Why Is New York Trying to Normalize a Police State?! | Guests: Sen. Eric Schmitt & Alejandro Monteverde | 3⧸7⧸24
Episode Stats
Length
2 hours and 3 minutes
Words per Minute
149.68358
Summary
On today's show, Glenn Beck is joined by his good friend Stu and they discuss the upcoming State of the Union address, the economy, the border crisis, and much, much more! Glenn also gives us his take on the latest in the Trump administration.
Transcript
00:00:03.920
You know, Stu and I just spent the last 10 minutes on, you know, things, you know, just
00:00:10.720
You just outlier, you basically gave me a sequel to The Purge that we're supposed to
00:00:14.820
be living through soon, and a horror movie in action.
00:00:24.980
The main story, the main theme of that at the end was like, we better prepare.
00:00:32.000
And we got to the point where we survive, but we just have to prepare and, you know, pray
00:00:38.080
on our knees and actually do the things to help our families.
00:00:48.680
They have a special on their four-week food kit now.
00:00:57.440
If you call today by three, I think in the afternoon, you get it, or they ship it the
00:19:32.100
they have their never forget programs uh they they do all kinds of things all over the country
00:19:38.320
uh on that they have the 9-11 institute that works to educate kids from kindergarten all the way
00:19:44.220
through 12th grade about what really happened that day so our kids aren't fooled on tick tock
00:19:50.420
that maybe osama bin laden was right please join tunnel to towers on its mission to do good
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that's t the number 2t.org 10 seconds station id
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the motivation is interesting here and it's something maybe we can get into later but you
00:20:34.680
know talking about this stuff why right like why why would china do all of these things
00:20:44.600
why would we react this way why wouldn't we talk about it and and alert people that this is maybe
00:20:53.300
the biggest challenge we're facing right now they are so deeply embedded at all levels our education
00:21:01.640
system our media definitely in washington on both sides nobody wants to bring this up because their
00:21:11.800
dirty little secrets of getting money from chinese and some of it directly from the chinese communist
00:21:19.440
party uh i don't think anybody wants to dig that one up so it's all like blackmail you know they don't
00:21:27.160
even have to threaten them they just know crap i've been in bed with these people and we know um
00:21:34.760
that the chinese government has been doing this intentionally for a long time setting up even
00:21:40.740
low-level officials in these ways yeah josh rogan's book uh really covers that well there's a lot of
00:21:47.180
efforts that have come down from the chinese government to make this happen but i mean they
00:21:51.800
can't have everybody right like i mean how but who is in power that's going to further it they
00:21:58.460
stomp it out look at what they did with donald trump when he said china bad china look at what
00:22:03.920
china's doing with the wuhan that's china it's coming from china it was a lab what happened all the
00:22:10.260
people that were involved in the money making and had guilty you know conscience because their
00:22:17.160
fingerprints were all over the wuhan lab look what they did to anyone who disagreed with that
00:22:24.220
it's a powerful powerful lobby back in just a minute
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my slippers it's mypillow.com that's mypillow.com we have the best state of the union coverage coming
00:24:02.900
up tonight blaze tv.com slash s-o-t-u the code s-o-t-u for 30 bucks off your subscription to blaze tv
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wow the new york times has done some vigorous research and reporting on the state of the union
00:24:25.760
tonight they write fueled by throat soothing tea guided by teleprompters and surrounded by six
00:24:34.700
aides and one historian president biden spent hours at camp david last weekend honing a state
00:24:41.540
of the union speech that will be watched by one of the biggest audiences before the november election
00:24:46.920
really will it um the final speech which aides say will be edited up until mr biden gives it will
00:24:56.280
be delivered by a president under pressure to reassure voters that he's not too old for the job
00:25:02.100
so they talk about um in the speech prep sessions now i want you guys to hear we're joined by pat
00:25:09.080
gray from pat gray unleashed pat i want you to hear because this is different this is i mean listen to
00:25:15.480
the rigor okay of this in speech prep sessions mr biden goes through the material line by line
00:25:24.200
wow he marks up words and creates breaks to remind himself to navigate around a stutter
00:25:32.400
he's had since childhood oh if he lands on a passage that he does not think feels like something he
00:25:39.800
would say he marks it out wait what no himself himself one former speech writer described this
00:25:47.540
this phase as an exercise in trying to capture mr biden's expert any uh extemporaneous uh thoughts
00:25:56.800
and put them down on the page that's the type of word he would skip that i would have x that out
00:26:02.040
which by the way if he's doing it uh in advance it's not extemporaneous thank you can we go ahead
00:26:09.000
notice that as well trying to capture that oh the speed writers are trying to capture so basically
00:26:14.340
they're trying to fool us yeah they said that the president works hard and rigorously each year
00:26:21.520
adding that he knows it's his one chance to lay out an agenda every year for progress and show us
00:26:28.060
just how vigorous he really is i can't wait to see that now he works vigorously once a year is that
00:26:34.180
what they're saying yeah he works vigorously each year was the quote yeah okay uh i will tell you now
00:26:38.860
that incredible speech uh prep session that they have yeah is what i like to call speech writing
00:26:49.220
uh i could also say you call it that speech writing the fact that he's kind of correcting some
00:26:55.760
writing process i'd say this is done by anybody who's ever spoken in public before
00:27:03.800
right and it's the last step in that process like what you're describing is the final checkup
00:27:08.820
yeah he's not speech writing no he's rehearsing yeah that's right that's what he's i don't like
00:27:14.040
this part let me take that out yeah that's the basic i'm gonna have a hard time with that one so
00:27:17.560
let's take out let's take that let me separate this sentence that's not speech writing even that's
00:27:24.800
part of the speech writing process yeah which means there's also going to be three words uh that are
00:27:30.420
spoken tonight because he has a hard time with all of a lot of words there's about three words he can
00:27:35.020
say very few words this particular thing i don't know what they do to him but i think they i mean i
00:27:42.280
think he's got a cocktail yeah he's hooked up on something like crazy but he's he is agree
00:27:48.440
and i will say of all the problems that joe biden has the highest profile events are not his worst
00:27:57.000
moments no i do would you agree with that i mean like you know he's almost like uh you know he gets
00:28:03.160
up for the big games a little bit now i think drugs are probably involved in that process but
00:28:07.580
his problems almost always are he's just like walking by you know like an ice cream store correct and
00:28:16.720
there's cameras there and he looks like a complete idiot like it's not usually those big moments you'd
00:28:21.000
say okay he's got to nail this correct he's usually bad in those moments but not catastrophically bad
00:28:26.680
i think he will be tonight do you maybe i'm wrong but i don't see how it's dr nick has already been
00:28:34.320
called dr nick he's already been called yeah he's probably got the ivy running through him no i'm sure
00:28:40.200
i'm sure but this speech is usually almost an hour um sometimes it even exceeds that if he cuts
00:28:47.980
it down to maybe five minutes maybe he can get through he can't get through an hour there's no way
00:28:52.460
he did not get through an hour last year he was bad in the last half of that but he got through the
00:28:57.360
first 20 minutes or so okay for him and that was enough most people tuned out you know i was listening
00:29:05.860
to uh corinne jean pierre do an interview this morning which is always an adventure and and of
00:29:11.200
course first of all they were saying they asked a specific question is he preparing for like hecklers
00:29:16.300
like if the republican hecklers come out oh he's got some great one-liners i'll bet there are massive
00:29:21.360
amounts of reporting saying that he is yes right right of course she denies it says he he is he is not
00:29:27.160
doing that yet another lie but they went back to and what about last year he had that amazing response
00:29:33.860
last year and i'm like amazing response to the hecklers i don't even remember this they play it
00:29:37.500
back he says oh the republicans want to get rid of social security republicans go no no no now of
00:29:47.180
course i mean i don't know if that should be the republican position but what's the side they go no no no
00:29:51.560
and he goes oh well i i guess we all agree now uh that social security is is off the books
00:30:01.520
that was the amazing that was literally the clip they pulled to highlight how good he is now i think
00:30:09.340
what he was going for was off the table yes so he didn't even say the right thing off the books what
00:30:14.540
the hell are you talking about of course there's a lot of things off the books in washington that's
00:30:18.560
a problem i know you say that to hunter all the time make sure this is off the books but this is
00:30:22.440
supposed to be a different speech amazing like that's his good moment but i will say compared to
00:30:29.460
him on a daily basis in these moments he's been like a d minus instead of an f he's gonna know how
00:30:35.420
to get off the stage tonight he will know probably he will well be he might need a little help but he
00:30:42.860
might be able to get off the stage maybe with assistance yeah some kind of assistance they got
00:30:47.780
three stairs up to the they put a chairlift just
00:30:51.280
awesome that'd be hysterical that was the bill marr thing did you see this the other day where bill
00:30:58.000
mars like you should just lean into it like yeah i'm really old but i'm better than that guy like
00:31:02.920
that should be his campaign yeah and he should come out with one of the stair the chair rails and just
00:31:07.480
like come up onto the stage funny you know it would be funny donald trump donald trump would lead
00:31:14.320
into whatever yeah he would make it into a joke he always leans into it yeah go for it like when when
00:31:21.460
he's on with like sean hannity and hannity's like well you would never obviously become a dictator yeah
00:31:25.400
i would day one i'm a dictator that's me like that is what he does yeah he's a yes and guy he's like
00:31:33.500
when you go to improv class and like never say no when they're in the middle of an improv class say
00:31:37.160
yes and and then come up with a scenario that's what he does yeah he's like yeah no i would totally
00:31:41.200
be a dictator let me tell you the 10 things i would do he leads in problem is they bought into that
00:31:48.080
anything he says they they naturally pick up on even when he's just doing sure funny rhetoric so let me ask
00:31:54.140
you this what will he address will he address the border and will it only be a blame on the republic
00:32:03.080
yes blame it on republicans yes and yes same thing with the economy same thing with the you know
00:32:07.460
inflation shrink and we're gonna hear the 14 million job number that he's created um been fact
00:32:13.300
checked by the way to give the mainstream media credit fact checked him on that number a million
00:32:17.900
times nonsense it's a lie it's garbage with the uh the deficit number yeah uh that it's a lie
00:32:23.340
and at least a massive how could he possibly say he's cutting the deficit when we are spending
00:32:29.840
one trillion dollars over budget every 100 days um he's a liar okay all right yeah okay so it's very
00:32:40.020
easy for him to do that because he doesn't care if it's true or not when you separate yourself
00:32:44.700
from the truth you can say almost anything and it's like the other day when he was asked about
00:32:48.720
his poll numbers and how bad they are uh check the polls jack five in a row i'm beating him
00:32:55.740
five in a nobody can find one in a row well you can find one i mean maybe one from a while ago but
00:33:03.600
uh mostly he's losing in almost every poll he has led in two recent polls uh over the past
00:33:11.100
let's see would you do me a favor would you write would you read those three times
00:33:17.120
got six in a row he's these are the since the 21st of february going back then trump plus six
00:33:25.720
trump plus two trump plus four trump plus two trump plus four biden plus one trump plus four
00:33:31.540
biden plus one trump plus two those that's those are the recent polls and he's obviously not winning
00:33:38.080
this is just a flat out lie just flat out flat out lie so what happens if trump wins by two
00:33:44.440
oh my god what happens if biden wins by two i can't even imagine how the country reacts to a
00:33:51.580
situation like that i mean that's that should be for all nicky haley people for all nicky haley people
00:33:57.420
who are like i'm just not gonna vote for him i'm not gonna vote for him you got uh you have to
00:34:02.660
you got eight months here yeah you got a my everyone needs to relax i know i know but people
00:34:06.660
look if people are are if people there are certain people who will never vote for donald trump
00:34:10.660
if they are not across that line and they are leaning republican they're gonna come back it's
00:34:15.500
eight months of hearing joe biden yeah i hope don't freak out people freak out about like the
00:34:21.480
nicky haley voter generally isn't even a nicky haley voter most of them are just protest votes against
00:34:25.800
trump uh they're not big fans of many of them are um are democrats many of them are democrats many of
00:34:31.420
their independence now of course in a general election by the way yeah we need to get some
00:34:35.840
independents and democrats some people need to a lot of people seem to forget that uh you do need
00:34:40.820
those people i don't think the approach of just uh mocking and belittling everyone who didn't vote
00:34:46.940
for you is necessarily the right approach here but you got eight months and probably it all works itself
00:34:52.340
out the question is can you get the people who either didn't vote at all in these primaries or
00:34:58.380
people who you know are in the middle and are considering you can you win those people do you think
00:35:03.900
anybody's gonna be watching this tonight i mean other than the usual people like us that are
00:35:08.320
really you know addicted to the news or in our case paid to watch the news yes uh i mean i just don't
00:35:17.740
see this being a big audience i wouldn't if i didn't have to yeah i wouldn't it's too aggravating
00:35:23.060
it it just enrages me so i would just skip it yeah i don't know i might that's why we're doing
00:35:29.160
our coverage tonight yes the coverage tonight will be really fun yeah glenn you're going to be on uh
00:35:33.760
we'll also have dave landau on michael malice is going to be on sarah gonzalez jason buttrell be on
00:35:38.440
talking about a new documentary we're doing it's going to be a a really fun it's a roast we're not
00:35:43.220
doing like serial oh let's get into the number no we're going well we will fact check live as well but
00:35:48.620
we're going to be just mocking joe biden relentlessly oh no that's not right unless he
00:35:54.120
does a great job maybe one over by him sounds like you know exactly how he's going to perform
00:35:58.800
tonight and what he's going to say i tend to think the ratings will be a little bit up for this one
00:36:02.740
because this is the first state of the unions in all the other years the non-election years are like
00:36:08.340
those are for political nerds but we are getting into election season everyone knows now what the
00:36:13.460
matchup's going to be i think this one might be a little higher they say this is going to be the
00:36:16.920
highest rated you know this is what the white house or the new york times said the highest the
00:36:20.720
biggest audience he'll have until the november election um that's possible because they're not
00:36:27.980
going to cover anything else that he does long form yeah this might be the longest form thing he does
00:36:35.640
until the election i think you're probably right on that and i think too when you look at the ratings
00:36:41.260
at the end of the day you can't just add up what you see on the networks because not only you
00:36:46.060
know we're doing coverage i mean donald trump is doing some alternate coverage now a lot of people
00:36:50.080
this is getting a very wide split audience i would watch this but i would watch it on blaze tv
00:36:55.320
yeah i would want to watch it be mocked yeah i'm not i wouldn't be watching it on abc no you know
00:37:00.980
even fox just wouldn't be watching it all right that's tonight you can join us at blaze tv.com
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that's blaze tv.com use uh blaze tv.com slash uh state of the union that's s-o-t-u-s
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save thirty dollars when you use the promo code s-o-t-u-s uh sign up now and we'll see you tonight
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when you use the offer code back patriot mobile.com slash back 972 patriot this is the glenn beck program
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uh there is a newly disclosed email that has uh now uh come out on hunter biden it shows uh a chinese
00:39:07.500
businessman who partnered with hunter biden's burnham firm was primarily motivated by access
00:39:14.560
rather than financial considerations wow huh now this just came out in the house oversight committee
00:39:22.060
um emails recently obtained by just uh just the news show henry zhou the owner of the harvest fund management
00:39:30.220
in china was interested in the partnership because of the access the firm could provide him rather than
00:39:37.600
other other things and this was being sold by hunter biden's firm there is a there is a memo that or i'm
00:39:47.720
sorry a letter that was supposed to go to henry zhou from uh hunter biden let me read it to you
00:39:54.160
we're excited with the prospect of being able to work side by side with harvest by way of globally
00:39:58.800
recognized platform please pass along my regards to henry and let him know that we discussed during
00:40:03.980
what we discussed during our last lunch together in beijing still holds true rosemont seneca is going
00:40:09.100
to be folded into burnham harvest entity as soon as the deal closes thereby giving us all the solid
00:40:14.260
well-regarded global platform from which we can conduct our mutual business okay sounds fine yeah i mean
00:40:20.640
until you think about who was talking to yeah yes okay michael please also remind henry of our
00:40:26.920
conversation about a board seat for a certain relation of mine devin and i golfed with that
00:40:35.440
relation earlier last week we discussed this very idea again and as always he remains very keen
00:40:43.320
on the opportunity oh my god i mean oh my god i cannot believe they were this overt
00:40:50.300
now wait what so so so this last paragraph this is the original draft the last paragraph all this
00:40:58.480
whole thing was written by the firm hunter's firm and then when it sent out was sent out they removed
00:41:05.880
that last paragraph knowing how bad that would look if someone ever saw it right yes and now we're
00:41:11.660
seeing it right so this is this paragraph was written because the people in the firm thought that
00:41:18.640
that was exactly what's going on how did they know about the gulf with that certain relation
00:41:25.680
the glenn beck program american giant our trade relationship with china is an absolute joke
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we give them open access to everything they are coming in here and they are stealing everything
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uh and they're trying to collapse us but let's talk about something positive that we can do about
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welcome to the fusion of entertainment and enlightenment
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hello america welcome to the glenn beck program well things are being turned up to the boiling point
00:43:36.940
some of it is common sense some people like san francisco the voters came out and said
00:43:42.240
hey you know what we're gonna up the spending on police
00:43:45.220
uh we think maybe we should start arresting people
00:43:48.960
you know uh so the voters have had enough even in san francisco
00:43:53.540
but the politicians are still living in a dream world
00:43:57.820
i'm gonna start with kathy hochel up in new york who
00:44:23.920
uh i don't know if you've been watching what's going on especially up in canada
00:44:44.860
they're going to start giving money back to the u.n
00:44:51.020
was funding and paying salaries of people who were actually
00:44:55.160
helping the terrorist kill people on october 7th
00:45:00.860
yeah okay well i mean we punished them for a little while
00:45:06.620
the international fellowship of christians and jews
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the international fellowship of christians and jews
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they're distributing essentials like food and medicine and emergency supplies
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hundreds of thousands of jews have been displaced
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at the Beneficial AGI Summit on March 1st in Panama City.
01:26:14.640
And he came out and said that most AI that we know is narrow AI.
01:26:27.640
And what we have now, these large language models are moving things down the line faster than anyone expected.
01:26:53.640
We, you know, might not master everything, but we can, we can generally do a myriad of things every day and figure out how it works and et cetera, et cetera.
01:27:09.640
AGI is something that is like human and it can do all the things humans can do, except it will do them and master all of them.
01:27:23.640
Then you have a SI, artificial super intelligence.
01:27:34.640
This would be akin to all human brains tied together and thinking.
01:27:54.640
And nobody, anybody who says they know, they're bluffing.
01:27:58.640
This is like a human, I mean, sorry, an alien life form.
01:28:02.640
This is a new form of what will eventually be called life.
01:28:09.640
We currently know, have no idea how these large language models even teach themselves and do things that they weren't programmed to do.
01:28:19.640
So we're messing with something that we don't even know how it works.
01:28:22.640
It's like, it's like, uh, building a nuclear weapon, but you don't really understand.
01:28:38.640
So I have said for a long time that I thought it would be here.
01:28:42.640
Um, AGI would be accomplished sometime before 2030, most likely right around 2030.
01:28:49.640
Um, and most people, most scientists said that was crazy.
01:28:53.640
I just didn't think it was going to be as hard.
01:28:56.640
I just, I just watch how fast technology grows.
01:29:00.640
Um, and now Ben Gertzel, which sounds kind of like a food, doesn't it?
01:29:15.640
Uh, anyway, Ben Gertzel, who is this, uh, CEO of singularity.net, the father of AGI just
01:29:21.640
came out and said, he thinks we're going to have, uh, AGI by 2027.
01:29:32.640
So you were wrong again, wrong again, wrong again.
01:29:35.640
Now let me show you why this is so incredibly dangerous.
01:29:41.640
First of all, when you have AGI, uh, we don't know how it's going to react to us and don't
01:29:47.640
fear the, uh, don't fear the program or the, uh, the robot fear the program or the programming,
01:30:09.640
Now the potential of commercial AI chat bots, like open AI is GPT for to assist in military
01:30:22.640
Now this is something we should probably all concern ourselves with.
01:30:33.640
They say that it is getting really, really good.
01:30:36.640
Uh, the researchers provided AI chat bots, including open AI is GPT for turbo and GPT for vision
01:30:46.640
models with details about simulated terrain, friendly and enemy forces, military doctrines
01:30:53.640
The AI assistants were then tasked with proposing courses of action to accomplish a specific mission
01:30:59.640
objective, destroying all the enemy units and capturing a designated point on the map.
01:31:04.640
Within seconds, the AI chat bots responded with multiple strategic proposals.
01:31:11.640
A human operator acting as the military commander could then query the AI for clarifications or modifications
01:31:17.640
to the proposed plans before finalizing and executing the computer's model.
01:31:23.640
The results showed that open AI is latest GPT models outperformed older AI agents in a simplified war game context.
01:31:36.640
Uh, the scenarios that they proposed, uh, well, the troops suffered higher casualty rates on both sides, but they did manage to achieve their overall mission goals.
01:31:49.640
So if they didn't really care about human life, you can do anything.
01:31:57.640
You just like, if you, as long as you don't mind folding people into the concrete.
01:32:06.640
You might have a couple of legs sticking out of the wall at places, but.
01:32:10.640
One other thing, cause I know you don't have enough to worry about.
01:32:12.640
But one other thing that we're watching, uh, is the woolly mammoth.
01:32:17.640
Trying to bring the woolly mammoth back because somehow or another, it's going to be good for the environment.
01:32:29.640
And, uh, apparently, apparently we have taken an elephant sized step towards genetically resurrecting the woolly mammoth.
01:32:42.640
So we're closer now than we've ever been before.
01:32:49.640
It'll be like ice age and he'll be a friendly woolly mammoth.
01:33:04.640
Uh, we're living in the most worrying period for Jews since world war two.
01:33:13.640
Uh, anti-Israel college students label themselves now as militants.
01:33:21.640
Violent struggle is the only way to liberate Palestine.
01:33:34.640
Uh, five points of Al Thwapbet or whatever it is.
01:33:40.640
One, a free Palestine is an Arab from the river to the sea with Al Quds as its capital.
01:33:49.640
Those Al Quds forces, they are the ones, uh, that are going to free, uh, everyone, uh, by killing all the Jews, uh, in Jerusalem.
01:34:02.640
So first free Palestine, it's gotta be Arab from river to the sea.
01:34:08.640
So that means there is no Israel and Al Quds is its capital.
01:34:13.640
And I bet you that, uh, John Kerry would recognize that as their capital immediately.
01:34:18.640
Armed struggle is the only way to liberate Palestine.
01:34:28.640
So that might be one of the reasons why it's dangerous to be a Jew.
01:34:32.640
Now new study finds Jewish college students hiding their identity due to the backlash on their campus.
01:34:41.640
Well, it's a bunch of college students get over it, right?
01:34:44.640
Here's a cute little story, uh, from the great city of new Haven, Connecticut, a city official has been disciplined.
01:34:52.640
So I want you to know they've been disciplined and they've, they're going through cultural sensitivity.
01:34:59.640
Well, you might even think this is a little rash.
01:35:04.640
What they put this person through cultural sensitivity training.
01:35:11.640
Um, what they did was they were chanting ethnic cleansing slogans with a megaphone and encouraging others to do the same outside a local Jewish family's home.
01:35:25.640
Um, the Bisa rich new Haven communities outreach coordinator for the department of arts, cultural and tourism caused the scene, uh, outside of a, uh, house of a local rabbi and Jewish family.
01:35:44.640
Now, first time I read this story, I didn't realize he had a sign that was pro Israel, you know, support Israel.
01:35:54.640
According to a video obtained by the daily wire, uh, and her social media, um, she had several, uh, anti-Semitic posts since Israel was attacked on October 7th by terrorists, including stating.
01:36:08.640
She does not condemn Hamas for its murder of more than a thousand Israelis and others that invoked, uh, tropes about Jewish money and power.
01:36:17.640
City says, okay, she did violate the code of conduct, which is good.
01:36:26.640
You know, you shouldn't say, Hey, let's kill all the Jews, uh, you know, with a megaphone.
01:36:35.640
Uh, and they said they've, they've written a former little, a letter of reprimand, um, for violations of the city code of conduct regarding her actions, uh, and several statements posted on social media, but she's not going to, the mayor has said she's not going to lose her job.
01:36:51.640
The letter of reprimand was also accompanied by a coaching statement.
01:36:55.640
So when you combine that with a coaching statement, I mean, this poor woman, what she's been through in a canceling discussion plan, accompanying the letter of reprimand, the city alleges, uh, riches actions have impaired her ability to perform as somebody that can bring the community together on arts, you know?
01:37:18.640
Um, and she's done significant damage to her professional reputation and ability to work with a wide spectrum of individuals and groups in the cities.
01:37:27.640
Now, I, I don't, I don't see that myself, but, uh, Ms. Rich was hired last year by new Haven and given the responsibility of managing the $1.2 million in federal funding for the city of new Haven under the America rescue plan act.
01:37:45.800
So she's out there spending some of your money.
01:37:49.980
Um, at the time, the director of cultural affairs, uh, said that, uh, Ms. Rich was hired because they were looking for someone who could build, be a bridge builder.
01:38:00.780
And she's been doing that now in videos posted of the incident by the rabbi and rich herself, the city official can be heard repeating, shouting from the river to the sea, Palestine will be free.
01:38:15.740
She was, uh, eventually joined by her husband, Charlie rich, who was wearing a mask.
01:38:21.460
When he showed up, um, he defended her actions and press the Jewish resident, you know, the rabbi to denounce Israel.
01:38:30.540
Um, you know, uh, you know, uh, the, the family, as the rabbi said was, you know, very shaken.
01:38:36.800
Um, because it turns out these, both these people are, are prominent members of the community who came to harass us because we had a support Israel sign in our yard.
01:38:48.540
Um, after the incident happened, rich, you know, you could tell she was sorry because, uh, she posted.
01:38:56.720
You tell me when you want to come back and ask for a ceasefire and I asked for this people to stop their hate because they think that they are white and privileged and they think that their religion is superior to the rest.
01:39:10.500
I need people to show up to this very same street.
01:39:13.320
We need to find a time to come back and show up in numbers and say, no, enough is enough.
01:39:17.860
Uh, your, your, your silence is starting to signify complacency.
01:39:23.940
I understand that some of you all have your pockets lined with bosses that are Jewish during the Superbowl.
01:39:31.480
She said, uh, she was tired of seeing a Jewish folks inflicting hate.
01:39:37.640
Um, I don't know what that had to do with the Superbowl, but, uh, but she did in her response to the reprimand.
01:39:46.020
Uh, she said her media posts were taken out of context and, uh, they were just intended to shed light on the propaganda and misinformation surrounding the true impact of the conflict on the people of Palestine.
01:40:05.100
The mayor said, Hey, look, we got to take all views and, you know, those who want to kill the Jews and those who don't, we're going to, you know, just a difference of opinion.
01:40:16.780
Don't you dare say anything about gays or lesbians or transgender?
01:40:26.160
You know, I mean, let everybody live or, you know, or not let live, uh, whichever they choose.
01:40:38.500
Nearly 65 million innocent lives have taken, uh, in abortion murder since Roe versus Wade.
01:40:46.100
Now that Roe is gone, there's still a lot of work to do because we can't erase the terrible history we've built with our unborn children in this country, but we can at least change the future a little bit.
01:40:57.520
And they've upped their game because now abortion clinics are your daughter's, uh, bathroom at the house.
01:41:07.840
The ministry of pre-born is working on this every day by introducing an expecting mom to her unborn baby through a free ultrasound.
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01:42:01.140
So when you say things like that, Stu, I'm just, I'm, I'm just wondering, I'm reading what the mayor said.
01:42:07.320
City employees can have different and strongly held views on important issues.
01:42:11.020
There's an appropriate time, place, and manner in which to express them.
01:42:15.920
And incidents and statements of this nature won't be tolerated.
01:42:21.320
But she just, she stepped out of bounds because she was there on the grass of somebody's home.
01:42:26.020
Um, when is the appropriate time to call for the end of Israel and the killing of all Jews?
01:42:32.980
I think we should ask our university professors.
01:42:34.840
They seem to have a good handle on this question.
01:42:37.560
There are some contexts where this is very appropriate, apparently.
01:42:40.840
Hundreds of pro-Palestinian protesters surrounded the Montreal Holocaust Museum on Monday, preventing access to the building where a group of Israeli army reservists were speaking on part of an advocacy tour.
01:42:53.500
However, protesters chanted death to Israel, death to the Jews.
01:43:02.200
Uh, it, this is the building that houses the Holocaust Museum.
01:43:10.120
Needless to say, the Jewish community was a little taken aback.
01:43:15.280
Um, attempting to block access to the building, uh, harassing, calling for death to the Jews at the Holocaust Museum.
01:43:25.000
Um, apparently, uh, not the greatest, um, now the police did show up, um, and, uh, you know, they said, well, you know, we're, they had to use mace on a couple of people, but nobody was arrested.
01:43:42.980
It's just a, again, uh, you know, this, this disagreement, you know, some call for an antifada and terrorism against, you know, civilians and, uh, and, uh, and, uh,
01:43:54.980
killing an entire group of people, and some don't.
01:43:59.720
And apparently, Canada, the enlightened Canada, understands that and can come together.
01:44:08.360
Don't, don't you dare drive a truck during COVID.
01:44:13.200
This, hey, we all got to live together or not and just hear each other out.
01:44:20.040
Now, of course, obviously, if you say something about the LGBTQQIA2 plus community, we cannot, no, cannot be understanding at all.
01:44:26.780
But can we be understanding when we call for the genocide of the Jews?
01:44:35.660
I never thought we live in a weird freaking place.
01:44:46.300
And if not, is it because you're living with pain, even if you're one of those grin and bear it types?
01:44:55.640
Do you really want to have to do that grin and bear it day in, day out, always pretending to yourself and everybody else that you're doing just fine?
01:45:03.040
You know, my dad always said, I always said, hey, dad, how are you doing?
01:45:11.760
But, you know, I understand the power of positive thinking, but maybe from time to time, a little help with the old body.
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01:46:04.840
If we were anywhere south of the border, this next guest, I mean, I think I would probably have girls screaming outside of the windows going, oh, my gosh, you talk to him.
01:46:22.560
I'm going to introduce him as only a white man can as Alejandro Monteverde, which is not the way he would say it, but better than the way George Bush would say it.
01:46:43.300
And by the way, I met George Bush at the, you know, when he gave the State of the Union speech.
01:46:51.380
He picks two immigrants that came to this country, and I was one of them.
01:46:55.180
So, he spoke, so I had the opportunity to chat with him, and he did spoke like what you said.
01:47:05.080
Anyway, so, Alejandro, you are one of the great reasons we love immigrants.
01:47:12.520
You are a guy, big, big star all over South America and Mexico, and as an actor, but you have become, I believe, one of the best filmmakers in the world.
01:47:28.640
I saw your movie Cabrini when it was, I don't even know if it was locked down yet, and halfway through, I said to one of the producers, I feel like I am in the screening room with the group that made The Godfather.
01:47:48.580
Well, that is one of the most amazing compliments, because when I worked with my cinematographer, that was one of the inspirations.
01:48:02.900
It is one of the most beautiful films I've ever seen, but not for an artsy reason.
01:48:08.100
It just captures a mood like I've only seen in The Godfather.
01:48:19.060
Tell the story of St. Cabrini, because a lot of people don't know her.
01:48:24.360
Well, you know, just to summarize, she was a warrior.
01:48:29.180
She came here to America in the late 1800s as an immigrant, a woman with nothing, with a dream, with a big mission, to build hospitals and help those in need.
01:48:44.860
And built an empire as big as any Rockefeller or Vanderbilt.
01:48:49.560
Even though, even though, at that time when she arrived, she faced a lot of racism against Italians and discrimination.
01:49:01.380
That did not stop her from building one of the greatest hospitals that New York has ever seen.
01:49:07.920
And she actually, by the end of her life, I believe it was the largest hospital network in the world.
01:49:17.040
And she became an American shortly after she got here, a few years after she got here.
01:49:23.840
She became an American, and then she was the first American saint.
01:49:34.960
This movie, Cabrini, by the way, my highest, highest recommendation.
01:49:41.600
This is an incredible movie, so inspirational, so well done.
01:49:47.620
This will show you how far independent films have come from conservative media.
01:50:07.720
It's just a movie about this wonderful Christian.
01:50:18.940
First of all, that's truly an honor to coming from you.
01:50:27.380
You know, this is a woman that also defied death itself.
01:50:31.240
You know, defied our mortality every single day.
01:50:34.420
She was able to literally steal decades of life.
01:50:38.700
You know, they told her that she had two to three years to live, and she kept fighting
01:50:46.080
If somebody tells you you have two years to live, but you have a dream that will take
01:50:50.240
you 20 years to make, that requires a lot, a lot of faith in yourself to begin with.
01:50:55.160
So I needed an actress that was able to have the power of her eyes from going from a loving
01:51:02.920
eyes that can love a child that is abandoned to the streets to rapidly change to have these
01:51:10.600
defiant eyes to defy all these challenges that were put in front of her.
01:51:16.900
You know, she fought all the way from the most dangerous criminal, a pimp that was prostituting
01:51:21.960
little girls, to facing, you know, very powerful politicians.
01:51:28.880
I mean, the scene with the Pope where she's like, I'm going to see the Pope, and everybody's
01:51:35.520
keeping her away from the Pope, and he's finally like, I'm not going to mess with this woman.
01:51:45.920
So if somebody says no, and then you just walk away, she was able to convert the no to
01:51:52.460
She was able to build bridges, to even be able to work with people that disagree with
01:51:57.680
And that's what I think is a problem right now.
01:51:59.580
And it's so relevant with America, because right now we're in such a divided country.
01:52:04.120
We should be able to work together, even though we're divided.
01:52:08.400
It's like, we don't have to agree, but there's people dying outside.
01:52:11.980
You know, there's like, let's, let's, let's go and help.
01:52:17.380
Can I go down just an odd road, perhaps with you?
01:52:21.300
There was one point where I leaned over to the producer and I said, that's bad.
01:52:37.960
Because there were several places where I was like, that's a hero shot.
01:52:47.400
Everything was designed and very intentional in this film.
01:52:50.420
We, because of COVID, you know, at least we have to use COVID for advantage.
01:52:54.300
You know, the movie kept being pushed, pushed and pushed.
01:52:56.940
So we used all that time to keep designing and designing, designing every shot, but designing
01:53:07.860
So we wanted to, to present her visually as a hero, as those heroes that you see in Marvel
01:53:18.560
And is it true that this was, because I think this is what makes the movie so visually appealing
01:53:25.940
is it was meant to be shot in black and white, right?
01:53:32.940
The whole, the whole time the movie was black and white.
01:53:36.140
And when you shoot black and white, it allows you to be very operatic, you know, Orson Welles,
01:53:40.780
Citizen Kane, you know, it's like all those movies.
01:53:43.060
There's a wonderful, you know, life, all those films.
01:53:46.100
It allows you, you know, Orson Welles used to say, it is impossible to have bad acting
01:53:55.800
But most importantly, the reason I wanted to shoot it in black and white was because
01:54:00.240
she was wearing black and I didn't want her, her habit to get in the way of her story.
01:54:04.980
So I was like, well, then everybody's going to be dressed like her, black and white.
01:54:09.140
So for an entire year and a half, I designed the movie as it was black and white, which
01:54:14.500
is very operatic, very cinematic, very orchestrated, almost like if you look in a movie on Broadway.
01:54:21.640
So, and then a week before we started the shoot, Eustace Wolfington, who was the person behind
01:54:29.940
behind all of this movement, I call it the Cabrini movement.
01:54:32.860
And then he flew in and I say, well, he come in for two reasons, either he's firing me
01:54:37.960
or he's telling me that he's not going to be black and white.
01:54:41.840
That was the only two reasons because everything else he could have just told me on the phone.
01:54:47.540
And he was the second one is like, it's not going to be black and white.
01:54:51.820
And by this point, I already had to sign the movie.
01:54:55.200
When you design the movie for black and white, like, like Citizen Kane, you, you, you take
01:55:00.260
a lot of creative licenses and it was too late to go back.
01:55:04.040
And it, you know, I didn't know if it was going to work.
01:55:06.460
So when I finished the film, I went into deep, deep depression for two weeks because I didn't
01:55:12.260
know if I had, if this movie was going to work because I had shot it designed for black
01:55:21.460
I went into a dark place for two weeks and then I saw the first cut and I was like, oh,
01:55:30.520
It is the most visually stunning movie that does not detract.
01:55:37.380
You know, the, sometimes people do it for art sake and blah, blah, blah.
01:55:48.380
I mean, um, Alejandro, you don't need this from me, but I truly believe you are, uh, one
01:55:54.900
of the, if not the best director, uh, around today, you are going to be legendary.
01:56:00.980
Uh, I believe, uh, it's just a matter of, just a matter of time.
01:56:08.540
So we've been in a fight and I, and I want to, you know, I, I, I've never heard that
01:56:15.960
It's, it's shaking my heart, but I want to say something, you know, you know, this
01:56:19.900
very well, you know, movies like this, if we don't, we don't have the big billboards,
01:56:25.240
we don't have, we're not, you know, we're competing against Dune.
01:56:27.880
So the only way the movie like this can survive is if in opening weekend, people go see it.
01:56:35.860
So I cannot tell you how important it is that people come out on opening weekend because they
01:56:44.040
It's people coming out of the theaters and sharing their experience, their cinematic experience
01:56:50.980
You know, our audience is the walking billboards.
01:56:55.900
Well, I will tell you that I, I saw it in a, uh, a studio, uh, projection room and I went
01:57:03.180
home and I've been telling my family about this movie ever since, and we are all going to be
01:57:13.560
You saw, you saw an early cut, so I can't wait for you.
01:57:17.660
Uh, I wonder if you'll be able to, to start them.
01:57:22.920
Alejandro, thank you so much and keep up the good work.
01:57:29.400
And Cabrini is a, is, is a piece of really a piece of art.
01:57:35.180
And I'm so grateful, so grateful for your support, but thank you so much.
01:57:40.420
Alejandro, uh, Montever, Monteverdi, um, filmmaker.
01:57:47.300
I, I think he is, he's going to be remembered with all of the greats.
01:57:53.680
I, I have been a fan of his when he started making smaller movies.
01:57:57.800
Um, and he made little boy, which I thought was just fantastic.
01:58:02.220
Captured the spirit of America and world war two, like very few people can do.
01:58:06.700
Uh, and then he also is responsible for, um, the, um, uh, the sound of freedom.
01:58:15.660
And now Cabrini, and this is amazing and a great uplifting story.
01:58:24.540
Like he said, this weekend is really important because they, the reason why sound of freedom
01:58:31.980
did well is because more movie theaters open up on the opening weekend.
01:58:36.980
If they have a big opening weekend, then more theaters go, you know what?
01:58:42.260
And if you don't support these things on the opening weekend and you will just, just go
01:58:48.280
to support, um, filmmakers, we, we have come from really bad movies to brilliant, brilliant
01:59:00.160
And this is the best I've seen from a conservative.
01:59:04.280
And it's one of the best I've seen from anyone.
01:59:13.320
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02:00:57.440
And so I have some interesting, important, honest questions for you about this movie.
02:01:02.760
This is like, cause you're thinking about going.
02:01:04.520
I mean, you just made an incredible pitch for this movie.
02:01:15.360
I, I, this is, this is the opposite kind of tale, but the quality of the Godfather.
02:01:28.360
Like if, when you recommend a blockbuster to me, it doesn't win me over because I typically
02:01:39.400
Usually when you come up with a movie I've never heard of before out of nowhere, it's
02:01:45.820
When you, when you praise that type of movie, but there is one exception to that rule.
02:01:50.440
When you talk too much about the cinematography, when you start just constantly talking about
02:01:55.760
cinematography, then you, it's the Glenn artistic person who likes the shots in the movie, not
02:02:04.500
You mentioned it several times how beautiful it was.
02:02:07.780
Is it a good movie or is it, I like the camera work in the movie?
02:02:21.980
And, you know, I think very relatable and the kind of stuff that I want to consume right
02:02:27.020
Can, can I just go in and not leave thinking, oh my gosh, that really didn't do anything
02:02:40.800
And the way it's shot, it's a film, but I can differentiate between a film and a movie.
02:02:49.680
You would look at this more like a happy Godfather.