Why Operation Arctic Frost Makes Watergate Look Like Child's Play | 10⧸30⧸25
Episode Stats
Length
2 hours and 7 minutes
Words per Minute
163.55418
Summary
The Fed has cut the rates. Does that mean anything to you? What does that mean to you, and why does it matter to the rest of us? Glenn Beck explains why this is a good thing. He also talks about the worst constitutional scandal of our lifetime.
Transcript
00:00:00.000
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00:01:42.500
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00:03:26.760
I think too little, too late, something like that.
00:03:32.180
I'll explain that to you here in real people terms in just a second.
00:03:42.520
That's the code name for something that is one of the worst scandals.
00:03:48.320
In fact, I think it is the worst constitutional scandal of my lifetime.
00:03:54.780
And it is way beyond Watergate or anything else.
00:03:58.380
And everyone, Democrat, Independent, and Conservative, need to pay attention to this.
00:04:03.180
Because every politician, Democrat, Independent, or Republican, if it's not fixed,
00:04:09.680
oh, they will find a way to use this kind of tool that the Democrats were using on the Republicans,
00:04:20.820
We'll talk about that coming up in just a second.
00:04:24.440
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Okay, now that we got that out of the way, let me talk to you a little bit about the Fed rate
00:05:45.140
Most people don't spend their evenings, you know, reading the Federal Reserve statements.
00:05:49.580
And I don't blame them because I don't do it either.
00:05:55.000
It's like background noise from an alien planet.
00:06:02.100
I don't even know what a basis is or a basis point.
00:06:09.460
Okay, let me explain what it is and why you should care.
00:06:11.780
Because the Federal Reserve, the quiet, most powerful group in the world,
00:06:16.200
has decided to cut rates and that changes the rules of your financial life
00:06:21.360
from your mortgage to your job security, from the cost of groceries to, you know,
00:06:28.180
What they did yesterday is not going to help your savings account.
00:06:36.700
Now, think of the Federal Reserve as, I don't know, the most corrupt bank in the,
00:06:46.200
Think of it more like the mob that, think of it like a very credible bank
00:06:56.180
Okay, it is not part of the federal government.
00:07:11.600
And if the economy slows down, this is what they say they do.
00:07:14.800
Okay, if the economy slows down or starts to break, the Fed tries to fix it by lowering
00:07:21.480
That's the interest rates that the banks charge each other to borrow money overnight.
00:07:26.560
And when that rate drops, supposedly borrowing becomes cheaper for you.
00:07:35.960
When borrowing becomes cheaper, you can start a new business, you can get a house, you can borrow more money.
00:07:43.820
And when people borrow more, they spend more, which in theory keeps jobs going, people are creating jobs, businesses start to open up, etc., etc.
00:08:01.560
It doesn't sound like a lot, especially if your credit card is at 21%, or your car loan is at 8%, or your mortgage is just choking you to death.
00:08:12.700
But it is a small ripple that will go outward, and it may just be the beginning.
00:08:20.000
So if you own a home and you have an adjustable mortgage, you'll see a slightly lower rate.
00:08:26.840
Maybe you'll save a couple hundred dollars every month, and that's not nothing.
00:08:33.040
If you have credit card debt, and this is my favorite part, if you have credit card debt, don't hold your breath.
00:08:39.960
Oh, because when they're raising the rates, oh, those banks, they raise that right away.
00:08:45.180
Oh, it costs us so much more money to be able to borrow money, and you're going to borrow it from us, so we've got to raise that rate right away, because it's going to cost us money.
00:08:52.340
Once they lower the rate, they're not in any hurry.
00:08:55.440
They're like, you know what, let's slow down just a little bit.
00:08:58.220
We don't need to lower that interest rate on that credit card right away.
00:09:01.340
Remember I said, think of them as a really good bank.
00:09:05.640
Now, if you're shopping for a car or a small business loan, this could be your window, because lending is going to get a little bit looser.
00:09:14.960
When the money is flowing a little bit more because the Fed lowers the interest rate, then the lending gets a little looser, and you can buy a car.
00:09:23.240
If you're retired or you're saving, you have money in a CD or a savings account, think of this as a move from the mafia.
00:09:35.420
Your savings account are going to drop just a little bit because your savings, you'll earn less, your CDs and everything else, you'll earn less when the interest rates fall.
00:09:44.420
In short, what this means yesterday is it's going to help people who are borrowing money, but it's going to hurt people that are not savers.
00:09:54.200
Now, it's not dramatic, but interest rate going down hurts people who are saving money, but helps people borrowing.
00:10:05.260
It helps people who save money and hurts the people borrowing money.
00:10:12.340
Well, the president's been saying, can you do this for quite some time?
00:10:19.180
This is what spurs jobs being created, because people can borrow money and they can expand their business.
00:10:28.960
The reason why they said they did this yesterday is because, quote, the downside risk to employment has risen.
00:10:40.540
I don't know why they just can't speak English.
00:10:44.180
We got to do this because people are starting to lose their jobs.
00:10:46.580
Maybe we need to lower things down so maybe people can hire some more people.
00:10:53.180
Inflation, they said, is still somewhat elevated.
00:11:00.920
We don't know our butt from our elbow on what we're doing with inflation.
00:11:05.460
We're out of magic tricks, and we still haven't tamed inflation, but it's getting better.
00:11:10.260
So they're trying to ease the pain of people getting fired or no job creation without setting all of our money on fire.
00:11:24.980
And when I say setting our money on fire, the lower the interest rates, what that means is your money is going to be worth less.
00:11:34.520
But here's the bigger move that's buried in the fine print.
00:11:40.880
They are also stopping the shrinkage of their balance sheet.
00:11:46.700
We're just going to stop the shrinkage of our balance sheet.
00:11:52.660
What kind of magic Fed Viagra are you using here to stop that shrinkage?
00:11:57.620
What it means is they're done pulling money out of the system.
00:12:06.500
More liquidity, more dollars that they throw in, the more fuel.
00:12:12.780
And it's a soft rolling start from fighting inflation to fighting a slowdown.
00:12:20.820
Now, here's how it's going to hit you in the real world.
00:12:22.840
If you're living paycheck to paycheck, this might feel like some relief in the short term.
00:12:36.960
But this is just a small move in that direction.
00:12:43.580
Maybe you can afford a little bit more of a better house.
00:12:50.240
Every rate cut makes your dollar worth a little less.
00:12:53.980
By the way, may I just side note here, Your Honor?
00:12:56.500
I don't know why we accept the Fed saying, we have a target of 2% inflation every year.
00:13:16.980
That means 2%, 2 cents on every dollar goes away every year.
00:13:31.120
Because they say it in a way nobody understands.
00:13:37.480
So the prices at the store, they don't fall with things like that.
00:13:44.780
The assets of the rich, the stock, real estate, they start to inflate again.
00:13:50.120
The working class, once more, will pay for the cure with the value of their labor.
00:13:57.500
When things tighten, the powerful scream louder than the average person and the Fed listens.
00:14:02.140
They open the money spigot, the markets rally, and the average American gets another inflation hangover at some point.
00:14:10.000
Hopefully, it won't happen, at least right away.
00:14:15.860
Because Donald Trump, with what he did in Asia yesterday, there's a lot of money coming in.
00:14:25.740
This guy is not going to be appreciated for if J.D. Vance wins.
00:14:31.580
I'm just assuming it's going to be J.D. Vance and Marco Rubio as the vice president.
00:14:34.920
But if they win, after his first term and maybe into the second term, if he's given a chance for the second term,
00:14:43.980
that's when you're going to really see everything that Donald Trump is doing right now.
00:14:48.380
You're going to see the effects and you're going to realize, holy cow, I thought that guy made a huge difference at the time.
00:15:17.200
If you have debt, this is a signal that you can maybe pay it down fast enough while the interest rates are starting to ease.
00:15:34.900
If you have savings, look for hard assets, things that will hold their value, real estate, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
00:15:42.120
If you're in business, this might be the window to shore up your position.
00:16:00.480
But the Fed believes that the storm isn't over.
00:16:05.640
We are in a very precarious situation between employment and runaway inflation.
00:16:15.960
And luckily, Donald Trump and Javier Malay get along.
00:16:19.160
And I hope we take a few more things from Argentina.
00:16:22.360
But the Fed, almost against their own will, is trying to steer us out of a slowdown.
00:16:29.600
But if we're not careful, it will set us up for another round of inflation.
00:16:37.020
And every time they pull that lever, remember, it's you and your dollar that ends up footing the bill.
00:16:43.580
One paycheck, one grocery bill, one devalued dollar at a time.
00:16:47.400
But right now, it is important for it to happen.
00:16:55.180
Maybe some more job creation is coming our way.
00:16:57.580
We've lost a lot of jobs just in the last week because of AI.
00:17:07.100
It's been UPS and Amazon that have cut, what, about 100,000 jobs between the two of them?
00:17:14.300
But you notice it's not the guy on the front line.
00:17:19.140
Like, right now, it seems to be the white-collar worker.
00:17:24.200
So the guy who didn't go to college right now, right now, is more safe than the one who did go to college and is trying to pay off all of that stuff.
00:17:34.100
They're being replaced by AI before the dock worker is.
00:17:37.960
So if you didn't go to college, now's the time to go, suckers!
00:17:44.180
Because you don't have to worry about all the things that the people are still paying for that they can no longer use.
00:17:50.680
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00:19:19.800
The things that are trending today that we should talk about.
00:19:27.900
Do you know that the people living on Snap, I think it's, what is it, 40% more in the last five years?
00:19:34.240
I know the payments have doubled in the last five years.
00:19:41.100
People got on because of COVID and shockingly didn't get off.
00:19:46.320
You know, I'm glad this is starting to turn now.
00:19:53.100
I'm glad the Democrats didn't fix this right away.
00:19:55.660
Um, because it's gone from, oh my gosh, my Snap benefits are going away to then Republicans going, oh my gosh, Snap benefits are going away to wait, wait, wait, wait a minute.
00:20:14.840
To now people going, I don't know if 40 million people should be on Snap in the first place.
00:20:19.660
We're finally having a real positive, constructive conversation.
00:20:25.160
I want to be there for people who are, are really, they really need the help.
00:20:34.300
I wish our churches were more involved in things like that.
00:20:40.200
Uh, but you know, that's part of the big, beautiful bill.
00:20:45.040
Um, and that's why they're trying to get the big, beautiful bill erased in this.
00:20:49.540
Um, but I mean, 40%, I mean, 40 million people are on, are on food stamps in America.
00:21:02.500
I mean, it's not, this is not like the dust bowl.
00:21:06.600
Why do you have 40 million people in this country?
00:21:13.160
I think people really think of food stamps as this program that gives people who are desperately in need of food help to get food.
00:21:25.140
It's become an assistance program where, you know, like if, if you are a little bit lower on cash than you'd like to be, they'll buy your food for you.
00:21:33.180
And then you, so you can spend that money on other things.
00:21:35.340
You know, that's not for everybody, but like, it's way too widely used for way to, you saw the people on, remember the people that we've seen on social media going, I have to sell my BMW because they're, you have a BMW.
00:21:52.640
I know a lot of people that don't have a BMW, you know, that work for a living and work really hard.
00:22:09.880
I believe that some people shouldn't have a BMW.
00:22:12.000
And those, some people are people that can't afford a BMW.
00:22:17.020
I'm so sick of this, this society that just everybody owes me something.
00:22:26.820
This is a game started by a guy named, I want to say William, but it's not William Bernays.
00:22:33.500
He was a, he was an ad guy back in the 1920s under Woodrow Wilson.
00:22:42.180
And when he looked at what was happening in the 19 teens, he said, the problem with this country is we are a nation of needs.
00:23:06.080
Our problem and the left and the right both say it.
00:23:09.040
We just want, want, want, want, want, and you get whatever you want and you got to have it right now.
00:23:17.420
Nothing wrong if that's the way you want to be, but we shouldn't be shoveling that.
00:23:21.420
We shouldn't have our government and everybody else going, you know what?
00:23:29.820
If you're, if you're fortunate enough, great, but the government shouldn't be shoveling.
00:23:45.400
So identity theft doesn't always start with some, you know, big dramatic hack of the system.
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It often begins with a stolen detail, social security number in a breach, a credit card skimmed at a gas pump or a password refused one too many times before you even realize what's happening.
00:24:01.660
Somebody could be opening accounts in your name, draining your savings, you know, taking out loans that leave you buried in debt that you never owed.
00:24:12.120
They have a team of specialists that monitor monitor literally billions of pieces of information every single day, looking for any sign that your personal data has been compromised.
00:24:21.320
And if they detect something suspicious, you know, then they know somebody is taking out loans that leave you buried in debt or, you know, you know, somebody is, somebody is trolling, getting an extra credit card.
00:24:33.700
That's, you know, you don't have the payday for it.
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00:25:20.240
Well, President Trump said yesterday, truly great meeting with President Z.
00:25:35.880
You never, truly, like everybody said, that meeting couldn't happen.
00:25:41.700
And it was, I mean, everything is like, people, I got up this morning, people said I couldn't open the door.
00:25:48.040
It was the greatest door opening I've ever seen.
00:25:50.420
But from all, you know, accounts, this was a really, really good meeting.
00:25:57.240
He's getting ready to meet with Putin and with what Putin has done in the last couple of days.
00:26:06.020
Donald Trump said he's going to start testing nuclear weapons again.
00:26:13.480
Well, China is testing them and Russia is testing them.
00:26:21.260
If I heard the news and I was in the Donald Trump White House, I would have walked in after I heard the news, especially yesterday, that Vladimir Putin has a new nuclear missile that he can shoot 6,000 miles away underwater.
00:26:40.560
And it can navigate and then blow up like a hydrogen bomb under the water just off the coast of California, which would create a radioactive tsunami.
00:26:59.320
Because Vladimir Putin is not going to do that.
00:27:03.540
It would make him the pariah of the entire world.
00:27:06.980
You're not going to set off a nuclear radioactive tsunami to cover Los Angeles.
00:27:14.160
Because here's if I'm the president and maybe this would make me a very bad president.
00:27:18.820
But if I'm the president and I hear that he has just launched a nuclear missile towards Los Angeles, my decision is, do I stop it?
00:27:30.840
Yes, I do everything I can to try to stop the missile from hitting.
00:27:37.900
All conventional wisdom is, you've got to launch now, Mr. President.
00:27:53.480
And then I'm going to say to the rest of the world immediately after it hits, this man just buried Los Angeles, killed all of these people.
00:28:03.500
By launching a missile, a hydrogen bomb underwater, God only knows what it's done to the environment, but here's what it's done to people and here's what it's done to Los Angeles.
00:28:18.700
I don't want a nuclear war because we all know what that means.
00:28:23.200
But the rest of the world, you need to condemn him and he needs to go on trial for crimes against humanity.
00:28:29.640
Nothing, nothing warrants that kind of abuse of nuclear weapons.
00:28:35.380
That's what I would do as president, because I know the rest of the world would not be kind to anyone who launched a nuclear weapon at the West Coast.
00:28:48.200
If we launched a nuclear weapon, you know, even if we blew up Israel with a nuclear weapon, the world would be like, look at what America has just done.
00:28:59.460
I'm so confused right now what I'm for and what I'm against.
00:29:05.360
He knows, Putin knows the president is the most concerned about nuclear weapons.
00:29:22.160
He's just used everything in his bag of tricks.
00:29:25.960
There's no place bigger he can go other than actually launching those things.
00:29:34.620
So that's what I think is happening with what Donald Trump has done this week and the way Putin is now reacting.
00:29:44.140
And he's about to turn his sights on Putin and Ukraine.
00:29:49.000
There's something else that has happened this week that we haven't had a chance.
00:29:51.960
It actually, I think, happened last week and I haven't had a chance to address it.
00:29:54.660
But I think it's important mentally because we have a problem with actual common sense in this country.
00:30:03.880
In New York, there was a conference hall that was holding just another boring conference with all the people from Wikipedia.
00:30:12.780
Wikipedia, you know, the beautiful Wikipedia people, they are so great.
00:30:19.560
Not sure it's all that much better, but it's better so far than Wikipedia.
00:30:24.260
But Wikipedia is responsible for shaping what the world calls truth.
00:30:28.980
So the head person of, you know, the CEO of Wikipedia is giving a keynote address and a guy walks onto the stage and pulls out a revolver, doesn't point it at the CEO, points it to his own head.
00:30:50.080
I'm a non-contact pedophile and I want to kill myself.
00:30:54.840
Now, the worst part of me goes, well, but that's the worst part of me.
00:31:18.320
He said, I'm there to protest what he called a don't ask, don't tell policy at Wikipedia.
00:31:24.840
Now, this is a rule that has banned anyone who openly admits to being a pedophile, even those who claim to have never have acted on it.
00:31:36.600
Now, I don't know about you, but generally speaking in my workplace, you claim to be a pedophile, even though, hey, Glenn, Glenn, Glenn, never acted on it.
00:32:10.140
I was editing stories about children, psychology, sexuality.
00:32:16.320
I call Wikipedia and, like, what the hell are you thinking?
00:32:25.720
Well, the editor was like, we can't have those people editing.
00:32:30.700
Let's just make sure if we find that out about somebody, you're not editing the Wikipedia files about children.
00:32:43.000
Well, so he was, he had been editing articles about children, child actors, child abuse prevention, child psychology, and pages on sexuality.
00:32:55.620
I look at Wikipedia for the very first time, perhaps, and go, good move, Wikipedia.
00:33:04.040
He no longer could have access to change any of those or be an expert on any of those pages.
00:33:14.740
He's like, well, we're punishing the, this is thought, this is thought crime.
00:33:18.840
Because, yes, I'm thinking about it, but I haven't acted on it.
00:33:26.280
I get onto a plane and the pilot says, ladies and gentlemen, as your captain speaking, and I just want you to know, I've been having wild, wild thoughts of suicide lately.
00:33:38.140
But I'm going to get you to San Francisco pretty safely.
00:33:42.460
And it looks like everything's going to be okay.
00:33:49.000
I say, excuse me, stewardess, bing, bing, bing, bing, bing, bing, bing.
00:33:53.000
Either he's off the plane or I'm off the plane.
00:33:55.660
I don't want a guy piloting the plane that has suicidal thoughts.
00:34:00.060
Now, that's not punishing him for thought crime.
00:34:04.280
Ladies and gentlemen, I understand some of you are in a full-fledged panic right now.
00:34:08.280
What are you, accusing me of actually wanting to kill all of you?
00:34:15.960
But let's not panic here and start prosecuting people for thought crime.
00:34:25.940
I'm not going to call him a bad person, blah, blah, blah.
00:34:27.960
But can we get him out of the cockpit so he is safe?
00:34:31.520
Get him some help and make sure that we get to our destination without going down in his suicidal thought.
00:34:53.720
You know, if you admit you're, you know, I, you know, I am really attracted by that hot four-year-old.
00:35:07.960
I'd like to know what you're doing to get help to fight that darkness.
00:35:15.480
But you should not be in the airplane next to the guy with the suicidal thoughts.
00:35:24.440
The problem is, with the suicidal thoughts and the pilot, we can actually say, we need to get him some help.
00:35:33.020
I mean, unless you're in Canada, I think suicide is actually okay in Canada now.
00:35:46.700
So we can't even say, he's saying, I haven't acted on it.
00:35:53.620
But we can't say to him, what are you doing to get help, dude?
00:36:04.100
That is taking the boundaries off of compassion.
00:36:16.660
Just like somebody who has anger issues, I don't know.
00:36:19.420
I don't think they should work in law enforcement until they're healed.
00:36:24.440
Some responsibility is just a little too heavy for the wounded to carry right now.
00:36:30.920
We don't jail people for temptations they haven't acted on.
00:36:43.340
That's all the rage on the left, not on the right.
00:36:46.380
But we as a society have to protect the innocent from preventable harm.
00:36:54.040
What do you say we prevent that from happening to all of us on board?
00:37:00.920
The purpose of moral boundaries isn't to shame the fallen.
00:37:08.340
And when you hold a position of influence, which, you know, I don't know, editing the world's encyclopedia and shaping how people understand, billions of people understand childhood, sexuality, and abuse.
00:37:24.980
In fact, our standard should be absolute trust because a single edit there will bring the whole system down.
00:37:32.900
A single word subtly changed will alter how the rest of us perceive evil itself.
00:37:40.400
And if that trust is compromised, then the entire institution collapses.
00:37:50.060
But this one, this one is not balancing freedom over safety.
00:37:55.380
This one is already answered when you said, yeah, I wouldn't want the pilot to fly me to San Francisco.
00:38:01.800
Even if you, honestly, even if you didn't have suicidal thoughts, I'm on the wrong plane.
00:38:06.940
If you're flying me to San Francisco, bing, bing, bing, bing, bing, can I get off?
00:38:19.800
Those are the things we should be spending our time in and our time on.
00:38:26.140
We are, you know, if we can't agree to protect children from the risk of a broken mind behind a keyboard,
00:38:33.000
how will we ever protect humans from the power of a machine behind a screen?
00:38:42.820
The only thing that isn't a tragedy is when people who have moral clarity, who have love in their heart, not persecution,
00:38:54.040
when they stand up and say, this has got to stop.
00:38:56.840
That's what stops life from being a constant tragedy.
00:39:00.760
You know, a man consumed by his own sickness, a gun in his hand.
00:39:22.220
Because the purpose of moral law, of boundaries, of rules and reason, it's not to punish the lost.
00:39:29.200
It's to keep the rest of us from being dragged into the fall.
00:39:33.320
Mercy for the broken, but protection for the innocent.
00:39:38.240
There is something special about gathering around the table.
00:39:40.480
The sound of the laughter, the smell of dinner coming off the grill.
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It's one of those moments that remind you what really matters.
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Family, faith, and the simple joy of just being together.
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You know, our community is like a cozy campfire with trusted friends.
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That's a hell of a lot better than the raging dumpster fire of mainstream media.
00:41:03.720
Imagine waking up one morning to find out that the home you've spent years paying for,
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the one you live in right now, has been sold out from under you.
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Not because you did anything wrong, but because a criminal found your title online,
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forged your name, and transferred ownership to themselves.
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It happens, unfortunately, every day, and it happens really quickly.
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Once that false deed is filed, your mortgage, your equity, and your sense of security,
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00:41:45.040
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Protect it the same way that you protect anything else that's valuable.
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It's changing the world in many ways, but don't let it change the name on your home's title.
00:42:42.620
I can't believe I'm saying these words, but the story on the monkey escape has just gotten weird.
00:43:07.980
We'll talk about that coming up in just a second.
00:43:09.680
And can we just play the Chicago mayor, this latest accusation on Donald Trump.
00:43:16.380
No one is going to convince me what the Trump administration is doing against black people
00:43:24.380
When you have black babies being thrown in the back of vans, zip tied in the middle of the night,
00:43:29.220
and mass men sticking guns in the faces of black and brown people, that is nasty, is vicious, is racist.
00:43:36.280
Dr. King described it as an evil, militarism, and that formation is an evil.
00:43:42.360
You should go back and read a little bit more on Dr. King, and I love how the left loves Dr. King again suddenly.
00:43:52.760
Could I get some pictures of the black babies being zip tied in the middle of the night
00:44:06.620
Let me talk to you a little bit about the Berna launcher.
00:44:09.740
Boy, Stu, I was up with Berna, and they let me try their new shotgun.
00:44:13.920
Now, you can use this in a regular shotgun, but it actually fires it out.
00:44:19.280
It has the powder in it, so it fires it out, but it's still a stun thing.
00:44:27.640
Yeah, it doesn't blow a huge hole in you, so it doesn't kill you.
00:44:31.140
But, and that is something that my wife, and I bet your wife,
00:44:34.900
I don't know if your wife would actually pick up a shotgun.
00:44:36.940
My wife is always so afraid of the kick and everything else.
00:44:39.560
And if there's trouble in the house, there's no kick to this.
00:44:42.840
I don't know if they've even released this yet.
00:44:57.360
You can find them at Sportsman's Warehouse, where you can try before you buy.
00:45:04.860
Sportsman's Warehouse, you can find one near you.
00:45:07.100
Just go to Burna.com and find the Sportsman's Warehouse that we'll try before you buy.
00:46:18.160
I want to talk to you a little bit about Operation Arctic Frost.
00:46:24.400
This is the code name for an operation that happened under the Biden administration.
00:46:28.720
And I remember, Stu, do you remember when I said it's probably 2009 or 10?
00:46:33.900
I said, if people in the press do not start policing, you know, the Biden and Obama administration,
00:46:41.540
we are going to find out that of scandals that will make Watergate look like it was a rookie operation, which it was.
00:46:59.400
We're going to talk to you about it and explain what it is, because this is a stand you must take.
00:47:07.280
First, Patriot, my Patriot Supply is here, along with Winter.
00:47:10.580
Winter, you know, winter is like a stress test.
00:47:13.240
You know, Mother Nature rolls out her cold, dark challenge and asks the same question.
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When the power goes out, the temperature drops.
00:47:23.700
The people who are prepared ahead of time are the ones who can sleep at night because they know they have what they need to stay warm, fed and safe.
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And right now they're running their winter prep special.
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You might have food, but do you have a way to heat that food, make that food work?
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Do you have something, you know, your power goes out?
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I mean, you have to have certain things to survive.
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You have to be able to cook food and you have to have food.
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Just get your winter prep special from My Patriot Supply and you're going to get all of these things included as a bonus.
00:48:25.040
And while we're talking about winter, let's talk about Arctic Frost.
00:48:29.780
And according to the records released now by Senator Chuck Grassley and the House Judiciary Committee,
00:48:37.880
the Biden era DOJ and Special Counsel Jack Smith drove an investigation that sprayed subpoenas like a fire hose.
00:48:45.800
We now know there were 197 subpoenas spanning more than 1,700 pages sent to 34 people, 163 businesses,
00:48:58.540
and then vacuumed up communications tied to more than 400 Republican individuals and entities.
00:49:09.660
They reached into media companies, CBS, Fox, Fox Business, Newsmax, Sinclair, into financial institutions,
00:49:18.500
into political organizations, even members, employees, and agents of the legislative branch.
00:49:26.440
So now you have congressmen and senators being vacuumed up into this whole thing.
00:49:42.540
You do not go after, you know, an entire party, 400 people.
00:49:53.300
Well, let me say the opening memo to justify Arctic Frost is called, in legal terms, it would be called the predicate.
00:50:01.620
And it was stamped, sensitive investigative matter.
00:50:07.620
And it cited, and I love this, listen to this language, cited, evidence suggesting a conspiracy around alternate electors.
00:50:17.480
I'm going to get to that here in just a second.
00:50:19.020
But it relied on, leaned on news clips, news clips, to vacuum all these people up, to get the engine turning, news clips were used.
00:50:42.000
Ray, Garland, Monaco, even coordination with the White House Counsel's office, it surfaces now in the record.
00:50:52.820
This is what the documents now on the table imply.
00:50:56.900
Now, let me just pause for a minute in the reading room of American memory.
00:51:16.540
1876 and 1960, they were messy, contested, deeply political moments that produced zero criminal prosecutions
00:51:28.540
In fact, Al Gore, if he didn't set a alternate slate of electors, he was counseled.
00:51:38.260
He was like, they're counseled to have an alternate set of electors.
00:51:42.400
Because once, if you don't do that, and the tables turn and you're like, you know what?
00:51:48.120
If you haven't seated those electors before a certain time, you have no case.
00:51:58.980
I think three, but definitely in 1876 and 1960.
00:52:02.640
In Hawaii, in 1960, Democrats signed certificates while a recount was still underway.
00:52:25.400
But it doesn't matter when it's about Donald Trump.
00:52:30.060
As the subpoenas flew, the FBI reportedly snooped phone records of Republican members of Congress.
00:52:38.180
The scope widened to donor analytics, broad financial data, Trump world advisors, the lawyers, the media contacts.
00:52:49.960
We said, during January 6th, we said, internally, if you don't think they are going after a massive tree, because remember, this is what the Patriot Act allows you to do now.
00:53:03.020
You go after one person, if anybody is calling somebody else, well, that person now can be hoovered up.
00:53:11.280
So, you could get pretty much everybody that you want with one subpoena.
00:53:20.240
When the state cast a dragnet over the opposition's political ecosystem with the authority to seize all their communications, compel testimony, and chill the donors, that's not tough politics.
00:53:37.240
That is the government with badges and grand juries leaning its full weight into one side of the national scale.
00:53:46.700
Now, Watergate, please, Watergate, let me compare Watergate.
00:53:53.520
Watergate was a gang of political operatives who broke into an office to get information.
00:54:01.960
Nobody even knows why they would have even done this.
00:54:09.700
They wanted to get some information that was there, you know, on the candidate and on the race.
00:54:15.100
And then they covered it up and they tried to keep the public from the truth.
00:54:22.280
And it forced a president to resign and people went to prison over it.
00:54:26.680
But Watergate was a private burglary executed by a campaign and covered up by the White House.
00:54:36.640
That's not the DOJ blanketing the opposing party's entire world with federal subpoenas while citing news hits as the predicate.
00:54:54.040
Watergate was an attempt to weaponize a campaign.
00:54:57.420
Arctic Frost, if the emerging records hold, was the attempt to weaponize the entire state against a political party.
00:55:08.880
The difference there is the whole ballgame under a constitutional republic.
00:55:13.940
You don't have a constitutional republic if that's allowed to happen.
00:55:17.220
In America, the state is supposed to be the neutral referee, not a sideline enforcer wearing one team's colors, you know, under the stripes.
00:55:26.960
And don't even start with me on, well, what about Donald Trump?
00:55:35.400
You want to make a charge against Donald Trump and what he's doing?
00:55:48.020
The moment the referee picks up the ball and starts running, the game is over.
00:55:56.480
And if it can be done to them today, it will be done to you tomorrow.
00:56:15.600
Because if you think this is about whataboutism, you cannot see the nose on the front of your face.
00:56:26.720
You cannot make a weaponization of a government, a partisan inheritance that each side can claim when it holds power.
00:56:36.240
If any president, any prosecutor, red or blue, uses federal power to criminalize political opposition rather than prosecute clear crimes, it is an offense against the equal protection under the law.
00:56:51.120
So let's lay down a standard here that I'm willing to apply to Donald Trump and to Joe Biden and any other president that comes our way.
00:57:00.400
Because if we don't lay this clear standard down, we're done.
00:57:03.640
The predicate, predication, it has to be real, not rhetorical.
00:57:11.380
Evidence suggesting via TV interviews is circular sourcing at its best.
00:57:19.000
It's not something that you launch a sprawling investigation on into a presidential rivals universe.
00:57:29.000
If you can't articulate the crime specifically, you don't get to launch a dragnet on the people that are running against you.
00:57:40.360
The scope has to be narrow and tied exactly to the alleged crime, not a sweep through media organizations and donor records and opposition infrastructure under vague theories that come from TV reports.
00:57:55.180
Journalism, journalism, political advocacy, fundraising, all of those things are protected activities.
00:58:05.680
Separation from the White House also must be unmistakable.
00:58:11.020
If the White House's counsel's office is coordinating device transfers into an investigation of its chief political rival, alarm should clang in every corridor of every main justice hall.
00:58:25.180
Everywhere, the alarm, the Claxton, should be going off right now.
00:58:35.060
If prior episodes, by the way, this is all thrown out by the Supreme Court, so you know.
00:58:40.940
If prior episodes, 1876, 1960, and I believe 2000, if they were treated as political, not criminal,
00:58:51.080
especially where alternate electors were explicitly conditional, then you need compelling new legal theories and clean facts to criminalize it now.
00:59:04.260
You can't just say, yeah, well, history never did anything about that before, and actually they said it was fine, but now, now it's going to be a crime.
00:59:15.660
Well, we really dislike the people that are doing it this time.
00:59:23.220
Now, before anybody clips this monologue and screams, Glenn Beck said nobody in the Trump administration did anything wrong.
00:59:30.980
Well, I don't think so, but that's not what I'm saying because I'm not the judge.
00:59:36.840
I'm the guy insisting that the rules are rules and they should be applied to everyone on all sides.
00:59:52.900
If he didn't do it, then he should be set free, but it should be on a clear set of laws.
00:59:58.940
What's happened in the Biden administration, they just kept changing laws.
01:00:02.400
Well, yeah, I mean, the bank said there was no crime, but Donald Trump, and so all of a sudden there was a crime.
01:00:09.200
Nobody's ever been prosecuted, ever before that.
01:00:28.500
Let the country see whether we had a criminal case or an election cycle dragnet, because that's what it looks like.
01:00:35.660
If the emerging picture is right, if Arctic Frost opened up on thin evidence, escalated on political pressure, and metastasized into a government-wide sweep of the sitting president's chief rival and his entire ecosystem,
01:00:56.280
This is much, much, much, much worse than Watergate, in kind, not just degree.
01:01:07.220
They potentially attempted to steal legitimacy, to criminalize opposition by wielding the sword of the state.
01:01:18.080
That violates our creed, that free men govern themselves by consent.
01:01:25.680
And the law is the wall that even presidents and prosecutors can never climb over.
01:01:31.520
If proven, the remedy is not a sternly, a terse letter or an op-ed and a shrug.
01:01:44.840
Inspector General referrals, special counsels where appropriate, prosecution where crimes are clear, statutory reforms to bar this from ever happening again,
01:02:02.920
Protections for the press, for donors and legislators in political cases.
01:02:07.940
Sunlight, all the sunlight on how this began, who approved it, and why no one in the administration said stop.
01:02:16.580
And to my friends say, well, Trump is doing the same thing.
01:02:27.560
So when emotions are high and temptations are strong, the republic doesn't survive by trusting that our guys will be angels.
01:02:35.920
It survives on the chains on power, everyone's power.
01:02:41.640
You know, when you hold a founding sermon in your hand, when you read the ink of Washington,
01:02:48.900
scratched in the margin, notes of James Madison, you discover that America's miracle wasn't that we selected saints.
01:02:57.240
It's that we built a system where even the sinners are fenced in by law.
01:03:05.240
When justice is blind to banners and bumper stickers and political parties, that's what America is America.
01:03:12.480
Arctic Frost, if the record stands, it took a blowtorch to that fence.
01:03:19.580
Retreat into teams, each side cheering for its prosecutors and its dragnet.
01:03:24.160
Or you can do the harder, nobler thing, just like our founders did,
01:03:27.780
and insist that the same rules that bind all power, especially when it's aimed at people we dislike, are enforced.
01:03:39.340
That's how you make sure there's not a second Watergate.
01:03:46.280
Because if we haven't, if we don't learn it this time, then by God, we are done.
01:03:53.320
The story of America is not a story of who got whom.
01:03:56.720
It's a story of a people who refuse to let the government become a weapon.
01:04:00.020
And if that spirit still lives in us, then this cold wind called Arctic Frost will pass and the Constitution will stand.
01:04:08.000
Because you stood for equal justice, for due process, for truth that doesn't bend to politics.
01:04:15.740
And that, that is how we relight the torch of America.
01:04:19.920
Every month, most people pay a phone bill without thinking about where that money goes.
01:04:25.020
But some of those big mobile companies use your hard-earned dollars to fund causes that undermine everything you believe in,
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When you switch to Patriot Mobile, you're not just getting great service, you're making a statement.
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You're saying, you're done funding the agenda of companies that despise you.
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And that feels good, not just as a customer, but as an American.
01:05:04.160
Patriot Mobile, they offer all three U.S. major networks.
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So you're going to have the same or better premium coverage as the major carriers.
01:05:11.980
So go to mypatriotsupply.com slash Beck right now.
01:05:48.960
Like, why would they be, you know, in convenience store after convenience store tipping the hand
01:05:54.480
a little bit and letting people know this was coming?
01:05:57.980
And in Delaware, according to Joe Biden, you can't go into a convenience store.
01:06:09.540
Whatever that racist thing that he said that everybody just dropped.
01:06:14.280
At that point, it was okay to say, just Joe Biden being Joe Biden.
01:06:29.680
The fact that this has happened and it's now being uncovered.
01:06:34.400
They're not going to just go quietly and be like, yeah, I know you guys got us.
01:06:42.120
This must be corrected or it's just going to keep happening and it'll get worse.
01:06:52.340
Buying or selling a home is one of the biggest financial decisions you'll ever make.
01:06:55.460
But too many people, you know, hand over that responsibility to the first agent who,
01:07:01.260
It's like picking a surgeon because he answered the call first, you know.
01:07:07.800
I will tell you that we tried to sell our house here in Dallas for a very long time,
01:07:15.240
And we got Brad Cook, who is part of our network, Real Estate Agents I Trust.
01:07:31.520
And it sold, and we close on it actually today on the house.
01:07:44.000
You want that kind of agent that works for you.
01:07:53.200
I'm not asking you to hire him or anything else.
01:08:09.540
You can get all the details in the free email newsletter.
01:08:14.780
If you happen to be watching Blaze TV, watch this.
01:09:43.140
And to see George Washington sit down in a T-shirt and jeans
01:09:46.000
and speak to you like a normal human being is wild.
01:09:49.900
Um, uh, we're going to be releasing something here in the next month.
01:09:55.280
Uh, and it is what we, we're going to show you what the future is going to be like.
01:10:01.180
We cannot produce it this way yet, but by 2026 or sorry, by 2027, we hope that the cost will be under control, that we can produce it this way.
01:10:10.620
I sat down with, uh, George, uh, and I typed in questions.
01:10:20.380
I sent a bunch of stories that show, you know, our debt, uh, the state of the union, all of the things that are going on.
01:10:48.420
And it was like, I think it was like 27 things.
01:10:51.560
And it was all in the, you know, the old timey, you know, founders language.
01:10:58.960
Uh, and so I then said, can you dumb this down a little bit?
01:11:02.360
Cause I don't speak that language really, really well.
01:11:04.440
I don't understand about half of what you just said.
01:11:16.460
Uh, and AI George is sitting across the desk now speaking to me.
01:11:23.160
Uh, and I did an interview with George Washington and it's remarkable,
01:11:30.920
That's not what you're going to get with George AI in January because it's so
01:11:36.240
wildly expensive, but you will be able to ask questions and get the answers.
01:11:46.400
So, you know, it won't be like that at the very beginning because it's so wildly
01:11:57.260
Uh, and so we have to take it one bite at a time.
01:12:00.540
And that's why we're going to be asking, you know, there are different levels that
01:12:03.660
you can join and some of them are founding levels and we'd really love to have your
01:12:07.780
help on this, uh, to be able to push this out as fast as we can in every way that we
01:12:14.380
But, you know, there's a reason why chat GPT is open AI and Grok is from Elon Musk.
01:12:27.480
So that's a part of the torch and it's coming in January.
01:12:31.300
So initially, uh, when you type a question, someone from the 1700s will write it with
01:12:37.900
quill and ink and then write it on parchment and then it will be sent to you by horseback.
01:12:44.040
That's how it starts, but it's going to get faster within a couple of hundred years.
01:12:54.020
And then you realize you actually just mistyped something.
01:12:58.440
Uh, no, uh, that's, it's going to be fascinating.
01:13:00.160
Actually, a lot of people had questions about this cause you did announce, you know, you
01:13:06.060
You've kind of alluded to it a lot here, but there were a lot of questions from listeners
01:13:11.240
about what you announced and what it means, you know, not only to, you know, the future
01:13:16.480
of the show and everything else, but also to their lives.
01:13:20.540
So, uh, when you say the torch is your last and final mission, does this mean you're retiring
01:13:37.240
All I know is you were in commercial breaks yesterday, just laying down on the floor.
01:13:50.980
In fact, I just signed a new contract with premier radio.
01:13:59.840
Are you going to still be doing radio Glenn TV and the Glenn Beck, Glenn TV?
01:14:06.200
Uh, I'll still be doing the Glenn Beck radio show on radio and on blaze TV.
01:14:10.440
So if you have a blaze TV subscription, you're still getting the radio show every day.
01:14:13.680
We are changing the way I do the radio show for Glenn Beck.com or the torch.
01:14:26.580
Jason is going to be hosting and it's almost a commentary on what is happening in real time.
01:14:36.380
Uh, if you're listening to the show, you'll be able to hear during the commercial breaks,
01:14:40.280
all of the stuff that is being added in, including additional information, deeper look,
01:14:44.800
and it will be, we will be generating, um, AI podcasts once per day.
01:14:52.180
So soon as the show is over, uh, I might go into, let's say we just did a deal.
01:15:00.040
We might do a podcast, just deep dive on Arctic frost, or I might go into that 1960 election
01:15:06.040
and it will, it will give you deeper understanding with the, the torch is all about going much,
01:15:14.200
So if you want more information, that's what this is about.
01:15:18.000
Uh, and so that will be happening alongside the radio podcast, uh, the Glenn Beck weekly
01:15:25.340
podcast with the interviews I'm doing, I think blaze, I am doing 22 episodes with them next
01:15:30.980
year, but I'm probably going to be doing 50 episodes, but they're different.
01:15:36.040
Uh, 22 will go with the interviews that we've done.
01:15:40.280
And then the other podcast I'm already, the first one we're launching with, we have two
01:15:45.440
One is called, um, days of ash and it's what happens to the world when it falls apart.
01:15:52.600
And it's a, it's a fiction series that is really great.
01:15:56.620
I've two episodes, two, uh, seasons already ready.
01:16:00.480
I wrote this one myself, uh, and it is, uh, uh, it starts with the crash and then shows
01:16:08.560
And in episode, or I mean, in season two, you start to realize, oh, I think AI might be
01:16:14.700
And it goes, it just, it's really a cool fiction series.
01:16:18.120
Um, and the other one is, and I think I'm up to recording episode four.
01:16:26.460
There will be 20 episodes next year of, uh, called the American story, the beginnings.
01:16:33.320
And it's based on David Barton and Tim Barton's book, the American story.
01:16:37.260
And it is a really good dramatic podcast that I narrate, uh, and it's the entire, uh, American
01:16:46.160
The first, uh, two seasons will bring you from Columbus to the end of the revolutionary
01:16:54.640
Those will be available, uh, right away for subscribers.
01:17:00.060
We're so, you know, everybody will have a bite at the apple.
01:17:05.420
But for instance, uh, those podcasts first, they will be heard first.
01:17:11.660
You'll be able to download and, and just eat all of them at once.
01:17:17.040
Uh, and that'll be available for like the first month or so on the torch.
01:17:21.400
And then it will go to our regular podcast series that we release on Saturdays, wherever
01:17:26.180
you get your podcast to Glenn Beck, you know, Glenn Beck podcast.
01:17:28.960
But then after that, it will go and we'll place it in history podcasts, you know, spot
01:17:39.140
So it's not all just under news and information.
01:17:45.980
So you, other people will be able to discover them.
01:17:48.520
So if you don't mind waiting, you'll get them for free.
01:17:51.400
If you want to help us build it, you can do that and you'll get them all at once at free
01:18:00.180
I also am maybe more confused than I was at the beginning.
01:18:03.140
So, uh, so complex with this is, I mean, it's like, it's, it, I mean, we're doing something
01:18:09.940
And it was kind of like when we went here and people were like, so wait, you're going
01:18:18.680
Remember at the beginning we were giving away Rokus for free.
01:18:21.100
So you could, we had to explain a Roku so you could understand how you could watch it
01:18:27.720
I remember a lot of buffering back in the day, a lot of, but basically just to boil this
01:18:32.060
down, if you're listening to the radio show, nothing changes, you're going to be able to
01:18:37.820
You've got interview podcasts that most of them are going to be on blaze TV.
01:18:41.180
If you're a blaze TV subscriber, 22, go to the, uh, the torch, uh, or listen to
01:18:47.800
And then you have a bunch of new material that's going to be coming out probably first
01:18:51.400
with the torch and then maybe filtering to some of the other places as well.
01:18:56.500
And by the way, on the torch, if you're a torch subscriber at this show at, after its
01:19:00.860
first run, cause it has to run live with commercials, it will always be commercial
01:19:05.380
So you will not have commercials on the, that's cool.
01:19:08.480
Um, can we screw with people and then play two pieces of audio at the same time and tell
01:19:13.540
them that some of it's supposed to be in the left channel and the right channel.
01:19:16.300
And then they, we've already done that, but yeah, we can probably bring that back.
01:19:19.300
I feel like most of the people probably don't remember.
01:19:21.840
Um, uh, a lot of this is a TV explained, uh, the George AI thing.
01:19:26.640
So, uh, are you going to be able to talk to the founders eventually?
01:19:42.320
If I went and tried to raise money, I could raise millions of dollars to do this.
01:19:46.680
Put AI in your, like, you can be making sandwiches and put AI in your company title
01:19:56.000
Um, this is my legacy and I want to make sure that we're never cutting any corners, that
01:20:04.600
We're not doing anything that will come back and bite me in the end.
01:20:09.160
Um, because AI can be extraordinarily dangerous.
01:20:13.920
This is all being funded by me and eventually by anybody who wants to help us, you know,
01:20:18.800
Um, and so we're having to take it slower because compute is so, there's a reason why
01:20:24.820
chat GPT is only being done by open AI slash Microsoft and Elon Musk is doing grok because
01:20:35.000
Um, so at first, uh, we will have to generate it for you.
01:20:40.200
The next step is you'll be able to generate it and this should come quickly and maybe in
01:20:44.940
January, but first, first quarter for sure, I am hoping that you'll be able to ask it
01:20:49.520
questions and it will give you, so you'll be able to type just like chat GPT, the next
01:20:54.200
phase, it will answer you and be able to listen to you and you can have a real conversation
01:21:00.860
with the, with a voice and it will take you through.
01:21:03.980
So your children will be able to learn from George.
01:21:20.160
Um, we will ask for people who are members to try it first, just to make sure I want to
01:21:25.380
do a lot of beta testing before I release this out to make sure that we've caught all
01:21:30.700
Um, and, uh, then the next step will be full video generation at the same time.
01:21:36.460
Um, so you will be able to have George in a t-shirt and jeans, teach your kids civics.
01:21:47.960
Uh, the other thing you're doing, and this is part of a foundation that you talked about
01:21:53.080
a little bit, but it was like continuing the mission of gathering all these documents
01:22:06.940
Um, and that is included scanning all of the documents in.
01:22:09.940
We're still a long way from finishing the entire library.
01:22:12.900
We finished the early part of the library prior to the founding and the founding.
01:22:17.540
Um, and we have a lot more to go, but it will, um, we're doing this 24 hours a day.
01:22:22.640
I mean, it's, it's amazing how many people we have working on digitizing things.
01:22:26.380
So you'll be able to, when it pulls something up for you, it will just pull it up, but then
01:22:30.360
you'll be able to say, I want to see that document and you can click on it and it'll pull the
01:22:33.920
document up so you can see it in its original form.
01:22:40.100
So any of the objects and it's being made for future for AR.
01:22:44.300
So you'll be able to, uh, you know, put on glasses and you'll be able to walk through
01:22:51.360
You could pick every artifact up and spin it around and see what it is.
01:22:58.580
Everything is factually based, uh, and first sourced.
01:23:03.580
So that's what the torch is and it begins in January and I'd love for you to join us.
01:23:10.400
Well, I would sign up now for a free email newsletter at glennbeck.com.
01:23:14.480
You'll be the first to find out that we'll release all the information there.
01:23:25.220
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We got another hour to go and a lot to cover that we have not hit yet.
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And I'd like to snap a few things myself when I get.
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Anyway, I'm going to just think about Jesus for a few minutes and then we'll come back and
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Okay, so, Stu, you know, the Reese's monkeys that escaped, you know, on a crash of a truck on I-59.
01:29:52.360
Yesterday we found out they were riddled with disease.
01:29:58.240
They had herpes and, I don't know, the clap and maybe a little COVID.
01:30:03.940
I don't think the clap was actually one of them.
01:30:09.080
Okay, so I don't recommend eating these monkeys.
01:30:14.140
Not exactly chocolate and peanut butter inside, okay?
01:30:17.360
But now, as if that wasn't weird enough, that a truck got into an accident, the back
01:30:24.440
door opened up, and these very aggressive monkeys.
01:30:31.660
It's like a completely predictable, gee, what's going to happen?
01:30:36.460
Obviously, all of society gets disintegrated through disease.
01:30:41.040
They're now saying that these monkeys were not diseased, okay?
01:30:51.580
And all of the other monkeys were, I'm quoting, they've all been destroyed.
01:31:01.340
If they weren't diseased, why would you destroy them?
01:31:05.840
I mean, this monkey thing just does not make sense.
01:31:08.420
This is how governments make conspiracy theories much worse.
01:31:25.920
Why would the driver, and this is what they're saying now, the driver didn't know.
01:31:32.780
So you just piled a bunch of monkeys into the back of his truck and he somehow or another
01:31:43.820
He was just like, I just picked up these monkeys, man, and they're all diseased.
01:31:58.280
He's just like, can you come pick up some monkeys?
01:32:02.680
We're going to put them in the back of your Camry.
01:32:09.200
Of course, there might be some monkey mess in the end because, again, they're riddled with
01:32:16.180
Okay, so now they're saying there's only one monkey on the loose, but it's totally fine.
01:32:24.420
So the one monkey that is loose, is it possible this one monkey was like the control group
01:32:33.060
The other five who did have the diseases, they destroyed them already, but they know them
01:32:44.700
So could you just get a shot of my screen here?
01:32:51.240
This is the picture they released of the rhesus monkey, and they have a picture of him fiddling
01:33:04.260
Maybe it's a Chinese spy monkey that is like, we're going to send these monkeys in.
01:33:09.460
They're going to rewire the entire country for collapse.
01:33:18.780
There's nothing rubber that he is holding on to.
01:33:25.360
Maybe this is how they destroyed all the monkeys.
01:33:27.060
They just told him to go up to the top of the telephone poles.
01:33:32.620
I mean, every day, it just gets weirder and weirder.
01:33:36.800
Do you have a theory here as to what actually occurred here?
01:33:44.300
I haven't put a lot of thought into the escaped monkeys.
01:33:52.260
That's as far as I'm going with the diseased monkeys.
01:34:08.960
The university was either buying or selling these monkeys and they were sending them to
01:34:15.340
some other place that is doing even more monkey experiments.
01:34:18.980
Whether they had diseases or not, I'm assuming they did because I can't imagine the driver
01:34:38.220
It doesn't mean it's true, but somebody told this guy.
01:34:42.440
Unless he's just constantly assigning hepatitis C to people he runs into.
01:35:01.400
Big social media account just assigning different diseases to different animals that walk by.
01:35:04.580
This is just another reason why we don't trust anything anymore.
01:35:30.760
Just tell us the truth about how you lost a bunch of diseased monkeys.
01:35:34.460
I would rather know that than have them go, there's absolutely nothing.
01:35:38.220
So my kid is in the backyard playing with a diseased monkey.
01:35:41.700
I mean, I just think, just for safety, maybe never let your kid play in the backyard with
01:35:47.640
an escaped monkey of any sort, whether diseased or not.
01:35:51.760
You say it's diseased, and I mean, you know how many stupid people, didn't we go over this
01:35:54.840
Like, 63% of Americans have, they cannot read past a sixth grade level?
01:36:05.700
Monkeys, where 63% of the people cannot understand anything past a sixth grade level, I don't
01:36:12.460
Monkeys might be like, oh, there was a cute little monkey in my backyard.
01:36:15.520
And your other neighbor that maybe can read at a seventh grade level is like, it's a diseased
01:36:21.780
I just can't read the names of these diseases because they're too long, but it's bad.
01:36:32.720
What if what they're doing is actually telling us the truth?
01:36:36.320
There's just nothing to be worried about, and that might actually be accurate in this
01:36:40.740
Because here's why I think, let me see if I can find, where?
01:36:45.520
Part of these monkeys were not part of a Tulane transport, and they're not infectious.
01:36:54.060
Non-human primates at the Tulane National Biomedical Research Center are provided other
01:36:58.660
research organizations to advance scientific discovery.
01:37:01.300
The primates in question belong to another entity.
01:37:05.600
We are actively collaborating with local authorities.
01:37:08.000
We're going to send a team of animal care experts to assist as needed.
01:37:13.740
When you think of our university, you don't think we have diseased monkeys here.
01:37:16.420
That's, I mean, it's a little, me thinketh, you protesteth too much.
01:37:27.340
If you're going to be transporting a bunch of diseased monkeys.
01:37:34.240
Don't do it in an Uber and maybe, maybe you have your own diseased monkey truck.
01:37:38.720
That's a, that's a, that's, you could go that way.
01:37:46.800
I will say diseased monkey truck's probably expensive.
01:37:54.780
Maybe we don't take monkeys and we inject them with a whole bunch of different, like COVID.
01:38:03.520
We're going to, we are always going to gain a function in these things up.
01:38:06.200
Can we not then just put them in a monkey truck?
01:38:13.460
If you, like, let's say you, if you had all these diseased monkeys and you dress them
01:38:17.940
all like Paddington Bear, if they escaped, no one would be upset about it.
01:38:26.020
They'd be so excited to see the Paddington Bear monkeys.
01:38:35.500
It's not like, when you think about terrorism, it's not necessarily that you're going to
01:38:42.140
That's what's happening with these diseased monkeys.
01:38:57.000
At one point in my career, I worked with both Zippy the Chimp and Bubbles the Chimp.
01:39:08.400
Anyway, Zippy was the David Letterman monkey cam, monkey.
01:39:31.080
Until they get to an age where they scratch your eyes out.
01:40:02.580
It was a very complex commercial where all of these things that were unbelievable were happening.
01:40:07.300
And, you know, at the middle of the commercial, a monkey just swings in on a rope and picks up a coffee mug, drinks the coffee, puts it down, looks at me, and then swings back out.
01:40:29.820
And rehearse, rehearse, rehearse, rehearse to get this right because it's a complex commercial.
01:40:48.980
And so the trainer gets out and Bubbles gets out of this limousine, like red carpet.
01:40:55.880
And we're starting to, you know, we're going to shoot it now.
01:41:02.340
We're going to shoot the monkey or the commercial.
01:41:11.680
And the trainer gives him the rope and said, Bubbles, here's what you're going to do.
01:41:19.980
When I point to you, you're going to swing across.
01:41:22.360
You're going to land right here on the desk behind him.
01:41:29.200
And then you're going to take the rope and you're going to swing back over to the ladder.
01:42:05.680
And I'm like, it was the first take and the monkey gets it right?
01:42:08.980
The monkey gets it right just by him saying, this is what you do?
01:42:12.340
I mean, I don't think we should put diseases into the monkeys.
01:42:23.360
And then he got old enough to scratch your eyes out.
01:42:37.020
But no matter what the weather does outside, Cozy Earth makes every moment you spend in your home feel like life is happening in perfect temperature.
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01:43:45.300
Make sure you mention that you heard it from me, Glenn Beck.
01:44:03.080
So the Post-Millennial has a story about Court TV and how Court TV wants to have cameras in the courtroom for the trial of Tyler Robinson.
01:44:19.220
He's the guy that killed Charlie Kirk, allegedly killed Charlie Kirk.
01:44:27.100
And the defense has come out and said, you can't have cameras in the courtroom.
01:44:35.700
Maybe we don't need the run-up to it, but in the courtroom during the trial, that's not going to taint the jury pool.
01:44:47.160
I don't know if they know this, but O.J. Simpson.
01:44:49.260
And I don't think TV tainted the jury pool in that one, okay?
01:44:56.220
Because everybody at home watching it going, this guy is guilty as sin.
01:45:03.080
By the way, all of them say they regretted that, but that's a different story.
01:45:07.780
So there is a push to have the cameras in Charlie Kirk's courtroom for this.
01:45:12.880
I think this was meant to be a public execution.
01:45:16.660
We deserve to be able to see justice happening.
01:45:22.420
I want it to be out in the open because I don't want any more conspiracy theories about this.
01:45:30.340
This really pisses me off, all these conspiracies.
01:45:32.840
Did you know that Erica Kirk killed her husband?
01:45:49.200
But anyway, I want it all out in the open, you know, and I got that.
01:45:54.080
I mean, I called Benjamin Netanyahu and he said it was okay to take this stand.
01:45:59.480
There is a story on the blaze today written by Oren McIntyre, who's a nice guy.
01:46:08.960
I just vehemently disagree with him on a lot of things.
01:46:12.720
But, you know, he's saying for a time, the right rally praising Kirk and demanding justice that unity didn't last.
01:46:27.460
Let it not become the occasion for tearing the movement that he led to pieces.
01:46:32.060
Then he goes into George Washington and spent much of his farewell address warning the young republic about foreign entanglements.
01:46:40.220
He praised American separation from Europe's great power intrigues and warned that making any foreign state a favored nation would corrupt domestic politics.
01:46:47.320
Washington foresaw the factions forming around the foreign loyalties and predicted patriots would raise concerns about the foreign influence that they would be branded as traitors.
01:47:00.780
And if you want to talk about foreign entanglements, I am all in.
01:47:17.200
The fracture cuts through the conservative through conservatism itself.
01:47:20.420
The United States has long allied with Israel sharing intelligence aid, military cooperation.
01:47:24.800
Yeah, just like we have with France and England and Germany and Australia and Japan.
01:47:32.500
Because they are most favored nations and they are on our same side most of the time.
01:47:40.860
If you want to stop all that, let's have that conversation.
01:47:53.980
Well, because Charlie Kirk, you know, he knew what was really going on.
01:48:05.460
And I'd love to have a real conversation about foreign entanglements.
01:48:10.340
And if you want to not agree with Israel, that is your right.
01:48:33.420
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It's free and it's available now at glennbeck.com.
01:50:04.380
J.D. Vance responds to the possibility of a Vance Rubio presidential ticket.
01:50:20.320
And they asked him about, you know, how do you feel about a Vance Rubio ticket?
01:50:26.360
And he said, well, you know, we get along really, really well.
01:50:31.900
The reason why we're successful is because all of us work together really well.
01:50:36.920
Which is not necessarily the case in the first term.
01:50:40.260
You cannot say that about the people working within the White House.
01:50:46.180
And we were talking and he asked me about a Vance Rubio ticket.
01:50:50.360
And I said, I talked to J.D. Vance and Rubio in the hallways of the White House just recently about that.
01:50:59.380
And I said, and they both said exactly the same thing.
01:51:03.060
Let's get through the next three and a half years.
01:51:05.540
Things could change quickly in the next three and a half years.
01:51:09.780
I think, again, there is a feeling, I think, on the right that a lot of exciting things have happened.
01:51:21.460
We're a long way away from the midterm election when it comes.
01:51:28.100
We are, to this point, closer to Trump's inauguration than we are to the midterms.
01:51:42.100
So, it's crazy how much could change in the next four years, let alone the next one year.
01:51:56.300
The left hates this more than they've ever hated anything ever.
01:52:00.320
I mean, every person I know on the left has been driven completely insane by all of this.
01:52:06.820
By all of this or by all of the leadership of the other side?
01:52:20.640
But I think it's more extreme now than it was in the first term.
01:52:28.800
He does help that along because he likes to toy with them.
01:52:35.640
However, it is the response from the media and the response from the Democrats that have made him into Hitler.
01:52:46.440
I mean, their analysis of Donald Trump is that he's the worst human being of all time.
01:52:50.880
I think that's helped along by leadership, helped along by the media.
01:52:59.060
Pol Pot implemented a lot of policies that they liked.
01:53:06.900
But at this point, I'm not sure they would be against the killing fields.
01:53:09.840
I don't know if the Hamas wing of the Democratic Party is against the killing fields.
01:53:14.520
But I will say, if you look at overall, you look at the approval ratings of Donald Trump, they're not at their highest point right now.
01:53:26.560
So, if that were to continue, if a couple things go wrong, if the economy turns down, and we've talked a lot about the economy being at risk, especially outside of the AI bubble.
01:53:38.580
I was reading something yesterday about the AI situation.
01:53:50.320
It's almost all a bunch of money being passed in between, like, seven companies.
01:53:57.400
And at the end of the day, if that, let's just say, that were to collapse, it would hurt our economy.
01:54:03.740
Even if it doesn't collapse, think of all of the jobs that are probably going to be lost in the next three years.
01:54:10.740
We're starting to see jobs being lost because of AI now.
01:54:16.200
And AI, I think, is going to become very, very unpopular.
01:54:20.840
And those who, you know, are using AI, this is getting very dicey for me.
01:54:26.220
I'm starting to regret everything I've done in the last two years.
01:54:28.700
But it's going to become very, very unpopular because it will take jobs if companies decide to use it as people and not as a tool for people.
01:54:46.940
The one thing that they both said that is the point I wanted to make on this was, and they say it in the Blaze article, a lot of the good work we've done is because we do it as an administration and we're all able to work together.
01:55:00.580
What both of them said to me on separate occasions when I said this was, I said to Rubio and to Vance, you are killing it.
01:55:20.540
We're just following what he is directing us to do.
01:55:23.380
And I'm like, yeah, but you guys are also doing a very effective job at doing that.
01:55:30.860
I saw Donald Trump try to give orders last time and it didn't work out well.
01:55:37.320
But what I wanted to say is I can't think of a time in my lifetime, I mean, I was not around the White House of the Reagan years, so I don't know, but I can't think of a time where I have seen honest credit given by the top leadership in hallway conversations to the president.
01:56:25.980
And told me a lot about the quality of people around him.
01:56:33.280
You didn't get the sense that they are saying the thing they know is going to keep them in the good graces.
01:56:42.560
I don't think either of those guys would have said, they would have just said, thank you.
01:56:53.480
Well, I think the Venezuela boats situation is an interesting highlight of this.
01:56:58.800
Again, like, you know, and we've talked about all the questions about it and there's some stuff to discuss.
01:57:02.920
However, like, that is something that is super important to Marco Rubio.
01:57:08.180
Like, that is a, I would say, central to his, that entire situation is very central to his belief system.
01:57:18.220
And the fact that Trump really takes that seriously is, and is doing something about it is really important to Rubio.
01:57:26.800
But I don't think, see, that's the way I think most administrations would look at it.
01:57:35.380
You know, and I agree with you, but I really think it's the other way around.
01:57:40.080
I think Donald Trump is like, here's why this is important.
01:57:43.700
And it has a little bit to do with Rubio, with what you're dealing with, what you're thinking.
01:57:48.560
But let me show you the grand strategy of why it has to happen.
01:57:51.800
And I think that the big, big vision is coming from Donald Trump, and it accomplishes everything that everybody else is looking to do, but it's much bigger vision.
01:58:06.740
Yeah, and I think, you know, the other thing that is very central to Donald Trump's belief system, besides, like, the idea that he doesn't want people coming across the border illegally, he's very against illegal substances.
01:58:18.180
Not just the crime that is associated with them, but he's, like, you know, obviously been really hard against that his entire life.
01:58:27.080
No, I think, I mean, I think, I mean, he wouldn't do this because of the Constitution, but I think if he could, I think he would be like, yeah, drug dealers, execute.
01:58:45.700
Well, and, you know, that's what some of the criticism is over the Venezuelan boats, right?
01:58:49.480
Like, we're just, you'll be surprised to hear there's not a lot of great trial attorneys involved in the process.
01:58:57.040
There's not a defense being presented when the drone is overhead.
01:59:09.300
But, like, he is, he, more importantly than stopping those drugs from coming in, because you see the boats, you're like, well, what could that even do to our country?
01:59:17.780
It'd be swallowed up by, like, you know, they wouldn't even get through a Washington, D.C. cocktail party, the amount of drugs they can carry on one of those boats.
01:59:29.500
Or somebody else from the Biden administration.
01:59:32.480
Right, who knows, who could have been with all the cocaine in the White House.
01:59:39.400
The message is quite clear what they're sending to Venezuela, which is not just don't send boats.
01:59:50.320
By the way, did you notice that very large ship off your coast?
01:59:53.660
Like, we are sending all sorts of messages to them, much deeper than, please stop delivering some cocaine here and there.
02:00:00.540
The fact that we sent one of our biggest bombers from North Dakota to just buzz the coastline just in the international waters.
02:00:15.800
Two of our bombers from the air base in North Dakota ran what I would describe as, and I think they want him to describe it in Venezuela the same way,
02:00:28.420
as a trial run, two times now we have sent two bombers, big bombers, right to the line of Venezuela, right to international waters.
02:00:41.720
They flew all the way down from North Dakota, down, made that run, and then headed on home.
02:00:55.700
You know what he's sending, what signal he's sending to me?
02:00:59.880
He does not care about the emissions from that plane.
02:01:11.220
Ever notice how much the world never really slows down anymore?
02:01:20.340
The shoulder creak means you slept wrong, and that little groan as you sit down, that's, ow, ow, ow, ow, ow, my warranty has expired.
02:01:27.860
And you used to laugh it off until one day you realized that morning stretch is starting to sound like a symphony or bubble wrap.
02:01:35.560
Relief factor is the 100% drug-free way to reduce pain from aging and exercise or whatever it is that you did that one time.
02:01:43.360
You know, you tried that CrossFit in 2014, and you screwed yourself up.
02:01:49.140
This is about actually getting you moving again, not just masking the pain.
02:01:53.800
Three weeks, that's all it takes to see if it will work for you.
02:01:57.020
And if it does, you might actually remember what it feels like to get out of the chair every day without, you know, ow, ow, ow, ow.
02:02:05.760
Relief factor, because the old man noises, ow, you know, shouldn't be your love language.
02:02:11.600
Just give it a try for three weeks, the three-week quick start.
02:02:47.560
Shop the same in-store prices online and enjoy unlimited delivery with PC Express Pass.
02:03:12.040
Did you see the Afghan guy that stabbed the Brit?
02:03:17.480
22-year-old Afghan illegal that was there, arrested.
02:03:23.620
They decided, oh, let's have compassion on him.
02:03:26.040
This guy, this British guy, just walking his dog.
02:03:34.040
And the Afghan guy comes with a knife and just stabs him.
02:03:51.340
I had seen that video, but I did not realize it was a stabbing.
02:03:53.980
I thought it was a, I thought he was just punching him over and over again.
02:03:59.420
Just stabbing him in the face and the chest and the, I mean, it's horrible, horrible.
02:04:03.900
Now here's a British woman on TV who was, who lives nearby.
02:04:12.820
I live in the borough right next to Hillingdon.
02:04:20.600
My local shop, there's been three stabbing, one murder since then.
02:04:25.060
My friend was murdered last year up on the high street.
02:04:36.080
I have a 22 year old son and I'm, I'm begging him to move out of the country.
02:04:47.860
They're putting our children in so much danger.
02:04:50.760
They're putting, they're putting everyone in danger and they're not doing nothing to help us.
02:04:55.920
And that, and that's the thing a lot of us feel.
02:05:01.000
They're pushing us to do something that we don't want to do.
02:05:09.060
British people never revolt against their government.
02:05:13.120
They're going to push us through it because they're not listening to us.
02:05:20.040
I had a cousin murdered 20 years ago who was stabbed to death and nothing has changed, Julia.
02:05:27.940
I'm sure, I'm sure I speak for everyone listening and watching right now.
02:05:31.200
I'm, my heart goes out to you and that's, that's, that's the, that's the reality.
02:05:48.760
This is where I live, not where the politicians live.
02:05:55.620
Keir Starmer, if you're listening to this, please do something.
02:06:25.620
You imagine if you were listening to anything non-BBC, if you were listening to talk radio,
02:06:41.480
you were listening to podcasts and that was happening on our streets and the government
02:06:48.540
was completely denying it and the mainstream media was completely denying it.
02:06:57.500
Thank God this government won't deny it, but the next one might.
02:07:02.400
Imagine you get to the end of the rope and the British people are getting to the end of their rope.
02:07:20.940
Politicians all over the world, you better wake up.