The Glenn Beck Program - May 10, 2019


Where's The Beef? | Guests: Bill O'Reilly & Dan Andros | 5⧸10⧸19


Episode Stats


Length

2 hours and 1 minute

Words per minute

172.92586

Word count

21,066

Sentence count

2,008

Harmful content

Misogyny

23

sentences flagged

Hate speech

36

sentences flagged


Summary

Summaries generated with gmurro/bart-large-finetuned-filtered-spotify-podcast-summ .

Glenn Beck and Bill O'Reilly are joined by Fred McCostraff, the head of Rightwing Outreach for the Democratic Party, to discuss the latest in the massive manhunt for a father who tried to pawn his baby.

Transcript

Transcript generated with Whisper (turbo).
Misogyny classifications generated with MilaNLProc/bert-base-uncased-ear-misogyny .
Hate speech classifications generated with facebook/roberta-hate-speech-dynabench-r4-target .
00:00:00.000 Thank you very much. We've got a great, great program lined up for you and a big announcement
00:00:05.940 with Bill O'Reilly today. So stand by. All right. We all know that socialism is coming to America,
00:00:12.440 but did you know that our own HHS secretary, Alex Azar, is helping the cause by trying to get
00:00:20.080 foreign countries to dictate the prices of our medicine? This will cause shortages. It'll set
00:00:25.680 medical research back. This is not a good idea. FreedomWorks is doing everything they can to
00:00:30.900 sound the alarm on this, to stop socialized medicine. I want you to do your own homework.
00:00:36.120 Start by going to FreedomWorksForMe.org and look at this case and tell Secretary Azar to fix patients,
00:00:43.540 not prices. The prices of our medicine to other countries, by having the other countries fix
00:00:50.380 our prices, does not fix our problem. FreedomWorksForMe.org.
00:00:53.300 Massive manhunt for a man who tried to pawn his baby. What's the problem? I mean, can we do that?
00:01:11.840 Can we, we can't pawn our babies now? Because I didn't think it was a baby. If he chooses that
00:01:16.760 it's not a baby or his only, can only a woman do that? Is this a problem? Because it's a man doing it. 0.72
00:01:22.580 I, I'm, I'm just not sure. A great show lined up for you. We begin in one minute.
00:01:31.420 This is the Glenn Beck Program. Mother's Day is Sunday. It's a little song I just started to write.
00:01:39.580 I, I haven't gotten very far on it, but I think you get the gist. Uh, it is a Sunday, Mother's Day,
00:01:44.980 23andMe, for a limited time, is taking 30% off their health and ancestry kit until May 13th.
00:01:53.740 Now, as a family, we sent in, uh, our, our health and ancestry kit, and I'm telling you,
00:02:00.620 it was one of the coolest experiences we've ever had. Honestly, as a family, we waited for that stuff
00:02:06.280 to come back. The kids were asking all the time. Then we sat down on the couch, and because they came
00:02:11.300 in at different times, um, you know, mine came in first, then Tanya's, uh, came in, and the kids were
00:02:17.820 so excited to go over each one to see where our ancestry was, but also to look at the traits and
00:02:25.460 the health traits, and, and, uh, you know, there's a couple of them where they're like, you know, uh,
00:02:30.320 when you get into the health thing, it's like, talk to your doctor, and you have to, you know,
00:02:35.660 click on all these boxes that are like, don't panic, and you, by the time you get there, you're
00:02:40.240 like, oh my gosh, do I have leprosy? Uh, and we didn't have any health problems, but we still had
00:02:46.120 to click through all those windows, but it is amazing. It'll tell you all about diabetes, whether
00:02:50.640 you are prone to it, and the things that you can do to, to help, uh, not get diabetes, and, or whatever
00:02:59.520 else that you might have. The health and ancestry kit, a great thing, really, honestly, for the whole
00:03:05.640 family, uh, at least it was for my family, and maybe we're weird, but I, yes, we are weird, but I
00:03:11.120 don't think it's because we're weird that we enjoyed it. $30 off right now, 23andMe, get it for
00:03:16.940 Mother's Day, 23andMe, their health and ancestry kit, go to 23andMe.com slash back, that's where you'll
00:03:24.860 be able to save the 30 bucks, that's the number 23andMe.com slash back, it, it, it's Mother's Day,
00:03:35.000 could you hang on just a sec, I'm sorry, it's for Mother's Day, uh, and, uh, the offer ends
00:03:40.560 soon. Why do I have to take this phone call? I'm so sorry, I appreciate it. You can finish
00:03:44.920 the commercial, but I mean, I, yeah, if we could just get to it when you, why would I start
00:03:48.460 to, Fred? Hello, Fred. Hello? Yes. Yes, Mr. Beck! Yes, Fred. Hi, how are you? I'm, I'm, I'm
00:03:58.440 good. Oh, wow, I'm a huge fan of yours. Thank you so much for having me on. Uh, my name's
00:04:03.060 Red McCostraff, I am the head of right-wing outreach for the Democratic Party, and I just
00:04:08.160 wanted to, I am really excited about this crop of candidates, and I just wanted to tell you
00:04:12.340 about some of them. Okay. I'm a lifelong Republican, I am in the boat with you, I, I have always
00:04:17.440 voted Republican every single election since I was a child. Right. This time I've changed,
00:04:22.860 and I just want to be able to come on the show and tell you just a little bit about some
00:04:27.580 of our exciting candidates for 2020. You're going to love them. Okay. I think your audience
00:04:31.320 is going to be very excited. Okay. I, I, I highly doubt that, but, uh. No, no, no, let
00:04:36.240 me, let me tell you about one candidate. You may have heard of her, Elizabeth Warren. Now,
00:04:40.680 I think you're, you guys are really, your audience is going to be very excited about what she's
00:04:45.060 bringing to the table. Uh, I don't. She's got a lot of pro-business policies, and I know, 0.99
00:04:50.380 you're, I know you're, I mean, we're, uh, very pro-business. Yes. It's one of the things
00:04:55.500 that we are. I have a feeling that you're not, you've never voted for a Republican in
00:05:00.360 your life. Well, hold on one second. Let me tell you about what is going to happen in
00:05:03.880 2020. All right. Okay. Okay. Okay. First of all, she's got this great business, pro-business,
00:05:09.400 uh, policy, and you've heard about her wealth tax, which has been very misrepresented, and we
00:05:15.060 could get into that another time. Right. But, uh, what's another one she's, she's coming out 0.98
00:05:19.580 with here in the next couple of weeks. I think you guys are going to love it as Republicans,
00:05:23.320 uh, as we are all Republicans. Yeah. I don't think you, Fred, you're not a Republican.
00:05:27.080 And so it's called a breath tax. Now the breath tax works like this. It's very interesting.
00:05:31.660 I think you're really going to love this. Hold on just a second. A breath tax. Yes. It's
00:05:35.780 very simple, very easy to, uh, implement. Basically what would happen is when you inhale 3% of your
00:05:41.380 salary goes to the government and, but, but hold on, let me get to the pro-business part.
00:05:46.160 Right. When you exhale only 2% of your salary,
00:05:49.580 salary would go to the government. So a total of 5%, but 3% hint. So if you hold your breath,
00:05:55.420 the longer you hold your breath, the less taxes you pay. I mean, this is an exciting proposal.
00:06:00.780 I don't, I think you guys are going to love it. And it's going to create lots of jobs.
00:06:04.360 How is that going to create any, any jobs? It's going to be fantastic.
00:06:08.120 So every time, every time it's not like, so does that add up? Is it like the second breath
00:06:13.800 is another 5%?
00:06:15.760 That is how the, it is a, yes, it would, it would work that way. So you'd add on the first,
00:06:20.900 it's unimportant. It's important. It's unimportant. That's down in the future. We'll deal with the
00:06:25.160 second breath when we'll get there. Okay.
00:06:26.860 But I think you're going to really love about it.
00:06:29.580 I've already.
00:06:30.320 You're really going to love about this policy.
00:06:31.860 Glenn. And as a Republican, I think we'll, we'll agree on this one.
00:06:36.060 I'm not a Republican and I don't think you are.
00:06:38.240 Do you care about jobs? Cause I know I care about jobs. That's why I changed to the democratic
00:06:42.360 party. Just very recently, it's a lifelong Republican. When I changed over to the democratic
00:06:49.380 party, one thing I found was interesting about this breath tax is it creates jobs. 0.96
00:06:54.240 How does it create? How does it create jobs? 0.99
00:06:56.160 This will create or save 1.5 billion jobs.
00:06:59.400 Wait a minute. It will create or save 1.5 billion jobs.
00:07:03.300 Haven't heard that one for a while.
00:07:04.500 It's amazing. And what it's going to do is you're going to have people who are going
00:07:07.620 to go around with mobile oxygen monitors and what you'll be going to work. Let's say
00:07:12.180 you're going to work and you'll have a person riding with you in your car with a mobile oxygen
00:07:17.860 monitor and they will be just putting a very unintrusive, large plastic mask over your
00:07:24.120 face. Now wait, this sounds like something I don't want in my life.
00:07:32.080 Really?
00:07:32.540 A stranger driving with me to work while I'm driving, they're putting a, a large mask over
00:07:39.900 my...
00:07:40.020 Most of it's clear though. You're going to be able to see most of the road. I mean, this
00:07:42.920 is not, it's going to be very unintrusive. Right. It's not our only policy. I'll say
00:07:47.640 that. Okay. All right. I know you, I know you guys, I know we, uh, we hate immigrants, 1.00
00:07:52.240 for example. No, we don't hate them. No, no, we don't. We hate immigrants. No, we don't
00:07:59.720 hate immigrants. What are these people? They're different colors. We don't want them here. 1.00
00:08:02.660 No. You're with me on this one. I know I'm not. We're all Republicans here. Right. And
00:08:07.540 I think your audience is going to be very excited about Elizabeth Warren. Who's more
00:08:12.200 anti-immigrant than a native American? I mean, it was their land. She doesn't want anyone 1.00
00:08:19.200 coming here at all. She doesn't like black people, orange people, white people. She doesn't 0.99
00:08:23.200 like any of them. No, I really, who hates the immigrants more than someone who had like 0.99
00:08:29.260 basically their entire race wiped out and put it onto casinos or whatever. Right. No, 0.92
00:08:34.540 that's not what you're with me on this. No, I'm not with you on this. A lot of people
00:08:39.760 are saying, Oh, Elizabeth Warren, she can't be, uh, for a strong border because she's not 0.92
00:08:44.720 wanting to build the wall. Well, have you asked her what her policy is? I think a lot
00:08:49.100 of Republicans would be interesting. She wants to drape smallpox blankets, uh, across
00:08:55.060 the border. She's got throw blankets. She's already infected them with smallpox. She wants
00:09:01.300 them on the board. You are going to love it. Oh, she hates the immigrants. You're going
00:09:07.540 to love this woman. Elizabeth Warren hates immigrants, loves breath taxing. Okay. Thank
00:09:13.640 you very much. I appreciate it. Oh, I'm sorry. I don't know why I took that phone call. Um,
00:09:24.400 it's interesting. They're trying to bring both sides together. They really are. Yeah, they
00:09:28.780 really are. And they know us. They've spent the time to really, to get to know us. Yeah.
00:09:35.380 I think that's a nice thing. It really is. It really is. I don't know if it could be running
00:09:41.040 over votes right now. I think the Trump administration's a little terrified of that.
00:09:44.600 Well, the smallpox blanket screen, I, it's cheaper. It's definitely a lot less expensive.
00:09:49.720 Yeah. You need to run wires over a long, uh, uh, distance. But like clothesline. But
00:09:54.480 like clothesline. Yeah. It would just be, it could just be easily like rope. We get
00:09:58.460 like, you know, when they have like conventions and stuff, just like that, that, uh, drape
00:10:02.580 and piping. Yeah. Right. Except it's smallpox blankets. Yeah. I never thought, uh, Elizabeth
00:10:07.600 Warren would be the one that would come up with that, but, uh, pretty exciting time for
00:10:12.180 Republicans. Yeah. Like that guy. Yeah. Like Fred. Uh, welcome to, uh, welcome to Friday.
00:10:21.460 We've got a great show for you today. Uh, yes, today. I mean, we have a show for you today,
00:10:26.600 a great show for you. It'll probably be scheduled in, uh, at some point. Uh, but today we have
00:10:32.700 a show for you and, uh, we're pretty thrilled about it. Uh, uh, Bill O'Reilly is going to
00:10:37.280 be with us in just a few minutes. Uh, and, uh, we have kind of a cool, really cool announcement.
00:10:42.320 One that I really thought he's not going to do that. And, uh, I called him up and he was
00:10:48.200 like, yeah. Uh, and so, uh, we have a cool, really cool announcement with, uh, Bill O'Reilly
00:10:53.840 coming up in, uh, just about 45 minutes. Today's the, uh, Uber, uh, the big, um, IPO coming
00:11:02.700 out here in the near future. There's a story out about some of these investments on these,
00:11:08.320 uh, on these startups, which is somewhat, somewhat impressive. It's like these type of investments
00:11:15.920 that you just never, they never come around to you, you know? Uh, so this is someone invested,
00:11:22.780 uh, is this is first round capital invested $500,000 in Uber back in the day. Uh, their
00:11:28.920 return so far, 2.5 billion. Oh, holy cow. Did you love that? I would love it more if
00:11:39.980 I could have been the guy. Yeah, that was in 2010. So the return on the investment, it
00:11:44.540 is over a nine year period. So you have to take that into account. Oh my gosh. $500,000
00:11:48.960 into 2.5 billion. See, this is the kind of lottery I want to win. Yes. You know, going
00:11:53.440 to the lottery and just doing a scratch ticket. It's not, I would want to win the lottery where
00:12:00.460 you've invested, you know, a thousand dollars and it's worth a million. Yeah. You know, and
00:12:06.420 you've built something at the same time. Right. And it kind of, yeah, exactly. So it doesn't
00:12:10.180 feel, but I guess that's what the lottery is because we're building this great education
00:12:13.540 system all around the country. It's amazing. You know, it's so great. So well, because I,
00:12:19.960 I think, wow, we've invested how much through the lottery in education and look how good
00:12:25.760 it is. So we could have built something like Uber, but no, no, no, no, no. Education in
00:12:33.300 the U.S. Yeah. Yeah. It's one of those things too, where you don't get the respect if you
00:12:38.240 win the lottery. Winning the lottery is basically people look at you and like, oh, that dope lucked
00:12:44.160 out. And now they got all this money and it pisses me off. When you invest some money into
00:12:48.720 a company, which is just as much a crap shoot as the lottery, basically, it is so many of these
00:12:53.800 things shut down. Then you're like, wow, that guy's a business genius. I mean, he didn't come
00:12:58.160 up with the idea or do any of the work on it, but he put his money into it very early. I would
00:13:02.500 love, I would love one of these guys to come out like, you know, in a bathrobe and slippers
00:13:07.860 and pull up in a big, like, uh, you know, Winnebago and, you know, I'm just here to collect
00:13:14.680 my billion dollars. Who knew? Who knew? Who knew? There's some money out of it and it
00:13:19.420 worked. Uh, here's some other ones. A $750,000 investment in Lyft worth now $240 million. Not
00:13:26.480 bad. I mean, not, not quite the Uber return. I mean, not the billion. Uh, you're supposed
00:13:30.800 to do this the other way because that would have seemed really, wow. I know. Well, I'm
00:13:35.440 getting there. We have a $9 million LinkedIn investment, $1.3 billion. I want that person
00:13:41.540 dead. Yeah. I don't know who it is. I want that person dead. Okay. So, so I don't even
00:13:47.100 know. Somebody signed me up for LinkedIn years ago and, uh, then every, I just, I can't stop
00:13:53.360 LinkedIn. You just can't stop it. You can't stop it. Then about, I don't know, six months
00:13:59.700 ago, I was like, I give up. Fine. Join, join. I don't care. Go. Oh my gosh. Don't ever do
00:14:06.140 that. Don't ever do that. Are you getting just constantly berated? If you don't get
00:14:15.680 a, an email from me, if you're my wife, honey, could you answer my email? I can't find it
00:14:23.280 anymore. I don't know. I just, I got a LinkedIn. That's all I got. Hey, I want to join your
00:14:27.940 network. I don't have a network. I don't have a network. I don't get it. I don't, I don't
00:14:33.120 understand. I don't want it anymore. Please. And it's one thing with LinkedIn
00:14:37.660 because it's activity. Like people are asking you to come in. Hey, can you be
00:14:41.040 part of my network? I swear though, it feels like they reach out on your behalf
00:14:45.700 to others as well. So they're constantly saying, and they're just persistent and
00:14:51.280 trying to make you do additional things. Oh yeah. They're like, Hey, did you know
00:14:55.340 somebody, somebody just had a, a, a job promotion? You should, you should
00:15:01.200 tell them something and you should tell them something. And here's four
00:15:06.200 suggestions. And you're like, I don't. Okay. That one. Hey, great. On whatever
00:15:11.240 you did. Like you send it and they, you know, they're like, I got one of those
00:15:17.820 two about you. You didn't even put any thought into it. You're like, right. I
00:15:22.660 know. I'm trapped in LinkedIn hell. Okay. 8.1 million in snap, uh, really, uh, get
00:15:29.340 got to 1.5 billion, 250,000 in Pinterest, uh, returned 399 million. How
00:15:36.220 about 11, uh, 0.8 million in Google by, by, uh, Kleiner Perkins in 1999, 4.8
00:15:44.540 billion and then $14.8 million in Facebook now worth $5.7 billion. I
00:15:53.480 mean, $5.7 billion. And again, this is, you get the respect of being smart out of
00:15:58.800 that. But, but, but my father-in-law, he bought all the beanie babies. Oh, when
00:16:04.860 those things turn around, turn around, man, I am sitting on an inheritance. Like
00:16:09.760 you will not believe. Uh, all right. Let me tell you about, uh, 1-800 flowers, 1-800
00:16:16.240 flowers, uh, as kid, you could get away with a lot. Uh, but, uh, I know my kids
00:16:21.780 are in the car right now, listening to me and kids, you're not really kids
00:16:26.840 anymore. You're teenagers. And so mom isn't going to be so forgiving. Oh yeah,
00:16:31.960 but they're so cute. She wants something nice that says that you thought about her
00:16:36.640 for at least 10 minutes. Anyway, uh, right now you can go to 1-800 flowers.com.
00:16:45.260 Now 1-800 flowers.com kids, I know is not on the circle. So you can actually go to
00:16:51.840 that site and I will go there with you and you can pick something out and it
00:16:56.880 will be sent to mom. So she knows you thought about her for 10 seconds. 1-800 flowers.com
00:17:04.440 go there. Now 1-800 flowers.com for the last minute kid shopping hint, hint 1-800
00:17:14.900 flowers.com 1-800 flowers.com. Click on the radio icon, enter the promo code
00:17:19.640 Beck. Mother's day is Sunday. 1-800 flowers.com code back. We break for 10
00:17:27.620 second station ID. Okay. So, uh, a couple of things happened to me last night. Uh, one,
00:17:44.460 I had the greatest, I had the greatest night ever because I had the opportunity to lie to
00:17:51.540 two family members and each of them thought that they were in on it. Uh, I went to, we went
00:18:00.580 to the kids school and, uh, and Cheyenne and Tanya both got an award. She got a service award
00:18:08.840 and, uh, I don't know, uh, Cheyenne got a, I bribe the teacher with my smiles award. I don't
00:18:15.880 know what that, but anyway, so, so, uh, Cheyenne knew about mom's award and mom knew about Cheyenne's
00:18:25.900 award. I knew about both. And so I was telling that, yeah, I was telling them both a lie. I'm
00:18:32.980 like, okay, all right. All right. Cheyenne might know if I say I'm coming because then she might
00:18:40.500 know, Oh, maybe I'm, I've got some sort of, you know, scholastic award or something. And
00:18:44.600 so I'm, I'm gonna, uh, I'm gonna, uh, tell her that I'm not coming. Okay. So then when
00:18:52.340 I show up, it'll be too late. She won't even think of it. She'll be just like, Oh, dad's
00:18:55.980 here. Great. Okay. And then, and then I told my, uh, my daughter, uh, listen, mom's getting
00:19:05.840 an award, but, uh, she can't know. So I need you to go and you just be with mom and I'm
00:19:14.500 going to tell mom I'm not coming. So then when I show up, so both of them thought they
00:19:20.880 were in on this scam of me showing up and you were in a way you're saying lie and what
00:19:27.480 a strong word that is. Really? You told the individual truth to both of them. Yes, I did.
00:19:33.780 Yes, I did. And it was great. I loved it. I loved it. So were they surprised? Yeah,
00:19:39.980 they were both surprised and it was, it was really great. Um, it was a better than last
00:19:44.700 year. My son won the Christ like, uh, the Christ like, uh, public school. Yeah. No,
00:19:51.980 uh, what was it? Like the Christ like award or something for the, uh, what was it? Yeah.
00:19:57.360 Most Christ like award, something like that. And I've never been more embarrassed in my life. 0.59
00:20:01.100 Okay. Uh, he actually, he did not know he was going to win, but he had dressed up, uh,
00:20:08.940 as if it was like going to be a, you know, an Academy award. And he goes to a school that
00:20:14.880 has the word Academy in it. Okay. And so when they announced the Christ like award, which
00:20:23.560 and his name, he stood up like it was the Academy awards. And he was like, yes, yes. Thank
00:20:30.300 you. Thank you. And then he gets up. Nobody gives speeches, nothing. He gets up. He kind
00:20:34.700 of nudges the teacher out of the way. And he said, I just like to thank the Academy for
00:20:38.860 this award. And he was like, and I was just in the back sweating going, oh my gosh, no,
00:20:43.720 it's the Christ like award son. He's awesome. I love how I like how he kind of puts you in
00:20:51.080 awkward positions. Cause this is your specialty and has been your specialty for decades with
00:20:54.720 your children. Yeah. Of putting them in the most awkward positions possible. Yes. Yes.
00:20:58.160 And now they're doing it to me. He is insistent on talking to you, by the way. Oh really?
00:21:01.420 He wants to do jokes with jokes with Rafe. He's like, dad, dad, there'll be 20 seconds,
00:21:07.140 just 20 seconds. They're just bad jokes with Rafe. And, uh, you just, you just drop them
00:21:12.240 in and there'll be incredibly embarrassing for you. And I'm like, I know I don't proved.
00:21:15.860 I mean, you don't need to talk to me at all. Just bring it in. Right. Okay. So anyway,
00:21:19.700 so that was the first thing. Then I'm so happy. I'm going out to dinner with my family,
00:21:24.360 two award winners. The Academy has recognized them. Yes. And, uh, we have dinner and my wife
00:21:30.900 says, tell me about the vegan burger. Now my daughter, my other daughter, my second oldest,
00:21:37.700 uh, Hannah, she has decided to go all vegan. Oh yeah. Uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, and now I see my
00:21:46.060 wife say, tell me about the vegan burger. I said, it stops here. It stops here right now. Stop it. 1.00
00:21:52.080 Oh, we're stop. It doesn't stop here. We're escalating it. We're escalating it. We,
00:21:56.560 as you know, there's this a vegan burger called the impossible burger that people say tastes just
00:22:01.000 like the meat. Impossible. Impossible. That's why they call it that. Yes. Well,
00:22:04.400 there's a shortage going. However, we have secured some for you and Pat to taste test coming up.
00:22:14.380 You're listening to Glenn Beck.
00:22:16.800 All righty. Real estate agents. I trust.com. I'm excited by the way. Announcement with Bill
00:22:23.380 O'Reilly coming up in just about a half an hour. He's going vegan too.
00:22:29.980 That's funny. Uh, real estate agents. I trust.com, uh, started to start by me, uh, and my brother,
00:22:37.140 Robert, uh, to be able to, uh, help people find the things that I was looking for. I, can I just get a
00:22:44.160 good real estate agent? I don't even know the questions to ask. I mean, like, uh, you don't
00:22:48.640 have a toupee, right? Cause I know people don't like toupees on people. So that'd probably drive
00:22:54.260 the price of the house down. If I had a real estate agent with a toupee, I don't even know 1.00
00:22:58.900 what to ask. How do you find a great real estate agent? That's what this service is. Doesn't charge
00:23:04.940 you. Doesn't cost you anything. It's real estate agents. I trust.com real estate agents. I trust.com.
00:23:10.800 If you're looking to buy or sell a house, these are the people who are the best in your area.
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00:24:45.020 Welcome to the program. Hello, Pat. Hi, Glenn. How are you? I'm great. I mean,
00:24:51.160 you're got to be great with two hamburgers, right? Yes, right. I'm a little nervous though. One of them's
00:24:55.280 not a real hamburger. I know. So here's the thing. Um, my, my daughter has gone vegan and,
00:25:01.700 uh, and I don't like it at all. And so has my wife. I hate it. Oh, really? My wife is starting 1.00
00:25:05.920 to go vegan too. I hate it. Jackie's almost completely vegan. She just won't. I'm not
00:25:12.140 interested anymore. Oh, shut up. I didn't marry you. Right? With this in the blood. Okay. First of all,
00:25:20.220 I never, I never said to anyone in my entire life, I know what I want to be married to a 50 year old 0.67
00:25:26.080 woman. Never said that. Never, ever. And now vegan. It's done. It's over. I'm out. I know.
00:25:35.100 This is just pleasure for me. It's crazy. It's a pleasure to watch this happen to you. Every night,
00:25:39.640 she's just, it's just vegetable garbage. So I'm going to, so we're going to New York for a week or
00:25:47.460 two and I'm going to be working. And my daughter was like, I'll cook. And I'm like, oh, that would 0.89
00:25:54.140 be no, no, wait. And she's like, yes, I'm going to cook. Wait, that means nothing. She won't,
00:26:00.980 nothing animal, nothing animal. Wow. When did that start? She started it about, it started creeping in
00:26:09.340 maybe two years ago. And, and Tim was really unhealthy and he was starting to look like me and
00:26:16.680 and all of a sudden. I don't remember that era. Do you? By any chance, Pat? Because I see Tim
00:26:21.180 every day and I don't remember this era. I don't remember the era. Oh no, he was like,
00:26:24.220 he looked like Glenn. No, he looked like, what's his name from the Santa Claus? I mean, it was like,
00:26:29.000 Tim Allen? Yeah, it was bad. Anyway, so, so, so they just started eating healthy and then she's,
00:26:36.360 and I knew it. I said to Tim, don't do it, man. She's starting to eat healthy. You know,
00:26:41.020 you know where this leads. But you got to, you got to understand that your daughter,
00:26:44.580 like when people, when vegans look at your daughter, they're like, look at that. Look
00:26:48.720 at that crazy left winger over there. Like they think she's not a left winger, but she's, 1.00
00:26:53.120 she is way further than vegan, right? Like she is to the point of like, no, she's, she's one of
00:26:59.540 the composting and like, she's like all the way there. Yeah. But not to the weird part, right? I
00:27:04.900 mean, like she's living it. And she does it from what I really like. She never lectures anybody. Yeah.
00:27:09.840 She's just living it. And she's like, you know, dad, you, you don't have to, you know, it's my,
00:27:14.820 but we go out to dinner and she will bring her own, you know, yeah, her own little, you know,
00:27:22.000 Tupperware stuff or whatever she's got. That's impressive. Yeah. She, she lives it. Wow. Well,
00:27:27.900 living it is becoming easier as someone who has to deal with this every day, especially in Texas,
00:27:32.600 where, uh, I think the most vegan thing you can have is like ribs with less lard than normal
00:27:39.100 included. Like that's, that's the vegetarian way to live. Vegan is we've taken the eyes off it.
00:27:44.320 Yeah. So there's this thing called the impossible burger. There is a shortage nationwide right now
00:27:52.360 of these things. And they're one of these, there's two main companies doing this, trying to basically
00:27:56.160 make a plant-based burger that, and other sorts of meat. So this is not like better, better living
00:28:02.840 through pharmaceuticals. This is, this is not Dow. No, this is, they take the, the enzyme of a pea or
00:28:10.660 something. So there's a, they found the specific thing that makes meat taste like meat basically.
00:28:15.700 Um, and it's, it's, how come peas don't taste like meat? Because there's a very small amount of
00:28:19.700 maybe, I don't know exactly. They're, you know, they are, they are experts at this and I am not.
00:28:23.780 Uh, however, they basically put that in as part of these things. And if you kind of look, if you
00:28:28.680 take a quick glance, right, you'll look and they do look like a normal burger. Yeah. It doesn't look
00:28:32.840 normal. Yeah. Um, so, uh, so there's two standards here. I'd like to, cause we have an A and B taste
00:28:38.020 test. One is a real burger. One is an impossible burger. We got them from HopDotty, which is a Texas,
00:28:42.320 uh, restaurant, uh, which I got them last night. So they're kind of reheated and that's going to hurt it.
00:28:47.060 Yeah. That's going to mess with it. So there's two standards here quickly. One is it edible? Do you,
00:28:52.900 do you like it? Would it, would it taste good to, uh, you know, can you tell the difference?
00:28:57.760 I think you're going to be able to tell the difference maybe, but I would like to see if
00:29:00.820 you just think it tastes pretty good. Well, I was going to say, I was going to say I knew
00:29:03.900 which one was beef just by looking at them. Uh, and then I looked at both of them and I look,
00:29:09.220 they look pretty similar. Exactly the same. Yeah. So I'm going to try it. All right. Pat,
00:29:14.500 I think, I think I want to go on record. I think B just by the look of it is the fake burger. Okay. Okay.
00:29:22.900 Hmm. Both trying. Really? I'm trying a, a, a definitely tastes like meat. Okay. I gotta
00:29:29.000 take some of this. They got some, some good guys getting rid of the evil vegetables that
00:29:33.840 have been placed on his burger. That's wrong. I mean, the vegetables are wrong. Not getting
00:29:40.060 rid of it. I mean, they grow in the ground. It's nasty. I don't want that. Okay. I, I would say
00:29:50.460 A is a burger. I would say A is a, that's meat is meat. It's not. Unless I haven't gotten
00:29:57.160 to the aftertaste yet. That might be the telling hint. Is there an aftertaste? I would
00:30:04.560 say that's, A is a, and this isn't fair because it tastes like a bad reheated burger. It is.
00:30:11.900 It is. It's a good reheated burger. I mean, Pop Daddy is a good place, but we did have to buy
00:30:16.300 them. I couldn't find a place that would, that made them for breakfast, sadly. So we
00:30:19.740 are, look, we haven't reached peak capitalism yet. Yeah. You know, when we, when we are in
00:30:23.840 Texas and they won't, they won't make us. Well, we have a location in this building.
00:30:28.460 All right. So now I'm going to try B. The worst part about this too, is I couldn't bring the
00:30:33.480 queso fries. Oh, those, that's. B is a fake burger. I agree. It's not bad though. Does it
00:30:45.300 taste like meat? Yeah. Yeah. It absolutely tastes like meat. It just tastes like a, it
00:30:52.940 tastes like, um, I think the textural difference is a little bit, but it, you know, it tastes
00:30:57.740 like, um, like a fast food burger almost. Right. And again, these are, they are reheated.
00:31:05.500 So it's not a knock on Hop Daddy's burgers, which are excellent by most tellings. Uh, so.
00:31:11.940 But I would still eat this. You would still eat it. I'd still eat this. And I would think
00:31:15.180 that it was a burger. If you just gave this to me fresh and it was hot and fresh, I bet
00:31:20.500 I wouldn't know. I wouldn't know the difference. And that's B? Yeah. That's B. Um, the, probably
00:31:24.860 the reason you wouldn't know the difference is that is the real burger. You're kidding
00:31:28.280 me. Are you serious? B is the real burger. Real burger. A is the impossible burger. That
00:31:32.700 is insane. Isn't that insane? That's amazing. I'm shocked that both of you went with the wrong
00:31:39.860 That is amazing. Wow. Isn't that, that's incredible. Oh, that's crazy. That's wrong. That's wrong
00:31:46.960 to do that to me. I mean, that is really, I demand that plants taste like plants and animals
00:31:53.140 taste like animals. I demand it. It's too confusing a world. That really is crazy. I could go vegan
00:31:59.680 with those. Cause they are freaking good, man. They taste it. I mean, it's been years since
00:32:04.600 I've had a hamburger because you know, I, this is how I eat all the time. Uh, and, uh,
00:32:09.300 but like I kind of, so I was wondering if for us to think for you to think that is amazing,
00:32:14.080 is amazing. And we had your, your chef was in here. He's the guy who reheated these, uh,
00:32:18.080 today. And he said the same thing when he had an impossible burger, he didn't know it.
00:32:22.220 I mean, Stu, you know this about me. I'm mostly vegetarian, mostly vegetarian. Mostly. Well,
00:32:27.340 I mean, I dabble in, I have a little fish and some chicken and a little bit of beef,
00:32:33.340 but roast and some pork steak ribs and a little, well, bacon, good amount of bacon,
00:32:38.220 um, ham, ham, ham, just sausage. Right. But there are thousands of species. I don't,
00:32:44.240 I've never eaten bear. Never, never, never. I've had bear. You have had bear. I've never
00:32:48.640 had bear. They just said there's 9 million species total in the world. What are you,
00:32:52.040 10 of them? Maybe. Maybe that's about a very small percentage of the species. I mean,
00:32:58.140 that it is, uh, it's an impressive. That's amazing. It's interesting to me though,
00:33:01.820 that vegans want something that tastes like meat. Cause I thought that was a point to get away
00:33:06.700 from meat. Well, I mean, I think there are, there are various types of vegans. Like for example,
00:33:11.140 uh, our, our producer Marissa is a vegetarian and she does not eat these because she doesn't, 0.96
00:33:16.300 she's not, it's not her desire. Depends on why you, why you're eating vegetarian, I guess.
00:33:20.380 I guess so. It was never a taste issue for me really. Um, maybe. So tell me about the protein.
00:33:25.460 Uh, I would love to tell you about it. You don't know. I have read about it in the past. I don't
00:33:31.300 know that I could quote, uh, accurately. There's, it's something called hem, I think,
00:33:35.080 or something that gives you the taste of meat. No, no, no. I'm talking about the protein. Oh,
00:33:39.460 as far as it's health, it's much healthier than a normal burger. Um, it's got less fat,
00:33:43.460 it's got less calories, it's got more protein. I am expecting my, my cows. Cause I have a ranch.
00:33:50.780 Cows. When that's what we, that's what we raised them to be. I am expecting my cows to be taking
00:33:55.780 their little hooves and pushing plates of this towards me. Like, have you tried to try this?
00:34:02.340 Venture capital is going into impossible burger. It's a bunch of cows. So you can't buy these though.
00:34:07.020 You can't buy them in stores to like hook them in your house yet. They're, they're at 7,000
00:34:11.920 restaurants right now across the country. If you go to red Robin, they have them. Cheesecake
00:34:15.160 factory has them. A lot of the big chains have started with them. They're about to come.
00:34:18.420 The impossible Whopper is right around the corner. 7,300 burger Kings are about to have
00:34:22.200 it as well. Um, and, uh, they are going into grocery stores later this year.
00:34:25.920 If Glenn and I can't tell the difference, I think that is incredible. Wild. I am blown
00:34:31.500 away by that. That's unreal. We are, we are anti fake food. Yes. We are anti vegan stuff where
00:34:39.920 we both hate vegetables and for that to fool. And I'm a rancher. Yeah. Yeah. I'm a rancher.
00:34:46.900 I, I, I breed my cattle to a, for a certain texture and taste. I mean, it's amazing. It's
00:34:54.220 amazing. That's amazing. Is this a lot less, uh, calorie wise than meat? Uh, I would say
00:35:01.060 it's maybe 20%, 25%. It's not like a, it's not a drug, but it is better, uh, health wise
00:35:07.520 for you. Um, but it's not like, it's not like a diet burger. It's like 12 calories. It's, it's,
00:35:12.480 I mean, you could tell, you can tell why eating it. It's not right. It's not like
00:35:15.480 a light. It's a good burger. Can I tell you something? This is the reason you do not, uh,
00:35:25.020 force government regulation. Yeah. When you have something that is as good or better, I
00:35:33.860 would gladly be a vegan. I would gladly not raise animals to be slaughtered for hamburgers.
00:35:44.300 If that was, was out and prevalent, you don't have to lecture me. You don't have to scare
00:35:50.840 me. You just have to come up with a product through the free market that is as good. And
00:35:57.460 then you'll gladly do it. How often have we said that about wind and solar? Yes. When
00:36:02.300 my house, my house finally is, is right. My house has been green from the get go. My, my
00:36:09.300 ranch, it doesn't have, we don't have any source of electricity other than what we make. So
00:36:15.260 when we started it, I was still had to have a diesel, huge diesel generator, uh, for the
00:36:20.620 house that would click on, uh, at night because of, you know, the wind power and the solar
00:36:25.820 would stop. And so I would still have to run generators. Uh, and I would use, I got
00:36:31.160 that fixed now. Yeah. That thing, the last time I was up there, because we put the new
00:36:35.920 generation now of solar panels up and the new generation of, of batteries. And they're
00:36:42.480 still not right. Yeah. It's very, it's still very expensive, but my generator hasn't run
00:36:49.260 in months, in months. Really? Yeah. It's totally green. Now you get this right.
00:36:55.040 So, I mean, you, you, again, you hate rich people. Well, it's rich people who are buying
00:37:00.320 this, the next generation and the next generation. I still hate them though. To be able to get
00:37:07.020 it to where it's going to be reasonable for everybody. And once it's reasonable, everybody's
00:37:12.100 going to have it. Yeah. Stop with this nonsense of government control. The free market system
00:37:18.440 is fixing all of this. Yeah. It's kind of exciting. I mean, there's, these companies are trying to
00:37:23.960 solve this problem without going through the government. This shows you how incredible it
00:37:28.040 is and what's possible. Hey, that is. No, no, no. It's impossible. It is impossible. And
00:37:34.040 you know what? Let me tell you something. It's an impossible burger. Yeah. Let me, they should
00:37:37.300 call it that. You know what? What's, what's, uh, um, um, really, truly amazing is Pat and
00:37:43.180 I both said leading up to this, it it's impossible. We will know. I, I really thought you would
00:37:49.840 know. Yeah. And then we didn't. Okay. Okay. Okay. Wait. Okay. So there's two things in capitalism,
00:37:54.680 two things that have happened today. And I want to show the, the other one, it'll probably
00:37:59.260 be later in the show, but it's amazing. How many times have you looked at a concept car
00:38:04.300 and you went, Oh man, they should build that. Okay. And they never do. And when you think
00:38:10.940 of the interior of a concept car, it always looks like a jet or, you know, something that
00:38:16.180 you're like, Whoa, I saw something today and I thought it was a concept car. And I'm like,
00:38:23.140 they should build that. And then it said 2020. And I started doing my homework on it and it's
00:38:31.200 made here in America. And it is, I mean, it's, it's honestly something you would look
00:38:38.540 at and go concept car. There's no way, no way. Really? And it's out next fall and made
00:38:45.300 here in America. Wow. It's incredible. I saw some of the cool footage of it. I mean,
00:38:49.280 it is incredible. It's incredible. It's incredible. So there's, there's, we are on the cusp of all
00:38:55.280 of, all of man's wildest dreams and on the cusp of man's most terrific nightmares and the free
00:39:05.680 market provides one and socialism will provide the other.
00:39:14.360 Boy, I, we should be endorsers of the impossible burger. I, I, I've made this argument before
00:39:19.220 because look, you can talk about greenies in the left. Exactly. You need conservatives to be 0.76
00:39:23.980 able to consider things like this. If, if it's ever going to, you know, if, if what your design
00:39:27.660 is and you want to stop, you know, you could have all the lefties in the world say, go to Burger King
00:39:32.880 and try the impossible burger. And I never do it. No, but, but you have somebody like Pat who's like,
00:39:38.120 okay, you know me, no way. Try it. It's unbelievable. Okay. If you're a small business owner,
00:39:46.100 chances are your business is booming. So how's your workload? Are you killing yourself?
00:39:51.540 You need some great new employees. So you don't have to work 24 seven. You need a great HR partner
00:39:59.260 that doesn't put more work on you to find the right people. Pat is still eating it. And I have
00:40:05.080 no desire to eat the real one, right? Yeah. It's zip recruiter.com slash back that zip recruiter.com
00:40:12.100 slash back. Do it now. Four out of five employers who post on zip recruiter, get a quality candidate
00:40:17.320 through the site for the first day. Try it for free at this special exclusive web address. It's
00:40:22.300 zip recruiter.com slash back the smartest way to hire. Uh, so I just showed, and I'm going to show
00:40:29.240 this to you, uh, in, in, in just a little while, we have Bill O'Reilly coming up with a special
00:40:33.420 announcement, but, uh, I just showed Pat this, what I thought was a concept car. Does that not look like
00:40:38.980 every concept car that you're like, Oh my gosh, you should build this. Yeah. It's beautiful and
00:40:43.620 futuristic looking like crazy different. Yeah. Like I've never seen anything like it. Yeah. And
00:40:49.320 features that you think, wow. Why didn't they think of that before? Right. Uh, on sale this fall
00:40:56.340 built in Marysville, Ohio. Wow. Like so great. It's so great. So great. We'll talk to you about that
00:41:05.340 and, and, and show it to you, uh, uh, coming up in just a little while. If you, if you're not
00:41:10.500 watching us on blaze TV, you should be just join us blaze tv.com slash back, uh, blaze tv.com slash
00:41:18.560 back. Use the, uh, promo code. What is it? Glenn. And you're going to save a 10% join us blaze TV bill
00:41:25.380 O'Reilly next. The fusion of entertainment and enlightenment. This is the Glenn Beck program.
00:41:36.920 A lot of stuff has gone on and the man who knows better than most what all of it means. And I say
00:41:44.800 that because he of course will tell us that himself, uh, Mr. Bill O'Reilly and his analysis
00:41:51.400 of the week next. This is the Glenn Beck program. Unemployment at historic lows. If I would have
00:42:02.940 told you that, uh, we would have 3.9, is it 3.6 now? 3.6% unemployment. If I would have said that
00:42:13.860 five years ago, I wouldn't have believed it. I don't think anybody in the audience would have
00:42:18.220 believed it. That is incredible. The best I was five years old. The last time that happened,
00:42:24.880 uh, Bill O'Reilly was 55, which is crazy. Uh, but anyway, historic lows for unemployment,
00:42:32.800 which means it's going to get harder and harder for you to find the right employee. That's why you
00:42:38.300 really need zip recruiter.com slash back. They're not, you know, some of these things are just,
00:42:44.080 they just dump all the resumes on your desk. That's no help. These, these guys actually not
00:42:50.440 only sort through them to find the best one. So they're all highlighted right at the top.
00:42:55.220 Uh, but also they go out and they search for the right employee that might not have seen your ad.
00:43:01.660 That's what zip recruiter does. It's unlike any other employment service. If you are looking for the
00:43:07.960 right employee, most employees or most, uh, employers find the quality candidate that they
00:43:14.240 can hire within the first day. It's zip recruiter.com slash back. Try it now. Zip recruiter.com
00:43:20.980 slash back looking to hire. It's the smartest way to hire and you can try it for free at zip recruiter.com
00:43:28.100 slash back. Mr. Bill O'Reilly. Yes, here I am. So good of you to grace us with your presence
00:43:51.080 today. You know, back, I look forward to this all week. And, uh, one of the reasons is that
00:43:57.660 someone has to get you and Stu on the right path. And I think that I've been on put on earth to do
00:44:04.560 that. Well, that's, that's one very low calling. It's a, yeah, it's a one reason maybe. Uh, all
00:44:10.840 right. So where do you want to start? You want to start with, um, the, uh, the battle in, in Congress?
00:44:17.720 Well, it's not really a battle because, um, they're not fighting among each other. They're
00:44:24.840 basically two camps in Congress. There are Republicans who want to keep the white house
00:44:31.600 and the Senate, and then perhaps, uh, win back the house and the Democrats who will do anything
00:44:39.000 at this point to get Trump out of office because they're not real sure they're going to defeat him
00:44:44.700 in 2020. So that, that's the most important takeaway of all of this is that the democratic power
00:44:51.820 structure, this is the swamp in Washington, the big money people, Hollywood, the media moguls,
00:44:57.920 they're not so sure that they can take Trump because Biden is shaky. Okay. I want to get into
00:45:05.260 Biden. Hang on, hang on, hang on. I want to get into the Biden thing here in a second. Let's stay
00:45:09.160 on course here for just, just, just a second with the, um, you know, the, uh, holding bar in
00:45:16.640 contempt, et cetera, et cetera. The, the way I read this bill, and before we get into the weeds of,
00:45:22.620 of, of what they're actually doing and claiming the way I read, this is, this is a suicide note
00:45:29.560 from the democratic party, because I don't know anyone on the, on the, uh, democratic side in real
00:45:37.060 life that is saying anything, but get over it, move on.
00:45:43.540 Certainly that's the will of the people. And that's why I've made that analysis that, that the
00:45:50.480 democratic party, um, is basically gambling that they're going to final, finally get something
00:46:00.160 impeachable. That's the goal. If they can get them into an impeachment situation, they know they're
00:46:05.920 not going to convict the Senate. We'll never do that unless there's really something we don't know.
00:46:10.580 So, so the Democrats just want to be smirch where the day Trump and hoping that the American people
00:46:17.420 will come around to their point of view, that Trump doesn't deserve to be president. Um, now on
00:46:24.220 the bar thing and on the Don jr thing and on the Mueller thing and on the redaction, it's all the
00:46:31.300 same. They want to retry the Mueller report. They want to recast it. That's what they want to do.
00:46:43.080 I know. And so they, they, it's like going fishing. You put 15 lines in the water and hope you get
00:46:48.640 a couple of bites. You've been, you've been on jr on perjury, or maybe they can get bar on perjury,
00:46:55.160 or maybe Mueller will say something embarrassing. They can put on a, a soundbite. That's, that's
00:47:00.780 what this is, but this is any fishermen people or the work of the people. And any fishermen's
00:47:06.120 family would say, dad, stop it. We've already gone through this area of the water with nets for two
00:47:14.840 years. Stop. Very good. I love that. Thank you very much. Thank you. Well, I've learned at the feet
00:47:21.420 of the master. Uh, I guess that's me. Um, but anyway, uh, rather than getting angry and I know
00:47:30.100 many Americans are angry on both sides, the, uh, you know, I'm just wrapping up, uh, the United States
00:47:35.360 of Trump, the anger and the hatred toward president Trump is just, I don't think I've ever seen it in
00:47:42.300 this country ever. I'm going back to Jefferson and, uh, to Adams. That was really bad. Yeah. Do you
00:47:48.920 have the quote of the heads on the pike? You have to, you, you have to include this in your book,
00:47:53.500 the heads on the pike and, and your, your children will be, your daughters will be raped and your 1.00
00:47:58.520 sons will have their heads on the pike. I'd love that. That's what Adam said about Jefferson. 0.99
00:48:02.900 If he's elected, that's what's going to happen. But I think it's worse now because of the internet
00:48:07.480 and because social media and all that is, it did no respite to it. Yeah. But, um, I think Americans
00:48:14.060 will, uh, basically start walking away from the coverage and I, and I already go over this
00:48:22.220 a lot, but I get the overnight ratings for cable every day. CNN, they don't have one show
00:48:28.220 now cracking a million viewers. Uh, not one, uh, try this stat on. I did a special on blaze.com.
00:48:36.880 Uh, we had more viewers. You should get blaze.com. Blaze TV. Thank you. Blaze TV.com. Uh, I did a
00:48:45.120 special, what was it last week on socialism bill? We had higher ratings on that. More people watch that
00:48:51.840 than we're watching primetime CNN. That's yeah, that's all it's online. That's how, that's how much
00:49:01.500 things have changed. And even Donald Trump, uh, when he gave his speech, Fox news carried the whole
00:49:08.280 speech in Panama city. They didn't do that well. They didn't do that well with it. Um, not what
00:49:14.840 Trump usually did. So I think people are, look, summer's coming, living is easy, all that, you
00:49:20.020 know, and people, you know, I had enough of this. And, um, that's why I say to people don't get caught
00:49:26.560 up in the bar and Don jr. And all it is, um, because it's not going to really mean anything
00:49:33.000 unless something new comes out. All right. So now let's switch to Biden. Biden's numbers are
00:49:38.400 astonishing when you have 22 people in the field and all of these people that are, are socialist
00:49:45.900 and running right towards the, the hardcore left. Here comes Biden who is, I don't think a great
00:49:54.040 candidate. Nobody's chomping at the bit for Joe Biden that I know of. Uh, and he throws in and he
00:49:59.300 is anywhere from 21 points to 39 points ahead of the entire democratic field. To me, that says there
00:50:08.120 is a thirst and a deep hunger on in the Democrats, uh, in the, in the voting base for anything other
00:50:16.460 than these socialist kooks. Well, first of all, the Beck audience should go to real clear politics.com
00:50:25.960 if they want to see the polling themselves, real clear politics.com does an average of the polls
00:50:32.980 because you can't believe one or the other polls or most of these polls don't know what they're doing.
00:50:37.800 Now, vice president Biden is a formidable candidate. And I don't think anybody should underestimate that
00:50:45.360 because he's going to have the media in his pocket and he's going to have at least six or $700
00:50:52.380 million to spend on his campaign. So just the combination of the two make him, don't dismiss him.
00:51:03.460 Um, also he's been around forever. He knows everybody. He's got all kinds of things going for him as far
00:51:10.060 as organization. He's got the entire Obama local organization and all the states at his disposal.
00:51:17.400 Then he, this guy, you know, it's not going to be, well, Trump's going to romp over him. It's not
00:51:23.000 going to be close. Right. But as far as his competition is concerned, there is none.
00:51:29.640 These, these people who are running out, they're basically running to write books and to get lecture
00:51:35.200 fees. Okay. That's what they're running for. None of them can win. They all know they can't
00:51:41.920 win, including Bernie Sanders, who doesn't even look like he wants to win anymore. And you've seen
00:51:47.220 him lately on it and nobody's showing up to hear him. He knows, he knows that it's over already.
00:51:55.140 Now it's possible, I guess, that one of them might capture Iowa, some votes, there's some votes in
00:52:01.060 New Hampshire, because in the early voting, the extremists dominate, particularly in Iowa caucus.
00:52:07.340 It's possible one of them might pop up, but in the long run, is nobody going to beat Biden? And I
00:52:12.780 said this six months ago, living up to my name, what did you call me? The master Yoda or something? I
00:52:19.380 don't know. But anyway, I don't recall that title. We were talking about your funny ears, but.
00:52:24.300 Okay. So any astute political observer knows that the field the Democrats have put out is not going
00:52:38.840 to beat Biden unless Biden collapses. You know, he's 76 years old or anything could happen, but
00:52:45.860 Biden, it's Biden's to lose. Okay. So unless Michelle gets in. Now I'm always, I always have that Michelle
00:52:52.780 Obama thing in the back of my mind. It's not going to happen. Okay. I mean, I don't think
00:52:56.920 so either, but she'd win. All right. So she would step in, I think, if Biden implodes. Yeah. If
00:53:04.940 like a scandal brought him down, like in between the convention and the election, maybe something
00:53:09.580 really drastic, you know, something like that, I can totally see her step in. Yeah. Right.
00:53:14.600 All right. So when we, when we come back, I want to stop one more place with Joe Biden and
00:53:20.200 that is China and Ukraine things that the, the, the left is completely dismissing, but it
00:53:28.140 is a gigantic scandal that makes him Hillary Clinton part do with, with graft and scandal and 0.60
00:53:38.940 dirty money. We'll get into that here in a second. Also before Bill leaves, we have a really, I think
00:53:45.100 a really exciting announcement to make. And we'll do that coming up. Stand by back with Bill in one
00:53:50.960 minute. I talk about, talk about your focus for a second. I mean, I know this particular segment
00:53:59.600 with Bill O'Reilly, you don't need to, you don't need anything to help your focus because he's so
00:54:03.160 incredible as master laser, laser, laser focus. But if you are going through a long day and you're,
00:54:08.940 are having trouble focusing at work, there's a new study out of Denmark, analyzing the deterioration
00:54:13.080 of attention span, uh, partly by studying Twitter and how fast stories cycle through the collective
00:54:17.980 conscience with all this sort of bombardment from news and social media and everything else.
00:54:22.920 Staying focused is really impossible, especially through a long day at work. I love Dawn to Dusk for
00:54:26.660 this reason, because you go through and you, I mean, sure the Bill O'Reilly segments are exciting,
00:54:30.240 but the rest of it is just Glenn going blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. And it's hard to,
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00:55:11.440 BrickHouseGlenn.com or 833-RING-BHN. Pause 10 seconds for station ID.
00:55:16.560 So back with Bill O'Reilly and a Joe Biden question. And there's three parts to this,
00:55:33.120 Bill. There's three separate scandals going on. One, the scandal of Joe Biden's son getting
00:55:39.340 onto the board of, it's not Gazprom, what was it, Burisma, in the Ukraine, and being involved in
00:55:49.100 all kinds of really shady stuff with the Americans financing this oil or natural gas exploration,
00:55:58.760 uh, and his son having zero, absolutely zero experience in that, but suddenly going on the
00:56:06.340 board. Then part two is what happened with China, where his son gets a deal at the same time he and
00:56:13.620 John Kerry are making a deal, uh, vice president Biden and John Kerry are making a deal with the
00:56:18.900 Chinese. John Kerry's son and Joe Biden's son are also working with the Chinese government and they
00:56:25.200 give them $1.5 billion to invest, uh, in their brand new investment firm. They got a deal that even
00:56:35.520 Goldman Sachs doesn't have. That's part two. But now there's another scandal with Biden and it goes
00:56:43.620 back to the Ukraine and it is the origin of the Mueller report. Where do you want to start?
00:56:50.700 Um, well, Hunter Biden, the son, um, has profited tremendously from his father's tenure as vice
00:57:02.940 president. That's where you start because that's indisputable. You can't have Nancy Pelosi come on or 0.84
00:57:09.600 some spinner on CNN or MSNBC and say, it's not. Okay. So in America, this is not unusual.
00:57:19.820 The children of, uh, powerful people. Um, you know, you saw the movie, uh, meatballs of Bill Murray.
00:57:26.960 Hang on. Just hang on. Just the rich kids have the money. They'll get all the girls. 1.00
00:57:30.940 That's the documentary meatballs. But, but hang on just a second. Yes. Chelsea Clinton has gone to hedge 1.00
00:57:36.660 funds and we know it wasn't because of, you know, she's so special. $750,000 job for NBC with no
00:57:43.320 experience. Correct. Okay. But, okay. Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, that's
00:57:48.540 different. Chelsea is there because she has insight on her parents, yada, yada. She's been around. You
00:57:56.340 can at least say that. What I'm trying to tell you is this. There is a, an advantage of being a rich,
00:58:03.320 powerful kid. Correct. Correct. And we all know that, but what Hunter Biden is doing is have to
00:58:10.340 decide on Biden, whether Biden did something corrupt and or illegal in order to get his kid
00:58:20.500 all this money. Now the kid, I understand Hunter Biden flew with his father to China on air force
00:58:27.260 too. Yes. That might be a problem. Yes. That might be a legal problem. Well, but that, but what the
00:58:34.720 Republicans should be doing is, you know, obviously researching this because Americans, you know,
00:58:41.420 once you say Ukraine, 90% of the American people collapse. All right. I don't want to hear any more
00:58:48.280 about Ukraine. Right. But China is different. You've got to make it come alive if you want to use it as a
00:58:54.120 political. Right. For instance, I, I know that Donald Jr. will get perks and so will everybody
00:59:00.840 else, but they also pay a heavy price for being, uh, a, a son or daughter judgment on it. Right.
00:59:07.260 And I'm not making a judgment on here and all the other Trump kids. Right. And I'm not making a
00:59:12.020 judgment on, on, on Hillary and Bill's kid, Chelsea. I'm not making a judgment there because I think
00:59:18.700 that, yes, they're using that, but blah, blah, blah. This is different. This is doing deals at
00:59:25.600 the same time. And, and the Chinese government giving 1.5, giving a deal that BlackRock, Goldman
00:59:34.300 Sachs, JP Morgan Chase, nobody has a deal like this and they give it to him on the same time.
00:59:40.420 They have to make it come alive if they want to use it. But just saying what you said,
00:59:44.860 it's not going to get traction with the, well, I tell you what, my contraction is Biden saying
00:59:49.460 that China is no threat to the USA. I mean, that's kind of far out there. Yes. Yes. I mean,
00:59:54.940 you know, if China is not a threat to the U S then who is a threat? Yes. Because China, 0.86
01:00:01.120 if you were knowing about it is an expansionist communist country, they want to expand. They
01:00:07.960 don't want to just say, okay, we're, we're commies and we're going to just stay here. No, you
01:00:12.960 know. Yeah. So the Ali Lama about it. So if they're not a threat and economically they want 0.98
01:00:18.580 to dominate the world because they know they can't take the world over militarily, that's
01:00:21.880 over. But economically you can take the world over now. Yeah. And that's what you're trying
01:00:27.000 to do. And with information, see a problem there. Yeah. That's pretty significant. Yeah. Okay.
01:00:33.600 So let me, let me go here to China because the Dow is down another 207 points. Donald Trump
01:00:39.980 loves these trade barriers. He loves them. He's never going to give them up, but it is
01:00:46.400 the Dow has had a horrible week because he said, you know what? I, you know, they were
01:00:51.940 supposed to meet on Friday and they're looking like they're going to renege on this. So I'm
01:00:55.240 going to double them as of a Friday. If we don't get this deal done, are we going to get
01:01:01.420 this deal done? I don't know. I mean, my, my people, and they're pretty good, as you know,
01:01:06.520 say that they had a deal and then the Chinese came back and go, ah, well, we don't want to 0.82
01:01:13.800 do it now. You do that to Trump, then it makes it personal. So now it's personal. And he said,
01:01:21.660 all right, you're going to renege on the deal. We put all this time and effort into it. And
01:01:25.360 you said to me personally, you would do it. And now you're going to back away from it.
01:01:29.680 So here's your 25% tariff. And they know that Chinese economy is wobbling. I would say the
01:01:36.780 odds are there will be some kind of an arrangement, but this is a military war. This is a trade war.
01:01:44.740 And the only weapon the United States has in a trade war are tariffs.
01:01:48.920 Bill, that's a really interesting observation. And I just wish there was a book that could explain
01:01:52.740 the way Trump thinks that was coming out soon.
01:01:55.320 You are such a suck. Do you know of any such product? 0.97
01:01:58.440 I am sending your mom for Mother's Day, just tell Marianne that she is going to get killing 1.00
01:02:03.380 the SS. I just got to get to her address and everything. But I know Trump as well as anybody
01:02:07.860 on this planet knows him. And I just finished 350 pages of, you know, my head blew off trying
01:02:14.860 to write about this. It was crazy. But it's personal now with Trump. And you know, when it gets
01:02:19.840 personal, I try to make some kind of deal.
01:02:23.420 Yeah. Yeah. All right.
01:02:25.000 He ain't going to back off.
01:02:26.320 Back with Bill O'Reilly here in just a second. We'll talk a little bit about the border and
01:02:31.920 a really exciting announcement that Bill and I have to make together. And we'll do that
01:02:37.020 coming up after the break. More with Bill O'Reilly from BillOReilly.com.
01:02:42.500 You're listening to Glenn Beck.
01:02:53.940 Synthetic identity theft. That just doesn't sound good, does it? Synthetic. What did that
01:03:01.400 what that means is when when a criminal creates an identity instead of stealing an existing
01:03:06.680 one? So they will take your Social Security number and they'll add some fake stuff to
01:03:13.500 it. Names, dresses, birthdates, and they just create somebody. But you're tied up in all
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01:03:26.720 get medical care, all this stuff. And it's happening. Don't let your identity be taken.
01:03:33.120 You need lifelock.com. They're the best in the business. They've been in this business since
01:03:38.080 the 90s when I thought it was a stupid thing. I'm like, who's stealing your Social Security
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01:04:01.260 1-800-LIFELOCK. 1-800-LIFELOCK or lifelock.com. Use the promo code BECK.
01:04:07.940 Get all the latest from Blaze TV. You got to be a subscriber. BlazeTV.com slash Glenn. It's a place
01:04:15.060 where conservatives can speak their mind. Use the promo code Glenn. Welcome to the program. Back with
01:04:20.940 Mr. Bill O'Reilly. We're going to be making an announcement here in just a few minutes on something
01:04:25.260 that Bill and I are going to be doing together that I think is really exciting. But first, Bill,
01:04:30.240 let me ask you, going back to the 2005 Glenn that said to George Bush, you got to take care of North
01:04:38.100 Korea and Iran right now because there's going to come a time if we don't, you're going to have no 1.00
01:04:43.640 options because they'll have missiles and they'll have a nuke. And then you're just in a patty cake
01:04:49.700 game, hoping to keep them entertained long enough until something else happens in the world that will
01:04:55.460 destroy the regime. We we have North Korea now firing missiles. It could be viewed as a failure
01:05:04.500 of the Trump administration. And I'm sure that's the way we would have couched it had Barack Obama
01:05:11.120 done this. But to be fair and go back to the 2005 Glenn, this is this is the time when there are no
01:05:19.820 good solutions. And we're just we're just biding time, are we not? Well, I think you can strangle both
01:05:27.720 countries economically, which the Trump administration is trying to do. That's the Pentagon strategy now.
01:05:34.400 Just, you know, strangle Iran so that the people will rise up and throw them out. And the embargoes have 1.00
01:05:43.520 been pretty effective over there. The currency is dilapidated. They don't have a lot of services.
01:05:50.540 Goods have a hard time getting into the country. People are angry. North Korea a little bit different
01:05:55.240 because they don't care whether people starve to death over there. But if you notice the USA grab one of their
01:06:02.220 tankers that was delivering oil. Yeah. So I think that there are strategies to damage these countries beyond repair
01:06:12.460 without getting into military action that are underway. So then so then so then let me go to one or two
01:06:19.640 ways. Go ahead. Let me go to Iran, because we just landed B-52s on the tarmac of of gutter.
01:06:29.820 Look, but Trump would love to hit them. Because that number one would, you know, distract from craziness
01:06:37.080 here. And, you know, he likes being a tough guy. Yeah, he'd love to hit them. But he can't hit them
01:06:44.860 unless they do something, you know, directly to us, not Hezbollah, not all of that behind the scenes
01:06:51.780 stuff. Yemen. So we say basically is being a provocateur. The president's being provocateur.
01:06:59.260 All right. You know, his two carriers. We say you better not mess around. We'll blow you up.
01:07:04.360 We say that we have credible information that they were about to hit either U.S. allies or U.S. assets
01:07:13.460 and U.S. troops. And that's why we sent these carriers over there. Do you do you believe that
01:07:22.180 we do have is that the Revolutionary Guard, which is the terror arm of Tehran, the mullahs,
01:07:30.220 is organizing guerrilla attacks inside Iraq, where we have 600 special forces that that's
01:07:40.280 the justification for the move. OK, I mean, that's not inconceivable. It's probably happening.
01:07:48.080 But I think in order for them to bomb them being the Pentagon, to bomb Iran, it's going to have to 0.96
01:07:56.600 be a little bit bigger, a little bit more visible. Let's switch to the border for a second. I said
01:08:02.200 earlier this week that as long as the economy stays the way it is, stays stable, and if this border
01:08:11.560 continues to spiral out of control, this is so clearly the problem of the Democrats. And what
01:08:19.580 I'm hearing coming out of the border bill is, I mean, we've we have transferred the population,
01:08:26.000 1% of the population of Guatemala and 1% of the population of Honduras to the United States
01:08:32.700 illegally in nine months. And the Democrats are not doing anything about it. They're still saying
01:08:40.520 it's not a crisis. It's not a problem. We don't need anything. I think this is going to hit,
01:08:45.860 you know, as the election comes near, and it's going to be so clear to everyone that this is
01:08:54.180 a real crisis. And it was caused by the Democrats. And it could be a huge, huge gain for the the White 0.82
01:09:02.680 House. Now, I know that they just started a new program. They're trying to get funding for
01:09:07.940 Operation Credible Fear. Do you know anything about that? No. Okay, I don't know anything about
01:09:14.960 it. I know very little. Well, one of the pillars of Trump's re-election campaign is the crisis on
01:09:22.820 the border. He's got four pillars. What that means that they're Trump's going to run on essentially
01:09:28.040 four things to be re-elected. One is the economy. Two is the border. Three is his defeating of ISIS and
01:09:36.760 Islamic terrorism. And four is the trade deals. So those are the four pillars that he's running on. 0.93
01:09:44.100 He doesn't feel, the Trump campaign doesn't feel that Democrats have any counter to any of that.
01:09:50.380 So what is Biden going to say? Elect me and I'll have a better economy? Nobody's going to believe
01:09:55.740 that. So, so, so, so usually, right, usually immigration can be big. If, if we had this going
01:10:05.740 on, to me, take Trump out of it for a second. To me, this feels like 1984. This feels like,
01:10:14.960 was it 84 that Reagan was reelected? Yeah, 84. It feels like 84, where it's just a different world
01:10:22.160 from what I'm seeing and hearing on television than what I see and feel from average everyday
01:10:27.140 people. They're still concerned. You know, just like in 84, we were still concerned about the
01:10:31.940 Soviet Union and us getting into a war and them vaporizing us. We're still concerned about things,
01:10:36.900 but it seems to all be going in generally the right direction on many fronts. And anything the
01:10:44.600 Democrats are talking about seem to be more of this socialist, but just off the rails in,
01:10:51.500 in many ways. Democrats have only one chance and that's identity politics. They put together
01:10:58.720 a coalition of the willing that includes all the minority groups, women, and pick off some 1.00
01:11:06.580 millennials. I think people are really sick of that. I mean, I just think the average person over 40 is 1.00
01:11:14.940 just sick to death of that. So the only thing you have going for him is if, if Biden can somehow or
01:11:23.160 another make himself not look like a socialist and bring back those people who were voting for Obama,
01:11:29.540 but then voted for Trump. Now, normally those people would stay with Trump or the Reagan.
01:11:35.620 Do you think Biden, I would imagine this is the Biden strategy. Do you think Biden can make the case of,
01:11:44.540 hey, I can continue this great economy and we'll even make it better. Are people willing now because of the
01:11:50.900 hatred of Donald Trump to switch horses in midstream?
01:11:55.000 No, I think Trump will get his 63 million votes. That's what he got last time. I think he'll get it
01:12:02.960 again. But what the Democrats are hoping for, because Hillary did win the popular vote, is a bigger 0.71
01:12:11.300 plurality in California, which is a one party state now, and that the 800,000 African-Americans that
01:12:18.460 stayed home, did not vote for Hillary Clinton will come back. And a combination of the two
01:12:25.700 in places like Philadelphia, Detroit, Milwaukee, would give them a very slim victory. That's the
01:12:34.780 strategy on the Democratic side. But Bill, on your, on your four planks for Trump, I want to focus on
01:12:41.720 one here, because we get this question a lot. I mean, the economy in ISIS, he's got great arguments
01:12:45.660 for, I think. And these are really strong ones. You know, I'm not a fan of the trade stuff, but
01:12:49.980 on the border, one thing I get all the time from conservatives is Trump is sounding great and
01:12:57.860 being very strong on the border now. Where was this the first two years when they had control and
01:13:02.560 an ability to do something about it? Look, Trump wanted a, what they call comprehensive
01:13:11.600 illegal immigration bill, a new immigration bill. But there were enough Republicans in the House
01:13:19.660 that didn't want it. And that's why he couldn't get it done. And Ryan, the Speaker of the House,
01:13:26.540 Paul Ryan, never backed it. And Trump was so inexperienced, and this is a large part of my book,
01:13:34.400 Donald Trump to this day still does not understand Washington, D.C.
01:13:37.640 Good. He still doesn't understand it. He was so inexperienced, and he didn't understand that Ryan
01:13:44.940 was basically undermining him in a lot of these things. Yes. And I have an unbelievable part where
01:13:52.920 Ryan and Romney get together during the campaign where Trump, it looks like he's going to be over
01:13:59.180 the top, and Ryan and Romney try to pull a coup. And very few people know about this. That's why
01:14:05.360 you're going to love the book. But anyway, Trump, it's convoluted and confused. But when he walked
01:14:11.260 in, he had no idea that the Republicans weren't going to back his immigration play, and they didn't.
01:14:17.640 Okay, you can pre-order that book. It is, what's the name of that cute little thing you're doing?
01:14:22.340 The United States of Trump, How the President Really Sees America.
01:14:26.060 All right, well, you might sell a few copies.
01:14:27.480 And I might have the subtitle change to How the President Lowe's Bill O'Reilly.
01:14:37.220 Okay.
01:14:37.980 Every day, some days he likes me, some days he hates me.
01:14:40.880 Well, it's pretty funny.
01:14:42.760 You know what's even funnier? He hates me every day. So, all right. So, Bill.
01:14:48.380 Yes.
01:14:49.200 I called Bill. I've wanted to do this for a long time, and I've talked about doing it for a long
01:14:54.600 time. And finally, we've just pulled the trigger on it. And history is really important. And
01:15:01.960 people are, you know, they'll go on vacation, and you'll take your kids to Disney, and you'll spend
01:15:06.980 a fortune. And what you'll do is you'll come back with a bunch of crap, and you'll kind of be pissed
01:15:13.580 off. And it'll be a good memory and everything else. But you really haven't really done anything
01:15:18.680 where you're strengthening your family, per se. So, what we've done is we're going to do a cruise
01:15:24.740 through history. And we're inviting you to take your family, take your kids or your grandkids,
01:15:31.720 or just come as a couple. We are going to begin our journey in Venice. You're going to learn the
01:15:42.060 history of the Renaissance. You're going to learn the history of the Republic as we stop in Athens.
01:15:49.820 We're going to go to Croatia. And then we are stopping our final stop will be in Israel. And
01:15:56.820 Bill O'Reilly will be joining me, as well as Rabbi Daniel Lappin. There's nothing like learning about
01:16:04.640 Israel and the roots of our religion with Daniel Lappin. David Barton will be there. Stu will be
01:16:11.860 there. And I will be on the cruise the whole time. And we can't wait for you to join us. It is
01:16:18.380 happening next spring. And Bill, you're joining us in Israel, are you not, Bill?
01:16:25.000 I think I'm going to hop on board in Dubrovnik in Croatia. I've been there. It's so beautiful. I mean,
01:16:33.600 it's an amazing itinerary that you've laid out. Now, I had to ask for a cabin away from Beck because he
01:16:40.020 gets seasick. But I'll need somebody to hold me, Bill. It's not because he fainted. But I'm going
01:16:49.780 to jump on in Croatia, I think. And we're going to do a couple of events. And it should be a lot of
01:16:55.980 fun. And we're going to be we're going to be at Caesarea. Stu, you didn't go to Restoring Courage.
01:17:02.160 But do you remember the first night event we did where where Paul was actually brought to to justice,
01:17:09.340 if you will? And that is the same place we're going to be doing it. We're going to be doing
01:17:16.220 an event there as well. So we want you to find out all about it and and join us on this cruise. Again,
01:17:22.520 it happens next spring. And you can find out all of the information at comesailaway.com comesailaway.com
01:17:32.280 and join us for a cruise through history, one where everyone will have a blast, see incredible
01:17:38.200 things, but also learn about the Republic and our faith and our freedom. That's next season comesailaway.com.
01:17:48.020 Thanks so much, Bill. Talk to you again. Okay. All right. All right. Let me tell you a little
01:17:54.440 bit about X chair. X chair is the best chair of the best chair I've ever sat in. I could watch I
01:18:02.960 could have this at a movie theater and I would be thrilled having this in a movie theater. And I'm a
01:18:07.360 I'm a seat snob now. You I know once you get into the nice theaters that they're building the late
01:18:12.160 lately, some of them are really nice. The nice recliners. It's crazy. This could absolutely fit in one of
01:18:16.280 those suitors. Yeah. I remember in 1982, when was the year 83? When when did Empire Strikes Back come
01:18:23.400 back? I think 82. 82. So I was in Washington, D.C. and I went to the maybe I went to the I went to
01:18:30.160 the MPAA, the Motion Picture Association of America in Washington, D.C. And they had full recliners and
01:18:36.440 they serve drinks and everything during the movie. And I was like, this is that somebody's got to make a
01:18:40.860 movie theater like this. Well, now they are. I'm telling you, I've I could sit in this chair,
01:18:46.960 the X chair and watch a movie. And I'd be thrilled you now that remember, this is an office chair for
01:18:52.940 home or the office. It is the most supportive and comfortable chair you'll sit in. Try it for
01:18:59.540 yourself. They have a 30 day money back guarantee. It's X chair Beck dot com. That's eight four four
01:19:04.900 four four X chair or the letter X chair Beck dot com. Mom has an office at home. Great Mother's
01:19:12.740 Day. Great Mother's Day gift. X chair Beck dot com. Get a hundred dollars off. Now, if you use the promo
01:19:18.440 code X wheels, you're also going to set the new X wheels, which are the difference between a matchbox
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01:19:30.280 four four X chair or X chair Beck dot com. Welcome to the program. I'm glad that you have joined us
01:19:37.820 today. It's been a great show. If you've missed some of it, you make sure you go back and listen
01:19:42.720 to the podcast. You can find it at iTunes or wherever podcasts are are found. What is the podcast for
01:19:48.200 tomorrow? Who am I interviewing tomorrow? Well, obviously, with with that question, Glenn, there's
01:19:54.400 always a good answer. Answer is and you're looking right now today. This would be I know
01:20:01.800 Andy Inesco, right? The guy from the Romanian guy. Yeah. This is a guy who had to deal with 1.00
01:20:08.660 socialism and communism. Yeah. And is now a little critical of our new direction here in the United
01:20:14.180 States. Yeah. And and and left Romania because he said he started to see the politicians start
01:20:21.340 to do the same thing. And so he came to America after the collapse of the Soviet Union, came to
01:20:27.420 America and he was like, this is great. Now he's seeing us do it. And so he is trying to get the word
01:20:34.800 out. They can somebody stop this in America. I know exactly what it is. If you have somebody who
01:20:43.220 think they know what socialism is, let them hear from the expert. He will. He will clear up socialism,
01:20:50.680 communism. It's a great time to subscribe. Next week is Mike Lee. Oh, it's a great interview with
01:20:56.280 Mike Lee. Subscribe now, iTunes, wherever you get your podcast.
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01:22:16.020 The fusion of entertainment and enlightenment. This is the Glenn Beck Program.
01:22:22.940 Boy, Bill O'Reilly would be exactly right if it looks like this is true. Biden is now surging past
01:22:31.640 Sanders in New Hampshire in the latest poll. It's over for that field of 22. If this is the way Biden
01:22:40.360 is entering this race, if any of it holds, it looks like it will be a Trump Biden race. And that's a
01:22:45.680 real uphill battle for Biden, but also probably a stiff competitor also for Donald Trump. Donald Trump
01:22:56.040 has the economy going for him. However, we have these tariffs that are happening and the tariffs are
01:23:03.600 going to get worse as of today. And we haven't seen how China is going to respond, but as the
01:23:11.500 International Monetary Fund said, this is a real war. It is a trade war. And it's becoming costly
01:23:21.180 to both sides. We'll get into that and some really cool, good news.
01:23:29.880 I just want to share. I feel like the flying car has finally arrived. In some ways,
01:23:34.640 I feel like the flying car has finally arrived. And I want to show it to you next.
01:23:42.280 This is the Glenn Beck Program.
01:23:44.100 CarShield. CarShield.com. If you need extended coverage, your warranty is expired and you need
01:23:52.100 extended coverage. CarShield has it. CarShield has it for you in a way that is perfect. If your car
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01:24:18.240 a mechanic repair a sensor or replace a sensor. And that sensor could be $1,000. Most people don't
01:24:24.400 have $500 to put into their car if something goes wrong. I mean, when that engine check engine light
01:24:29.880 goes off, I start to sweat. If you're like that, don't worry about it. Don't sweat it anymore.
01:24:35.520 Get CarShield.com. CarShield.com saved me a buttload of money on repairs that I've had to have done to
01:24:42.580 my cars that were out of warranty. It's CarShield.com or call 800-CAR-6000. 800-CAR-6000. CarShield.com.
01:25:02.020 Okay, I thought it was just me. And so I checked with Stu and then I checked with Pat
01:25:06.800 to make sure that it wasn't just me. And I saw this this morning. I got up and I thought
01:25:15.080 this has got to be a concept car because it's the coolest interior of a car I've ever seen.
01:25:22.640 And I've never seen an exterior quite like it, but that's not as impressive as the interior.
01:25:28.160 And you know how you see concept cars and you're like, they should build that.
01:25:32.260 And then they never do. Right. Because they always look so cool on the inside. Right?
01:25:37.940 Right. Because you go to like a car show and they have the one example of how this car could
01:25:42.320 theoretically look like. And then five years later, when it actually comes out, it looks
01:25:46.020 nothing like that. Okay. So now I want to preface this with, I think this is incredibly an impractical
01:25:53.220 car. Okay. I showed it to my wife this morning about five and she's like, where do you put the
01:25:59.640 dog? Okay. So, uh, it's a very impractical car, but it is the new SUV from Mercedes Benz
01:26:08.800 Maybach and it's made in Marysville, Ohio. Now I thought this car, uh, I thought there's no way
01:26:18.220 this car is a bazillion dollars. It's got to be over a million dollars. Uh, and it's got to be
01:26:23.860 competing with a Rolls Royce of at least 500. Okay. It's fixed. It's expensive. I'll tell you
01:26:30.620 the price, but it's not that. Um, but again, I'm not showing it because I think it's something
01:26:35.940 that everybody should go out and buy. I'm showing it because cars are starting to be like the concept
01:26:42.120 cars. Roll the video here of this. Uh, this is the, this is the new Maybach Mercedes SUV and it is
01:26:57.120 beautiful on the outside, but when you go into the inside, have you ever seen anything but a
01:27:04.640 concept car look like that? No. I mean, it looks like a, it's like a spaceship. It legitimately looks
01:27:08.980 like it could be in a movie, right? A futuristic car. It's like a, I robot. Yeah. You see those
01:27:15.360 cars, you know, and they're usually like Volvo or your sob or something like that Audi. And you're
01:27:20.060 like, why doesn't Audi make that car? Yeah. They're making it in Marysville, Ohio. Yeah. And that's a
01:27:28.620 big part of this too. Pretty impressive that it's happening. It's being assembled in America,
01:27:32.460 which I love. I just love. Um, but I posted this so you could see it. It is like glenbeck.com. Yeah.
01:27:40.540 It's a, it's, it's crazy space age look. Um, and it, it has, I mean, you could tell which market
01:27:48.160 they're going for because in the center console of the back seat, it's like an SUV limousine and in the
01:27:56.080 center console, it has this glass thing, this glass like cover that just slips away into the
01:28:04.800 console and it has a tea set in there. So I guess it's for your like five year old girl or the
01:28:12.440 Chinese. Right. But I imagine that you could have that made into something else. I'm sure. 0.99
01:28:17.300 I'm not a huge fan of, uh, hot liquids, uh, bouncing around in cars. No, but, uh, I guess,
01:28:24.180 I mean, you know, and this car is completely impressed. It's white. The interior is just
01:28:28.440 solid white. Uh, and you know, I mean, what, who, who would, who could keep a white car clean?
01:28:37.860 It would have to be like somebody in a suit all the time, right? It's only for picking up business
01:28:43.460 like contacts and at the airport or bringing them to nice dinners. I don't know. I mean,
01:28:48.020 you have a pair of jeans in that and it's over. Yeah. Right. I mean, it would be over.
01:28:53.120 It would be over in my family, you know, quickly, but look at the panels on the ceiling.
01:28:58.960 It's full glass on the panels on the ceiling. It looks like a jet on the inside. And it's one
01:29:06.860 of these new cars that has what looks like a giant iPad as their entire screen. Yeah.
01:29:11.760 Like these screens are getting so big. Eventually they're just going to cover the windshield.
01:29:15.800 They're just going to cover the windshield. You're just going to look through the iPad and
01:29:18.740 the iPad will be a camera and you'll be able to see the road that way. Like that's the only
01:29:22.840 way. Cause at this point the, the, the screens are getting so large, but this is a beautiful
01:29:27.480 car. That's unbelievable. And it's amazing that it's actually available or soon available.
01:29:32.300 It's available this fall. I mean, the, the wood on the side has inlaid, I don't even know
01:29:37.920 led lights in a pattern. It is the car of the future that we've always seen. It's coming
01:29:44.880 out this fall. They are already in production in Marysville. How much do you think that just
01:29:50.580 looking at it? How much do you think that's worth? I, I guessed a million dollars. It looks
01:29:54.320 like a, you know, like one of those high, like end Bentley type of, I mean, it looks better
01:29:59.100 in many ways than that. Cause it's, it looks more futuristic. Yeah. It looks absolutely
01:30:02.880 fewer futuristic. I've never seen a car look like this before. Uh, that car is $200,000.
01:30:10.420 Now that's a lot for a car. That's a huge amount for a car.
01:30:12.980 However, that's only, what is that double the price of the sedan of the, the top S
01:30:19.200 class Mercedes Mercedes is what about a hundred, a hundred, 10,000, something like that. So
01:30:24.420 that's double that, but it looks like it's much more than double. Yeah. I mean, this
01:30:29.340 is crazy. And I'll bet this one is, I'll bet this one is a lot more because this one
01:30:34.020 has like rose gold all over it, but you have to see this car. Cause I've just, have
01:30:39.840 you ever seen a car actually look like the concept car for sale? Yeah. And built
01:30:47.720 in America. Yeah. It's great. It's a really cool, great. It's a cool, I mean, that is
01:30:52.800 an amazing, and it's interesting built in America and at least their demo car does
01:30:57.260 seem to be targeted towards the Chinese market in several ways. And you wonder, I
01:31:02.260 mean, that's kind of interesting, right? I mean, we're now, we are, we are, we're the
01:31:06.840 secondary market now. Yeah. We're the secondary market. I mean, we're all
01:31:09.820 ready. The second largest exporter in the world, which people don't realize they
01:31:13.480 think because we're, you know, cause China has passed us with, by the way, you 0.50
01:31:16.880 know, four times the amount of people, it's not shocking that they would pass
01:31:19.560 us eventually. Uh, but, uh, we're still the number two exporter in the world and
01:31:24.200 the number two manufacturer in the world. So I guess it's not that shocking that
01:31:28.420 we'd be exporting, but it's a kind of a cool story. And I like the fact, I like the
01:31:32.100 fact that it's assembled here in America, um, because it is cause it's not just
01:31:37.060 like a regular car. That's it. That's a craftsman's car. You know what I mean?
01:31:41.400 That's like what you expect, like from what crew in, in England that makes all
01:31:46.380 the Bentleys, you know, um, where to have it, to have the top of the line
01:31:53.540 Mercedes assembled here in America, I think is fantastic. I just love that.
01:31:58.780 And it's one of those things where yes, the evil rich people will be the only
01:32:02.180 one buying it right now, but that technology. Oh, that'll all be seen in
01:32:05.940 happens faster and faster now. I mean, it's crazy. You said, what was it today?
01:32:09.900 Oh, we were talking about the impossible burger. Oh yeah. And, uh, so
01:32:13.860 Stu did a taste test with me and Pat on this, this impossible burger. Explain
01:32:18.880 it. The impossible burger is like a plant-based burger that is attempting to
01:32:22.280 taste like meat. And so it's been a, it's a company they've done a lot of, you
01:32:26.080 know, research and they've made it. And I've had every veggie burger on the
01:32:29.160 planet, uh, basically. And this one is the best one by, uh, to me, a good
01:32:34.400 margin. He's been coming in for weeks going, guys got to try this. And we're
01:32:38.960 like, no, cause those veggie burgers, they always taste like sawdust. Right.
01:32:43.480 And so this is not a, I don't even know how it's different than a veggie burger,
01:32:46.960 right? Like it's actually tastes like a burger. And, but again, I haven't had a
01:32:50.420 burger in a long time, you know? So I was like, eh, maybe I would like to see Pat
01:32:53.660 and Glenn who are actual, I would say meat eating experts to try this and see
01:32:59.000 if they think it does too. I could live the cattle, a cow is the only thing I
01:33:02.560 need to live because I could have ice cream and steak every day and I'm a
01:33:05.900 happy man. And cheese, you could cheese out of that. Butter. I have everything I
01:33:10.640 need in one animal. So we did a taste test. We got two burgers, uh, from a place
01:33:16.320 here in Texas. One same, made the exact same way. One regular burger and one the
01:33:21.420 impossible burger and did a side-by-side blind taste test. And both Pat and I
01:33:26.100 hands down thought the impossible burger was the real burger. And we thought the
01:33:34.900 real burger didn't taste as good. I mean, it was, I mean, there was no way I would
01:33:42.160 have guessed that. I would, I, cause I was trying to get you over the hurdle of, yeah,
01:33:45.580 you know, I could eat one of these. They're not bad. Like that's kind of what I was
01:33:48.360 thinking. No, I was, you actually told you if I just like steak. So, I mean, it's
01:33:53.840 not a steak. It is ground beef. Yeah. You can fool me on ground beef. I would eat
01:33:58.260 that in tacos. I would eat that in hamburger, you know, that I'm done. That's
01:34:02.100 great. I could have that all the time over regular beef. Um, but I like a steak,
01:34:07.420 you know, so I'm not, I'm not, I'm not ready to go vegetarian, but I got to tell
01:34:12.120 you, there is what I love about this is we were talking about this this morning.
01:34:17.360 And I said, the last time I had a veggie burger, it tasted literally like
01:34:21.060 sawdust and it must've been 15 years ago, 10, 15 years ago. And you looked at
01:34:25.700 me and said, well, it's been 10 years. I'm like, we had fire for 5,000 years.
01:34:34.680 Okay. It's been 10 years to make sawdust taste like beef. I mean, it really
01:34:42.120 tastes like beef and it's natural. And this is the greatest thing because we are
01:34:48.460 on the, the verge now of having these kinds of massive advancements, uh, happen
01:34:57.140 on a daily basis. In 10 years, it will be like this every day where you'll have
01:35:04.620 something you'll be like, shut up. No way. That is the world we're headed towards.
01:35:09.540 And the free market system is doing it. And it kills me because the, the environmentalists
01:35:16.040 are coming after places like Red Robin, uh, or actually they're not going after Red
01:35:21.080 Robin. They're going after the impossible burger, right?
01:35:24.100 Yeah. And there, there's some criticism from the, the hardcore, uh, vegetarian,
01:35:29.280 vegan types that say, you can't, you shouldn't serve this at those restaurants because they
01:35:34.080 serve regular hamburgers. And you're, you're giving a company that serves regular meat,
01:35:38.080 all this money. And it's like, are you kidding me? Like these are people that you could win over
01:35:42.120 if you have a good product, which they do, you know, people, people will absolutely try it.
01:35:46.760 And if they like it, delete it. It's just the same, you know, Pat made the point of with solar
01:35:49.940 and wind, when those things are better and cheaper than fossil fuels, we're not like locked
01:35:56.740 into fossil fuels. We want the best thing. And fossil fuels are the best thing right now.
01:36:01.780 But as if solar starts getting to the point where it's basically free electricity and
01:36:06.160 we're all going to be on board with it. I'm not going to loyalty to a good oil company.
01:36:10.040 I don't care about them. I don't care. I just care about civilization,
01:36:13.220 which is what electricity basically represents. And this is a great example.
01:36:18.260 This is just a great example of leave the free market system alone. The future is so bright,
01:36:27.600 so bright with the free market system. We are on the verge of everything we could possibly imagine.
01:36:34.060 And yet, what are we doing? We are dragging ourselves back to the fire, back to cavemen,
01:36:43.080 back to, no, everyone must live in block housing. No, stop thinking it's 1951, America.
01:36:52.600 I don't even mean 1951, America. I mean, stop thinking about that, America. It's not 1951,
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01:37:39.520 Um, this has changed my life. It truly has changed my life. Take it three times a day,
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01:37:50.880 our biggest problems. 70% of the people who try relief factor find relief and go on to order month
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01:38:02.140 Just take it for three weeks. If not cancel, don't order anymore. Uh, if it does, you'll get your life
01:38:09.640 back. I have 800-583-84, 800-583-84 or relief factor.com. We pause for 10 seconds. Station ID.
01:38:32.140 Uh, by the way, we, uh, announced that, uh, Bill O'Reilly, Stu, David Barton, and Rabbi Lappin,
01:38:45.500 uh, we're all going on a cruise through history. Uh, and we're going to have some really incredible
01:38:51.940 stuff, uh, that we're going to be teaching all the way through. We invite you to take this cruise
01:38:57.760 with your family or your kids or your grandkids. Uh, and, and you'll not only see amazing things,
01:39:03.760 uh, but you will also learn from the experts, uh, that can tell you all kinds of great things about
01:39:10.940 our freedom, the birthplace of Republic, uh, the birthplace of our religion. We are going to be
01:39:17.640 starting in, uh, Milan and then, uh, Venice. Uh, then we're going to, uh, Croatia, uh, Athens,
01:39:26.200 and then Israel. And, uh, we're going to be doing shows for you. It's only just for the cruise,
01:39:33.080 uh, and you can find out more about it. It happens next, uh, next spring, and, uh, you can find all
01:39:41.060 the information at comesailaway.com. That's comesailaway.com. Yeah. It seems like the site
01:39:45.880 has been shut down by the traffic at this point, but, uh, keep trying today and it'll be trying.
01:39:49.780 It's a, it's, it's an incredible ship. This is a brand new, I think it's a maiden voyage of this
01:39:53.920 ship, uh, brand new, uh, and beautiful, beautiful, beautiful. Uh, so there, uh, the new tariffs are
01:40:02.280 coming into effect. Looks like today, uh, we're talking about another, uh, 15% extra tear up on
01:40:09.120 $200 billion worth of goods and another 25% coming on $375 billion of goods from China.
01:40:15.880 This will now affect Apple. If they go through the second part, the, the 25% or the 15% increase
01:40:23.780 on where the tariff was at 10%, uh, now bringing that up to 25, that does not include, uh, companies
01:40:30.900 like Apple, but the second 25% that does include Apple. That means your Apple iPhone, you know,
01:40:38.480 is going to cost them 25% more to make, and you're going to be seeing some of those costs.
01:40:42.680 And any phone really. I mean, there, you know, a lot of it goes through China. The big winner
01:40:46.780 in these sort of trade, like something like this, the big winner is a country like Bangladesh 0.87
01:40:51.480 or a country like, um, uh, India, a country that's not stuck in the trade war, but has
01:40:58.560 lower, it's not really a net win. It's a net loss to both us and China in major ways. I mean,
01:41:05.120 if you think about it this way, you have so far, there was $20 billion on additional taxes. A
01:41:11.740 tariff is just a tax and it's a tax paid by U S companies, not Chinese companies, U S companies
01:41:16.800 pay the tax. So U S companies pay the tax and they pass a good chunk of that along to consumers,
01:41:22.360 not a hundred percent of it, but a good percent, probably 80%.
01:41:25.960 Yeah. So you have $20 billion that had already been applied on Chinese goods. An extra 30 billion
01:41:30.360 comes today. And the new, uh, amount would be another on top of that $94 billion a year in,
01:41:36.520 in taxes, which comes out to about $122 billion a year. To put that number into perspective,
01:41:41.760 the Trump tax cut was $1.5 trillion over 10 years. So about $150 billion a year in tax cuts
01:41:50.420 was the entire tax cut. And the, these tariffs just on one country, China, $122 billion in
01:41:56.580 additional taxes. So you're, you're, you're, you've already almost erased the Trump tax cut.
01:42:02.640 The first round, you've definitely done it now this round. I mean, with one country that's,
01:42:09.060 you know, you combine everything. I think you probably have, um, or at least a good chunk of
01:42:13.500 it. I mean, some, I will say there are other things that get, that happen. Uh, sometimes,
01:42:17.200 for example, some of these countries will move operations. Many, very few of them move them to
01:42:21.780 the United States because it's just between the difference between China and the United States
01:42:24.720 cost-wise is so ridiculous, but they go to lower cost countries like Bangladesh. They go to, they go 0.99
01:42:29.460 to India, they go, uh, to nearby places. Uh, so that being said, you have those opportunities. Uh,
01:42:36.440 so those countries will probably benefit. And, and in a way that does benefit us because China is
01:42:42.420 truly a menace to the world. I really believe China is a menace to the world with what they're 0.99
01:42:48.480 building in this prison state, um, that they, they have is, is, is truly frightening. I think
01:42:54.680 they're the biggest threat to mankind we have seen, uh, in all of humankind. Uh, really?
01:43:02.100 I do. I do. I mean, they were probably be number one on that list from their old regime,
01:43:08.380 but now you're saying they're number one on the list from the new regime. Yeah. I don't think
01:43:12.360 there we've, I don't think we've ever faced a threat as human beings, not as a country. I don't
01:43:16.800 think we've ever faced a threat, uh, as human beings, as dangerous and destructive as China is 0.99
01:43:26.380 today. And China 2025 is even worse. Back in a minute.
01:43:31.840 You're listening to Glenn Beck. I, you know, I wish I said, I, I could say, I, I don't believe
01:43:43.920 this story, but I do because, uh, the stories every day are insane. Recent group of criminals
01:43:52.040 that had been burglarizing, uh, this, this area had, uh, been asked by police, why are you doing
01:43:59.560 that? And they said, it's because we have a right to the nice things in that home. If
01:44:05.280 they haven't, if they haven't burglarized their home or haven't put anti burglary system on
01:44:10.520 it, we have a right to it. If it has an alarm system, we'll go to the next one, but that
01:44:15.500 stuff is ours. It's an invitation. This is the kind of mindset we're dealing with. Now you've
01:44:20.800 got to have a burglar alarm on your home and the most affordable. And I can officially now
01:44:27.040 say the best system you can buy. And I have reason to back that up and we'll talk about it
01:44:33.960 coming up, but it's simply safe. Go to simply safe Beck.com get free home security camera. When
01:44:40.320 you order, it's a hundred dollar value. You'll have eyes on your home 24 seven video evidence
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01:44:51.560 Check out blaze TV.com slash Glenn it to subscribe to blaze TV. If you use the promo code Glenn,
01:44:59.400 you'll save $10 and you can spend it on an impossible burger.
01:45:04.480 Uh, Dan Andros, uh, a guy who started with me in 2000. Well, it was actually 1999. We remember
01:45:13.600 we were all together for the big Y2K switch scare. That's right. We were all wondering if we were
01:45:18.880 going to explode. That's right. Planes fell out of the sky, right? I remember that. That was when
01:45:23.220 planes fell out of the sky and, uh, the world basically ended. Yeah. It was awful. It was,
01:45:27.360 it was awful. It was awful. Uh, and, uh, now over at faith wire, uh, faith wire.com. If you,
01:45:32.160 uh, if you'd like to get some, uh, I don't know, some, some, uh, news about faith with an anchor
01:45:37.140 in something that's actually real. Uh, we love faith wire and you guys are going to be working on a,
01:45:41.980 um, I mean, you went to Israel last year. Correct. Uh, we have the big special next week coming out,
01:45:46.680 uh, with your visit, uh, with Jason Buttrell from this, uh, staff as well for the, uh, moving of
01:45:52.600 the embassy, a pretty historic moment. Turned into something that Dan, that you thought that,
01:45:56.640 I mean, it turned into something entirely different. Yeah. I mean, we were there to mark
01:46:00.760 that occasion where, you know, every president pretty much for as far back as we can remember
01:46:04.920 in modern history was promising to do this and none of them did it. And to Trump's credit, he did it.
01:46:08.800 He got it done and he actually had the courage to do it. And, um, we got to witness firsthand
01:46:14.620 sort of the, how the media concocts a narrative on, on Israel. I mean, we've, we saw it just the
01:46:20.480 other day. It was, it was, Hey, Israel with has shot back at Gaza and they, you know, that's when
01:46:27.680 they pick up the story. It's not the hundreds of rockets that just got shot randomly into those
01:46:32.960 Southern, uh, cities in Israel before that. So, um, that's why you're in, uh, in town, but there's
01:46:41.160 something else that you guys are covering today and that's a big, uh, pro-life rally
01:46:46.960 in Philadelphia. How big is this? Um, yeah, the crowds are good. Um, I haven't looked at,
01:46:51.940 we have a live feed going in. Um, I've been taping our special, so I haven't actually seen
01:46:55.980 the crowds, but, uh, from the reports, it looks like there's a lot of people there. Um, Matt
01:47:00.060 Walsh had actually been the first to tweet it out because if, if, did you guys see the story
01:47:04.380 of Brian Sims, a democratic rep, uh, from Pennsylvania who went on tape and you know
01:47:09.600 what it reminded me of, he was berating a pro-lifer out there, an elderly woman who was
01:47:13.680 just out there alone. And she was out there praying for the, you know, butchery that was 0.58
01:47:19.420 going inside Planned Parenthood, hoping that hearts and minds would change. And some big
01:47:23.220 teenagers too. He was berating. And that was in a separate video and he was trying to dox
01:47:26.740 them. He was asking a hundred people, a hundred dollars he'd give them if someone knew these
01:47:31.340 people's names and addresses and would give them out to teenage girls. Oh my God. And
01:47:36.060 this is an elected, this is an elected official. And so he was on camera doing that. And so
01:47:42.220 Matt Walsh tweeted it out and said, Hey, we should go and go to this place. And, um, and
01:47:47.380 so that's what's happening there today. And we're live streaming it, uh, on faithwire.com.
01:47:51.040 Faithwire's there. Our own Graham Allen is there as well. Um, uh, Abby, Abby Johnson from
01:47:56.600 the movie Implanned is her story. She's there. Lila Rose is there. I mean, it's, it's turned
01:48:01.180 into a big thing and thank God that, that there's still people out there reacting to
01:48:04.700 which a video, which was blatant harassment of elderly people and teenagers who are praying.
01:48:11.980 Uh, you imagine it's so far you're, you're, you as an adult male say, I'll give people a hundred
01:48:20.600 dollars. If you can identify these people and tell me where they live for what purpose,
01:48:26.180 for what purpose? Well, and it's against the exact same. He was sitting there saying they're
01:48:30.140 shaming people. They're shaming people for who go in there. And it's like that, no, that's what
01:48:34.080 you're doing. What, what a woman like that was doing and what those kids were doing every, I mean, 0.85
01:48:38.960 I've watched countless hours of these, uh, protesters, these Christians that are out in front
01:48:45.180 of Planned Parenthood and, and other pro-lifers as well. And not once have I seen them out there
01:48:50.500 being brutal and shaming them and yelling at them. No, they're pleading with them. They want to
01:48:56.280 save the lives of these children that are going in there. I have seen, I've seen, I've seen people
01:49:01.340 shaming, baby killer, things like that. I have seen that, but I think that's changing. I think that
01:49:06.980 was 20 years ago. Right. Yeah. Um, now people are just much cooler about it and they really are. I
01:49:13.760 mean, that's the way to do it. You're, you're not going to change anyone's heart by calling them a
01:49:18.540 baby killer. Right. And, and, and could it, could it be possible that, because I, I, I, now that you
01:49:24.440 mentioned it, I can remember seeing some of those clips back in the day too. Is it possible that
01:49:28.080 that's just what the media chose to show us? Yeah. Yes. They chose to show us that instead of,
01:49:32.300 I mean, we had a report on a guy who has stood out in front of a Planned Parenthood clinic in Orlando
01:49:36.940 for, I think almost a decade now. And they've credited over 2000 babies saved because of this guy.
01:49:43.420 And he's a simple guy. And all he does is go out there and preach the gospel to these,
01:49:46.460 to these women going in, you know, Hey, God doesn't want you to do this. Come talk to me. 1.00
01:49:49.820 I want to show you this. And, and God's word changes their hearts. Yeah. Cause usually it is
01:49:54.580 a tough, it's a tough decision, right? I mean, you're going in there. If you've decided you're
01:49:58.040 going to go abort your child, it's a big decision in your life. You're scared. The best perspective
01:50:02.240 on this, I thought was Abby Johnson, when she was in here talking to us and she said, cause in the
01:50:06.900 movie, if you, if you, if you haven't seen Unplanned, anyone who hasn't seen it, there's a scene
01:50:10.340 right at the beginning where there are some of these protesters and one guy's dressed as a grim
01:50:14.200 reaper and he's screaming at the women as they come in. And, and you could say, well, I would,
01:50:19.980 cause I'm, I'm sure I'm on the same side of the argument, generally speaking, a pro-life side.
01:50:24.160 But the approach is so interesting. And she mentioned it, I thought was really interesting
01:50:27.420 because she was a Planned Parenthood clinic director and she was on the other side of it.
01:50:30.880 And she said, what that dynamic creates is a place where the woman or the clinic worker comes 1.00
01:50:36.640 out to the car and meets the woman. And she, the woman who is making this decision feels that,
01:50:42.220 that the Planned Parenthood worker is the one providing the safe space. She's the one who's
01:50:46.440 giving protection. She's the one helping her. So in that moment, the person who's helping her is
01:50:52.800 actually the Planned Parenthood worker who's protecting her from these crazy people outside
01:50:57.020 the walls. And it actually causes people to go in more often. It's like looking at Mengele when
01:51:02.240 you got off the train as he's the guy who's going to help you. No, no, he's going to do medical
01:51:08.300 things to you that you're not going to like. Right. Yeah. You know? And, and if you, I am
01:51:12.880 convinced, I mean, if, if you are not convinced that what we are witnessing is not a political
01:51:18.860 battle as far as abortion goes, but it is a battle of between good and evil and between
01:51:24.940 against the, the, the, the, the, the spiritual forces of wickedness. Yeah. That is what we're
01:51:30.520 seeing. Do you remember the video of the guy, the, the abortion doctor a couple of years
01:51:35.340 ago and he was growling at the guy with the camera out there. I mean, it was like, there
01:51:39.400 was a demon in, I mean, there was a demon in him. I'm just convinced now that he wasn't,
01:51:42.940 he wasn't joking around or trying to be funny. That guy had evil in him. And I just don't
01:51:49.800 know how you can boil down this issue to anything else. When the science keeps, the more we have
01:51:54.980 technology, the more we see, we can detect the heartbeat so early. That's what the Georgia
01:51:59.220 bill was, was just passed. And we're not even, we're, we're not, we're not even arguing what
01:52:05.160 we used to argue. We used to argue with compassion and it was, well, you want to do that to your
01:52:10.160 daughter? You want your daughter? And so they would trap you in this little pocket of, of
01:52:15.620 compassion where most people are like, no, I don't want to even think about this. Yeah. But
01:52:20.540 we're not even talking about that now. We're talking about five minutes before birth. Yeah. And
01:52:25.760 they, and they can't bring themselves to say it's a child, to say it's a child to go against the
01:52:30.200 sacred cow. Audio. Uh, when was it from CNN? Yeah. Where, where the woman said to, to, um,
01:52:39.000 Rick Santorum, that's not a baby inside of her. What is it? Is there anyone who actually,
01:52:46.680 then why do we have baby showers? Right. Or baby bump. What's your baby bump? That's the fetus bump. 1.00
01:52:51.500 No one says it's the fetus bump. Yeah. And by the way, fetus, they're like, oh, that's a fetus in
01:52:55.360 there. Did you know what fetus is? It's Latin for offspring. It's, yeah, it's the Latin word for
01:53:01.100 baby. Yeah. It's a baby. That's not some magical scientific word that means clump of cells. Right.
01:53:06.160 It means child. Yeah. And I was, I was, uh, I was talking to a pro choice, uh, guy the other day and
01:53:10.240 we're talking about the line, right? Like we would say, I think I'll hear that, you know, conception's
01:53:13.620 the line and we were now talking about, no, it's passing the birth canal and maybe beyond that is the
01:53:19.440 line. And, you know, I think there used to be a position where it was, maybe it was viability,
01:53:24.580 right? Like the baby can live on its own, which is around, you know, 22, 23, 24 weeks, or if it's,
01:53:29.800 uh, cognitive ability and they're all these different lines that we used to talk about.
01:53:33.820 And you think about those things, it like, you know, they talk about cognitive ability might be
01:53:38.180 around 12 weeks where that starts to begin. And it's like, that is a conservative dream right now.
01:53:43.980 Like these people who think of themselves as pro choice are advocating positions that are way to
01:53:49.360 the right to where we are from where we are. These are massive conservative moves. These are,
01:53:54.580 I mean, Republicans have problems getting 20 week bans passed, let alone 12 weeks. These are people
01:54:01.580 who are telling me they are pro choice and saying, well, not after the first trimester, obviously,
01:54:06.720 like, wait a minute. Whoa, let's go back to that Roe versus Wade standard because it's quaint 0.98
01:54:11.600 compared to where we are now. We're talking about, we have on this board, uh, to my left is,
01:54:17.380 uh, is five in five categories is two are 22 different candidates, uh, running for the
01:54:22.480 democratic nomination. They can't find one of them to say that abortion five minutes before birth
01:54:29.860 is wrong. They can't find one of them to say that. Yeah. I mean, that is fascinating to me.
01:54:35.660 Think of the lack of moral courage you have to have or not have to, to not be able to stand up to
01:54:42.200 that. And, and I'm looking for one, I would love to just have one. Where is the Democrat who is
01:54:48.300 willing to buck that platform right now? Because they are obviously afraid of that content that,
01:54:54.000 you know, that constituency that just loves to just champion that abortion. So let me just give you, 0.61
01:54:59.240 let me just give you some headlines. If you don't think that we are in a battle of, of
01:55:07.480 just the biggest change, just leave it at that good and evil, or just the biggest change a culture
01:55:16.900 maybe has ever seen. Listen to these, um, college faculty chair compares Chick-fil-A to pornography
01:55:25.680 as the academic Senate votes to kick the restaurant off of campus. Is it possible? He's talking about
01:55:31.360 the chicken is too tasty. Yeah. It's like, um, second Colorado shooting suspect is a
01:55:37.100 transgender girl who identifies as a boy converse announces a new partnership converse, a new
01:55:46.620 partnership with an 11 year old child, that child, you know, because they are famous for dressing in
01:55:54.580 drag and dancing in gay nightclubs converse converse. I was too controversial for converse.
01:56:04.460 Remember converse never made a special shoe for me. I made converse very, very famous again back in
01:56:13.140 what? 2008 and 2010. That was a big deal was my converse. I remember that. I was way too
01:56:21.300 controversial. An 11 year old child who is famous for dressing in drag and dancing in gay nightclubs 1.00
01:56:28.460 is their new partner. Is this the one that there's footage of men in the club coming up and throwing
01:56:33.040 dollars at that? Yes. He's the one that went on good morning America. And there was that clip with
01:56:37.020 a stray hand and they, he come, the kid comes out and this is, that's a good morning America. I mean,
01:56:41.880 that's like family friendly allegedly. And this kid is 11 and he comes out and he's making all these
01:56:47.140 sexual moves on the floor and everyone's cheering. It's sick. It's sick. How about this one? Parents
01:56:53.960 say, these are just today's headlines, by the way, parents say to a second grade teacher tried to
01:56:59.920 convince their son eight that he was transgendered. Parents say he feels different. Now he's confused.
01:57:09.220 This is, this is the beginning of the fundamental transformation of America. This next election
01:57:18.680 completes it. It completes it. We either say I've had enough of this or we embrace it. But this next
01:57:28.340 election, if we embrace it, it completes it. This is who we are. Thanks, Dan. And we'll see you
01:57:35.500 tonight on, uh, on, uh, the news and why it matters. Looking forward to it. Okay, great. And
01:57:40.300 you'll be here next week too, because we have a special with, uh, uh, Israel. We'll tell you more
01:57:44.220 about that coming up. Uh, mercury real estate is our, uh, is our sponsor, real estate agents,
01:57:49.480 I trust.com real estate agents. I trust. If you are looking to buy or sell a new house,
01:57:55.480 uh, or your house, all you have to do is just get online to real estate agents. I trust.com
01:58:01.380 within an hour. Usually you have a real estate agent contacting you. Uh, and these are not the
01:58:07.040 real estate agents who are going to like, when we're going to blow up balloons and we're going
01:58:10.660 to have open houses every Saturday. Well, I'm going to bring some more real estate agents in.
01:58:16.020 And if we could have some more cookies on the counter, that would be great. Now, do you have
01:58:21.440 a plan? Yes. Real estate agents. I trust.com. These real estate agents have been hand selected
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01:58:46.020 That's real estate agents. I trust.com. Welcome back to the program. Uh, there's something that
01:58:52.780 we didn't get a chance to talk to, uh, talk about today that I definitely want to make sure we get
01:58:57.040 to is the co-founder of Facebook says we've got to break up, uh, Facebook. It's dangerous. And he
01:59:03.980 is absolutely right. It is dangerous. Um, however, I, I so caution conservatives, please do not
01:59:14.260 start talking about regulating these companies. If we get into bed, if the United States government
01:59:22.300 gets into bed and has their hooks into these companies any more than they already do. And
01:59:29.760 these companies are going to be consulted on, well, what should the regulation be like?
01:59:34.760 They will close the doors for any kind of competition. And you will have, if you think
01:59:42.220 the cable industry and television industry was hard for conservatives to do, you'll have
01:59:47.120 no chance. And they're not violating the first amendment. They can kick off anybody they want
01:59:55.520 because they're a business. So the bill of rights goes away. If these companies are the companies that
02:00:04.540 squash everything else for competition and you just can't start your own Google because the, because
02:00:11.960 of the litigate, the, because of the, uh, the legal ramifications of it, it's all stacked in their
02:00:17.260 favor, just like it's always been for everything else until regulation is lifted. Remember what things
02:00:24.600 were like with AT&T? That's because they were, they were regulated. Ma bell. They had regulations
02:00:31.480 and you couldn't do anything about it. Soon as those regulations were lifted, we had all kinds
02:00:37.420 of new things. This is Google, Amazon, Facebook, Apple saying, regulate us, please regulate us.
02:00:44.520 Tell us the rules because we can, we have enough money to be able to do anything. The person who's
02:00:49.300 starting up a new company, they won't have, they won't be able to hit those stairs. They won't have,
02:00:52.200 they won't, they won't be able to do it. I remember Bill Gates said just with the regulation
02:00:56.180 because of Microsoft. Now you wouldn't be able to start a new competitor for Microsoft.
02:01:01.460 He said, I couldn't do today what I did back then. I couldn't start Microsoft.
02:01:06.900 This is a guy who is accused of being in violation of antitrust legislation. This is a guy, I mean,
02:01:13.320 think about that. This is a guy who's being accused of, of, of being in a monopoly in court.
02:01:18.160 And his point is, yeah, I couldn't, I couldn't even start this company. I couldn't start any
02:01:23.020 competition right now because of the way this is set up. And this is not a conservative, obviously,
02:01:27.000 Bill Gates.
02:01:27.620 Yeah. So please, we'll talk about it. But please, before you start saying, you know,
02:01:33.200 we should regulate Dune, just think it through and we'll help you on that next week. Have a safe
02:01:39.740 weekend. God bless you. Thank you so much for your support.
02:01:42.960 You're welcome. Not you. Don't care about your support, Stu. You're listening to Glenn Beck.