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
Summary
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
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Thank you very much. We've got a great, great program lined up for you and a big announcement
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with Bill O'Reilly today. So stand by. All right. We all know that socialism is coming to America,
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but did you know that our own HHS secretary, Alex Azar, is helping the cause by trying to get
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foreign countries to dictate the prices of our medicine? This will cause shortages. It'll set
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medical research back. This is not a good idea. FreedomWorks is doing everything they can to
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sound the alarm on this, to stop socialized medicine. I want you to do your own homework.
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Start by going to FreedomWorksForMe.org and look at this case and tell Secretary Azar to fix patients,
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not prices. The prices of our medicine to other countries, by having the other countries fix
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our prices, does not fix our problem. FreedomWorksForMe.org.
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Massive manhunt for a man who tried to pawn his baby. What's the problem? I mean, can we do that?
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Can we, we can't pawn our babies now? Because I didn't think it was a baby. If he chooses that
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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.
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I, I'm, I'm just not sure. A great show lined up for you. We begin in one minute.
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This is the Glenn Beck Program. Mother's Day is Sunday. It's a little song I just started to write.
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I, I haven't gotten very far on it, but I think you get the gist. Uh, it is a Sunday, Mother's Day,
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23andMe, for a limited time, is taking 30% off their health and ancestry kit until May 13th.
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Now, as a family, we sent in, uh, our, our health and ancestry kit, and I'm telling you,
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it was one of the coolest experiences we've ever had. Honestly, as a family, we waited for that stuff
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to come back. The kids were asking all the time. Then we sat down on the couch, and because they came
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in at different times, um, you know, mine came in first, then Tanya's, uh, came in, and the kids were
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so excited to go over each one to see where our ancestry was, but also to look at the traits and
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the health traits, and, and, uh, you know, there's a couple of them where they're like, you know, uh,
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when you get into the health thing, it's like, talk to your doctor, and you have to, you know,
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click on all these boxes that are like, don't panic, and you, by the time you get there, you're
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like, oh my gosh, do I have leprosy? Uh, and we didn't have any health problems, but we still had
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to click through all those windows, but it is amazing. It'll tell you all about diabetes, whether
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you are prone to it, and the things that you can do to, to help, uh, not get diabetes, and, or whatever
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else that you might have. The health and ancestry kit, a great thing, really, honestly, for the whole
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family, uh, at least it was for my family, and maybe we're weird, but I, yes, we are weird, but I
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don't think it's because we're weird that we enjoyed it. $30 off right now, 23andMe, get it for
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Mother's Day, 23andMe, their health and ancestry kit, go to 23andMe.com slash back, that's where you'll
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be able to save the 30 bucks, that's the number 23andMe.com slash back, it, it, it's Mother's Day,
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could you hang on just a sec, I'm sorry, it's for Mother's Day, uh, and, uh, the offer ends
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soon. Why do I have to take this phone call? I'm so sorry, I appreciate it. You can finish
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the commercial, but I mean, I, yeah, if we could just get to it when you, why would I start
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to, Fred? Hello, Fred. Hello? Yes. Yes, Mr. Beck! Yes, Fred. Hi, how are you? I'm, I'm, I'm
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good. Oh, wow, I'm a huge fan of yours. Thank you so much for having me on. Uh, my name's
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Red McCostraff, I am the head of right-wing outreach for the Democratic Party, and I just
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wanted to, I am really excited about this crop of candidates, and I just wanted to tell you
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about some of them. Okay. I'm a lifelong Republican, I am in the boat with you, I, I have always
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voted Republican every single election since I was a child. Right. This time I've changed,
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and I just want to be able to come on the show and tell you just a little bit about some
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of our exciting candidates for 2020. You're going to love them. Okay. I think your audience
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is going to be very excited. Okay. I, I, I highly doubt that, but, uh. No, no, no, let
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me, let me tell you about one candidate. You may have heard of her, Elizabeth Warren. Now,
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I think you're, you guys are really, your audience is going to be very excited about what she's
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bringing to the table. Uh, I don't. She's got a lot of pro-business policies, and I know,
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you're, I know you're, I mean, we're, uh, very pro-business. Yes. It's one of the things
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that we are. I have a feeling that you're not, you've never voted for a Republican in
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your life. Well, hold on one second. Let me tell you about what is going to happen in
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2020. All right. Okay. Okay. Okay. First of all, she's got this great business, pro-business,
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uh, policy, and you've heard about her wealth tax, which has been very misrepresented, and we
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could get into that another time. Right. But, uh, what's another one she's, she's coming out
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with here in the next couple of weeks. I think you guys are going to love it as Republicans,
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uh, as we are all Republicans. Yeah. I don't think you, Fred, you're not a Republican.
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And so it's called a breath tax. Now the breath tax works like this. It's very interesting.
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I think you're really going to love this. Hold on just a second. A breath tax. Yes. It's
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very simple, very easy to, uh, implement. Basically what would happen is when you inhale 3% of your
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salary goes to the government and, but, but hold on, let me get to the pro-business part.
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salary would go to the government. So a total of 5%, but 3% hint. So if you hold your breath,
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the longer you hold your breath, the less taxes you pay. I mean, this is an exciting proposal.
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I don't, I think you guys are going to love it. And it's going to create lots of jobs.
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How is that going to create any, any jobs? It's going to be fantastic.
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So every time, every time it's not like, so does that add up? Is it like the second breath
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That is how the, it is a, yes, it would, it would work that way. So you'd add on the first,
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it's unimportant. It's important. It's unimportant. That's down in the future. We'll deal with the
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But I think you're going to really love about it.
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Glenn. And as a Republican, I think we'll, we'll agree on this one.
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I'm not a Republican and I don't think you are.
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Do you care about jobs? Cause I know I care about jobs. That's why I changed to the democratic
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party. Just very recently, it's a lifelong Republican. When I changed over to the democratic
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party, one thing I found was interesting about this breath tax is it creates jobs.
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Wait a minute. It will create or save 1.5 billion jobs.
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It's amazing. And what it's going to do is you're going to have people who are going
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to go around with mobile oxygen monitors and what you'll be going to work. Let's say
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you're going to work and you'll have a person riding with you in your car with a mobile oxygen
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monitor and they will be just putting a very unintrusive, large plastic mask over your
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face. Now wait, this sounds like something I don't want in my life.
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A stranger driving with me to work while I'm driving, they're putting a, a large mask over
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Most of it's clear though. You're going to be able to see most of the road. I mean, this
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is not, it's going to be very unintrusive. Right. It's not our only policy. I'll say
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that. Okay. All right. I know you, I know you guys, I know we, uh, we hate immigrants,
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for example. No, we don't hate them. No, no, we don't. We hate immigrants. No, we don't
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hate immigrants. What are these people? They're different colors. We don't want them here.
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No. You're with me on this one. I know I'm not. We're all Republicans here. Right. And
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I think your audience is going to be very excited about Elizabeth Warren. Who's more
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anti-immigrant than a native American? I mean, it was their land. She doesn't want anyone
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coming here at all. She doesn't like black people, orange people, white people. She doesn't
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like any of them. No, I really, who hates the immigrants more than someone who had like
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basically their entire race wiped out and put it onto casinos or whatever. Right. No,
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that's not what you're with me on this. No, I'm not with you on this. A lot of people
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are saying, Oh, Elizabeth Warren, she can't be, uh, for a strong border because she's not
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wanting to build the wall. Well, have you asked her what her policy is? I think a lot
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of Republicans would be interesting. She wants to drape smallpox blankets, uh, across
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the border. She's got throw blankets. She's already infected them with smallpox. She wants
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them on the board. You are going to love it. Oh, she hates the immigrants. You're going
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to love this woman. Elizabeth Warren hates immigrants, loves breath taxing. Okay. Thank
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you very much. I appreciate it. Oh, I'm sorry. I don't know why I took that phone call. Um,
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it's interesting. They're trying to bring both sides together. They really are. Yeah, they
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really are. And they know us. They've spent the time to really, to get to know us. Yeah.
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I think that's a nice thing. It really is. It really is. I don't know if it could be running
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over votes right now. I think the Trump administration's a little terrified of that.
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Well, the smallpox blanket screen, I, it's cheaper. It's definitely a lot less expensive.
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Yeah. You need to run wires over a long, uh, uh, distance. But like clothesline. But
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like clothesline. Yeah. It would just be, it could just be easily like rope. We get
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like, you know, when they have like conventions and stuff, just like that, that, uh, drape
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and piping. Yeah. Right. Except it's smallpox blankets. Yeah. I never thought, uh, Elizabeth
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Warren would be the one that would come up with that, but, uh, pretty exciting time for
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Republicans. Yeah. Like that guy. Yeah. Like Fred. Uh, welcome to, uh, welcome to Friday.
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We've got a great show for you today. Uh, yes, today. I mean, we have a show for you today,
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a great show for you. It'll probably be scheduled in, uh, at some point. Uh, but today we have
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a show for you and, uh, we're pretty thrilled about it. Uh, uh, Bill O'Reilly is going to
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be with us in just a few minutes. Uh, and, uh, we have kind of a cool, really cool announcement.
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One that I really thought he's not going to do that. And, uh, I called him up and he was
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like, yeah. Uh, and so, uh, we have a cool, really cool announcement with, uh, Bill O'Reilly
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coming up in, uh, just about 45 minutes. Today's the, uh, Uber, uh, the big, um, IPO coming
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out here in the near future. There's a story out about some of these investments on these,
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uh, on these startups, which is somewhat, somewhat impressive. It's like these type of investments
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that you just never, they never come around to you, you know? Uh, so this is someone invested,
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uh, is this is first round capital invested $500,000 in Uber back in the day. Uh, their
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return so far, 2.5 billion. Oh, holy cow. Did you love that? I would love it more if
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I could have been the guy. Yeah, that was in 2010. So the return on the investment, it
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is over a nine year period. So you have to take that into account. Oh my gosh. $500,000
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into 2.5 billion. See, this is the kind of lottery I want to win. Yes. You know, going
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to the lottery and just doing a scratch ticket. It's not, I would want to win the lottery where
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you've invested, you know, a thousand dollars and it's worth a million. Yeah. You know, and
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you've built something at the same time. Right. And it kind of, yeah, exactly. So it doesn't
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feel, but I guess that's what the lottery is because we're building this great education
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system all around the country. It's amazing. You know, it's so great. So well, because I,
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I think, wow, we've invested how much through the lottery in education and look how good
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it is. So we could have built something like Uber, but no, no, no, no, no. Education in
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the U.S. Yeah. Yeah. It's one of those things too, where you don't get the respect if you
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win the lottery. Winning the lottery is basically people look at you and like, oh, that dope lucked
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out. And now they got all this money and it pisses me off. When you invest some money into
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a company, which is just as much a crap shoot as the lottery, basically, it is so many of these
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things shut down. Then you're like, wow, that guy's a business genius. I mean, he didn't come
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up with the idea or do any of the work on it, but he put his money into it very early. I would
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love, I would love one of these guys to come out like, you know, in a bathrobe and slippers
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and pull up in a big, like, uh, you know, Winnebago and, you know, I'm just here to collect
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my billion dollars. Who knew? Who knew? Who knew? There's some money out of it and it
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worked. Uh, here's some other ones. A $750,000 investment in Lyft worth now $240 million. Not
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bad. I mean, not, not quite the Uber return. I mean, not the billion. Uh, you're supposed
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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
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dead. Yeah. I don't know who it is. I want that person dead. Okay. So, so I don't even
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know. Somebody signed me up for LinkedIn years ago and, uh, then every, I just, I can't stop
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LinkedIn. You just can't stop it. You can't stop it. Then about, I don't know, six months
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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
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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
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understand. I don't want it anymore. Please. And it's one thing with LinkedIn
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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
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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
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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
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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
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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.
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.
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.
00:22:16.800
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
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.
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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
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
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
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,
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,
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
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
00:47:58.520
sons will have their heads on the pike. I'd love that. That's what Adam said about Jefferson.
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
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
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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
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.
00:57:30.940
That's the documentary meatballs. But, but hang on just a second. Yes. Chelsea Clinton has gone to hedge
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,
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
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
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
01:01:55.320
You are such a suck. Do you know of any such product?
01:01:58.440
I am sending your mom for Mother's Day, just tell Marianne that she is going to get killing
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
01:02:26.320
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.
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Get all the latest from Blaze TV. You got to be a subscriber. BlazeTV.com slash Glenn. It's a place
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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
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
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
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
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.
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
01:11:06.580
millennials. I think people are really sick of that. I mean, I just think the average person over 40 is
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
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.
01:14:27.480
And I might have the subtitle change to How the President Lowe's Bill O'Reilly.
01:14:37.980
Every day, some days he likes me, some days he hates me.
01:14:42.760
You know what's even funnier? He hates me every day. So, all right. So, Bill.
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
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could have this at a movie theater and I would be thrilled having this in a movie theater. And I'm a
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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
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Day. Great Mother's Day gift. X chair Beck dot com. Get a hundred dollars off. Now, if you use the promo
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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
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.
01:23:44.100
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You just don't want to do it because now you can't just go in and tinker. You can't go to Pep
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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
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Get CarShield.com. CarShield.com saved me a buttload of money on repairs that I've had to have done to
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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.
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
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,
01:37:02.120
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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
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
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
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
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
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coming up, but it's simply safe. Go to simply safe Beck.com get free home security camera. When
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Check out blaze TV.com slash Glenn it to subscribe to blaze TV. If you use the promo code Glenn,
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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
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,
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.
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
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.
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
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,
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
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,
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within an hour. Usually you have a real estate agent contacting you. Uh, and these are not the
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real estate agents who are going to like, when we're going to blow up balloons and we're going
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to have open houses every Saturday. Well, I'm going to bring some more real estate agents in.
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And if we could have some more cookies on the counter, that would be great. Now, do you have
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a plan? Yes. Real estate agents. I trust.com. These real estate agents have been hand selected
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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,
02:01:27.620
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.