'When Liberals Are Deranged on Trump' - 5⧸4⧸18
Episode Stats
Length
1 hour and 58 minutes
Words per Minute
162.31903
Summary
Trump Derangement Syndrome is a rare psychological disorder that affects only a small minority of the population. It s a symptom of the patriarchy's desire for power and control, and it can be traced back to a man named Donald J. Trump.
Transcript
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love courage truth glenn back side effects of trump derangement syndrome include rage
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inability to avoid the patriarchy sensitivity to microaggressions victims complex inability
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to conduct reasonable conversations blurred vision while shifting genders bloating chronic
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whining preoccupation with defending minority cultures hatred of men susceptibility to
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mansplaining or man spreading and denial call your doctor immediately if you experience chest
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pains sudden pink hair or thoughts of feminism sadly today what you're not going to hear on
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uh television is that the last time our unemployment rate was this low we were counting chads it's 3.9
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you're not going to hear a lot of talk about that because it shows that cutting taxes actually works
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cutting regulations helps people get jobs sadly i have to also report that congressman gregory meeks
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a democrat from new york has been showing signs of advancing trump derangement syndrome yesterday
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during an interview with cnn's poppy harlow and john berman congressman meeks displayed the unnerving
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symptoms of a contaminated patient most of all he showed a profound sense of denial this clip is
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fairly long mostly because representative meeks does such a masterful cringe inducing job
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of caking his trump hatred with passive voice and insinuation his symptoms emerge in the form of an elaborate
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form of vocal and ideological gymnastics listen no doubt everyone would welcome the return of these
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three american citizens and let's hope that rudy giuliani is correct and that they're on their way home
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we just don't know if it if it happens does the president deserve credit president moon does
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of south korea does president trump deserve credit if these three americans come home i think that
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number one we want to make sure that they come home and if anybody had anything to do with it
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i'm happy i want our american citizens to come home but when i look at the whole deal with
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north korea it seems to me that all of what was started was started with president moon and president
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moon has been doing a lot of the negotiations and been talking to the north koreans and talking to
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the chinese behind the scenes and trying to work to make this happen because he knew when he heard
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president trump say that president trump uh... would not go back to south korea if he decided to attack
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north korea that's when the negotiations start taking place with north korea he left he went to
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north korea start president moon said president trump deserves a lot of credit up yep but but you know it
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even in your interpretation of it president trump didn't get in the way i mean doesn't he deserve credit
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then for creating or being part of this atmosphere where these three americans may come home and these talks
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might happen i am glad that we get our american if we get our american detainees home it's a positive
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thing and a number of individuals can take credit is he one of them but i am saying that if you talk
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about the whole north korea south in peace the reason why we are where we are is president moon it seems
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like you're doing everything you can to not say that the president deserves credit
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luckily trump derangement syndrome is treatable there is a cure of course there are many people
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who are just immune to the cure they are incurable but most people however with treatment can be saved
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ingredients for the cure include humanity belief in others logic common sense optimism a little greater
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selflessness personal responsibility a recognition of facts and critical reasoning of the average fourth grader if you
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are a loved one is faced with someone who is stricken with the syndrome stay calm it's rarely contagious don't let
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their hysteria inflame your senses it's what the patients want instead show them your humanity your kindness your
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ability to be strong show them your sympathy and maybe hopefully they will see you once again not as a video game
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villain but as the person that you are and they will recognize that with logic they can be there and be healthy once again
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it's friday may 4th you're listening to the glenn beck program
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the man carefully sips his beer as he watches an underwear commercial he laughs with a gravelly flatness when the actor's voices become
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high-pitched and then he takes another sip he sprawls back into the recliner as if it's his comfortable in the bungalow overlooking
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the pacific ocean on cockle shell drive in dana point california the neighborhood is nice it's gated
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security guard a safe oceanside town in orange county
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the man looks like a suburbanite unwinding after a day's work which is precisely the case
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he served in the navy he fought in the vietnam war his wife is an attorney and their three daughters have promising
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futures ahead of them the man is a police officer and by all accounts
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he sits there in the recliner and on the television
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65 people died in poland when a freight train collided with a
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saudi flight 163 caught fire after takeoff and all 287 passengers and 14 crew members died
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maybe as the man watches the news he thinks about the night stalker the serial rapist that had
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terrorized california each time he had claimed another victim people rushed to buy guns many hardware
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stores sold out of locks but it had been a while since he had struck the man was so focused on
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television and lost in his thoughts that he was almost startled when patty harrington groaned from the
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floor her hands bound behind her back with a brown macrame cord the man enjoyed tightening the
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restraints until his victims couldn't hardly feel their hands they would only feel a nagging pain
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the man had somehow or another crept into this gated community unnoticed and then into the house
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patty was a pediatrics nurse and her husband keith didn't hear the man until he was in the room
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as they slept there wasn't any forced entry keith was 24 he was just months away from completing med
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school at uc irvine and the harringtons had only been married for three months they were staying
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at a house which keith's father owned temporarily and they had never even settled into the master
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bedroom but when the man crept in he forced patty to tie keith's hands together he took keith
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into the master bedroom and then he took patty into the living room and began raping her he likely
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stacked plates on keith's back and told him not to move because he'd hear it he likely gloated about
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the rape currently however he was taking a bit of a break to watch just a little television with a beer
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he would rape patty and shifts stopping occasionally to grab some crackers or something else from the
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cabinets but he kept his gloves on the entire time when he's finally done with patty he takes her into
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the master bedroom he covered keith with a blanket to avoid getting blood stains on himself and then
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lands one swift blow to the back of keith's head with a piece of lawn equipment
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and the man would not show patty the same courtesy
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keith's father found the two bodies tucked into bed they were both still wearing their night clothes
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but they had been dead for days by then keith's father recoiled and then he lifted the blanket
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keith was purple with a gash on his head where the killer had hit him but he had hardly lost any blood
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patty was not so lucky she was caked in wood chips and blood she was just in a mangled heap
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the killer had beaten her savagely and then continued beating her well after she had died
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it was clear they had been murdered for sport for some cruel sadistic ritual
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this story the harrington story is just one of the many harrowing gruesome heart-rendering tragedies
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that the golden state killer caused between 1976 and 1986 he would commit at least 12 murders
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at least 50 rapes and 120 burglaries for decades he alluded and baffled police he was always just one
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step ahead in part because his mo was always changing he raped he killed he burkled through
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cities and counties all throughout california starting with sacramento county and then down
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through oakland and santa barbara and orange counties he had a sadistic career that lasted 12 years
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and terrorized california the killer carefully plotted his break-ins and murders often posing as a jogger
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he studied his victims their schedules their habits meticulously he delivered unnerving taunts to the press
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then in late april 2018 police had a breakthrough in the case
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they found a dna match through a genealogy website the suspect was joseph d'angelo he was a 72 year old
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guy he owned a a boat and a modest house his neighbors have said that he was cantankerous and
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often would fly into a rage for no apparent reason but none of them imagined that he might be capable of
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such heinous sinister behavior if d'angelo was in fact the golden state killer it would mean that he would
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have raised a family in between the vicious rapes it would mean that he was a police officer for much
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of the time of his rape and murder spree although he was fired for shoplifting before the rampage
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ended no one knew he took a warehouse job at a local grocery store where he worked as a truck mechanic
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for 27 years until his retirement was celebrated in 2017
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one of his daughters and one of his grandchildren were living with him in the house at the time of the arrest
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what must have been going through their mind when police swarmed his house to arrest him
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he was inside building a table in his garage he had a roast in the oven for dinner
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they took him out and bound his hands together behind his back
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i'm not sure if the handcuffs were so tight that he could no longer feel his hands
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the latest news story the events that happened just last week the golden skate uh golden state killer
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uh has been found i want to talk to you a little bit about our sponsors made this half hour program
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glenn beck we're very excited about some of the things that are coming up on the uh program
00:14:32.880
not only today but in the future where we hope you enjoyed the news story uh that we just did on the
00:14:38.660
golden state killer which is an incredible story not being from california i don't remember
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uh the golden state killer i just remember there was a time period i remember growing up with ted bundy
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and uh he was i think he was in the pacific northwest uh and we had the green river killer
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there was just like these serial killers that were all happening it's seemingly in the 70s
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and i remember kind of being young and jumping out of the bushes to my sisters and going it's ted
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uh so sadistic oh my gosh they were sadistic to me so don't even start i was a younger brother
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so they beat the snot out of me all the time until i got big enough uh the first thing i did was
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run i'll go it's ted then i ran for my life uh but anyway uh uh really just an amazing story
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and the guy goes back and just lives his life the question is did he believe he was going to get away
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with it oh he got away with it for over 30 years i know 30 years uh he stopped killing in 1986
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although they are now looking back and trying to tie other unsolved murders to him so we may
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have a an increased number uh number of deaths pretty soon yeah because he he kept changing his
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mo he was smart he was a cop he was a cop so he knew he knew how to do this um what was interesting
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was uh the way they found him is insane they this is only the second time it's ever happened where
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they've done this they went they had dna uh from the deaths and they went to a public dna site so
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they have this site which i would describe kind of like a social media of dna and the idea is that
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you put it's not like 23 and me no well no it's kind of no it's kind of related but if you put your
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dna in there you can uh look for relatives it's sort of genealogy sort of social network in a way
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because you can search dna patterns to find relatives you didn't know you had which is an
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it's an interesting site you even put your dna i i'm sorry but i'm i mean i am i remember when the
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the evidence with oj simpson which was dna wasn't good enough people were like i don't understand so
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i'm beyond that but do you you go to like 23andme get your dna and then and then upload it upload
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that's how i would assume i've never done the 23andme thing does it sort and categorize and say
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hey these people are like your yeah like it's gonna give you links right so you can find for
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example a distant relative that you didn't know that you had in this particular case that's kind
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of what happened is they went on to this free searchable site they created a profile with this
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dna profile and searched for similar dna what they found was not the killer who was dumb enough to put
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his own dna on a public website that's not what happened they found a distant relative of the
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killer and from there they were able to build out i think it was 28 different family trees going back
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to the early 1800s and sort through all of them until they were able to lock down on this guy don't
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you love the fact that somebody thought to do this and soon it will be done by artificial intelligence
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yeah i mean soon an artificial intelligence you know machine learning will just go oh well we can
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find him this way and it'll just it'll do it in minutes i mean really this is like it's a weird
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idea but at some point it's almost like there will be i don't say no crime but no unsolved crime
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well it's it's this is i think as important as uh the fingerprint yeah it's that it's i mean you got
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to remember but people thought at the beginning they were like what do you mean if fingerprints he's
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leaving his fingerprints and in the 1800s that and blood types those weren't used and so you couldn't
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solve anything and when somebody finally thought fingerprints let's look for fingerprints they didn't
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have a they didn't have a record they didn't have all the fingerprints they started saving fingerprints
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and that's how they started connecting things this is the next step but this is way ahead of
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fingerprints because dna you leave dna all over when you commit a crime it's very difficult to
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not do that and so you know you think about a how amazing it is that they can solve this and this is
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a great use and we can all be really excited about the idea that they were able to capture this guy
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through amazing means using genealogists and all sorts of different ways to go the other side of it
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though is we're entering a phase in which you no longer control your own data your own dna because
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it wasn't this guy who uploaded his own dna it was some relative he probably had never met in his life
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and yet they were able to find him because of that now in a crime it's great right this it worked
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really well and they used totally these are totally legal means but you know we all think like we can
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control our our data by saying well i'm not going to agree to that agreement i'm not going to sign up
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to facebook i'm not going to sign up to twitter uh well we're getting to a point where that doesn't
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matter because if someone you know has done it they can all of these records wind up combining in one
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big sort of blender of data and you can be tracked based on the people you know or you're related to
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or you've interacted with and that is a totally different world there's no way to control it under
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under those guidelines we are we have created one of the greatest things man has ever created and one
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of the most dangerous things man has ever created there would be no jews left none today if hitler had
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the stuff that we have today uh and what's just over the horizon i want to show you something that's
00:20:25.380
happening in apple i'm sorry not apple amazon and you're going to say okay well i i feel bad about that
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then i want to take you to china and tie the two together and ask you some serious questions of
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so there's 72 000 veterans organizations in america they serve the best of the best but none of these
00:21:00.400
organizations help pay for funerals for servicemen the average funeral costs six thousand dollars and
00:21:05.580
honestly that seems pretty low to me at this point the government only covers three hundred dollars and
00:21:10.020
if you are a mathematician like i am you know that's about five percent of the cost that's completely
00:21:15.320
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this is the glenbeck program a very positive jobs report
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we are at three point four nine nine three point nine percent the last time that we have had that
00:22:30.480
unemployment rate we were counting chads it's been 18 years since we have had that unemployment rate
00:22:38.100
yeah december 2000 that's remarkable that's you know back before the show was national
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we had just uh gone through the 2000 election we're counting chads maybe you know the the election
00:22:50.820
isn't actually officially decided no september 11th no war all of it i mean it goes back a long long
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way and you know it's it's pretty much it's the jobs uh created weren't quite as high as they were
00:23:03.140
expecting which is why the market isn't particularly reacting well to it uh that in the and the uh wages
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they're not seeing wage growth which they would have expected in a job market this time to see
00:23:13.620
wage growth this is interesting because no one says that i've heard you say that many many times
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nobody in the when it comes from the analysts side says this what they say is it's gonna come it always
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comes and i keep thinking to myself glen keeps saying that it's not gonna come because of automation
00:23:29.380
yes and we're not gonna see that rise you're not it's it's the actual workers are going to become
00:23:36.000
less and less valuable uh and and this goes to even people like me i mean you will be able to in 10
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years be able to digitize my thinking digitize my voice everything and it will come up with through ai
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perhaps with better things than i can come up with it's art it's stories it's it's of course auto
00:24:00.840
manufacturing it's all of it it's all of it yeah and it's pretty amazing you know you will hear
00:24:06.600
as well that the economy was doing pretty well before trump took office and so you know to prepare
00:24:14.060
you because i think trump deserves a lot of credit here um you know this is a good day for trump when
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you have the north korea stuff which seems to be advancing very well uh the you know the it looks
00:24:23.640
like the prisoners we've got somebody would have taken his twitter away he would his his popularity
00:24:28.580
rate would be well into the 60s i think it's if he didn't have twitter it's certainly not helping
00:24:35.420
him i don't think there's any argument to say that it's helping him at this point um but i mean it
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helped him you could say i think break through the primary group right because it brought so much
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attention to him i can't imagine it's helping him now i think it did help though you know i say that
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because i see the all the trouble he causes himself but then again some of that trouble has been
00:24:56.560
yay short little fat man and that's probably what helped break through in north korea was that
00:25:02.980
guy's he's nuts really i heard he he's not like a normal president we better change our behavior we
00:25:08.800
had ian bremer on uh was it early this week or last week he wrote a new book um and he's i think a
00:25:14.940
really interesting commentator on these matters because he's not hardcore conservative he is not
00:25:20.840
hardcore liberal like he comes out i think is trying to call balls and strikes and he he is the only
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one he keeps going on cnn and they don't know what to do with him because he keeps saying
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hey trump trump is the only president that could have done this with north korea he's the only
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president who could have done it and his answer when they ask why what's your answer it's risk
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aversion you know both bush and obama didn't want to risk the negative potential consequences of this
00:25:43.000
sort of approach uh which is you know beating up on china and and and talking tough and all of those
00:25:48.520
things um now it does i think trump's approach does increase the chances of a real war breaking out
00:25:58.280
on the other side it definitely increases the chances even more of actual peace breaking out
00:26:05.080
uh peace to strength right and this is why the guy got elected right i think that's that's why the
00:26:10.180
jobs thing is similar i mean i think you'll you'll see if you happen to be touting the job numbers to
00:26:14.460
your friends you will likely see uh that uh they will quote to you the obama job numbers from his
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last 15 months in office which are actually on average better than the first 15 months of trump
00:26:26.200
so just know that when you go into any argument today about that i think the real answer for that
00:26:31.940
is that it's harder to gain jobs and grow an economy when you're at almost full employment i mean you
00:26:38.460
know if you think about who is it easier for michael moore to lose weight or is it easier for uh you know
00:26:43.640
uh brad pitt to lose weight it's easier for michael moore right if he if he just you know stops eating
00:26:50.240
he's going to lose weight really fast and that's what happened throughout the obama administration
00:26:53.540
the job numbers came quicker than they are now but the fact that it's harder for trump to go it's
00:26:58.640
harder to go from four percent to two percent than it is from six percent to four percent um but i mean
00:27:03.220
these are good numbers and uh it's pretty encouraging i will also say it is harder to go uh uh down from
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here because jobs we are not china is not our enemy on jobs and they're they're not taking jobs from us
00:27:18.820
in the future it's just not happening in fact they're going to be taking jobs from their from
00:27:23.040
themselves soon because of manufacturing going all digital and automated and ai
00:27:28.980
at the same time and i don't think these stories are unrelated at the same time that seattle is pushing
00:27:36.880
you know for their 15 minimum wage and coming after amazon and saying we want a head count and
00:27:43.500
a 526 tax every year on every person you employ an additional seattle tax and it'll cost amazon over
00:27:52.400
20 million dollars every year and they're saying well you can afford it you're just bad anyway you
00:27:58.500
employ 40 000 people at the same time a story comes out that talks about how bad it is to work for amazon
00:28:07.440
now i want you to listen to this but i want you to listen to this story with the mindset of jobs are
00:28:16.260
going to become more and more scarce uh jobs are going to be automated more and more and look at your
00:28:25.520
life in your place of business you know that no matter where you are there's at least 10 to 20
00:28:32.780
probably 10 10 of everybody's place of business where the people are you're like that person screws
00:28:41.100
off all the time they're always on the phone they're always just talking they're goofing around
00:28:44.480
they don't do it right every job you've ever had now listen to the story and tell me because you're
00:28:51.060
going to be i think conflicted in this former amazon uh warehouse worker described uh being
00:28:57.160
stopped in his tracks by an awful smell emanating from the trash cans the stench he said was unmistakable
00:29:02.560
and led him to one conclusion his co-workers were so worried about taking too long on a bathroom break
00:29:07.680
that they had to resort to urinating in the garbage cans okay doesn't say that that is what it is
00:29:14.320
it said it's his conclusion that they were so worried about their bathroom break well there's
00:29:21.500
also another one i think i've worked around some people that probably would pee in a garbage can if
00:29:27.260
it just saved them extra steps is that a possibility i never witnessed anyone in the act i just witnessed
00:29:35.940
the aftermath in three instances three i felt i noticed an awful smell and pinpointed i noticed
00:29:44.300
uh i have pinpointed the location the trash bins that are scattered throughout the multi-tiered
00:29:49.400
mezzanine and i reported it um never has there been a trash can that smelled bad in any other
00:29:55.140
circumstance uh they said they found a bottle of urine on a shelf saying that people would do so
00:30:01.140
because they feared that the bathroom break would take too long and cause them to miss their strict
00:30:05.000
targets since publishing bloodworth story last month more than 30 people who said they've worked for
00:30:09.960
amazon in the us the uk and germany so more than 30 people in three major countries have contacted
00:30:23.180
a business insider with stories of working in an amazon warehouse they verified some of their accounts
00:30:29.800
through employment documentation and interviews the warehouse employees paint a picture of constant
00:30:36.320
surveillance and a crippling fear of missing targets okay i i just i just want you to know 30 people
00:30:43.540
out of a workforce of how many their seattle has 40 000 do you think between the u.s the uk and germany
00:30:53.700
you can find 30 people who were like oh my gosh it was they were slave drivers or have an axe yes okay so
00:31:02.720
they talk about the efficiency is the beating heart of amazon um and they have true they have the yes
00:31:11.120
they have these pickers where thousands of employees pick products off shelves pack them in the right
00:31:16.720
boxes and get them to customers but that efficiency comes at a cost these employees say the pickers move
00:31:23.720
around warehouses on predetermined routes to collect items for delivery scanning each one with a handheld scanner
00:31:29.820
which at times the length between uh scans employees say the pickers must hit a certain number of scans
00:31:36.920
per hour and if they miss their targets a manager shows up to see what they're doing employees say
00:31:42.380
that spending time talking to co-workers getting time to go get a drink or taking too long to find a package
00:31:48.900
or build is time off task too much which leads to a penalty point for an employee get enough of those and
00:31:54.580
you're fired that that seems like a completely rational system you should that you're not being
00:32:00.000
paid to talk to other employees if you take a break you're not going to get in trouble unless you take
00:32:03.920
too long and it has to happen multiple times before you're even talked to you have to have i think four
00:32:08.620
points taken from you then you meet with a manager and then you have another chance you get four points
00:32:16.460
you have to meet with a manager then you have another chance you have four points and you meet with a
00:32:21.060
manager and you're fired i mean so they give you 12 opportunities okay again like that what you're
00:32:28.120
describing if accurate sounds a little cold but it's not their that's not their job here is here is the
00:32:37.400
line that jumped out to me uh when there is pick to pick this means employees has 15 minutes breaks
00:32:45.320
between picks essentially your two 15 minute breaks are in standard 10 hour shift they're actually
00:32:50.940
two 10 minute breaks because the time he gets a break room or the toilet seats eats up at least
00:32:55.120
five minutes he said being a picker moving around the warehouse to retrieve items for uh packaging
00:33:01.420
is it makes the employee feel like a robot uh-oh don't say don't bring that up don't don't use the
00:33:09.420
word robot don't don't you might don't exist is your quote you might feel like a robot but at least
00:33:16.780
it's not a robot it's not a robot that has your job and the more we're we're entering a really weird
00:33:23.440
place because china they do look at people like robots and they are now doing brain scans you think
00:33:32.820
it's bad at amazon they're now doing brain scans they put a chip in a hat or a cap that every employee
00:33:38.800
has to wear and if you are you're depressed suicidal uh not focused the brain scan through an algorithm
00:33:48.380
goes to the boss and the boss says they're not focused the boss comes down and says pay attention
00:33:54.440
man pay attention they come down a couple of times they move you one time they move you to another place
00:34:01.620
the second time go home now they said uh the people thought that was a little intrusive and and felt it
00:34:10.000
was a little insensitive but they got used to it there's a balance here the world is changing
00:34:17.600
and what is it we're going to do with that being said it is why we must and and universal basic income
00:34:28.740
is not the answer but i don't know what is the answer but in the next 10 to 12 years we're going
00:34:37.180
to need an answer because more and more people this the jobs at 3.9 that's the opposite of what the
00:34:47.060
people in silicon valley are thinking they're thinking if we could just get the the jobs at 56.1
00:34:55.560
percent unemployment yeah if we could have you know 96.1 unemployment how great would that be
00:35:03.240
because nobody would have to work that's what silicon valley and technology is driving for
00:35:09.820
so that leaves the question a where do you get money b where do you find meaning
00:35:18.400
those are two questions that have to be answered by society the first one will be answered by all of us
00:35:26.600
i hope the second one has to be answered by each of us individually and we better start finding the
00:35:34.380
answer to that right now i want to tell you about filter by if you live if you live in a place where
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i mean i've lived all over the country and i have bad allergies i've never lived in a place like texas
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it is it is non-stop bad and if you don't change your filters your air filters a couple things happen
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if everybody in your house suffers or everybody at your job suffers uh and so does the hvac system
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you got to change the filters because they get clogged with so much crap that's one of those things
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though you you you change your filters and as you're walking away throwing the old filter away
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you think you know if i'm going to do this every whatever it is three or six months this time this
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time i'm going to do it and then you remember again and you look at it and they're pure black because
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you haven't changed it in two and a half years that's kind of me yeah that's that's absolutely me
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i would i mean my my hvac system would catch on fire and i'd be like what the hell is happening
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this is the third one in 10 years he's not air conditioning companies and then they just come
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00:37:53.820
hats off to springfield armory i'm going to give the full story on this later a little later on the
00:38:20.680
program but springfield armory has just released this statement they are severing ties with dick's
00:38:27.020
sporting goods and field and stream in response to their hiring a group of anti-second amendment
00:38:32.980
lobbying firms uh this latest action follows dick's sporting goods decision to remove and destroy all
00:38:39.480
modern sporting rifles from their inventory in addition they have denied second amendment rights to americans
00:38:45.520
under the age of 21 we at springfield armory believe that all law-abiding citizens of adult age
00:38:50.860
are guaranteed this sacred right under our constitution i have to tell you if if all of the
00:38:56.580
gun manufacturers said to dick's sporting goods oh really i don't want to sell to you
00:39:02.300
i think that would probably be a smart thing it might but although then it makes guns less
00:39:08.200
accessible which i don't know that's a necessarily something that you know for the second well i would like
00:39:13.320
to point out that there was a study done on dicks and uh no matter what they say the studies are
00:39:19.480
showing that they're still selling the modern sporting rifle the ar they're still selling them
00:39:25.100
they're just claiming they're not they're getting rid of their inventory before they melt the rest of
00:39:58.680
Have you recently sent your son or daughter off to college?
00:40:08.720
Maybe they used to be staunchly pro-life, but now they're kind of unsure.
00:40:13.380
Maybe they weren't political at all, but now they're coming home and they're like,
00:40:17.460
you know, mom and dad, I think I'm kind of political now.
00:40:23.100
Coming home on Thanksgiving and debating climate change, social justice, universal health care.
00:40:29.420
As it turns out, there seems to be a pretty good reason for this.
00:40:34.600
Our children, hear me out, this is crazy, are being indoctrinated.
00:40:38.660
And we are paying tens of thousands of dollars to allow them to do it to our children.
00:40:45.160
If you're signing a check for your children's college tuition,
00:40:48.860
sit down before you hear these statistics because you might pass out.
00:40:52.640
If you're driving, just pull over to the side of the road.
00:40:56.060
There's a new study published by the National Association of Scholars.
00:41:00.380
Now, we knew things were bad in college and universities, right?
00:41:06.680
New study published by the National Association of Scholars looked at nearly 9,000 professors
00:41:11.740
at 51 of the 66 top-ranked liberal arts colleges in the U.S.
00:41:16.500
and they found political bias on campuses is not a rumor or conspiracy.
00:41:26.720
If you remove the two military colleges from the study,
00:41:30.920
the ratio of Democrats to professors, Republican professors,
00:41:41.480
Wait, wait, so the amount of a Republican or Democrat professors.
00:41:46.880
There are 13 Democrats, if you can even call them Democrats.
00:41:50.920
I'd like to see how many are Democratic Socialists.
00:41:57.660
40% of the colleges had zero Republicans on staff.
00:42:09.440
80% had so few Republican staff members that they found it statistically insignificant.
00:42:20.780
80% had such a low number, it was statistically insignificant.
00:42:28.880
The study found in 1984, 39% of college professors described themselves as left-leaning.
00:42:43.900
The numbers look even worse when you break it down by academic field.
00:42:49.040
You want to know how the leftists are so effective in rewriting history?
00:42:52.040
Maybe due to the fact that every one, every single, every single one Republican history professors,
00:43:09.860
If so, there are 48.3 Democratic professors for every one Republican, and it goes downhill from there.
00:43:18.180
The field with the scariest liberal to conservative ratio shouldn't be a surprise at all.
00:43:23.400
Anyone who watches or reads the news, listen to this.
00:43:26.200
Out of nearly 9,000 professors and 51 of the top-rated schools,
00:43:31.580
the number of Democrat to Republican communications facility members,
00:43:36.520
not professors, communication facility members, is 108 to zero.
00:43:51.460
The number of conservative communications professors is zero.
00:43:58.500
So if you think the bias in the media is bad now, you haven't seen anything yet.
00:44:03.600
And I just want to just ask you a quick question.
00:44:07.820
Why are we all still signing those checks, that next tuition check?
00:44:14.780
By the way, before we get to Bill O'Reilly, let me just remind you about our internship program.
00:44:28.040
For students that are 18 to 24 years old, and we've actually had people who are out of college
00:44:34.220
and are now teachers, join us in our first year last year.
00:44:37.700
We're having a two-week study course about the founding, the founding documents.
00:44:47.760
You have actual hands-on experience with the founding documents and the letters between the founders.
00:45:00.660
It's called the Student Leadership Training Program.
00:45:02.480
From May, it goes, there's three sessions that run between May and July.
00:45:06.640
If you go to mercuryone.org slash LTP, Leadership Training Program, you can find out all the details.
00:45:13.280
Yeah, find out the details and make sure you join us this summer.
00:45:17.300
And the stories we're getting back from the people who are going back to college,
00:45:20.980
one of them is actually teaching their college professor about the history of America
00:45:27.040
because she wrote a paper and he was like, where did you get any of these facts?
00:45:30.680
And he's open-minded enough to where he's like, I didn't know any of this.
00:45:39.940
They're two-week sessions and you can find out all the details there.
00:45:45.640
Your kids or whoever is going to have, they're going to have to go through a rigorous interview.
00:45:52.120
And whites need not apply, just so we can get that out there.
00:45:59.640
We'll judge you on the content of your character.
00:46:04.240
Well, I hope you're using Killing England as a textbook in that.
00:46:16.100
I'm telling you, Killing England has got these urchins pointed in the right direction.
00:46:26.700
No, we're going to send you a large print galley.
00:46:43.320
I haven't seen that really covered very much on...
00:46:46.320
There's still, you know, Giuliani throwing Trump's legal team into disarrays on CNN right now.
00:46:52.580
The reason it went down from 4 to 3.9% is that Stormy Daniels is now on the road doing that raise.
00:47:02.920
So what do you think about the Cohen story this week with Stormy Daniels and Giuliani coming out
00:47:09.200
and the press saying he made a horrible mistake and...
00:47:15.960
Well, I don't know about that, but as you know, because you study our analysis on BillOReilly.com,
00:47:23.920
the reason Giuliani did this was because of the raid on Michael Cohen's office.
00:47:29.820
In that raid, they took off all his documents, which clearly show that Cohen wrote a check
00:47:47.840
So they said, look, we've got to get out in front of this.
00:47:55.900
So that's why Giuliani went on Hannity in a number of ways.
00:48:00.520
I mean, his main focus was to demonize James Comey, but the secondary focus was to say,
00:48:08.860
Bill, because I know you keep up with my commentary at glennbeck.com.
00:48:14.780
So you know that one of the main things that this did was, and I don't think this is inconsequential,
00:48:19.900
is it took the liability off of Cohen, because Cohen was in trouble.
00:48:33.740
So it really was an olive branch saying, hey, stick with us.
00:48:38.740
Maybe, but I think the more important thing was they wanted to define it,
00:48:43.280
that it was paid by, this is the key, retainer funds.
00:48:48.340
When you hire an attorney, the attorney says, look, I want your house, your boat, your car,
00:48:52.860
and your third child, and then I'll take on the case.
00:49:00.880
So Cohen was getting, I think, a monthly retainer from Trump,
00:49:05.540
and he used this, according to Giuliani, some of that money to get Stormy Daniels off the radar screen.
00:49:13.260
The story is basically that Stormy Daniels alleges a one-night stand with Trump way back,
00:49:20.180
you know, 12, 13 years ago, and she wanted money to shut up.
00:49:28.240
And they gave her a little bit of money because it was coming close to the presidential election.
00:49:32.960
They didn't want this woman running around with her attorney.
00:49:37.100
So the voter can decide for his or herself whether that's a worthy thing to do,
00:49:44.240
But the press is using us, obviously, to say, well, Trump said he didn't know anything about the payments.
00:49:59.440
This is almost, in many ways, the same story as the Clinton thing.
00:50:09.080
Then he said, well, I was only, it was a personal thing.
00:50:13.280
I mean, Donald Trump can say the same thing here.
00:50:16.680
And, you know, half of the country is going to care.
00:50:19.560
But that was the half that didn't care under Clinton.
00:50:25.720
So, I mean, it's going to have the same outcome, is it not?
00:50:30.960
But there's a difference between, because Clinton's actions toward Monica Lewinsky was when he was in the Oval Office,
00:50:38.820
And Trump was way, way back when he was a builder and had no political aspirations.
00:50:43.720
And he also lied under oath, where Trump did not lie under oath.
00:50:49.660
I mean, because that's what the Mueller thing is all about, the perjury trap.
00:50:55.320
Look, what bothers me about all this is that the country is being damaged by somebody like Stormy Daniels and her attorney.
00:51:05.320
And I think the president has to understand that, look, this is hurting the country.
00:51:19.460
You've got the – this hurts the stock market every day.
00:51:22.600
The stock market now wobbles because they don't know what's going to happen to the president.
00:51:27.740
And so the stock market, which should be stable and growing, is now wobbling.
00:51:38.680
So it's now becoming something that I think the president's going to have to say, enough.
00:51:46.160
I'm going to answer the questions the way I believe they should be answered.
00:51:49.980
As I said, I would never in a million years go in under oath with Robert Mueller.
00:51:58.780
Trump doesn't remember from one week to the next what's happening.
00:52:03.860
It's impossible for him to answer these questions.
00:52:14.540
But he'll say anything that comes into his mind.
00:52:22.760
Okay, when we come back, because you are in New York,
00:52:26.000
I want to talk to you a little bit about what the governor of New York has done with the NRA
00:52:36.400
They're the sponsor of this half hour with Bill O'Reilly.
00:52:40.580
If you've ever taken your car in for an oil change and the mechanic finds something wrong
00:52:45.460
and, surprise, you're hit with a repair bill that you didn't expect,
00:52:53.940
And just having an oil change, and they're like, hey, you've got to fix something.
00:53:02.300
Then, after the initial blood rush where you kind of just see stars and the sweat comes
00:53:07.840
to your brow, then I went, is it covered with CarShield?
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00:54:36.740
The president is Dallas today to speak at the NRA convention.
00:54:42.920
We're pleased to have the NRA here in the great state of Texas.
00:54:49.160
Bill, he just spoke before he got on to Marine One and he said, Rudy Giuliani is a good guy,
00:54:55.160
but he'll get his facts straight, which is kind of an interesting turn.
00:55:00.260
He said also that they will fight this if there's a subpoena all the way to the Supreme Court and they are not.
00:55:13.080
The Giuliani remark was he's insinuating that Giuliani did not have his facts straight when he talked to Hannity.
00:55:22.340
I don't have the full context of it yet, but he did say he's a great guy.
00:55:28.420
He just started yesterday and he'll get his facts straight.
00:55:33.180
So they're trying to spin whatever damage they think they've incurred here.
00:55:39.540
Look, I just wrote a message of the day for BillOReilly.com and it's a pretty simple message and it was written for the executive branch.
00:55:54.520
The strategy now that people should understand is to wear Trump down so he cracks.
00:56:03.180
And every day of some other mini scandal, every day impugn his honesty or whatever you want to do.
00:56:11.900
And so you make it impossible for him to focus on the governance and you psychologically damage him so that he's just crazed.
00:56:21.140
I mean, I don't think people understand that you and I, of course, do because we've been in the eye of the storm for many years.
00:56:27.780
The toll it takes on people like Sean Hannity to be called a slumlord.
00:56:33.280
People like me to be accused of things that I didn't do people like you to be boycotted or whatever.
00:56:44.340
It's not like you can just go out to 7-Eleven and say, I don't give a flip.
00:56:48.580
Especially when it's organized and it's hateful and it hurts your children and your friends.
00:57:01.340
I look at myself in the mirror today and I'm not the same man.
00:57:04.360
And that, well, but that's a good thing, Beck, that you're not the same guy.
00:57:21.460
And we see how many times the media has been wrong.
00:57:24.560
I've got a whole list of all the things the media has gotten wrong and proclaimed this is the end of Trump because this.
00:57:31.000
And they were wrong about it and had to go back and correct it.
00:57:38.660
How do you think this will play out with the average person?
00:57:41.580
Because I think the average person, they bought in.
00:57:45.320
If you bought into Donald Trump, you know, okay, that's the kind of guy he is.
00:57:53.400
That's already baked into the price of Donald Trump.
00:57:56.560
And for him to lie about it, if he is indeed lying about it, if he was lying about it and it comes out that he was lying.
00:58:09.840
That's the message of the day on Bill O'Reilly dot com.
00:58:12.420
Look, if you if you pay, look, there's no question she got paid.
00:58:17.420
So that you gave her money because you didn't want four days before the election.
00:58:21.620
And this woman timed it because that's what extortionists and blackmailers do.
00:58:27.160
I don't want to be hauled into court by her lawyer.
00:58:29.800
But I'm just saying that the timing of these kinds of accusations was not coincidental.
00:58:37.860
So, you know, I want to be clear and I'm not calling her a blackmailer extortionist.
00:58:41.860
I'm saying that this happens all the time to powerful and prosperous people in America all the time.
00:58:51.420
So you with Trump, he's just got to basically sit down with Giuliani and his other council and he's got to prepare a statement.
00:59:05.920
His base isn't going to flee him because of this.
00:59:09.820
They're not just like Nixon's base wouldn't have fled him on the Watergate thing.
00:59:18.100
And now you have an organized media that is devoted to destroying you.
00:59:26.500
And your only your only defense is the truth, even if it hurts.
00:59:32.120
Will it if it goes through, goes all the way to the Supreme Court and then he does have to admit it, if indeed it is true.
00:59:38.460
I'm not saying that it is at this point, but if if it is true, he goes all the way, he fights it.
00:59:47.360
I think if he explains that I can't possibly remember all the things that Robert Mueller, we don't know where he's going to go.
01:00:04.140
And I can't get in a position where I'm grasping for things that I'm not sure about.
01:00:15.820
As we continue with Bill O'Reilly, we'll talk a little bit about the NRA and the state of New York next.
01:00:39.060
You want to sell your house, you bump into someone that you knew from 10 years ago.
01:00:43.600
It's like a Ned Ryerson character from Groundhog Day.
01:00:46.820
And they say, oh, Ned Ryerson, I'm a real estate agent now.
01:00:50.900
And you go through that whole process with this person you didn't even like back then is now your real estate agent seemingly for life.
01:00:58.100
If you need to sell your house fast and for the most money, the place to go is realestateagentsitrust.com.
01:01:06.700
There's got to be a better way to find a real estate agent.
01:01:10.180
And realestateagentsitrust.com is that better way.
01:01:13.340
They've got 1,200 agents from all over America that have been qualified by the team and they make sure that they get the best results, that they're upfront and honest with you.
01:01:21.900
And these are people that listen to the Glenn Beck program or Pat Unleashed.
01:01:25.700
We're talking about people who share your values.
01:01:29.600
Get moving with realestateagentsitrust.com if you need to sell your house fast and for the most money.
01:02:01.520
From New York State, from dfs.ny.gov, Department of Financial Services press release.
01:02:10.580
Governor Cuomo directs Department of Financial Services to urge companies to weigh reputational risks of business ties to the NRA and similar organizations.
01:02:20.300
New York may have the strongest gun laws in the country, but we must push further to ensure that gun safety is a top priority for every individual company and organization that does business across the state.
01:02:30.160
Therefore, I am directing the Department of Financial Services to urge insurers and bankers statewide to determine whether any relationship that they may have with the NRA or similar organizations sends the wrong message to their clients and their communities who often look to them for guidance and support.
01:02:51.140
It's a matter of public safety, working together, and we can put an end to gun violence in New York for once once and for all.
01:02:58.740
DFS is encouraging regulated entities to consider reputational risk and promote corporate responsibility in an effort to encourage strong markets and protect consumers.
01:03:09.560
Now, this has already been taken by MetLife and Chubb.
01:03:15.280
Chubb just got rid of its discounted program on concealed carry insurance.
01:03:21.400
We also know that Bank of America and Citigroup have already kowtowed and they have started to change their relationship.
01:03:29.880
Bank of America said no financial services to gun manufacturers or gun sellers that make high-capacity magazines or guns that fire high-capacity magazines, including semi-automatic handguns that can hold more than 10 rounds.
01:03:55.800
This is just a way to get around the constitutional argument.
01:04:01.060
This is totalitarian government squeezing the banks.
01:04:07.000
What do you think they mean you should check into your reputational risk?
01:04:14.020
Well, the real intent here by Governor Cuomo is to boycott.
01:04:24.820
They want any companies that do business with the NRA to be punished economically.
01:04:36.940
So now the politicians are saying, well, we can do the same thing with outfits that we don't like.
01:04:43.180
And the subtext to it in New York is that Cynthia Nixon, the actress who actually played Nancy Reagan in the movie Killing Reagan, is running against Cuomo in a Democratic primary.
01:05:00.640
So he's doing a lot of things to please the left.
01:05:09.360
A lot of the companies you mentioned do business with the state of New York.
01:05:15.260
Saying if you do anything with the NRA, you're not going to do business with us.
01:05:25.560
This this this was just issued by the state of New York.
01:05:28.360
The Department of Financial Services has fined locked in companies seven million dollars for underwriting NRA branded carry guard insurance.
01:05:38.180
Now, what carry guard insurance is, is if you are if you have to shoot somebody, they cover your bail.
01:05:46.380
They cover the fees, they they do everything they can to make sure that you are protected, that you can not be financially destroyed by a charge that maybe you're innocent of.
01:06:00.920
They have just locked in agreed to pay a seven million dollar fine because they were part of this.
01:06:13.980
Well, that's going to send a message throughout the entire financial industry.
01:06:18.560
I can't do anything that it covers insurance for guns that will kill the Second Amendment.
01:06:26.220
You know, it's what has to happen is they have to then bring it in and say this isn't.
01:06:43.840
This is the argument has to be made in court of law that this is coercive and it's against the Second Amendment and it's designed to make it impossible for people to exercise their Second Amendment rights.
01:07:06.180
Yes, but who will have who will have standing in that, you know, and and will they be brave enough to come through in Illinois?
01:07:12.400
They're now talking in one town about confiscating all of the guns.
01:07:22.040
Yes, but times times are different now, and they're having a hard time finding people.
01:07:28.340
All of the people that were that are being named in this lawsuit, they're all Jane and John Doe.
01:07:34.460
Nobody's willing to put their name on it because I mean, and it's a violation of the Fourth Amendment.
01:07:39.760
We're just going to come in and seize your property.
01:07:46.100
And they're having a hard time finding people who are willing to stand up because they know their life could be destroyed and their lives are in danger if they if they stand against this.
01:07:57.640
Listen, Beck, this is a fight to the end on the Second Amendment.
01:08:03.520
So there are, I think, more Americans who support the Second Amendment, according to polls, and don't.
01:08:12.020
So the NRA and other groups have to say, this is what's happening.
01:08:22.320
And it's I've always said this in the end, it's what the people are going to want.
01:08:27.060
They're not going to be able to overturn the Second Amendment.
01:08:31.720
It's a constitutional thing, and they're never going to get that out, the amendment out.
01:08:37.680
So they're going to try to strangle it economically, just as they do on television.
01:08:42.800
And, you know, the the proponents of the Second Amendment are going to have to fight it.
01:08:52.900
I mean, I've got a couple of other things on your list, but anything on your list that you think was important this week that we haven't touched base on?
01:08:58.480
Well, I think that, you know, you have a system now of total collapse in the media.
01:09:08.060
But it's now starting to take, you know, shape in a in a more dramatic form.
01:09:22.600
They don't pretend anymore that their goal is not to report facts to the folks.
01:09:32.780
You know, when I was when I was when I was at Fox, Sarah, do you have the clip from Hillary Clinton?
01:09:37.780
I think it was from yesterday or the day before where she was talking about the Iowa caucus.
01:09:42.160
You know, when I was at Fox, I said, there's going to come a time to where they're all just going to take the mask off.
01:09:46.620
You know, there it was it was when Newsweek said we're all socialists now.
01:09:53.200
And they and they they immediately, you know, went back and then everybody said, oh, that's just a that's just a racist term.
01:10:01.580
You know, you're just by saying you're a socialist, you're just it's basically you're a racist.
01:10:06.380
Here's what Hillary Clinton admitted to just two days ago when she was making a list yet of more people that caused her to lose.
01:10:13.620
You may be the only presidential candidate since World War Two that actually had to stand up and say, I am a capitalist.
01:10:27.680
But I mean, if you're in the Iowa caucuses and 41 percent of Democrats are socialists or self-described socialists.
01:10:37.000
And I say, yes, but with appropriate regulation and appropriate accountability.
01:10:49.800
Here's a here's the Democrats saying 41 percent are self-described socialists.
01:10:54.420
You know, it is an amazing phenomenon that so many Americans believe that Venezuela is a good place.
01:11:03.920
You know, I mean, just take a ride down a caracas and take a look around or go to Havana.
01:11:12.640
Go to China and just, you know, go out of Shanghai and Beijing and walk around a little towns.
01:11:18.620
So it is amazing how that people are so stupid that they think socialism is a system that would bring prosperity because it will not.
01:11:29.080
The other thing I saw this week that was the millennial study on religion by Pew.
01:11:35.640
That Americans ages 18 to I think it's 42 have just abandoned religion.
01:11:43.200
Just they just, you know, they don't believe in the quote unquote God of the Bible and the God of the Bible, of course, is a God that interacts with human beings.
01:11:53.420
When you pray to the God, the God is aware of you in your life and your struggles and your trials.
01:12:06.240
OK, so now you combine that with the socialism and you're getting into atheistic socialism.
01:12:16.220
And, you know, for aware people to see how the country is changing, it all goes back to what you said at the beginning of the hour.
01:12:23.060
The education system that these kids are being indoctrinated.
01:12:32.380
OK, and we, you know, we really have to fight against it.
01:12:41.780
See, if you they're giving the guys a way out back.
01:12:55.700
Isn't it amazing that you're you have to you have to be dead asleep?
01:13:00.740
They've just taken the language and flipped it upside down.
01:13:03.800
You have to be dead asleep to all of the facts and common sense and reason to gather and get the get the term woke applied to you.
01:13:15.000
Bill, when I don't know if, you know, Jacob Hine or heard his story, but he is a guy who a kid, eighth grader who had to translate a story in his Spanish class.
01:13:33.020
His teacher really just bullied him in class, lectured him in class and and just mocked and ridiculed him for using Fox News as a source.
01:13:52.660
And it was and really embarrassed the kid in front of his class.
01:13:59.800
But do you can you think of any reason why that would happen in a Spanish class?
01:14:11.420
If you want a, you know, any kind of controls on immigration, then you just don't like the Hispanic people.
01:14:18.140
Look, I don't know if Americans understand how dramatic the changes are in this country and how the people who are trying to stop this madness are being destroyed and picked off one by one.
01:14:32.680
Don't know if they, you know, look, Fox News, Fox News is not nearly what it was five years ago.
01:14:43.800
And that's the last line of defense in the media is no one else.
01:15:03.920
I think that you can swing it back because the instincts of most Americans recoil when they see this.
01:15:12.120
So you still have the folks, but the organized politicians, media, education system, it's unbelievably damaged at this point.
01:15:24.300
I actually agree with Bill, everything you said, but I do think there is hope there's something else happening.
01:15:36.620
I think what he meant was Bill O'Reilly dot com.
01:15:46.880
The last couple of weeks, Simply Safe has won some really important distinguishing honors.
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Editor's Choice Award from CNET Magazine, PC Magazine, and The Wire Cutter.
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Now, these are three really respected product testers for, you know, wireless technology and new technology that's coming out.
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They put Simply Safe through a battery of test.
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They compared it to other home security products and Simply Safe won hands down every single time.
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They now look over the goods and houses and businesses of over 2 million Americans.
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We were in a store the other day, and he came up.
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People are using it in businesses and your home.
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01:17:47.800
She is about to give birth in prison because she was trying to protect her two-year-old from an assailant.
01:18:06.740
The woman drove her car into the other woman's car, and her daughter was still in the car.
01:18:21.600
This is happening at her house on her own property.
01:18:24.720
And she says, back off after the other woman drove her car into the car where her daughter was.
01:18:43.260
Coming up next, Todd Hine, the dad of the boy that is in eighth grade that was bullied by his Spanish teacher because he was told to go translate a news story.
01:18:54.660
He did, but he translated a news story from Fox News, and he was bullied and embarrassed and ridiculed in school.
01:19:03.720
We get the whole story and what happened then, next.
01:19:24.660
Yesterday, we learned where Hollywood, with its dainty preaching and glamorous fist-waving, draws the line.
01:19:48.900
In typical, dramatic, though outlandishly late show of force, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences has expelled Bill Cosby and Roman Polanski.
01:20:01.380
It's time, they decided, to battle sex abuse, end quote.
01:20:06.900
But best of all, because they're in Hollywood and they're such incredible performers, they were able to say it with a straight face, unaware, apparently, of all of the irony here.
01:20:18.900
In a statement, the board cited the organization's standards of conduct as the basis for the two men's expulsions.
01:20:26.300
The statement also noted that the board continues to encourage ethical standards that require members to uphold the Academy's values and respect for human dignity.
01:20:36.480
They also pointed out that only four people have ever been expelled in the Academy's 91-year history.
01:20:42.560
There's Bill Cosby, there's Roman Polanski, there's Harvey Weinstein, and Carmen Caridy, Caridy, Caridy, Caridy, I've never heard, have you ever heard of that name?
01:20:55.800
Because we're really familiar with the crimes of the first three, but what did Caridy, what did, what did they do?
01:21:04.300
Must have been murder, must have been rape, right?
01:21:06.220
No, no, no, no, no, in 2004, he emailed a friend, an early preview of a confidential film, and it wound up online.
01:21:22.160
There is something to be said about lumping those four crimes together that kind of makes a farce out of all of it, because Polanski has been on the run for decades.
01:21:35.760
He has been nominated three times since his 1977 guilty plea for unlawful sex with a minor, also known as child molestation and rape of a 13-year-old.
01:21:51.400
In 2003, he even won an Oscar, Best Director for The Pianist.
01:21:57.200
Um, I don't know, I mean, you took pretty swift action on the guy who released one of your precious movies.
01:22:07.560
Next year's Oscars, expect them to parade this ruling around like a badge of courage.
01:22:17.940
It's more really of a scarlet letter announcing to the world the hypocrisy of Hollywood and how it pays so well.
01:22:27.200
Hollywood's standing against, uh, you know, sexual abuse and all this stuff now.
01:22:40.380
Isn't it a little like when the church came out, when was it, in 1982 or 1992?
01:22:51.960
Uh, we have a story that's just an incredible story.
01:22:54.300
It's happened in Fort Wayne, Indiana, one of my favorite towns in all of America, uh, and, uh, and Blackhawk Middle School.
01:23:02.680
It revolves around an eighth grade Spanish teacher, uh, and what she did to a, a student for completing his project.
01:23:12.180
We have his father on the phone now, Todd Hine, uh, the father of Jacob, who is an eighth grader there in, um, in Fort Wayne, Indiana.
01:23:25.100
Uh, so, so Todd, tell me, tell me the story exactly what happened, uh, what the assignment was, and then what happened after that?
01:23:34.900
Sure. This is actually a reoccurring assignment that, uh, she gave the students beginning of the, of the year, um, once a week there to read any type of, uh, current event, news article, um, anything that they choose according to her own words.
01:23:52.180
Um, she wants them to translate a story into Spanish, um, turn that in, and, uh, it's, it's a weekly assignment for, for the kids there.
01:24:00.020
Okay, so your son, he went and he found a story, which is actually an incredible story.
01:24:05.080
I read it and was amazed, uh, by it, about how the, there were several pilots now, uh, from the government who are saying they saw a UFO and there was video of it and everything else.
01:24:23.680
Well, the problem was the very next day after he turned the assignment in, she came up to him in the middle of class, um, and, uh,
01:24:30.020
in front of everyone, didn't pull him aside and said, Hey, Jacob, I'd like to talk to you about your article from yesterday.
01:24:35.620
She said, I want you, you know, I noticed that you sourced Fox news as the source of your article.
01:24:41.260
And I want you to know that Fox news is fake news.
01:24:43.520
It's full of lies and you're no longer to use Fox news for any of these.
01:24:58.060
It wasn't just that she bullied him and embarrassed him in front of the class.
01:25:01.660
No, that was, that was, that was the beginning.
01:25:04.020
She actually decided to give him a separate assignment.
01:25:06.560
She said, what I'm going, what I want you to do is stop doing the assignment that everybody was doing in class.
01:25:12.820
You are to Google any of the many Trumps or many of the lies that president Trump has told since being in office and write me a page on that and turn it in tomorrow.
01:25:24.620
And what did that have to do with the story of UFOs?
01:25:28.760
That's, that's how this entire incident, you know, became about and why I'm actually on your show today.
01:25:36.320
In fact, there were multiple news outlets, CNN, NBC, all ran the same article.
01:25:42.720
You know, and nonpolitical, but the source of the news was offensive, apparently, to her, that he actually read it off of Fox News and not one of the other sources.
01:25:52.400
And then give him, you know, a punitive assignment that, again, outside of any class curriculum I've ever read for foreign community schools in a Spanish class to Google the sitting president's numerous lies and write on that instead.
01:26:04.960
So, so, so, so Todd, your son comes home, Jacob tells you this, what does he say and, and what do you do?
01:26:15.340
Well, he actually let my wife know when she picked him up that afternoon.
01:26:19.640
Um, I became furious, you know, obviously it's, these are eighth grade kids.
01:26:25.040
It's not government or, you know, any kind of setting that maybe even political speech would be, uh, you know, appropriate.
01:26:31.000
Um, I went ahead and tried to call the school that afternoon.
01:26:35.880
Um, the next morning I called to request to speak to the principal.
01:26:38.860
They were, they said she was out of town for a couple of days.
01:26:42.980
So being unsatisfied, I immediately called the, uh, the actual school corporate office itself.
01:26:48.800
They, uh, referred me back to Blackhawk to, uh, Mr. Harrell, who's their vice principal.
01:26:54.400
And, uh, he returned my call, told him, you know, the, the, uh, the incident that occurred, told him that we would like to set up a meeting with this teacher, um, the principal and, you know, figure out what happened.
01:27:11.320
Well, two days later, we actually had, had our meeting, um, a meeting in which in the state of Indiana, we're a one party state.
01:27:17.520
We, you, you, you can actually record, um, did not let them know we did that through that meeting.
01:27:22.860
Um, the teacher, um, the teacher 100%, uh, admitted that, that it exactly took place the way that, that my son described it.
01:27:34.140
Um, there was not a, he said, she said it was, yes, I did that.
01:27:38.460
In fact, her exact statement was, you know, I can't imagine if this happened to my child, I would be, you know, in the same, I'd be furious as well.
01:27:50.500
Where, how did this become, you know, that, that I said, what gives you the right to, you know, push political views, agendas or whatever on children?
01:28:00.420
Um, she ended up being asked by the principal to leave the meeting, uh, because she, again, was not giving any kind of answers.
01:28:07.100
Um, the principal, after she left the room, told us that this would be in a human resources investigation.
01:28:14.120
Um, she would forward it on and, uh, keep us posted as much as she could.
01:28:19.700
So, uh, so, uh, what do you, have you heard anything since?
01:28:28.380
Is there, well, you know, this incident actually took place.
01:28:33.100
So over a month, you know, ago now, um, various emails were sent to the school.
01:28:38.880
Um, in fact, I did a little bit more research on this teacher just by pulling up her public social media pages that are absolutely full of, I don't know how else, how to describe it, but, uh, liberal, uh, propaganda, anti-Trump, you know, um, ban assault weapons.
01:28:56.340
Um, Elizabeth Warren, you know, any tweets that she put, you know, disparaging to President Trump, she retweets, you know, she actually put a couple things on her own face or her own Twitter account, um, in which she does list herself as a teacher at foreign community schools that, uh, I doubt I should say too much of it on the air, but, um, how the president is a liar and he should shut his effing mouth, you know?
01:29:19.980
So this isn't, you know, it kind of made more sense after, you know, just doing a quick search on her that, that this is, this is personal for her.
01:29:28.060
And this is, um, she feels like she has the right to, you know, inject her, uh, political beliefs on, on, on 13 and 14 year old kids of all people.
01:29:35.800
Yeah. You know, I, I mean, everybody has their own political belief and you have a right to express it in your own, uh, life, et cetera, et cetera.
01:29:41.240
But once you cross over into the school and it becomes indoctrination, I think that's a real problem.
01:29:44.980
Um, what are you expecting and what do you hope and what are your next steps?
01:29:50.100
Sure. Well, long story short, um, you know, a lot of, there was not much communication from the school itself, zero from the school district.
01:29:57.220
Um, finally, you know, to the point where we were fed up, I actually called, I believe it was, uh, end of April, April 24th ish, and spoke with, uh, Tim Rall, who is the assistant to the superintendent for the foreign community schools district.
01:30:10.700
Um, told, he told me that day that, uh, the investigation into this incident has been completed, um, that it is a private matter between the school district and the teacher, as far as the outcome of this goes.
01:30:24.520
Um, the biggest thing as well, you know, with this, after our initial meeting with the school and told that this is going to be forged to the human resources department for investigation, which sounded like they're taking this very serious.
01:30:35.060
Um, fast forward three more school days. Um, Jacob was actually picked through another teacher that, that submitted a, uh, creative writing assignment.
01:30:43.260
He did to, to have an excused absence for the afternoon to visit a, uh, art museum that night.
01:30:49.200
He texted a friend in the same Spanish class. Hey, did I miss anything for homework tonight?
01:30:53.400
And the homework assignment that the child texted back said, yes, our homework assignment is, um, since it's been six months since the, uh, hurricane in Puerto Rico, um, how, well, I'm sorry.
01:31:05.920
Since six months since the hurricane in Puerto Rico, only 95% of the island has power and how Donald Trump should have done more.
01:31:13.860
The people again, three days after this incident.
01:31:18.060
Um, so again, the frustration kept mounting. We, we, we did it the right way.
01:31:22.160
We went through, you know, the, the due process, you know, the meeting, the waiting, forwarding more information as we were coming.
01:31:28.680
You know, as soon as I got that, that, um, text messages that my son's friend had sent him, I immediately went to the school the next morning and said, this has got to stop.
01:31:37.240
We do not want him in this class until this investigation has a conclusion.
01:31:41.720
Um, their solution at that time was, well, he can come down here and work in the office.
01:31:47.180
Sure. Well, that was just the day because the next day, uh, we, foreign community schools started their, their,
01:31:52.160
10, 11 day spring break. So just a bandaid for the day.
01:31:55.780
Um, went through spring break the day that classes started back.
01:31:59.500
My wife actually called the school and said, what is the plan for Jacob in the Spanish class?
01:32:03.720
Um, she basically said he can continue to come down here.
01:32:08.300
And my wife said, no, he is there to, to learn.
01:32:10.980
Um, just through other friends that have, you know, the same period, they have a writing class in fourth period.
01:32:16.560
She said, would it be possible to just have him go to another writing class as opposed to, uh, come into the office?
01:32:26.020
Now, my wife's second question to the principal at that, that phone call, what about this Spanish credit?
01:32:34.500
It was supposed to give him what we thought was one credit moving into high school.
01:32:38.240
It's going to carry in for it, um, in the conversation with the, uh, the principal, she said that, um, she'd have to look into it.
01:32:47.300
Um, there shouldn't be an issue with his, his credit transferring again.
01:32:52.120
He's straight A's straight A's in Spanish as well.
01:32:54.740
And, um, there was just not much of a conclusion.
01:33:00.780
And if, if the high school next year doesn't do anything, let us know.
01:33:11.020
So again, April 24th, I called, uh, the school district and talked to, uh, the assistant, um, superintendent told me the investigation's over.
01:33:22.940
Um, I said, well, when did the investigation conclude?
01:33:25.220
We don't, you haven't, you know, no rights to know any of this.
01:33:32.800
Actually, Monday of this week, I actually called down to the Indiana state, uh, board of education.
01:33:37.700
And the lady that I spoke with down there said, I'd like to figure out the process of a formal complaint against my local school system.
01:33:45.300
Um, she said that, uh, any complaint against the school system policy questions are made at the local, uh, local school district level.
01:33:53.480
And referred me back to the school board, um, immediately got phone, Googled the school board's phone number and, uh, made that call.
01:34:01.300
Lo and behold, it's actually the superintendent's office's phone number.
01:34:04.000
The lady that I spoke with there again explained, hey, I'd like to formally complain, you know, make a complaint against the school district to the school board regarding an incident with my son.
01:34:14.020
Um, she had no idea who I needed to speak with.
01:34:16.340
She said, let me figure out who you should talk to and I'll call you back.
01:34:19.760
Um, about 10 minutes later, I get a call from the actual superintendent, Wendy Robinson of foreign community schools.
01:34:25.780
Um, very, very strange conversation, I guess, that, uh, I guess left us with more questions and answers through this.
01:34:35.380
Um, she introduced herself as, you know, the superintendent and what do you need to speak with my school board about?
01:34:42.460
Um, and, uh, told her, you know, we don't feel like that, uh, the policy that foreign community schools has as far as, you know, any teacher discipline or incident with a teacher is kept between the teacher and, you know, the, the HR department that we'd like to talk about the policies.
01:34:59.720
Um, her exact term, well, now, Mr. Hine, the, the teacher has apologized.
01:35:04.320
The school board has, or the school district has apologized.
01:35:09.360
I said, well, first of all, the school district has never apologized.
01:35:12.460
And she interrupted, she said, I'm apologizing right now.
01:35:18.960
I said, now, as far as this teacher's apology, how, I mean, how can I take, you know, believe her apology when three days after this meeting that we had, she continued to push her political agenda.
01:35:32.160
Um, it got to the point where it got kind of heated.
01:35:34.300
I mean, we were going back and forth at each other for a little bit, um, brought up the concern of, of this high school credit transferring.
01:35:41.100
She said, I'm going to let you know that, you know, I will get it in writing that this trend, this credit will transfer.
01:35:47.440
So at least a big portion of our, you know, of our issue with this incident, you know, Jacob being basically penalized over this, um, was resolved in my book until the next day.
01:36:08.000
The world is in chaos, uh, and it's looking for stability.
01:36:11.520
And I think Bitcoin, it looks very unstable, but, but cryptocurrencies are the future.
01:36:19.820
Now, I, I don't know, uh, you know, all the ins and outs.
01:36:22.860
And when I started to invest, I didn't know all the ins and outs, and it made it really scary.
01:36:28.460
Um, but I, I knew enough about them to believe there's something here.
01:36:33.380
So we looked around, Stu and I were looking for people who can teach this, who really knows it.
01:36:42.840
He's a guy who has been talking about this for a long time.
01:36:47.960
We're like, okay, can, can you just do this like in a course for us and for the audience?
01:36:55.260
It's a smart crypto course.com smart crypto course.com.
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You want to understand what cryptocurrencies are and, and not only just how to invest them,
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How to invest, which one's good, which ones are bad, et cetera, et cetera.
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Then you can decide if you're going to get involved or not, but you need to understand it.
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Now smart crypto course.com Glenn Beck, Mercury.
01:37:51.760
This is an amazing story out of Fort Wayne, Indiana teacher bullying a child in a Spanish
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class because, um, he's using Fox news as a source.
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I, because she assigns him something crazy, uh, to make amends for using Fox news.
01:38:09.660
Uh, parents, uh, you know, go through an ordeal at the school.
01:38:13.080
Well, she apparently says she's never going to do it again.
01:38:17.800
Tell me, you know, all the bad things that the president has done in Puerto Rico, uh, in
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And the father is trying to get somebody to do something.
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He finally gets to the, uh, school district, the, uh, superintendent.
01:38:32.920
She apologizes, says, don't worry about the credit, but then what happens Todd?
01:38:38.340
Well, two days ago, we received this email back from her stating that she, uh, has looked
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into the credit situation, said that he will receive the credit for the first semester.
01:38:47.340
Um, she said, according to the school though, your wife requested your son to be transferred
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Um, they also stated that, uh, my wife told her back that he's planning on taking a different
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And she had a question on how will a Spanish credit affect his German for next year?
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Um, so the response we got back was that because my wife requested to get him out of that class
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And the, according to them, she had no concerns about this credit transferring next year because
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So he will not receive credit for the second semester.
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I mean, we, we've kind of play our cards pretty close to us and just.
01:39:36.240
Well, you just keep us up to speed on this because I, I, in a, in a small town like Fort
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Wayne, Indiana, uh, I mean, it's, this is craziness.
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If you can't get satisfaction, uh, make sure you, uh, keep us informed because we're on it
01:39:59.020
And hi to Charlie Butcher and all the people at WoWo.
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you're listening to the glenn beck program we welcome pat gray back to the program
01:40:45.740
who uh had surgery this week and apparently things went well they did uh feeling uh considerably
01:40:53.760
wait what's going on doctor said he's 100 but he could go quickly could go quickly he said
01:41:03.660
you know if you're gonna keel over yeah and die it'll be sometime probably between like 1105
01:41:11.080
friday morning to 205 central time friday afternoon wow that's when you're going to be on the air
01:41:18.380
you could be doing fine and then drop dead wow wait are you okay well it's not between those
01:41:25.480
times i was wondering this is leading to something dramatic it could be it could be i'm not i'll tell
01:41:30.960
you this i'm gonna i'm gonna tune in to the pat gray program today yeah because i want to know
01:41:35.860
what's gonna happen anything could happen anything you just don't know die today welcome back pat
01:41:41.420
thank you good to be here uh i have a quick story and i know we want to get into some political
01:41:45.460
things but i have a i have a good story uh that we have finally in new jersey solved who was pooping
01:41:53.220
on the uh high school uh track uh every day they were they were finding human feces uh near the track
01:42:01.320
every day on a daily basis and they couldn't figure out who was doing it uh and so the the school
01:42:07.280
district um you know put some resource powers onto it and uh and they found out that uh it was a guy
01:42:15.360
who was was jogging on the track at about five o'clock in the morning every day and when he was
01:42:22.420
finished or halfway through whatever he would uh drop his drawers and poop there next to the track
01:42:27.380
pull his drawers back up and start running again happens no it really doesn't okay it really it really
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doesn't uh but it is interesting um the guy is charged with lewdness and littering
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uh and he's due in court on monday uh and he has take a he has had to take a leave of absence from
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his job um uh because uh well he was the um he was the superintendent of the school district
01:42:57.560
is unbelievable does that not explain american in nutshell today that is unbelievable that's crazy
01:43:09.340
that's reminiscent of another superintendent story we had yeah it is recently yeah how does it feel
01:43:14.140
pat that you know when glenn trying to select the perfect story to start your segment with
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he selected that one yeah that's the one he was looking for what is that what is perfect yeah it
01:43:24.520
does yeah it does it does i don't know what he's saying i've been finding poop in the hallway
01:43:28.080
all right there's another there's another story this one comes out of from west virginia i'm in love
01:43:36.280
with this uh story today it's uh don blankenship who's running for senate i think he's gonna win
01:43:41.360
uh yeah after this ad i think you're right he's powerful now wait a minute wasn't he the guy
01:43:47.020
in jail he had a a minor brush with the law was he pooping in a high school he was not okay he he
01:43:55.540
actually ran i think it was the sixth largest coal company in america so this guy's like a very
01:44:00.240
wealthy guy he was you know very respected you know in the business community at some level they
01:44:05.200
did have a uh minor incident uh and i mean with minors they lost uh 29 minors uh in a terrible
01:44:12.620
accident you'll remember this from several years ago and he wound up getting paying some legal cost
01:44:16.260
for that because of safety violations of the mine right yeah it was a pretty ugly story it was so he
01:44:21.400
has decided to run for senate now he's in a three-person race uh it looks like he's in third place
01:44:26.440
and when you're in third place in a three-person race but still relatively competitive like it
01:44:31.760
doesn't look like he's going to win um but yeah but i mean he's not at one percent just point out
01:44:35.760
well it didn't look like he was going to win until this ad until this ad came out you got to take
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sometimes you got to take drastic measures okay sometimes you need to like you need to let it all
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go all right to win a race like this and he does and that's what don did here um he there's a lot
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to unpack out of this ad i'll warn you in advance here is uh the new ad from don blankenship
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hi i'm don blankenship candidate for u.s senate and i approve this message swamp captain mitch
01:45:00.400
mcconnell has created millions of jobs for china people while doing so mitch has gotten rich in fact
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his china family has given him tens of millions of dollars mitch's swamp people are now running false
01:45:11.600
negative ads against me they are also childishly calling me despicable and mentally ill the war to
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drain the swamp and create jobs for west virginia people has begun i will beat joe mansion and ditch
01:45:23.160
cocaine mitch for the sake of the kids oh my i am concerned that there are too many china people
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and africa people and mexico but i might vote for that guy just because of that ad well i don't even
01:45:36.660
get me started on the japan people there are too many of them with jobs that's the craziest thing i mean
01:45:42.180
if we're going for entertainment value which i think is what we're doing now isn't it that's all we do
01:45:46.540
i mean it's all we do now in politics is who's going to be more entertaining that guy is non-stop
01:45:52.760
joke material oh man it does appear to be a there's a dash of racism in china people yes and also remember
01:45:59.680
mitch mcconnell is married to elaine chow so it's china people so that's where it's china family comes
01:46:05.240
in unbelievable i didn't understand the cocaine reference though cocaine mitch yeah so what is that
01:46:09.520
cocaine mitch it's a real it's a great stretch in politics i love when they when people really go
01:46:14.420
crazy and try to manipulate a claim to like really stretch it so uh mitch mcconnell is cocaine mitch
01:46:20.100
because mitch mcconnell is married to elaine chow right elaine chow is the secretary she was
01:46:24.440
china family that's his china family okay she's uh transportation now she's transportation so she's
01:46:31.120
she's the secretary of transportation her one of the reasons she has a qualification for that role
01:46:35.380
i guess is her family had a shipping company uh and they still own the shipping company so her dad
01:46:40.220
started a shipping company uh one ship in that giant shipping company in 2014 there was discovered
01:46:48.000
90 pounds of cocaine on the ship now it had nothing to do with elaine chow it certainly had nothing to
01:46:53.840
do with mitch mcconnell and it really had nothing to do with the company either no one was charged in
01:46:57.820
the incident they found 90 pounds the ship somebody just smuggled it on yeah yeah the ship is so large
01:47:03.260
it carries 182 million pounds each time it goes uh where it goes so this is point i i was looking at
01:47:12.800
this before point zero zero zero zero zero five percent of the of the uh haul cargo uh was cocaine
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on one trip one time four years ago and a company that's owned by the family of his wife mcconnell
01:47:32.820
apologist or what can i tell you come on can i tell you that's what china families will do you
01:47:37.620
your china families will do you that way china families will do you you know may i just say
01:47:41.780
that really i think we can come to a place now that you shouldn't run if you've ever had a problem
01:47:49.800
with a minor and i mean that in any way minors can be interpreted well this one is actually for the
01:47:55.860
kids i don't know if you know this he said he was he's going to win this for the kids which i thought
01:47:59.520
was important the other thing is like when you had two unidentified kids with him yes i assume
01:48:04.500
they were grandchildren we don't even know neighbors i don't know who they were i i hate that part's
01:48:10.680
rough too because the kids are adorable and it's like you know you bring in these kids into this
01:48:14.660
middle of the kids i just i don't i think i mean you have to see it we'll have to post it you have
01:48:20.660
to see it because it it sounds bad it looks then when you look at him you know who he is he's uh
01:48:27.320
it's uh pedro from uh uh from oh yeah from napoleon napoleon dynamite yes because there's
01:48:34.140
absolutely no emotion in his face whatsoever vote for me and i will make your wildest dreams come true
01:48:40.080
except for you cocaine mitch with your china family
01:48:54.580
not now are you okay i'm not sure we'll have to see yeah give me about 15 minutes all right thank
01:49:03.120
you pat he looks so how healthy and happy and then all of a sudden
01:49:07.180
all of a sudden out of nowhere none of us see that he was fine look all right what's he none of us he
01:49:13.760
looked fine and then all of a sudden oh no it's happening again my gosh and none of us saw it
01:49:19.520
coming no none of us saw it coming you won't see it coming as well on pat gray unleashed where he may
01:49:23.780
very well from scientists have said it to him may keel over during his program today on doctor said he
01:49:30.180
is gonna die that's confirmed that's confirmed he is gonna die he is going to die and maybe the
01:49:36.520
most likely time would be in the next few i'm a doctor man it most likely it'll happen on the air
01:49:41.700
today you don't want to miss it history in the making with uh pat gray and his uh entire orchestra
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coming up in a few minutes on most of this network glad you're here all right let me tell you about our
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glenn beck it's gonna be exciting few weeks uh here
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at uh the mercury studios in dallas mercury one uh starting their leadership program again uh the
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first week the session starts may 28th that's just a few weeks away uh what this is for ages 18 to 25
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if they if you have a passion for discovering truth and a desire to become a stronger leader
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we would like to uh spend a couple of weeks with you at mercury one uh it's mercury one.org
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ltp leadership training program uh you are going to have hands-on experience on leadership and on
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the country uh you're going to uh have hands-on experience with documents and some of the greatest
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artifacts in american history you can find all about it at mercury one.org slash ltp first week uh session
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there's two weeks each each session is two weeks may 28th the second session is june 11th and the last
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session the summer is july 9th 18 to 25 mercury one.org slash ltp i will tell you the second
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session is going to be quite an amazing thing mercury one and i have been working on something
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for well since we moved to dallas uh it's been a big uh dream and a big project and uh something that
01:53:05.340
has been very very uh complex and difficult and we are going to announce it uh that week at um at our
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museum and you will be the first to see and experience what we're doing if you come down
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to the mercury studios and see uh the museum which will be open for three days uh here at the studios
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and it's going to be one of the best museum experiences we've done yet it's a munchkin eating
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contest um why would you no i no and by the way not the donuts it's like they're actually right i mean
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wizard of oz it's about history man yep yeah okay so that's coming up you get all the details on that
01:53:43.180
mercury one.org um so a couple things from the media before we uh depart uh the iran thing that
01:53:49.880
happened this week with with israel and netanyahu saying hey you know they're doing a lot of bad
01:53:55.540
things kind of went away fast it did you know why because it wasn't a big deal nothing new here
01:53:59.140
nothing new here and the media wanted to make sure you understood that over and over and over again
01:54:03.860
listen nothing new that is what the un's nuclear watchdog says about the israeli prime minister
01:54:10.280
benjamin netanyahu's self-described blockbuster revelations on iran there is nothing new in bb's
01:54:16.340
presentation nothing new and not groundbreaking nothing new in substance nothing new nothing new
01:54:22.280
here nothing new nothing new nothing new nothing new nothing new nothing new nothing new nothing new
01:54:29.600
there's there's not a new new story unbelievable i mean it really it is incredible that they keep
01:54:36.820
doing that by the way the voice glenn referenced the voice christian amampur yeah well you should
01:54:41.320
sex expert christian amampur because uh she's got a big cnn series right now about how different people
01:54:48.560
have sex around the world and that's you know again you know surprisingly it's very similar
01:54:53.200
the way people have sex around the world yeah there's a couple things that happen we can
01:54:57.560
describe them more in detail maybe after the show yeah but for anyone who hasn't had that
01:55:01.260
conversation shockingly very much the same i will say that so that was not surprising at all let me
01:55:07.280
give you something that i thought was surprising uh to hear on fox news did you hear this neil cavuto
01:55:12.180
thing wow it's it's kind of gone viral i guess uh neil in a you know the way neil does because he's
01:55:19.480
he says i think everything with a smile he seems like an upbeat sort of guy has he been on trump's case
01:55:24.920
a lot not that i know of i didn't know he laid into him for what seemed like hours yesterday uh he
01:55:32.260
here's a clip of it this is from his show and it's kind of shocking to hear this on fox news when
01:55:36.520
they're obviously more and from neil cavuto and from neil as well here's uh here's a clip
01:55:40.460
played no role in this transaction of that you're consistently out of the doubt mr president say maybe
01:55:47.040
not deliberately but consistently way too consistently so let me be clear mr president
01:55:52.620
how can you drain the swamp if you're the one who keeps muddying the waters you didn't know about
01:55:58.780
that 130 000 payment to a porn star until you did said you knew nothing about how your former lawyer
01:56:05.040
michael cohen handled this until acknowledging today you were the guy behind the retainer payment that
01:56:11.100
took care of this you insist that money from the campaign or campaign contributions played no role
01:56:17.660
in this transaction of that you're sure thing is not even 24 hours ago sir you couldn't recall any of
01:56:24.500
this and you seem very sure now i'm not saying you're a liar you're president you're busy i'm just
01:56:29.280
having a devil of the time figuring out which news is fake let's just say your own words on lots of stuff
01:56:35.160
give me shall i say lots of pause you are right to say some of them are out to get you but oftentimes
01:56:40.800
they're using your own words to bash you your base probably might not care but you should i guess
01:56:48.900
you've been too busy draining the swamp to ever stop and smell the stink you're creating wow that's
01:56:54.880
your doing that's your stink mr president that's your swamp jeez wow i mean and that was just a clip
01:57:05.900
of it it went on and on and on and he went over topic after topic after topic highlighting some of
01:57:10.160
the misstatements and that's uh i was i'm guessing the television wasn't on in the white house during
01:57:15.060
that i guess not i don't imagine it wasn't that was uh it's pretty pretty dramatic on fox news yeah
01:57:22.580
neil cavuto uh you know who has always kind of gone his his own way and you know i've disagreed with
01:57:28.040
him and agreed with him at different times on things um but he is you know he's uh i'm having a
01:57:34.240
dickens of a time he is always a gentleman um but and that's about as fiery as i've ever seen him
01:57:42.220
uh ever in life all right have a great weekend we'll see you monday