No, it was.
00:20:00.540 They've taught their children that.
00:20:02.640 And they did it anyway.
00:20:03.560 They did it anyway.
00:20:06.440 Do you remember, Pat, Tanya and I wanted to buy a piano.
00:20:09.760 We ended up buying like a thousand dollar piano.
00:20:12.060 OK, because none of us really play.
00:20:15.200 And but we had this dream that we were all going to learn, you know, and we had two young children.
00:20:19.980 And so we're going to learn.
00:20:20.880 We get a piano.
00:20:21.960 And I said, well, let's get a good piano.
00:20:24.280 Let's let's, you know, can we look at Steinways?
00:20:27.120 Now, I've never I don't know what a Steinway cost.
00:20:30.200 I thought, like, you know, I don't know, maybe 10,000, maybe 10,000.
00:20:34.880 No, no, no, no.
00:20:37.440 They're about one hundred and twenty five thousand dollars.
00:20:40.220 They can be as high as half a million.
00:20:42.580 And so we walk into the Steinway place and Tanya's like, Glenn, these are really expensive.
00:20:48.320 And I'm like, let's just look, you know.
00:20:50.680 And so I go in there and I'm looking at just like a black one.
00:20:55.280 OK, there's nothing special about it's just a black piano.
00:20:58.380 And I said, so how much is how much is this one?
00:21:01.720 She said, oh, this one hundred and twenty five thousand dollars.
00:21:05.020 And I wanted to say, does it cook me breakfast, too?
00:21:08.920 Or what else does it do besides?
00:21:10.860 Can you live in it?
00:21:11.940 Play music.
00:21:13.220 Yeah.
00:21:13.760 And does it play music on its own?
00:21:15.940 She looked at me like I was a cretin.
00:21:18.460 I'm like for one hundred and twenty five thousand.
00:21:21.040 I should be able to say, hey, play something nice.
00:21:23.700 And the piano should play something nice.
00:21:26.020 OK, without anybody sitting there, unless somebody from Steinway would like to sit in
00:21:30.240 the little chair.
00:21:31.320 Maybe that comes with it for one hundred and twenty five thousand.
00:21:34.340 Maybe a little person comes that can play the piano, too.
00:21:37.800 No.
00:21:38.760 So she's telling me, but we can make these any way you want.
00:21:42.180 And she's showing me all these, you know, inlaid pianos that are like two hundred and fifty.
00:21:46.560 Now I'm kind of getting into it.
00:21:48.140 I'm not I have no intention of buying one.
00:21:50.200 I'm just like I'm just looking at how stupid these pianos could become.
00:21:55.580 And so, you know, but you're doing what you always do when you're way out of your league.
00:22:01.400 You pretend there's a possibility that we might buy it, but we're going to have to go away
00:22:07.900 and talk about it first.
00:22:09.820 So I'm pretending that I'm very interested.
00:22:12.440 And I said, so what do you do, you know, like, do you can you put the little lock on
00:22:18.540 the keyboard thing, you know?
00:22:20.520 And she looked at me like I was a cretin and she said, no.
00:22:24.840 I said, well, you could put anything on these pianos.
00:22:27.120 We don't put little locks on the keyboard.
00:22:28.960 And I said, well, how do you keep your kids?
00:22:31.560 I've got, you know, three year olds.
00:22:33.000 How do you get them from, you know, pounding on the keys?
00:22:36.120 She said, you tell them that it is a Steinway.
00:22:44.080 Oh, I didn't think of that.
00:22:48.340 My gosh.
00:22:49.120 Think of that at all.
00:22:53.040 OK, so anyway, let's go back to the real world here for just a second and talk to you
00:22:58.340 about the cruise through history.
00:23:00.420 If you've ever wanted to take a cruise, this is the cruise to take.
00:23:04.240 It's next spring.
00:23:06.120 I'm going to be there.
00:23:07.000 Bill O'Reilly is going to be there.
00:23:08.480 David Barton, Rabbi Lappin, Stu, possibly some unannounced guests are going to be on board
00:23:15.060 as well.
00:23:16.980 We really want you to come.
00:23:18.520 We're going to go to Venice.
00:23:19.580 Then we're going to go to Athens.
00:23:21.240 We're going to go, if you were a fan at all, of Game of Thrones.
00:23:25.440 What was it?
00:23:26.000 King's Landing.
00:23:28.180 We're going there.
00:23:29.760 It's Dubrovnik.
00:23:31.420 That one's just for fun.
00:23:32.640 And then we're also going to Israel.
00:23:36.760 And we're going to do several shows that you're going to be able to watch.
00:23:39.980 We're going to kind of hang out together.
00:23:41.660 I mean, it's not like you want me hanging out at the pool because I hang out.
00:23:45.620 You know what I'm saying?
00:23:46.820 You don't want to see me in a bathing suit.
00:23:48.340 Anyway, it's an all-inclusive trip.
00:23:50.720 I'd love to have you join my family as we sail away.
00:23:55.080 ComeSailAway.com.
00:23:56.400 Learn all about it.
00:23:57.580 Grab your tickets now before they're all gone.
00:24:00.080 ComeSailAway.com.
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00:25:13.340 Welcome to the program.
00:25:14.980 We have Laura on the phone.
00:25:17.320 Hello, Laura.
00:25:18.040 Welcome.
00:25:19.300 Hi.
00:25:20.280 I, your stories about the Steinway and the elevator are so funny and typical because I used to work in Manhattan.
00:25:30.520 And that's why I'm not anymore because all they are is angry, want to control.
00:25:36.300 And if you don't laugh, you're going to become like them.
00:25:40.400 Oh, I know.
00:25:41.600 I know.
00:25:42.580 It's, it's why I move.
00:25:44.000 One of the reasons why I moved out of New York, you're, you're surrounded by people and not everybody.
00:25:49.560 I mean, there's a lot of normal, hardworking people, but there's a lot of people who are just living in an entirely different world.
00:25:59.440 One that they think that they control, that they think that they can control.
00:26:04.920 Yeah.
00:26:05.160 And you just have to laugh.
00:26:06.140 And everything else, yeah, everything outside of them is just a nuisance and it's not worth, I mean, people who, my son used to work at this store called Bergdorf Goodman's.
00:26:18.500 If you're from New York, you know it.
00:26:20.080 It's a very elite store.
00:26:21.740 Well, people would take their giant dogs in while they're shopping and their dogs would take a crap and then they would look at the store person like, you're going to clean that up, aren't you?
00:26:32.800 And it was part of the policy if whatever, the customer is always right.
00:26:38.160 So you just don't say anything about the dog taking a giant crap.
00:26:42.620 You just go clean it up.
00:26:44.020 And it's insanity.
00:26:46.320 It's just insanity.
00:26:48.700 Thanks for your call, Laura.
00:26:49.960 I will tell you this.
00:26:51.260 I've been going because I had father-daughter dates every night with my daughters, my wife, and my grandchild.
00:27:00.440 And so I get in dressed, I'll get all dressed up and I take my kids out one at a time and because it's a family tradition now, don't start this tradition.
00:27:12.380 It never ends.
00:27:13.740 When it started spreading to my granddaughter, I'm like, wait, that wasn't part of the deal.
00:27:18.040 Anyway, so I was going to a different show every night and let me just give you a couple.
00:27:26.640 If you're thinking about coming to New York, whatever you do, don't see Frozen.
00:27:32.100 Don't see it.
00:27:33.720 Now, I know you don't need that advice of let it go.
00:27:39.780 Just let it go.
00:27:41.360 I know you don't need that advice, but in case you're thinking about it, it's like Disney has just given up.
00:27:48.580 It's like Disney is like, they'll buy anything.
00:27:51.880 I mean, they'll pay money to see anything.
00:27:53.680 And then when they get into that room and they're trapped, we're going to sell them.
00:27:58.100 We're going to sell them some gloves for 35 bucks that aren't even in the movie.
00:28:03.540 They're just used on the stage and then the kids are going to beg and they'll buy them anyway.
00:28:11.900 It's a torture chamber.
00:28:13.760 That's what Frozen is.
00:28:14.960 It's a torture chamber.
00:28:17.320 Then the next night I went to see Beautiful, which is my daughter wanted to see it.
00:28:24.680 I had seen it in Los Angeles.
00:28:26.380 It's the story of Carole King.
00:28:27.680 I love Carole King's music and her her backstory of when she was writing music.
00:28:33.620 I mean, she's written so many famous songs that you had no idea that she had any any part of.
00:28:39.400 And it's a great story, but it's I don't know.
00:28:44.920 Maybe it was I was still pissed off about Frozen.
00:28:47.820 Then then we went to Moulin Rouge.
00:28:51.740 How I didn't see this one coming Moulin Rouge is a movie.
00:28:59.100 It's one of my favorite movies.
00:29:00.800 I really love it because Baz Luhrmann is he's a genius and it's a really risky movie that you either love or you hate.
00:29:08.680 And it's not like it's not like Princess Bride.
00:29:11.680 Princess Bride is a movie that people either get it or they don't.
00:29:16.260 And if you don't get it, I'm not friends with you.
00:29:18.520 OK, this is it's one of those things you could be on a first date before you even spend a dime at dinner.
00:29:25.120 You just say, hey, I'm here to pick you up.
00:29:27.980 And you like Princess Bride?
00:29:30.340 If they say no, say good luck to you.
00:29:33.260 Good luck.
00:29:34.260 OK, and move on.
00:29:36.920 This is this is a movie that says to me we're friends.
00:29:42.460 But how friendly are we?
00:29:44.920 If you don't get this movie and you don't see the beauty in it, OK, we're friends, but we're never going to be really close.
00:29:55.280 I went to see the show with my daughter because she really wanted to see it.
00:29:58.800 Hannah and I'm in the theater and it's nothing but stage stuff and and an excuse for Broadway to dress men as women.
00:30:08.320 That's really all this is.
00:30:09.880 It's like, hey, we can do anything now.
00:30:14.200 OK, great.
00:30:15.180 That's fantastic.
00:30:16.700 And it's a beautiful stage and blah, blah, blah.
00:30:20.100 But it's just it's relentless.
00:30:23.180 And it's going to it's going to run on Broadway forever.
00:30:26.400 It's already a hit.
00:30:28.220 It hasn't really even officially opened.
00:30:30.700 And it's just because it is the elite elite saying we hate everything about America.
00:30:39.280 That's all it is.
00:30:41.420 And so and I'm sitting there and one of the elites is looking at me.
00:30:46.640 I think I told the story earlier.
00:30:48.600 One of the elites is sitting there and she's just looking at me and her husband is staring us down.
00:30:54.320 And I know it's because she either hates me because she recognizes me or she thinks I'm like a Jeffrey Epstein who is dating this 20 year.
00:31:05.840 And she's just looking at me like, oh, you are sick dating that 20 year old woman.
00:31:12.200 You know, and as I watch her, I, you know, I kind of like I kind of cuddle up to my daughter like, yeah.
00:31:18.200 Yeah.
00:31:19.400 And so then she says to me at the intermission and I, I, I chose the Christlike route and I didn't, you know, say the things I wanted to say.
00:31:30.520 Like, yeah, yeah.
00:31:32.060 Now, this is my hot date.
00:31:34.020 She's 25 and she is great in the sack.
00:31:38.020 Instead, when the lady says, so tell me, is this a special date?
00:31:42.520 I said, yeah, it's a father daughter date.
00:31:46.200 She changes and she's like, oh, that's wonderful.
00:31:48.720 And then she goes into her elitism and says, so what have you seen this season?
00:31:54.580 And I said, well, I'm not from here.
00:31:56.420 So, you know, nothing.
00:31:59.120 And she said, oh, well, I mean, this season, what have you seen?
00:32:03.040 I'm like, OK, well, this week I saw Frozen, which was like a dagger to her.
00:32:08.460 And I looked at her and she was like, oh, oh, my gosh.
00:32:11.360 And I said, it was horrible, right?
00:32:13.920 She said, oh, yes.
00:32:15.760 Now, I don't even think she saw it.
00:32:17.640 She just knew she didn't need to be told, let it go.
00:32:20.820 It's the one time I've ever agreed with somebody who is an elite in New York.
00:32:25.740 And then I said, you know, and then we saw Carole King and she was like, oh, that's not even music.
00:32:32.260 And then I really put the dagger in her heart.
00:32:35.480 I said, and I'm going to see Wicked with my one of my younger daughters.
00:32:39.380 And she she almost started vomiting at that moment.
00:32:44.480 But I will tell you, I went to Wicked and it's a great story.
00:32:48.780 If you've never seen it, it's worth it.
00:32:50.200 It's closing this year.
00:32:51.740 It's really a great story.
00:32:53.560 But a couple of things happened.
00:32:54.880 First of all, that's where my people are.
00:32:57.460 My people are at Wicked and they were so great.
00:33:01.020 As I walked in, I saw a bunch of people and they were just they would look at me like and they just smile.
00:33:05.460 They'd be like, yeah, how you doing?
00:33:08.740 And I just look back.
00:33:10.240 I'm doing good.
00:33:12.080 And and so we'd walk through and people would come up to me and they would say, I know you're on your father daughter date.
00:33:17.840 We just wanted to say hi.
00:33:19.100 It was so cool.
00:33:20.000 Everybody was so cool.
00:33:21.980 Just so cool.
00:33:23.460 But I'm sitting there.
00:33:24.780 And because we're in New York, I go everywhere with a protector.
00:33:27.980 And so this guy is sitting next to us.
00:33:31.900 He's he's the chief of our detail and he's sitting right next to us.
00:33:36.040 And about halfway through, I said, what do you think?
00:33:40.600 And, you know, this is a guy who, you know, is pretty good at killing people.
00:33:44.960 I mean, that's what that's what his job was in the in the in the special forces.
00:33:50.380 And so he's, you know.
00:33:52.880 He's not exactly the guy who usually goes to Broadway.
00:33:55.680 And I said, what do you think?
00:33:57.680 And he said.
00:33:59.940 I have no idea what's going on.
00:34:02.560 And I'm thinking, if you can't follow this one, dude, you know, maybe you shouldn't be the gun.
00:34:10.260 Is that bad or good?
00:34:12.600 And so I said, you don't understand it.
00:34:16.040 And he said, well, you know, my childhood.
00:34:18.140 And he had a really tragic childhood.
00:34:20.200 He said, so I never watched any TV and I never seen any movie.
00:34:24.140 So I've never seen the Wizard of Oz.
00:34:27.900 And that was just such a bizarre concept to me.
00:34:31.600 I'm thinking, I mean, I think Osama bin Laden saw the Wizard of Oz.
00:34:36.760 How did you not?
00:34:37.860 You didn't see the Wizard of Oz.
00:34:39.600 And I'm trying to explain it to him in two minutes before the second half starts.
00:34:43.300 And I'm like, OK, so a little girl, she's got a dog named Toto.
00:34:48.060 She she's think how crazy this sounds picked up by a tornado in her house, crashes down on a witch and her shoes are taken because she's got to go on the yellow brick road.
00:34:58.700 And the lady comes down in a bubble and she gives her the shoes.
00:35:01.960 But she doesn't know the power of the shoes and the and the other witch's feet curl up underneath the and then they get on and they meet a scarecrow.
00:35:10.300 And he's like, what the hell?
00:35:11.460 And the curtain's starting to come up.
00:35:13.020 OK, it was bizarre, bizarre.
00:35:17.560 I still think.
00:35:18.660 I still think if you haven't seen the Wizard of Oz, I don't.
00:35:24.940 I don't trust you entirely because you might be a spy and I don't know who you're spying for, because, again, I think even the enemies of our state have seen the frickin Wizard of Oz.
00:35:36.800 So as I'm sitting there and I'm talking to one of the elites at Moulin Rouge, she says, oh, those of you seen.
00:35:44.860 I said, what would you recommend?
00:35:45.760 And she said, oh, you've got to go to Hadestown.
00:35:50.440 And I'm thinking to myself, I think she just told me to go to hell.
00:35:54.060 You've got to see Hadestown.
00:35:56.520 And I said, hey, Hadestown.
00:36:00.280 And she said, yes, it's the Greek myth.
00:36:05.320 OK.
00:36:07.200 About Orpheus.
00:36:10.240 You know, Orpheus and Persephone.
00:36:13.980 And I want to say to her, it's Persephone.
00:36:18.220 OK.
00:36:19.340 It's Persephone.
00:36:21.720 But but I didn't.
00:36:23.380 And I was like, you know, when she said it's Orpheus and the Greek.
00:36:27.040 I just went, oh, yeah.
00:36:29.000 Yeah.
00:36:29.340 Like I've been reading.
00:36:30.340 Like I was just reading that in the bathroom before I got here.
00:36:34.480 So we went to it last night because we did some research on it.
00:36:38.780 And Tanya and I went to it last night.
00:36:41.020 It is worth every penny that you would pay.
00:36:45.220 If I would have if I would have seen that the first night, I would have taken my children to that every single night.
00:36:51.040 And I thought, you know, we went with some friends, the one who chose the Christlike, you know, attitude on the elevator.
00:36:59.740 And so we're going to Hadestown.
00:37:01.720 And they're very Christlike.
00:37:03.640 And so they said they said, they said, do you know anything about this?
00:37:07.200 And I they're texting because they got seats.
00:37:10.120 You know, we were up in the nosebleed.
00:37:11.440 I needed a Sherpa to be able to find my seat.
00:37:15.080 It was the rake of this theater.
00:37:16.800 If I was like in the fifth row in the upper balcony.
00:37:20.180 And I swear to you, if I would have if I would have tripped, I would have landed on the stage.
00:37:26.980 It was it was I needed mountain climbing pants anyway.
00:37:32.320 So they're sitting they're sitting away from us.
00:37:35.500 And and they said, so, do you know, you know, anything about this?
00:37:40.400 And I said to Tanya, I said, it's about hell in New York.
00:37:47.860 I don't think this is a safe zone.
00:37:50.940 And it was it was clean the entire way through.
00:37:56.320 It was really, really it was great.
00:37:59.940 It was really intelligent, but it wasn't talking down to you.
00:38:03.760 You could just enjoy it.
00:38:05.600 You have to know a little bit about the myth, but it's there in the brochure.
00:38:11.180 And it is it is so good.
00:38:13.660 It was so good.
00:38:15.000 That's that's what Broadway should be like.
00:38:19.740 Unfortunately, I have a feeling I was surrounded by people who are far, far better than me.
00:38:27.440 And so if you buy tickets, make sure you buy them in the cheap nosebleed seats, because the people the people who are down on the orchestra level, they think that they are above you.
00:38:45.660 And when you buy the cheap seats, you can clearly say to them, shouting from the balcony.
00:38:51.180 Oh, really?
00:38:53.120 You are beneath me.
00:38:55.140 And and and of course, if it gets really ugly, you could just start tumbling down the stairs and you can take out about 10 of them if you're a big enough man, which I am.
00:39:07.920 All right.
00:39:08.520 Back in just a second.
00:39:19.900 All right.
00:39:20.460 We've seen the video thieves grabbing packages on the news.
00:39:23.180 That's those are called porch pilots and pirates.
00:39:26.460 And the thefts have grown to the point where Texas has just enacted legislation.
00:39:31.620 You can now be sent to jail for 10 years if you're stealing stuff off of people's porches, which might be a little stiff.
00:39:37.400 But I knowing Texas, they were thinking 10 years or I say was string them up and hang them.
00:39:45.320 So 10 years is probably pretty good in Texas.
00:39:48.180 Texas leads the way in personal freedom and the rule of law.
00:39:52.580 And if you don't like it, well, maybe you should get the hell out of Texas.
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00:41:01.180 Hey, Charlie Kirk is going to be on with us today.
00:41:04.200 Founder and president of Turning Point USA.
00:41:06.620 Bill O'Reilly is also going to be a part of the program in just a few minutes.
00:41:13.520 I can't wait to hear from Mr. Bill O'Reilly.
00:41:16.680 He lives about.
00:41:19.860 Well, with traffic, probably about 14 hours away, but he lives just in Long Island, which is just right across the river.
00:41:27.520 And I asked him, I say, come on into the studio.
00:41:29.840 And he said, no.
00:41:32.200 No, no, but if you want to surprise you want to come out to the house, you can come out to the house.
00:41:38.260 And I said, no, no.
00:41:41.500 How about we just call each other on Friday?
00:41:43.780 And he said, OK, if we have to.
00:41:47.180 And I said, exactly, exactly.
00:41:49.500 So he's going to be on with us in all of his cheeriness.
00:41:53.900 This is pleasant, usual pleasant self coming up next.
00:42:01.080 I'm Hillary.
00:42:01.860 That's your four minute buzz.
00:42:02.940 And now here's Glenn and Pat with the next hour of the show.
00:42:05.520 Thank you so much.
00:42:07.020 Appreciate it.
00:42:07.880 Got a big, big rest of the show here for you.
00:42:11.140 And Bill O'Reilly is coming up next.
00:42:14.300 I want to talk to you about our sponsor.
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00:43:34.300 The fusion of entertainment and enlightenment.
00:43:40.540 Boy, there's a lot going on.
00:43:43.140 We have Nancy Pelosi at the throat of AOC.
00:43:46.420 And I mean, they're eating themselves.
00:43:47.780 And it's wonderful to watch.
00:43:50.240 Iran seems hell-bent on a war with the United States.
00:43:54.220 Also, the British ambassador said,
00:43:56.940 Oh, Donald Trump is just a neanderthal.
00:44:02.380 Will things start to change with England once Boris Johnson gets in?
00:44:08.680 Because I think Boris Johnson and Donald Trump are going to get along famously.
00:44:15.040 Also, the big story was Jeffrey Epstein.
00:44:18.860 And this is seemingly working out really well for Donald Trump, I think.
00:44:24.920 And it could expose everyone in the Democratic Party as real, true monsters.
00:44:33.880 We go there with Bill O'Reilly in one minute.
00:44:36.800 This is the Glenn Beck Program.
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00:46:03.080 And we know people love boots, but they want to wear them, you know, with a suit and they might want to wear them also out on the ranch.
00:46:11.000 How can we make this affordable and still have them handmade?
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00:46:33.980 That's one of the things I've missed being here in New York is the customer is always right.
00:46:39.720 Or how about this one?
00:46:41.120 The customer isn't invisible or a pain in the ass.
00:46:46.140 I can't tell you how many people we've run into and they're like, these people, you come into the store and they're like, oh, what?
00:46:53.320 What do you want?
00:46:54.360 You're like, you're getting paid to be here, right?
00:46:58.040 And you knew this was part of the job to talk to people.
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00:47:17.280 Kind of some ominous, scary music because the one, the only, Mr. Happy Pants himself, Bill O'Reilly joins us.
00:47:37.600 Hello, Bill.
00:47:37.880 Happy boots.
00:47:39.720 I'm going to get some of those boots.
00:47:41.280 And happy boots to you, too.
00:47:41.880 Yeah, you sold that pretty well.
00:47:43.300 Are you?
00:47:44.040 Yeah.
00:47:44.560 Yeah.
00:47:45.060 Yeah.
00:47:45.440 Well, I mean, I would get them, you know, and if I would pay extra if they would insert themselves in people's butts for me.
00:47:54.340 So I didn't have to do it.
00:47:55.260 I could just anyway.
00:47:58.140 How are you doing, Bill?
00:47:59.540 I'm the same, which is tragic for everyone.
00:48:01.880 You know that.
00:48:05.720 Were you always as a kid?
00:48:07.760 Were you miserable?
00:48:08.440 No, I was a happy kid, Jerry Mathers-like, a Beaver Cleaver kind of kid.
00:48:15.860 Really?
00:48:16.480 I did beat up Wally on a regular basis.
00:48:19.400 Yeah.
00:48:20.040 What happened to you, Bill?
00:48:21.700 I mean, you had great success.
00:48:23.540 You're very popular, and yet you're just a get-off-my-lawn kind of guy.
00:48:28.960 No, no.
00:48:29.540 I like the urchins on the lawn.
00:48:32.300 If anybody over 25 can't go on the lawn.
00:48:34.900 No, I'm a realist, and just looking at the world the way it is is a little draining these days.
00:48:43.880 Yes, it is.
00:48:45.460 So, Bill, I want to talk to you about Jeffrey Epstein.
00:48:47.920 First of all, do you know him?
00:48:49.540 Do not.
00:48:51.480 Okay.
00:48:52.400 It seems everybody in circles, yeah.
00:48:54.980 I mean, look.
00:48:55.700 No, I know that.
00:48:57.420 I had dinner with a guy last night who was a friend of his, and I didn't know that.
00:49:03.820 I mean, I was talking to this guy about other things.
00:49:06.680 He's a political player.
00:49:09.160 But this guy, he ran in a lot of circles that merge entertainment with politics.
00:49:18.540 There's a guy named Ron Burkle out in Los Angeles.
00:49:22.360 He does that.
00:49:23.640 They basically are very wealthy people with a fleet of private jets.
00:49:28.840 They ferry people around the world for various reasons.
00:49:34.740 I am, as you know, a guy who doesn't comment unless I really know what happened.
00:49:43.300 But I can tell you this.
00:49:44.780 Well, they have so much on this guy, they being the feds in Manhattan and the lower Manhattan, the Southern District.
00:49:53.620 You know, he's looking at probably 15 to 20, and they'll get him.
00:49:58.280 I will tell you, Bill, he'll die in prison, I bet, at that point.
00:50:02.860 I will tell you, being in Manhattan this week, everyone, everyone is talking about it in the upper circles.
00:50:11.680 Everybody is talking about it.
00:50:13.480 Yeah, they're trying to link politicians into him.
00:50:16.600 I did look at that vis-a-vis President Trump.
00:50:19.900 I talked to an attorney in Southern Florida who is very conversant with the victims down there coming forth.
00:50:31.480 Now, there is a court filing on the record that says that Trump, in the early 2000s, expelled Epstein from a Mar-a-Lago.
00:50:42.420 That's on the record.
00:50:43.720 I have to tell you, Bill, I think that Donald Trump not only is looking good in this because of that,
00:50:53.880 he immediately expelled Epstein from his club when he found out he had preyed on a teenager and immediately expelled.
00:51:05.860 They're trying to tie it into him, but I think there's a strong possibility, even though he's been with Epstein before, that he is clean on this.
00:51:18.480 I'm going to go a step further.
00:51:20.160 I would love to hear your opinion on that this may have actually kind of been pushed by Donald Trump in some way.
00:51:31.200 Because, you know, they say, they say, what is his name, Acosta, is, you know, pardon him.
00:51:38.400 Did you see what the reporter actually said that's not getting a lot of play?
00:51:43.300 The reporter said, the one who started this and been following it since the early 2000s.
00:51:48.340 This is the Miami Herald reporter?
00:51:50.140 Yes, and she came out this week and she said, what people really need to understand is, he was asked about this by the Trump campaign.
00:52:03.880 You know, how did you give this sweetheart deal?
00:52:06.140 And he said that it was because he was told by the politically elite above him that, to leave it alone, the guy was an intelligence operative.
00:52:22.160 Now, I don't believe that he was an intelligence operative.
00:52:25.100 Yeah, I can't comment on any of that because I haven't been able to confirm it and I'm not really working the story hard.
00:52:31.140 Not that I just have other things to do, but I think that in America, it is true, if you are a billionaire, you can spread money around and get lenient treatment in our criminal justice system.
00:52:46.880 I believe that's true.
00:52:48.580 I believe that people who make that accusation are accurate.
00:52:52.820 I've seen it myself.
00:52:55.060 And it's very bad.
00:52:57.740 And if anything comes out, they are looking that the division that is the division that is working with the FBI on this and the and the Southern New York officials is the corruption division.
00:53:14.580 Yes.
00:53:15.220 So it's not just the it's right.
00:53:18.580 It's a very good observation back.
00:53:20.640 It's not the it's not the rank and file prosecutors.
00:53:25.020 It's the and it's not the sex crimes division only.
00:53:28.800 Right.
00:53:29.500 It's public integrity.
00:53:30.920 So I don't think there's any doubt that you're going to see more on this story and that it may have a chilling impact on the Democratic Party,
00:53:40.140 because it seems that they were far more involved with Epstein than the Republican Party.
00:53:46.700 However, that's speculation.
00:53:47.940 So now let me let me ask you this.
00:53:51.720 Doesn't this show a pattern of the Democrats that they're going to have start to have a hard time if this comes out and there are big Democrats involved in this?
00:54:00.760 Isn't this aren't they going to have a hard time with the Me Too movement, seeing that one of their big donors was Harvey Weinstein and everyone knew about him.
00:54:12.720 And the other one on this coast was Jeffrey Epstein and everyone.
00:54:18.040 They called his plane the Lolita Express.
00:54:20.580 Yes, everyone knew it.
00:54:22.560 And they still took money and invited him and tolerated him.
00:54:27.640 What does that say about that?
00:54:30.020 Well, it was a division.
00:54:31.100 OK, and there always has been a division.
00:54:34.440 So there are sincere people who believe that American society tolerates behavior that it shouldn't.
00:54:46.920 And they have a right to go out and make their case in the strongest possible way.
00:54:52.640 But there are other people who use these cases for political reasons and which hunted.
00:55:02.260 And we saw that with Kavanaugh.
00:55:03.720 Now, that is the most dangerous example that I can give anyone of how you take an injustice and then compound it a hundred times by a far larger injustice.
00:55:20.580 It's a new book out by Molly Hemingway that gets into Dr. Ford.
00:55:25.220 I'm not I didn't check out Hemingway's research, so I'm not going to repeat it.
00:55:32.000 But I said from the very beginning, this was a witch hunt that almost destroyed Kavanaugh and his family.
00:55:39.860 Kamala Harris drove it.
00:55:41.800 Cory Booker drove it.
00:55:43.500 The New York Times drove it.
00:55:45.400 So they used a legitimate issue.
00:55:48.160 OK, and this spun it around to destroy political opponents so that this is a very complicated issue that Americans should think about very seriously.
00:56:00.020 When I see this Kamala Harris, I see what she did in that Kavanaugh hearing.
00:56:04.880 OK, I could never vote for her for anything ever.
00:56:09.480 This is a dangerous woman.
00:56:10.880 So you let's let's change this subject slightly and talk about what we should be talking about.
00:56:22.080 We should be looking for the predators.
00:56:24.620 But the injustice of these women, I've had I've had people come and say, well, I don't know if I believe it.
00:56:30.860 I mean, why wouldn't they come out and say it?
00:56:32.720 Oh, I don't know.
00:56:34.340 The guy was friends with everyone.
00:56:36.580 He was a billionaire.
00:56:37.520 Everyone, you think they're going to believe you over the voice of a former president who's like, no, Jeffrey's a good guy.
00:56:46.720 They're not going to believe you.
00:56:48.080 And so this this hurts the by not exposing this and not going all the way on this.
00:56:56.720 This hurts anyone who has been a victim of sexual abuse because it just reinforces they're not going to believe you.
00:57:04.600 Well, it's horrible government.
00:57:06.480 And if if they did indeed botch the original case in Florida, as the Miami Herald contends, and it looks like the evidence, you know, a cost is pretty overwhelming.
00:57:19.040 Yeah, a cost is out.
00:57:20.240 All right.
00:57:20.520 So so it looks like that happened.
00:57:22.780 The federal government is trying to right that wrong now.
00:57:25.680 And that's a good thing.
00:57:27.620 But if you know history, you know, that powerful people in politics and entertainment, particularly have gotten away with an unbelievable stuff.
00:57:39.640 Oh, yeah.
00:57:40.420 Because they have the money and the and the access to do whatever they wanted to do.
00:57:47.400 I think the question is.
00:57:50.700 Yeah, that was going to say that's the real question.
00:57:53.320 Is this going to end now?
00:57:55.420 And that's a good thing.
00:57:56.720 That's great.
00:57:57.340 That's a very good thing.
00:57:58.340 Thank you.
00:57:58.820 All right.
00:57:59.080 Back in just a second with more with Bill O'Reilly.
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00:59:34.000 Let me change, because you were just overseas, and I think you went to Germany.
00:59:46.500 Were you over in England at all?
00:59:48.760 No, I was not in England.
00:59:50.860 I went to Germany and Austria, combination business, pleasure.
00:59:55.300 And I wrote a brilliant column, and I hope you read it, called The Plan.
01:00:00.380 Oh my gosh, did I ever.
01:00:01.860 Okay.
01:00:02.380 I've read it.
01:00:03.080 And while I was in Germany, I had very high-level meetings.
01:00:08.720 I love those high-level meetings.
01:00:10.420 And I did a very astute analysis of the tax system there, which is what the Democratic
01:00:18.500 Party wants here.
01:00:19.960 But they won't tell you that.
01:00:20.880 I wish you weren't.
01:00:21.860 I really wish you weren't as humble as you are.
01:00:24.760 You know, I have to say these things.
01:00:26.860 I'm like Trump in that regard, to get your attention.
01:00:30.020 I know.
01:00:30.340 Because you're old and you drift away.
01:00:32.700 You drift away.
01:00:33.600 Yeah, no, I am.
01:00:35.400 I get you back.
01:00:37.360 All right.
01:00:37.800 That's right.
01:00:38.180 Okay, so what was the point of this beautifully, wonderful, best-written piece of all time?
01:00:45.100 What was the point of it again?
01:00:46.660 Okay, I'm in Munich, Germany.
01:00:48.240 And Munich could be in any state, USA, minus the language in the old buildings.
01:00:53.540 People live exactly the same in there as we live in the United States.
01:00:57.460 They have a BMW.
01:00:58.980 They live in small homes or apartments, not expansive like some people live here.
01:01:03.840 But they go to work.
01:01:04.840 They work hard.
01:01:05.720 They're industrious.
01:01:06.560 And after their weekly paycheck, they have no money left over.
01:01:11.820 Nothing.
01:01:12.740 Okay?
01:01:13.080 The government takes everything.
01:01:14.760 They keep them in beer and cigarettes.
01:01:16.620 You can have your little wine.
01:01:17.880 You can have your BMW.
01:01:19.480 You can have your little lederhosen, whatever you want.
01:01:23.420 But you can't have anything left over to put in the bank and invest.
01:01:27.200 And that makes it impossible for German workers to improve their status.
01:01:34.420 So your son and grandson is going to be the same as you, all right?
01:01:39.120 Because the government takes it all.
01:01:41.700 And I break it down so that even Stu could understand it.
01:01:45.480 I mean, I just – it was amazing to me.
01:01:49.100 And I had a guide.
01:01:50.040 I had a guide who was, like, furious about this.
01:01:52.920 And, of course, the underground economy, cash, that they don't declare, is all over the Germany.
01:01:58.100 All over it.
01:01:58.700 So, you know, what's weird, Bill, is, you know, you started out – I was listening.
01:02:03.980 You started out saying, you know, this is the same thing that's happening here in America.
01:02:06.880 I don't know if you saw the Washington Post story from David Montgomery on AOC's chief of change.
01:02:14.020 And he's talking about a meeting between her chief of staff and Sam Ricketts.
01:02:21.480 Is this – is this the millionaire?
01:02:23.100 No, no, no.
01:02:23.420 Okay.
01:02:24.640 That's the money behind her, by the way.
01:02:26.040 This is – okay.
01:02:27.400 Right.
01:02:27.720 But this is – what's his name?
01:02:30.260 Sycott Chakrabarty, who is her sugar daddy when it comes to politics.
01:02:38.280 Right.
01:02:38.960 He is chief of staff.
01:02:40.600 He helped her get elected, et cetera, et cetera.
01:02:43.280 He was meeting with the climate director for the Washington governor, Jay Inslee.
01:02:49.020 And it's a – it's a – it's a – it's a article about their conversation.
01:02:54.600 And it is amazing.
01:02:56.960 Chakrabarty had an unexpected disclosure.
01:02:59.380 He said, the interesting thing about the new Green Deal – this is a quote – it wasn't originally a climate thing at all.
01:03:06.760 Ricketts greeted the startling notion with an intended poker face.
01:03:10.220 Did you guys think of it as a climate thing?
01:03:12.820 Because we really think of it as a how you change the entire economy thing.
01:03:19.020 And it goes into how they are talking – and it's – I don't know if this is written as a bad thing or not.
01:03:26.900 It's the Washington Post.
01:03:28.480 But it's horrifying where they're just talking about, yeah, you know, we cloaked it as a climate thing.
01:03:33.880 But it really has nothing to do with that.
01:03:36.420 And Inslee's people say, well, I know.
01:03:39.280 And it's good because it included the climate, which we have to do.
01:03:43.040 But this whole system needs to be destroyed.
01:03:46.640 We need to end the free market.
01:03:48.380 And it's amazing how open they are.
01:03:51.220 Just this week, France passed a tax on anyone flying out of that country got to pay 18 euros, which is about 25 bucks, just to leave on a plane.
01:04:06.360 All right?
01:04:06.720 And they say this is the environmental tax.
01:04:09.140 Now, you look at France and you go, this isn't going to do anything for the environment at all, anywhere.
01:04:17.100 This is just another sneaky way to take as much money as you can from anybody on your soil.
01:04:23.320 So that's what's happening here.
01:04:28.280 Okay, we're going to continue with Bill O'Reilly from BillOReilly.com.
01:04:32.500 He's got a great book coming out this fall about Donald Trump.
01:04:35.900 You want to pre-order it right now, just go to the Bill O'Reilly page at Amazon.com and order it now.
01:04:42.840 BillOReilly.com is also where you will find his daily rant, you know, and his happy corner.
01:04:51.040 Uh, it's quite a happy place.
01:04:54.040 BillOReilly.com.
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01:06:22.220 Welcome to the program, Mr. Bill O'Reilly.
01:06:25.520 By the way, Bill, it's nice of you.
01:06:27.880 I'm sure I'm going to see you tonight at Carnegie Hall where my daughter is performing.
01:06:31.920 Very, very nice.
01:06:33.020 It's very impressive.
01:06:34.040 I hope she does well.
01:06:35.200 I'm out here in eastern Long Island staring at the ocean right now.
01:06:38.980 But if I were closer, I would certainly come in.
01:06:42.560 It's not like I'm asking you to come across the country.
01:06:44.360 I mean, she's performing.
01:06:45.460 Now, when I say she's performing, she was kind enough not to say, you know, she said,
01:06:50.320 please don't put my name even in the title.
01:06:52.120 She'll, you know, in fact, tuck me into the back, you know, of one of, you know, in the, in one of just any row of this, this giant choir.
01:07:01.160 Uh, so she doesn't, you know, she didn't want to stick out.
01:07:04.120 So you probably, if you haven't been to Carnegie Hall, those listeners haven't been there, it's probably the, uh, most iconic, uh, concert hall in the country.
01:07:12.800 And so anybody performing there will remember that the rest of their life.
01:07:18.040 Yeah.
01:07:19.240 Yeah.
01:07:19.780 I just thought as a friend, you should be there.
01:07:21.640 And Beck, if you had invited me earlier, I certainly would have gone, uh, but you did.
01:07:25.600 Oh, I know.
01:07:26.200 I know.
01:07:26.560 I know you're too busy.
01:07:28.180 You're, you're, you know, I'm like an afterthought on Fridays.
01:07:31.840 Um, you know, no, no heads up.
01:07:34.040 That's fine.
01:07:34.560 Like that.
01:07:35.380 No big deal.
01:07:36.040 No big deal.
01:07:36.720 No big deal.
01:07:37.640 You know, there's two performances tomorrow as well.
01:07:39.500 But anyway, um, let's, uh, let's talk a little bit about Iran.
01:07:44.360 What the hell is happening with Iran?
01:07:46.080 Are they, are they, do they want war?
01:07:49.760 No, I don't think they want war, but they're trying to, uh, this is called, uh, you know,
01:07:55.820 saber rattling, wag the dog, you know, there was a movie called wag the dog with Dustin
01:08:01.960 Hoffman.
01:08:02.380 Their economy is so bad and the people are so restive, um, that the mullahs are really
01:08:10.620 frightened.
01:08:11.800 They're going to be overthrown.
01:08:13.520 And the only way they see that they can keep their power is to, you know, inflame some kind
01:08:22.240 of conflict with America and the West and Israel.
01:08:25.180 So that the Iranian people, the Persian people say, oh yeah, they're the bad guys and they're
01:08:31.560 the fault.
01:08:32.280 That's why we have a terrible economy.
01:08:33.880 It's them.
01:08:35.060 This is what it is.
01:08:36.920 And so to me, um, the Iranians are going to go up to a line and they'll stop.
01:08:44.860 But if they don't stop, I can guarantee you that Donald Trump will launch some bombings
01:08:52.160 in that country and, you know, put a hurt on them pretty quickly.
01:08:57.560 Yeah.
01:08:58.080 The press is trying to make, um, Donald Trump into a warmonger.
01:09:01.300 He's been against every war that we have fought in the Middle East.
01:09:05.080 I think forever.
01:09:06.200 Biden is not the guy who wants war.
01:09:08.840 Biden is trying to use this.
01:09:11.120 Um, keep your eye on Biden.
01:09:13.280 Biden is a really interesting guy.
01:09:15.500 They're setting they, the radical left, which despises Biden, wants him out of the race.
01:09:21.200 They're setting Biden up to be a racist.
01:09:22.920 All right.
01:09:23.700 They did it again this week, um, that Biden doesn't like blacks and his voting record in
01:09:29.260 the Senate was anti-black.
01:09:30.740 You're going to see that thrown at him in the next debate.
01:09:33.560 But Biden to counter is basically saying, I'm the smart guy on foreign policy.
01:09:40.000 I'd get back into the Paris peace accords on global warming.
01:09:43.700 And I would get back to negotiating with the Iranians and get everything back, calm down
01:09:48.600 like we had it under the Obama administration.
01:09:51.240 That's where Biden.
01:09:52.220 And that's why the left.
01:09:53.620 Right.
01:09:54.140 And that's why the left doesn't like him because they really are a burn it to the ground.
01:10:00.680 Let's start our final, you know, socialist state.
01:10:04.720 And they don't see him as an agent of change.
01:10:07.200 They see him, uh, like a Macron.
01:10:11.200 Where is this going to be more of the same?
01:10:13.140 That's who Biden is.
01:10:14.040 Biden doesn't want to burn the system down.
01:10:15.980 The system gave Biden $15 million in the last two years.
01:10:20.240 And Biden, I used to track Biden's charitable givings, which were nothing.
01:10:27.700 In 2016, he gave five, he and his wife gave $5,000 of charity.
01:10:32.120 I mean, it's ridiculous.
01:10:33.780 But as soon as he figured out he might want to run again, then he gave a mill.
01:10:38.160 The next year in 17, he kicked a million in charity.
01:10:41.180 He was, Steve, come on, Joe, you're trying to figure.
01:10:42.900 But anyway, Biden doesn't want to burn the system down because Biden has exploited the
01:10:47.200 system to the nth degree.
01:10:49.740 However, Biden is going to come now as the statesman and I can make the world like America
01:10:57.040 again and I can deal with the mullahs and I can deal with climate change and all this.
01:11:02.320 So that's where he's going.
01:11:03.340 Well, I have to tell you, I think if they don't go with Biden, they don't really have
01:11:09.640 a chance.
01:11:10.620 And if they do go with Biden, I don't think they have a chance only because I don't think
01:11:16.140 the left is going to rally around Joe Biden.
01:11:21.120 They are a ladder.
01:11:22.880 I think a bargain is going to be made fairly early that is going to be Biden-Harris ticket.
01:11:30.540 OK, and then Biden is going to tell the chieftains of the Democratic Party, I'm only going to
01:11:36.400 do one term and you're going to get Kamala.
01:11:39.820 OK, that's what I think is going to happen.
01:11:43.000 Now, they'll never admit it.
01:11:44.360 You'll never see it.
01:11:45.840 But I am almost positive.
01:11:49.700 That's how that makes sense.
01:11:51.460 OK, that makes sense.
01:11:52.640 Kamala gets the second and then Biden is going to do one term and then go back to Biden
01:11:59.120 land, which is in Delaware.
01:12:01.960 So then so help me out on how this is.
01:12:05.220 Help me out on how this is going to play out, though, with I mean, right now it is out and
01:12:10.820 out war with AOC and Nancy Pelosi.
01:12:14.560 But it's not because Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez has no power at all.
01:12:21.100 None.
01:12:21.540 Zero.
01:12:22.700 She can't do anything other than get media attention.
01:12:27.280 OK, I mean, if you think that she has power, then you think Whoopi Goldberg has power.
01:12:33.200 It's the same thing.
01:12:35.340 Cortez will be on the view within five years.
01:12:38.100 I can guarantee it.
01:12:39.240 Yes, true.
01:12:40.020 All right.
01:12:40.300 Yes, true.
01:12:40.920 So she has no power.
01:12:42.440 However, she is she is a cultural icon right now with many on the left.
01:12:48.660 So what?
01:12:49.340 Nancy Pelosi.
01:12:49.920 Culture.
01:12:50.420 Culture leads politics.
01:12:52.520 You know that culture leads politics.
01:12:55.300 Beck, you're out of your mind.
01:12:56.560 This is so ridiculous.
01:12:57.740 This whole thing is contrived.
01:12:59.200 Nancy Pelosi has all the power in the House of Representatives because she says to the
01:13:04.580 Democrats, unless you vote the way I want you to, we're not going to give you any money
01:13:08.880 to run for reelection.
01:13:09.980 You've got to run every two years.
01:13:11.160 So 90 percent of the Democrats say, yeah, Nancy, I need your money.
01:13:15.420 I'll do anything you want.
01:13:17.160 Anything.
01:13:18.340 That's how it's run.
01:13:19.960 There are four that don't need her money.
01:13:22.520 Ocasio-Cortez doesn't need a dime from the Democratic infrastructure because Hollywood
01:13:27.640 and the far left loons will fund her and the other three, Omar, whatever their name,
01:13:33.900 the Muslim ladies.
01:13:35.240 They don't need her so that they can say whatever they want.
01:13:39.100 All right.
01:13:39.520 But they don't have I agree with you.
01:13:41.720 Wait, wait, wait, Bill.
01:13:42.880 I agree with you on all of this, but you're out of your mind if you don't think that they
01:13:48.660 are a cultural icon now for the uber left and especially those under 30.
01:13:58.320 This is culture.
01:14:00.520 That's a sliver of the American people.
01:14:04.120 They can't look when Ocasio-Cortez says that we have concentration camps on the southern
01:14:11.280 border while I'm standing in the middle of Dachau.
01:14:15.620 OK, I'm this Americans know this is insane.
01:14:22.160 Now, is there a cadre of people that follow what she says and believe it?
01:14:27.900 Yes, but it's maybe two percent.
01:14:31.060 She has no power.
01:14:33.240 She's not going to ever do anything in the American government.
01:14:36.560 She's just there to promote herself like Megan Rapinoe.
01:14:41.060 They're the same person.
01:14:43.940 OK, yeah, yeah.
01:14:44.840 And and she'll be gone.
01:14:47.180 So what Pelosi does is give her power.
01:14:50.220 Pelosi's bestowing power on her by by engaging.
01:14:55.140 Just ignore her.
01:14:56.260 Who cares the way what she votes?
01:14:58.680 She's a nut.
01:15:00.040 All right.
01:15:01.140 She's insane.
01:15:03.060 And the press, of course, loves it.
01:15:07.340 So here's let me go back to this Washington Washington Post article.
01:15:16.360 They talk about the Ocasio-Cortez's guy and Ricketts, who is, you know, with Inslee and
01:15:25.760 they talk about I like to show my cards and see the people reactions.
01:15:31.780 I wanted to get a sense of where they're coming from.
01:15:34.720 They seem open and hungry and want to do stuff.
01:15:37.480 He's talking about people.
01:15:38.680 In my mind, an ideal situation is we have a president surrounded by a bunch of people
01:15:44.880 who are constantly thinking we could go bigger, bolder, faster.
01:15:48.640 I don't know if Inslee is going to be president, which he's not.
01:15:51.900 But if he runs a really good campaign, maybe ends up running a big agency with the mindset
01:15:56.260 he's going to bring something big.
01:15:58.960 He said we've got a completely different theory of change, which is you do the biggest, most
01:16:05.940 badass thing you possibly can, and that will excite people.
01:16:10.240 And then they're going to vote because the reality is our problem isn't that more people
01:16:15.000 are voting Republican than Democrat.
01:16:16.760 Our problem is most people who would vote Democrat aren't voting because they don't have
01:16:23.420 a vision for America.
01:16:25.020 So their idea is people are getting primed for change on both sides.
01:16:30.940 And I believe this to be true.
01:16:32.300 They're being primed that this system doesn't work and we've got to change.
01:16:37.640 Now, I would say we've got to reset back to our constitution, et cetera, et cetera.
01:16:43.080 But others will say, no, we're going to you know what?
01:16:46.340 We're going to we're going to do clean jobs and we're going to have this big, big vision.
01:16:50.880 And a lot of people, because it will be culturally acceptable, we'll go in that direction.
01:16:57.380 And that's the power of AOC.
01:17:00.800 If the media didn't prop her up, she wouldn't have anything.
01:17:05.720 Jay Inslee is points is polling at zero point seven percent.
01:17:10.100 He won't even get over one percent.
01:17:13.520 The American public, by and large, do not want radical people in power.
01:17:19.800 That's not going to change anytime soon.
01:17:23.400 OK, so they can huff and puff and blow the house down.
01:17:28.440 But it's not going to matter.
01:17:30.480 This is a totally media driven phenomenon, this Ocasio-Cortez, a hundred percent.
01:17:38.820 All right.
01:17:39.180 Her district, if you go to her district, I mean, you've got 16,000 votes.
01:17:43.880 It's crazy.
01:17:45.540 But there is the danger if if if Americans, good people bail out of the system.
01:17:54.220 All right.
01:17:54.880 And then go to their machines of which they're addicted and did spend their whole life on their computers and their smartphones.
01:18:02.460 Then incrementally, this this will take on a threat.
01:18:07.000 But it's not there now.
01:18:10.360 OK, real quick.
01:18:11.600 I just want to ask you this.
01:18:13.140 You know, we had the ambassador of Great Britain say horrible things about Donald Trump.
01:18:16.640 And then he quit, which he should have.
01:18:19.800 You know, an ambassador needs to be a diplomat.
01:18:22.400 And but when you're looking at the future and it looks like Boris Johnson may be the next prime minister, Boris Johnson could be Donald Trump's Margaret Thatcher.
01:18:35.540 I think they'd make a good team together.
01:18:38.180 I don't know if you're worried that way.
01:18:41.300 But all I know is there will be many discussions about hair.
01:18:45.940 OK, between Trump and Boris, there's going to be a lot of hair stuff going on.
01:18:53.160 There'll be a lot of.
01:18:54.000 Yes.
01:18:54.420 Yeah, they're both blonde.
01:18:55.860 OK, it's both kind of out of control.
01:18:58.300 It's going a lot of different directions.
01:19:00.020 All right.
01:19:00.620 So they have a lot.
01:19:01.680 OK, well, that's that's a that's analysis that you would only get from Bill O'Reilly.
01:19:06.920 The analysis that you would never expect.
01:19:09.520 Bill O'Reilly, thank you so much.
01:19:11.380 All right.
01:19:11.760 Always a pleasure, guys.
01:19:12.980 Thanks for having me.
01:19:13.600 And all right, thank you.
01:19:15.580 Bill O'Reilly from Bill O'Reilly dot com.
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01:20:41.020 This is the Glenn Beck Program.
01:20:45.240 You know, you and Bill were talking about the pay gap and Megan Rapinoe from the soccer team.
01:20:52.100 It's making such a big deal out of it.
01:20:53.400 Now, are you aware that the U.S. women's soccer team a couple years ago, this was in 2017, played a male team in Dallas.
01:21:03.420 FC Dallas.
01:21:04.360 They came to Dallas and they played FC Dallas.
01:21:07.100 A men's team.
01:21:07.280 They played a male team.
01:21:08.660 Well, okay, by men, I mean under 15.
01:21:11.800 These are 13 and 14-year-old boys.
01:21:13.700 And they played this male team.
01:21:17.580 Please tell me.
01:21:19.500 And lost 5-2.
01:21:21.720 Not just lost.
01:21:23.440 They were crushed 5-2 by 14-year-old boys.
01:21:30.360 Now, the Christ-like part of me would say, I don't know.
01:21:37.940 I don't know what the Christ-like part of me would have me say.
01:21:41.320 Because I'm not really searching real hard on what Christ would say about this.
01:21:45.300 But the Glenn part of me would say, yes!
01:21:50.220 I know.
01:21:51.420 I couldn't believe.
01:21:52.120 When I heard this story, I'm like, okay, make sure.
01:21:55.300 Please tell me that's true.
01:21:56.620 Please look it up and find it on it.
01:21:58.420 It's in Newsweek.
01:21:59.700 It's in CBS Sports.
01:22:01.080 It's all over the place.
01:22:02.260 And tuning up for a game against Russia, they played FC Dallas Under-15 Boys Academy.
01:22:09.720 Oh, my gosh.
01:22:10.820 And lost 5-2.
01:22:12.700 Can I tell you something?
01:22:13.980 This is why there's not equal pay in that particular field.
01:22:19.600 Who wants to go see that?
01:22:22.160 Nobody.
01:22:22.560 If they're being beaten by 13-year-old boys, I can go see that on a Saturday for free with my kids.
01:22:30.920 I know.
01:22:31.440 You know what I mean?
01:22:32.300 It kind of explains the revenue.
01:22:34.020 You know, the revenue for the Men's World Cup was $6 billion.
01:22:38.440 The revenue for the Women's World Cup was $131 million.
01:22:42.440 There's a disparity there.
01:22:44.300 And it's kind of tough to overcome.
01:22:47.680 Maybe if we have them, maybe if they are wearing something kind of, you know, scantily clad and they're kissing each other, more men would go.
01:22:59.120 But I think that's wrong.
01:23:00.740 And Jesus would not want that to happen.
01:23:03.160 No, he would not.
01:23:04.160 No.
01:23:06.700 The fusion of entertainment and enlightenment.
01:23:10.500 Well, the president had a social media summit at the White House, and it's being spun a lot of different ways.
01:23:23.660 And what really happened?
01:23:25.380 Charlie Kirk was there at the White House while this was going on.
01:23:29.980 We will find out what happened at that meeting, who was there, why they were chosen, and what the solution is.
01:23:38.060 He's got a great op-ed that came out a couple of days ago or yesterday about how to fix the social media platforms.
01:23:46.660 And that is to treat them as publishers, which they are.
01:23:50.660 You start to edit.
01:23:52.280 You're not a platform.
01:23:53.980 You're an editor.
01:23:55.880 You're a publisher.
01:23:58.760 And that means you can be sued for what's on your platform.
01:24:03.900 That would change their stock price overnight.
01:24:07.040 He's right about this.
01:24:09.040 We talked to Charlie Kirk in one minute.
01:24:12.500 This is the Glenn Beck Program.
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01:24:46.820 I'm in this area and I need a great real estate agent.
01:24:49.720 Usually with 5 or 10 minutes, you will be talking to somebody about what your needs are.
01:24:55.000 I mean, unless you're doing it in the middle of the night.
01:24:57.860 So they are looking to serve you and they have a sense of urgency.
01:25:02.820 They're professional.
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01:25:55.980 Charlie Kirk is a best-selling author.
01:26:24.840 He was featured in Forbes magazine, the 30 under 30 in 2018.
01:26:29.500 He's the youngest speaker ever at the 2016 Republican National Convention.
01:26:35.360 He is an Eagle Scout.
01:26:36.840 He started Turning Point USA, which is now one of the biggest grassroots organizations with 1,200 high school and college campuses nationwide, blanketed, 150 full-time staff, and he's 24 years old.
01:26:55.000 This guy is quite amazing.
01:26:57.400 Welcome to the program, Charlie Kirk.
01:26:59.960 Thank you so much for having me, Glenn.
01:27:01.640 Great honor.
01:27:02.240 Thank you.
01:27:02.600 So, you know, Charlie, I posted something that you wrote to me when I was at Fox and you were like 17 and you say, I'm speaking at tea parties and blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
01:27:12.560 And I read some of the comments after, and you have a lot of people that don't like you.
01:27:17.880 And you tweeted something about me a couple of weeks ago, and I'm reading the comments underneath that, and there's a lot of people that don't like me.
01:27:26.520 You're a very controversial person, as I am.
01:27:33.460 Tell me what you feel like you are doing and why your work is important.
01:27:41.640 Well, again, thank you for having me on the show.
01:27:44.220 It's always a great honor.
01:27:45.540 I mean, kind of the main big picture of what I'm trying to accomplish and what I'm trying to do at Turning Point USA is try to continue the most successful experiment in human history, which is the American experiment.
01:27:59.780 There's no guarantee that this is going to continue.
01:28:02.880 The constitutional republic that, you know, we're still enjoying to this day but seems to be crumbling around us, there's no guarantee that this experiment will still be successful.
01:28:14.400 And my focus is primarily on college and high school students that are not necessarily opposed to our ideas, that they're never exposed to them at all in the first place.
01:28:24.120 And it is putting forth the ideas of individual liberty, limited government, constitution, American exceptionalism, you know, the ideas that were really birthed and rooted in the Scottish Enlightenment that have allowed the greatest civilization ever to exist in the history of the world to have that permission to exist.
01:28:41.480 And it draws some critics, some people on the left and some people on the right that might not seem to think that there is a sense of urgency to save the country right now.
01:28:53.000 And that's perfectly fine.
01:28:54.340 That's how you know you're making a difference and you know that better than anybody else.
01:28:58.680 But the main thesis of what we're doing is that there's an entire generation that instead of being thankful that they're living in America, they're angry that they're living in America.
01:29:08.380 And there's no way you can make an argument that it's healthy for our country or for our society.
01:29:14.060 So, Charlie, you were at this meeting at the White House where the president brought in some social media people and the press is saying that these people are very controversial and some of them are.
01:29:32.640 Who was there and why and how were these people chosen?
01:29:36.300 Well, I was there.
01:29:38.980 Our good friend Lilo Rose was there from Live Action.
01:29:42.700 Our friends from Prager University were there, Heritage Foundation.
01:29:46.160 And there were some people that I haven't met before and I've seen some of their content online.
01:29:50.940 Definitely more in the creative space.
01:29:53.400 But what I think is really promising about the kind of conservative movement is we don't all have to agree.
01:30:00.640 We don't even all have to agree on tactics at times.
01:30:03.560 At times, it's almost as if the leftist media is attacking Donald Trump for not having everyone be exactly the same in the room, almost as if that's what they're used to.
01:30:13.140 They're used to looking at a press pool where there's no disagreement whatsoever, which is completely antithetical to what journalism and expression should be.
01:30:22.640 And so I actually applaud the fact that not everyone in the room agrees on every issue or sees eye to eye on even the way to go about advancing those issues.
01:30:30.880 That's something that should be celebrated.
01:30:33.540 But the insinuation that this is some form of a radical summit, nothing could be further from the truth.
01:30:40.040 I mean, you have...
01:30:41.080 Sorry, go ahead.
01:30:43.180 Go ahead. No, go ahead.
01:30:45.460 No, I just finished the point.
01:30:47.380 I mean, there's people in there that are consistently attacked in a misleading way by the media for doing nothing more than investigative journalism
01:30:56.720 or really exposing, you know, some of the biggest stories of our time.
01:31:00.740 And I wouldn't call Lila Rose a radical.
01:31:03.140 I mean, Planned Parenthood would call Lila Rose a radical.
01:31:05.900 That doesn't make her one.
01:31:09.420 And certainly Prager is not.
01:31:11.700 And Prager is being, you know, his algorithms are all upside down to make sure people stay away from Prager University.
01:31:19.380 So what came out of this meeting?
01:31:25.840 Well, first and foremost, the fact the meeting happened in the first place is a really promising sign.
01:31:33.060 It shows that the White House is listening in real time to the wants and concerns of the American people.
01:31:38.880 I think this issue of tech censorship is one that has been given a much bigger platform over the last two, two and a half years than it was, you know, previous to that.
01:31:49.700 And I think that the tech companies are really unchecked and out of control in a lot of different ways.
01:31:55.700 And whether it be the demonetization of Stephen Crowder's videos or the restriction of Prager University videos on YouTube
01:32:01.880 or Lila Rose not being allowed to advertise on Twitter while Planned Parenthood is, these sorts of isolated incidents, it shows an actual pattern.
01:32:11.580 And so the big takeaway, first and foremost, is that this has really elevated this issue to the highest possible level
01:32:17.540 and has definitely got the tech companies' attention.
01:32:20.400 And now the president even said that he wants to call the tech companies back in and have them answer some of these questions
01:32:25.860 of why these individuals and why these voices are being suppressed.
01:32:28.960 But even beyond this, is that this has been, and this is where I really applaud the president,
01:32:34.900 this has essentially been a third rail of politics issue for whatever reason,
01:32:39.880 that both parties have been perfectly fine with, you know, bending the knee to the South Valley oligarchs and elites.
01:32:46.200 Because Google, for example, is the most lobbied for company in the world.
01:32:50.520 I mean, they have an amazing amount of K Street lobbyists that advocate for them.
01:32:54.680 So this was not necessarily something that, you know, the president will benefit from politically,
01:32:59.580 from the, you know, the wise men of Washington or the K Street ruling class.
01:33:03.420 But it's something that resonates with the American people
01:33:05.580 and definitely puts a lot of these social media oligarchs on defense.
01:33:09.420 And I think that's for the better.
01:33:10.760 Let me, let me switch subjects about Tommy Robinson, changed to Tommy Robinson.
01:33:19.020 Will Cowell was on with me.
01:33:20.240 Andrew Will Cowell was on yesterday and he was speaking about Tommy Robinson.
01:33:24.580 And I don't know, I haven't spoken to Tommy Robinson and I haven't done a lot of in-depth homework
01:33:30.240 because it's over in England.
01:33:32.240 And, you know, I see things on both sides and think, ah, that's kind of bad.
01:33:37.280 And then other side, you know, other times I think, ah, no, I think he's being persecuted.
01:33:41.660 But I'm not sure.
01:33:43.820 The blaze just did a story on Tommy Robinson.
01:33:48.420 Tommy Robinson was not convicted of journalism.
01:33:51.400 He was convicted of illegal immigration, assaulting a cop and fraud.
01:33:55.420 He's no hero.
01:33:57.680 I don't know.
01:33:58.660 I haven't even had a chance to read this whole thing.
01:34:00.780 Um, and I don't know, I'd like to talk to Tommy myself and, and ask him about some of
01:34:08.140 these things.
01:34:08.720 Do you know Tommy?
01:34:10.100 And I know Donald Jr.
01:34:12.600 Uh, has come out and said, Hey, we should, you know, we should at least consider what he's
01:34:17.840 saying about coming here to America because he's facing jail time.
01:34:22.880 Um, do you know him?
01:34:25.280 What is your feeling on him?
01:34:27.520 And, and is this something that we should be considering?
01:34:32.840 So I do not know him.
01:34:34.420 And I, like you, am hearing very conflicting information on this story.
01:34:39.680 And usually that goes to show me that the truth is somewhere in the middle of both of
01:34:45.320 those things.
01:34:46.080 Usually that's just kind of comes from, uh, experience there.
01:34:49.940 I will say this though.
01:34:51.280 I think what is really difficult for us Americans to understand is how the UK and Europe really
01:35:00.160 don't appreciate free speech at all whatsoever or, or the freedom of the, they don't have
01:35:04.280 a first amendment, right?
01:35:05.980 They don't, they don't.
01:35:07.240 And I mean, the, the kind of Corbynite movement in the United Kingdom led by Jeremy Corbyn,
01:35:12.940 the leader of the labor party is essentially his satellite cell is Bernie Sanders in the
01:35:18.760 States.
01:35:19.120 And so what I'm, my point kind of where I'm talking about with Tommy Robinson and all of
01:35:23.540 this is that it's a tough thing sometimes for Americans to digest saying, wait a second,
01:35:28.480 Tommy was locked up last year for filming outside of a courthouse.
01:35:33.060 And yes, there, there are laws about that in the United Kingdom, whether they're, I think
01:35:38.700 they're totally incorrect.
01:35:40.420 Um, and, but there, there is something that goes to show that if the left in this country
01:35:44.980 gets their way and they want to make America Europe, I mean, you're going to have a completely
01:35:50.280 different set of standards and rules.
01:35:51.680 And I think that applies in this case.
01:35:54.300 And I can't speak to the other stuff in regards to Tommy.
01:35:56.880 I, I, I read a similar article to that where someone talks about the illegal immigration and
01:36:02.320 so on and so forth.
01:36:03.620 Um, but I, I, I, again, when you hear such conflicting information, I think the truth
01:36:08.860 is somewhere in between there.
01:36:10.580 So, yeah.
01:36:11.640 And I think it's, it's both a frightening thing, but at the same time, a really good thing
01:36:16.520 that I'm not willing to take other people's words for it.
01:36:19.880 You know, I, I want to personally do my own homework and I want to talk to the person and
01:36:25.740 I want to look at both sides myself before I judge it.
01:36:29.700 And I think that's, that's really good.
01:36:32.580 That's what we didn't do.
01:36:33.980 Really.
01:36:34.740 I think many people didn't do on Kavanaugh.
01:36:37.320 They were just, uh, going along with their side until Kavanaugh really spoke out and the
01:36:44.360 two were sitting there.
01:36:45.240 And I think America figured out, I don't know, I can't, I can't be the guy who decides the
01:36:54.160 guilt or innocence, um, with a media trial.
01:36:57.880 And I think that maybe this is good that we're a little wary of judging people, uh, as good
01:37:06.140 or bad.
01:37:06.840 Would you agree with that?
01:37:07.980 I totally agree.
01:37:09.440 And, and, and look, the whole idea of due process and the idea of the cross-examination
01:37:13.940 of witnesses and trial by jury is to try to remove kind of the trial by the mob.
01:37:20.280 And, and this was something that was really rooted in English common law, which was trying
01:37:24.600 to bring rationality and try to derive emotion away from sentencing.
01:37:30.300 And I, and we saw this with the Covington kids back in January.
01:37:33.440 Let us not forget how the media was so quick to indict a group of high school kids because
01:37:38.540 they dared wear, wear, make America great against that, you know, on, um, on a monument
01:37:43.240 in Washington, DC, while an agitator got up in the face and in their face and started
01:37:47.780 banging a drum.
01:37:48.920 And all of a sudden we were supposed to believe these were the worst kids in the world.
01:37:53.000 Uh, I've, I've only got about 40 seconds here.
01:37:55.820 Can you just tell me on your, your editorial about naming, uh, these, uh, the corporate,
01:38:04.040 you know, Google, Facebook, et cetera, naming them not platforms by, or, uh, instead naming
01:38:09.240 them publishers, which carry some real heavy, uh, ramifications for those companies.
01:38:15.000 Did you talk to Donald Trump about that?
01:38:16.960 And is he interested in pursuing this?
01:38:20.040 There was a question about it, uh, yesterday.
01:38:22.780 And he seems, I think he, like I want to try to find a, a way to solve this without
01:38:29.240 growing government.
01:38:30.920 However, there is kind of a, there was a sense and a tone and this wasn't outwardly said,
01:38:35.740 but it was kind of a subtext is if these tech companies continue the way they're, they're
01:38:40.100 going, that there's going to be more and more options put on the table.
01:38:42.920 I don't know if this can be done outside of the legislative branch, if it can be done
01:38:47.160 executively, but I do think that the changes in the 602 code need to happen because these
01:38:51.940 big tech companies are hiding behind the platform label when in reality are acting like
01:38:56.720 news publishers.
01:38:58.620 Exactly right.
01:38:59.580 Charlie, thank you so much.
01:39:00.660 We'll talk again.
01:39:01.640 Charlie Kirk, founder and president of Turning Point USA, somebody who, uh, is going to be
01:39:07.600 around for quite a while.
01:39:09.020 He is, um, he is very, very sharp, uh, and has built a very powerful organization and he's
01:39:17.060 24.
01:39:18.540 All right.
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01:40:20.740 We pause for 10 seconds.
01:40:22.540 Station ID.
01:40:23.100 Mr. Pat Cray has joined us all week.
01:40:46.700 Stu is on vacation.
01:40:48.680 We've appreciated Pat coming in all week.
01:40:54.020 Thank you, Pat.
01:40:54.580 Oh, absolutely.
01:40:56.680 It was kind of a dream come true.
01:40:59.200 Yeah, it was a joy.
01:41:00.060 It really was a joy.
01:41:01.160 It really is.
01:41:01.940 It's been a joy.
01:41:02.680 It really is.
01:41:03.060 Yeah.
01:41:03.480 So.
01:41:03.980 Yeah.
01:41:04.520 Yeah.
01:41:05.760 Yeah.
01:41:05.920 Remember when we just thought, you know, remember when we thought to ourselves and to each other,
01:41:11.380 we would say to each other, man, I just hope we work together until, you know, until we just
01:41:15.900 can't work anymore.
01:41:17.460 And now we're just like, I don't want to work anymore.
01:41:21.640 I don't want to see anybody.
01:41:23.180 Yeah.
01:41:23.660 I mean, we could call each other from time to time and laugh about the news, but.
01:41:27.100 Yeah.
01:41:27.520 No.
01:41:28.860 Yeah.
01:41:29.500 Those are the days that don't come back.
01:41:31.360 It's kind of changed.
01:41:32.180 I mean, it's, it's gotten to the point where everything's so upside down and inside out
01:41:39.180 and serious.
01:41:40.260 Yeah.
01:41:40.540 It's, it's hard to call and laugh about the news because it's not funny anymore.
01:41:43.940 Yeah.
01:41:44.620 It's just not funny.
01:41:46.080 You know, the problem is, is it, is it like you think to yourself, you know, I could laugh
01:41:50.860 about this, but it could put us all in prison in the next 10 years.
01:41:57.460 That puts a damper on things.
01:41:58.300 And my kids might be slaves.
01:42:00.140 So.
01:42:01.160 Yeah.
01:42:01.560 I don't know.
01:42:01.940 The whole slavery thing kind of takes the humor out of it.
01:42:05.260 Really does.
01:42:06.040 Kind of sucks.
01:42:06.680 It really, it really does.
01:42:09.280 Really does.
01:42:09.960 Yeah.
01:42:10.520 Been interested to hear.
01:42:11.560 So what do you have on your plate there?
01:42:12.600 How many people don't know what the deal is with this Tommy Robinson situation?
01:42:18.340 I, I, I, and I don't, I guess maybe, maybe the one thing that tips the scales against Tommy
01:42:27.380 Robinson for me is right here in the blaze story today.
01:42:30.760 And that's the fact that he appeared on the Alex Jones show.
01:42:33.640 Well, okay.
01:42:34.820 Well, that cinches it.
01:42:36.380 I mean, obviously.
01:42:38.180 Yeah.
01:42:38.620 Uh, there's something wrong there.
01:42:40.660 Something wrong.
01:42:42.800 Why?
01:42:44.020 Okay.
01:42:45.300 I mean, Donald Trump also appeared on the Alex Jones show.
01:42:49.140 Yeah.
01:42:49.420 Yeah.
01:42:49.600 That was a mistake.
01:42:50.680 That was a mistake.
01:42:51.720 Yeah.
01:42:51.940 I think he's correct.
01:42:53.020 And that, you know, don't you?
01:42:55.380 Cause he hasn't been on there in a couple of years.
01:42:57.700 Uh, yes, I, I, I do believe that.
01:43:00.780 Uh, I, I, I will tell you this.
01:43:03.360 Uh, you kind of have to look at Tommy Robinson, you know, would you know whose show you're going
01:43:09.120 on if you were, you know, going on a show and it wasn't the BBC, it was just some podcast
01:43:14.640 over in England?
01:43:15.740 No, I wouldn't actually know.
01:43:17.900 Yeah, that's true.
01:43:18.540 And you might do your homework, but if they were controversial, you'd be like, you know,
01:43:21.920 you'd be like, well, I'm controversial too.
01:43:23.680 I don't know.
01:43:24.780 So I just don't.
01:43:26.980 Yeah.
01:43:27.420 I just don't know.
01:43:28.760 And the problem is there are so many people on both sides.
01:43:32.620 There are people that pretend that they're progressives and they're absolute socialists.
01:43:37.280 Uh, I mean, and a socialist meaning eventually we're going to get to communism.
01:43:42.560 Um, you know, there are, there are just snakes everywhere that you just don't know who
01:43:48.500 people are and that's dangerous.
01:43:51.920 Yeah, it, it is.
01:43:53.640 And it's, it's another point in why nothing's funny anymore because you just don't know who
01:43:59.420 to believe.
01:43:59.980 You don't know who to trust.
01:44:01.720 You don't know who you can turn to and you don't know what's even real anymore.
01:44:05.980 Part of, I know part of Tommy Robinson's problem was he's, he's been using all these fake videos
01:44:11.340 and fake quotes on people.
01:44:14.200 Uh, right.
01:44:15.100 So did he know that?
01:44:17.140 Yeah.
01:44:17.440 Right.
01:44:17.820 Did he know that?
01:44:18.660 Or is he part of that?
01:44:20.080 We'll get into Tommy Robinson.
01:44:21.860 I want to do some more homework and we'll probably talk about that on Monday.
01:44:25.880 You're listening to Glenn Beck.
01:44:34.320 All right.
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01:45:55.100 This is the Glenn Beck program.
01:45:57.720 I have to tell you, I'm so excited to see my daughter perform on the stage of Carnegie Hall
01:46:03.300 tonight.
01:46:04.820 Um, and, uh, you know, Pat, I mean, I know, you know, this, uh, she's, she's performing,
01:46:11.740 you know, and there's a choir or something millennial choir.
01:46:14.860 She's kind of doing it incognito, right?
01:46:17.440 Cause it was, uh, Cheyenne Beck.
01:46:19.960 It was Cheyenne Beck.
01:46:22.080 Uh-huh.
01:46:22.920 Right, right, right.
01:46:24.260 But she's so humble and she said, no, you know, take my name off of the posters.
01:46:29.160 Let's just make it the millennial choir.
01:46:31.420 And, uh, you know, and then she was, I'm sure they wanted her to do solos and stuff,
01:46:37.720 but she said, no, no, no, just, just put me in, you know, just, uh, just a row of the
01:46:43.000 choir.
01:46:43.500 Don't focus on me.
01:46:45.040 You know, in fact, make it put me back so far where even my parents are like, I think
01:46:50.800 that Cheyenne, I'm not sure.
01:46:53.340 Uh, you know, just because of her humility.
01:46:56.100 So humble of her.
01:46:57.200 So humble.
01:46:58.120 So humble of her with this.
01:47:00.780 If you've never seen the millennial choir, it is an absolutely amazing choir.
01:47:08.280 Uh, I think they're 400 or 500 voices strong, uh, starring my daughter, but she plays no
01:47:16.780 role at all other than just a choir member.
01:47:19.860 You know, she's trying to keep it on the down low.
01:47:22.500 Um, but, uh, it's this amazing choir done by these two brothers, uh, the Stewart brothers
01:47:29.100 who are professionally, classically changed and trained, and they demand perfection.
01:47:37.680 And these teenagers all the way through adults in this choir, actually little kids all the
01:47:44.100 way through, you know, adults are, are, are just, um, so spot on.
01:47:53.220 They demand perfection.
01:47:54.560 And the amazing thing is, is everybody in the choir, uh, wants it, you know, at first
01:48:00.720 that, you know, when they first start training all these people, they're like, okay, calm
01:48:04.460 down.
01:48:05.420 Uh, but they don't.
01:48:07.520 And, and so the, everyone in the choir feels like they are part of something, uh, that is
01:48:14.120 excellent.
01:48:14.700 And, and it is.
01:48:16.460 So if you're anywhere in the New York area and you want to see something truly remarkable,
01:48:20.640 Carnegie Hall this weekend, their three performances, uh, tonight, tomorrow, and, uh, and, uh, tomorrow
01:48:26.420 night, you know, Cheyenne's humility with, uh, with the choir, you know, not having her
01:48:30.660 name on front like that.
01:48:31.800 It reminds me of what Joe Biden did with, uh, Barack Obama when he, when he begged Barack
01:48:37.420 not to endorse him.
01:48:38.480 He's like, no, no, please.
01:48:41.160 Exactly.
01:48:41.820 Don't endorse me.
01:48:42.680 And you know that happened.
01:48:43.620 You know it happened.
01:48:44.580 Right.
01:48:45.040 I can't, you know it happened.
01:48:46.340 It's not fair for the other candidates.
01:48:48.680 If you endorse me, I don't want you to.
01:48:52.340 Yes.
01:48:52.940 So that was really exactly what Joe Biden did.
01:48:55.780 And, uh, and then Cheyenne took that lesson.
01:48:58.880 That's really something good for her.
01:49:00.900 Yeah.
01:49:01.200 Good for her.
01:49:01.880 Well, she's into social justice and she knows she's lived a privileged life.
01:49:05.880 Right.
01:49:06.340 And so she's like, no, no, no.
01:49:08.780 You know, uh, anyway, so, uh, I've been up here in New York and I've been staying at
01:49:13.180 this Airbnb, uh, this place and, uh, it's this really nice, uh, house cause I have all
01:49:19.940 of my kids, uh, with me and the grandkids and everybody else.
01:49:23.800 And so, so we rented this Airbnb and when you do that, I've done this before, like I've
01:49:29.740 stayed in San Francisco for, I don't know, some event I had to do and, uh, we traveled
01:49:35.000 with the whole radio team and everybody else.
01:49:37.560 Uh, yeah.
01:49:38.260 Who, you, Pat, you were there, right?
01:49:40.220 I was there.
01:49:40.720 Yeah.
01:49:40.900 And, uh, and yeah, and remember, and, and, you know, when you meet sometimes the Airbnb
01:49:46.320 people, they have this kind of moment when they see me walk up and you, yeah, yes, it's
01:49:56.140 really not pleasant.
01:49:57.720 Uh, and so I was not looking forward to meeting the owners of this house.
01:50:02.160 And so when I first walked into the house, the guy has got a big library and, uh, and
01:50:06.580 so I'm looking at all of the books and I'm trying to figure out who he is and, and who
01:50:10.880 they are.
01:50:11.940 Um, I find out that she's very, very, very famous.
01:50:17.900 Uh, and, uh, and he is as well, he's a very famous painter.
01:50:23.100 And I don't want to give any more details than that because you'll understand in the
01:50:27.520 story.
01:50:28.260 Um, but I can't figure out where they stand on things at all just by, you know, trying
01:50:34.440 to piece clues together of how their lives are.
01:50:37.400 And yeah, I went through the medicine cabinet anyway.
01:50:40.240 Um, so I, so I'm trying to figure out who they are and I actually bump into him in the
01:50:46.380 street cause he was going into the garage of this, of this house where he has a, an art
01:50:50.860 studio and, uh, and we find out that we have a mutual friend and I'm like, Hmm, that shows
01:51:00.100 maybe, but he's doing work for this mutual friend.
01:51:04.360 He's painting something.
01:51:05.240 So I'm like, yeah, maybe, but maybe he doesn't know.
01:51:09.560 Then I, uh, uh, he says, Hey, come by in the art studio.
01:51:12.960 Anytime.
01:51:13.320 He said, I work here every day and I'd love to talk to you, you know, show you this stuff.
01:51:17.160 And, uh, so I said, sure.
01:51:19.260 So I come back the next day and I go into his studio and he's working on another painting
01:51:24.440 for someone else.
01:51:25.900 And he says, yeah, he's a classic painter, a classical painter.
01:51:30.060 Um, and so he uses, he won't work off of a photograph.
01:51:33.520 If you want a portrait, you have to sit for it.
01:51:36.400 And sometimes they take as long apparently as a month, but he could only get, he said,
01:51:42.020 I'm working on this piece and it's really hard cause I can only get the guy to sit.
01:51:45.480 He's only, he sat for me for six straight days.
01:51:48.920 And he said, the guy just couldn't take any more time than that.
01:51:52.340 And, uh, he starts to show me and it's Clarence Thomas.
01:51:58.220 He's painting this portrait of Clarence Thomas.
01:52:02.320 And he's because he had to leave.
01:52:05.280 He made a paper, he made a paper mache Clarence Thomas.
01:52:10.020 And, uh, and, uh, the justice gave him his black robe, uh, to put over this paper mache Clarence Thomas.
01:52:19.200 I took a picture of it.
01:52:20.260 I, I, I'm going to ask you if I can share it.
01:52:22.240 It's hysterical.
01:52:23.480 He's got like little beer can shoes.
01:52:25.560 I mean, his feet are like beer.
01:52:27.400 He needed to get the, the drape of the, of the robe, right.
01:52:31.900 And Clarence couldn't sit there any longer.
01:52:33.760 Um, and so I'm thinking, okay, this guy, he's got to be, I said, so six days with Clarence Thomas.
01:52:41.240 He said, he's a remarkable man.
01:52:43.840 And I'm like, okay, all right.
01:52:45.840 I think I'm safe.
01:52:47.560 Um, but in New York, you never know.
01:52:49.860 Yesterday it's raining and raining really hard.
01:52:52.640 And I'm walking down the street and about three blocks away from the house.
01:52:56.540 And he says, um, I hear, Hey Glenn.
01:53:00.400 And I look back and it's him.
01:53:02.120 And he runs up and he's like, Hey, I've been watching some of your stuff.
01:53:06.260 I did some research on you with, with art.
01:53:09.260 And I said, oh boy.
01:53:11.200 Okay.
01:53:11.880 Yes.
01:53:12.320 And he said, I really want to talk to you because of your art history things that you've talked about.
01:53:18.660 Now, everything I've ever talked about on art history is like the progressive era art and how it is, you know, on the buildings here in New York and what it says and how they changed it and everything else.
01:53:32.960 And I said, uh-huh.
01:53:35.620 And he said, you are the only one I've done so much research for years.
01:53:41.580 He's a, he's a art professor as well.
01:53:44.260 He said, for years, I've done work on the progressives and what they did around the turn of the century to art and how they have destroyed art.
01:53:54.360 And he said, you're the only one that I know that actually knows this stuff.
01:53:59.620 He said, I really would like to talk to you about it.
01:54:02.440 So we went to his art studio.
01:54:04.180 We sat there.
01:54:04.580 He was like a starving little kid where he was just like, somebody I can talk to, somebody I can talk to about the evil of progressive, you know, 20th, early 20th century progressives.
01:54:19.560 And he talked to me about how if he said, if you want to learn how to paint, don't go to art school.
01:54:27.640 You want to learn how to, I think he said something along the lines of, if you want to learn how to hate, you can go to art school.
01:54:36.040 He said, but they're not teaching, he said, they're teaching ugliness and they're teaching you, you know, to be, he said, to be polite, avant-garde.
01:54:47.880 And he said, all of this stuff was to change the people's values.
01:54:54.680 And he talked about this, this amazing process about how the elites and the progressives changed people's tastes.
01:55:04.780 And now how it is just this corrupt system.
01:55:08.760 And this is a guy who is a well-known, I mean, you know, here in New York has a big gallery that's his, just him.
01:55:20.700 So he's a big, big name.
01:55:22.560 And I was shocked.
01:55:23.640 And I said, so you wouldn't be willing to do a podcast, would you?
01:55:31.460 My son-in-law was with me.
01:55:33.020 And as the guy walked out, I said, hey, he said, you got to get him to do a podcast.
01:55:39.320 This is fascinating.
01:55:40.780 And I said, he's never going to do a podcast.
01:55:43.320 He'll never do that.
01:55:44.580 And he comes back and my son said, ask him.
01:55:48.100 And he said, ask me what?
01:55:50.120 And I said, well, I do a podcast.
01:55:52.220 He said, I know I've watched them.
01:55:53.320 And I said, you wouldn't be willing to.
01:55:55.080 He said, I'd love to.
01:55:57.300 Wow.
01:55:57.700 So once I get him to verify, because I said, you better think about it, dude.
01:56:04.060 And he said, I understand.
01:56:06.000 I know what that means to my career and everything else.
01:56:10.120 He said, but I'll think about it.
01:56:13.940 But my answer to you is yes.
01:56:17.040 He says that the corruption of the art world, and he's right, culture leads politics.
01:56:25.780 Right.
01:56:26.720 And does any of that sound familiar?
01:56:28.780 You remember where that, I mean, the origination of all that, where that comes from?
01:56:33.600 The communist goals from 1963 that were entered into the congressional record.
01:56:39.420 Goal number 22.
01:56:40.600 You remember what that was?
01:56:41.300 I remember I was thinking about that yesterday.
01:56:42.980 It was something like to make it ugly and degrading or something like that.
01:56:46.920 Continue discrediting American culture by degrading all forms of artistic expression.
01:56:54.280 An American communist cell was told to eliminate all good sculpture from parks and buildings, substitute shapeless, awkward, and meaningless forms.
01:57:05.020 Wow.
01:57:05.840 This is, I mean, it's kind of where we are.
01:57:07.640 We're waiting to you here.
01:57:07.980 This guy has the history really down, and it was a fascinating conversation.
01:57:16.100 And the good thing is, I said, yeah, but, you know, it's nobody's, who's going to, who on the inside is going to change it?
01:57:24.720 I said, you know, in the universities, you're starting to have the intellectual dark web that are coming out, and they're still on the left, but they're coming out and exposing it.
01:57:34.420 He said, Glenn, people are starving.
01:57:37.700 He said, they know this isn't good.
01:57:40.140 They know this isn't right, and they're sick of the corruption in this that you are destroyed unless you play ball.
01:57:48.120 And he said, I think you'll be surprised at the number of people in the art world that are sick of it and want an end of it.
01:57:55.900 And I think that's, I mean, it goes to this theory that I have that we're reaching a tipping point to where people know what we have now is not working.
01:58:07.800 And so we have to start showing a brighter tomorrow and the way to get to that brighter tomorrow because people are starting to feel, I don't want anything to do with what's happening today because it doesn't work and it's corrupt and it's awful.
01:58:23.460 And it's big change, big, big change is on the way.
01:58:37.800 Okay, there is nothing worse than putting your foot into a shoe or a boot that sucks, that doesn't feel good, feels stiff.
01:58:52.780 You're walking around all day and you're just, you get, and I just can't wait to take these shoes off.
01:58:57.460 You start to sound like a woman.
01:58:58.860 I just can't wait to take these shoes off.
01:59:00.860 Except here's the usual deal.
01:59:02.200 With guys, it takes you more than five minutes in a shoe.
01:59:06.500 By the time my wife puts a shoe on and then she gets down to the bottom of the stairs and stepping into the car, she will say, oh, I can't wait till this night is over so I can take these shoes off.
01:59:17.540 Why did you buy them in the first place?
01:59:21.320 Okay, anyway, women somehow or another do that and they're cool with it.
01:59:26.380 I'm not.
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02:01:10.480 This is the Glenn Beck program coming on Monday punished for tweeting the truth.
02:01:19.400 Wait until you hear this story about John Lott.
02:01:23.500 John Lott is one of the, the biggest scholars and experts on, on gun stats in the world.
02:01:33.000 Uh, he's been locked out of his Twitter account for literally tweeting the truth about the New Zealand shooter, uh, that is been deemed, you know, a Trump supporter and a right winger.
02:01:46.880 Uh, no, apparently that's not the truth.
02:01:50.340 Uh, the guy, he, all that John did was tweet phrases from his manifesto, like conservatism is dead.
02:01:58.940 Global capitalist markets are the enemy of the racial autonomists.
02:02:03.120 Uh, he called himself an eco fascist.
02:02:06.680 Um, uh, he wanted to further the unionization of workers and minimum wage increases.
02:02:12.280 He talked about the increasing wealth of the 1% that exploit the people for their own benefit.
02:02:17.540 The nation with the closest political and social values to my own is the people's Republic of China.
02:02:23.660 This is a conservative.
02:02:26.140 This, this guy is a Trump supporter.
02:02:30.600 No, John Lott tries to correct it by tweeting those quotes on Twitter.
02:02:36.260 He's locked out of his account.
02:02:39.120 Tweeting the truth will get you in trouble on Monday.
02:02:42.720 Glenn Beck.
02:02:47.540 murder神 poor Pharisee.
02:02:57.720 Herman just takes care of him.
02:03:00.000 He's going to suffer afterля letter.
02:03:07.680 Listen to him Oh my God.
02:03:10.100 The, listen to him, I'm sorry.
02:03:11.840 I kind of get a baby.
02:03:13.220 I'm sorry.
02:03:14.080 But that's enough.
02:03:14.680 I'm sorry.