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Speaker 2 The fusion of entertainment and enlightenment.
Speaker 2 This is
Speaker 2 the Glenbeck program.
Speaker 2 Hello, America. Welcome to the Glenn Beck program.
Speaker 2 Well, Lee Zeldon, he came out and said the EPA is leading the largest deregulatory action with trillions of dollars in cuts than any administration has ever done.
Speaker 2 Just one department, the EPA, doing more than any other administration has done in all of them combined. Is this the beginning of deregulation? I hope so.
Speaker 2 We'll talk about that and also something that came out in the blaze today about
Speaker 2 a possible plan of what Donald Trump is doing.
Speaker 2 I hope it's not what he's doing, but we'll talk about that in just a second. First, let me tell you about Relief Factor.
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Speaker 2 So there is a, hi, Stu. How are you?
Speaker 2
Good, Glenn. How are you? Good.
There is a, there's a story in The Blaze today. Trump's economic blueprint is hiding in plain sight.
Let me give you just a little bit of it.
Speaker 2 The Trump tariff plan has rocked the stock market and economists around the world with the president notoriously labeling the implementation of his tariffs as Liberation Day, while others called his reciprocal moves a huge mistake.
Speaker 2 Many have argued that Trump did not actually implement reciprocal tariffs at all, though.
Speaker 2 Look no further than on X, where even though, even through his platform's owner, Elon Musk, is one of Trump's top advisors, White House post about the tariffs was slapped with community notes labeled that said the numbers from the administration were not based on actual foreign tariffs at all, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
Speaker 2 So the story goes on to say, so what is he doing?
Speaker 2 And
Speaker 2 I would like to, you know, they interviewed an expert that is with the president, Stephen Moran,
Speaker 2 big-time economic advisor.
Speaker 2 He's worked at the Treasury Department and one of the top advisors now for the president.
Speaker 2
And he talks about a couple of things. He talks about the Mar-Lago Accord, which is speculation.
Don't know if
Speaker 2 this is what the president is doing, et cetera, et cetera.
Speaker 2 But there's also something that Stephen wrote about, and I'll talk about it here in a second, that seems to be laying out the same course that the president may be on.
Speaker 2 So
Speaker 2 let me explain this to you because what they're claiming is that the president may be tweaking the value of the U.S. dollar to help America America out.
Speaker 2 And let me go over this because there's some serious risks attached to this one.
Speaker 2 So imagine the US dollar as the coolest toy on the playground and everybody wants to play with it because it's the best. Nobody thought we could have a better toy than this one.
Speaker 2
That toy is called the world's reserve currency, meaning that countries use it as gold. It is their savings account.
And they use it for trading, for savings, for buying stuff globally.
Speaker 2 Now, the Mar-a-Lago Accord, which the Blaze says might be a Trump administration plan, wants to make that toy a little less shiny on purpose by devaluing the dollar, basically making it worth less compared to other
Speaker 2 countries' money, in particular the Chinese won.
Speaker 2 Why?
Speaker 2 Well,
Speaker 2 imagine you have a lemonade stand, and our lemonade is really pricey because it's traded in dollars. And you got to use dollars, and you know, dollars are just really expensive.
Speaker 2 Our lemonade now is much more expensive, but across the street,
Speaker 2 China is selling theirs way cheaper. So everybody is buying their stuff from China.
Speaker 2 Well, if we would devalue our dollar, our lemonade would get cheaper and more people would buy from us than from China.
Speaker 2 That's a very dangerous game we we play. The idea is to make American goods like cars, steel cheaper to sell overseas, which would boost our industries and create jobs over here.
Speaker 2 Okay.
Speaker 2 Now, the Blaze story also mentions another goal, helping our massive national debt, which is now $33, $34 trillion.
Speaker 2 If the dollar is worth less,
Speaker 2
then the debt is easier to pay off. It's like owing 100, but now 100 isn't as much as it used to be, so it's less of a burden to repay.
But here's the catch, and it's a big one.
Speaker 2 I think Germany did this.
Speaker 2 I think that's what Germany did. Devaluing the dollar can cause inflation, which means prices go up for everything.
Speaker 2 So your favorite candy bar, you walk into the store, used to be a dollar, it's now $5.
Speaker 2 And if it's made overseas, it's guaranteed to be $5
Speaker 2 because now
Speaker 2 the tariffs on it and everything else, and we've devalued our dollar. So all the foreign stuff is far more expensive since our dollar buys less.
Speaker 2 Okay.
Speaker 2
It's different if you're buying it with gold. Because gold, dollar in gold, it doesn't change with the dollar's value.
It seems like it's going up, but it's actually not. The dollar is going down.
Speaker 2
So it takes more dollars. You know, when you see the price of gold is up, no, no, no.
Usually that means the dollar is down. Okay.
Speaker 2
So because we're not buying everything in gold or saving gold, nor are other countries, the price hike hits hard. Now, imagine that happening to everything, groceries, gas, clothes.
Well,
Speaker 2 the Blaise and Stephen Mirren warned that this kind of inflation could be a disaster for Americans. Gee, you think?
Speaker 2
It's not good. It's not good.
Now there's another huge risk here.
Speaker 2 Devaluing our dollar to pay down the debt could be seen as an act of war.
Speaker 2 If I have a trillion dollars of our debt and I want you to pay a trillion dollars back, if you start devaluing your dollar and now
Speaker 2 you're only really giving me
Speaker 2 $500 billion for my trillion dollars that I have in my savings account. I'm kind of pissed at you.
Speaker 2 You're intentionally
Speaker 2 stealing from my account, right?
Speaker 2
China has well over a trillion dollars of our bonds, U.S. Treasury bonds, in their piggy bank.
We devalue our dollar. We're taking money out of their pigging bank and just setting it on fire.
Speaker 2 Could make them furious. You know, they might see it as an economic attack.
Speaker 2 The Blaze pointed out that this could spark a trade war,
Speaker 2 but
Speaker 2 maybe even a war war.
Speaker 2 We're talking about trillions of dollars.
Speaker 2 Don't like to poke a beehive, you know, just because some of the the honey inside might be really good. No, let's not poke the beehive unless you're prepared for all of the possible consequences.
Speaker 2 Now, the Blaze mentioned something called the Plaza Accord, which happened back in 1985. And it was a deal that was made in 1985.
Speaker 2 We got together at the Plaza Hotel in New York with countries like Japan and Germany. And
Speaker 2 the agreement was to weaken the U.S. dollar to help American industries because back then, our dollar was super strong and it was hurting our exports like now.
Speaker 2
And it worked for a while, except Japan got hit hard. Their money got too strong.
Their exports tanked and they ended up in decades-long economic slump. Ever wonder what happened?
Speaker 2 Remember when Japan was huge? They owned everything and it was like,
Speaker 2 I think
Speaker 2 they forced me now to name my next child Sony?
Speaker 2 And then all of a sudden it stopped and you didn't, you're like, what happened? Well, they just crashed. Yeah, why did they crash? Because of the Plaza Plaza Accord.
Speaker 2 We weakened our dollar, which made everything from Japan more expensive,
Speaker 2 and that put them, that put them out. Now, the Mar-a-Lago Accord is like a modern-day version of that, except this time it's aimed at China, and the stakes are much, much bigger.
Speaker 2 So what's the upside of this? Well, it could make American goods cheaper abroad, so our factories will start, you know, buzzing again, will create more jobs. It also might shrink our trade deficit.
Speaker 2
That's when we buy more from other countries than we sell to them. We need to sell more things to them.
If our stuff is cheaper, then we sell more and the gap closes.
Speaker 2
Third, like I say, could make our debt feel lighter to pay off, at least in theory. But the risks of this are massive.
Besides inflation and the act of worthing,
Speaker 2
if we make our dollar less shiny, other countries also might say, you know, I'm not going to play with that toy anymore. I'm not going to hold that toy.
Wait a minute, it's the greatest.
Speaker 2 Well, no, not anymore, because now it has cost my treasury all kinds of money. I've lost half my money because it's not gold.
Speaker 2 And that was kind of the plan here: that you would never devalue your dollar, United States.
Speaker 2 And that way we would hold your dollar as our reserve currency. That's a very, very big deal.
Speaker 2 If
Speaker 2 we lose our
Speaker 2
reserve currency status in the world, we lose all of our VIP privileges. We can't borrow money cheap.
Everything gets pricey, much, much more pricey. Blaze also warned that
Speaker 2
China might dump our treasury bonds. That could crash our financial markets.
You know, this is, look, he's playing Jenga. and I hope he's the greatest Jenga player of all time, but he's playing Jenga.
Speaker 2
I don't know if they're going for this. Blaze thinks that it's likely.
You know, Stephen Miram, he wrote
Speaker 2 or co-wrote something called A User's Guide to Restructuring the Global Trade System.
Speaker 2
It spells out this whole plan. And people have been saying, no, that's not what Trump is doing.
But he wrote this before Trump got into office and he's on the Trump team. And it seems to be,
Speaker 2 you know, mirroring exactly
Speaker 2 what is happening.
Speaker 2 He talked about using tariffs, taxes on imports, pressure China into a deal, suggest national security rules to force everything through.
Speaker 2 This is exactly what the president is doing. And with an advisor like Mirin in his corner, I mean,
Speaker 2 There's a chance this is what he's cooking up, especially since Trump loves the idea of boosting American industries and taking China on, but it's a very, very risky game.
Speaker 2
It's, you know, like we're going, we're at a carnival, gang, and I really want that stuff bear. Okay, all right.
Well, I'm going to get you that stuffed bear.
Speaker 2 Instead of using the BB gun, though, you're using a shotgun loaded with slugs.
Speaker 2 You might win the bear, but you also might kill everybody behind the counter with it and take down the whole stand. So
Speaker 2 I'm just glad that I'm the one explaining it and not having to make the decision on it
Speaker 2
because this is a very, we are in a high-stakes game. Never seen anything played.
Have you seen anything played this high stakes?
Speaker 3 No, and it is a high stakes game. What does this mean for, let's say, the rest of his presidency, like as far as the other things that we are cheering on that he's doing?
Speaker 2 Well, if this doesn't work,
Speaker 2 nothing. I mean,
Speaker 2
I mean, he'll not be able to do anything. He won't be able to do anything.
No, I don't think so.
Speaker 2 If this wins,
Speaker 2 we're golden for a long time. If this loses,
Speaker 2 I don't think we even hold the House or the Senate, and we don't win in 28.
Speaker 3 That's a big, so risk-big, win-big, I suppose. It really is.
Speaker 2 And I don't know the odds. I mean, I know what everybody says.
Speaker 3 Never tell me the odds. Never tell me the odds.
Speaker 2
Never tell you the odds. I like to know the odds.
Before I put my money down on the table, I like to know the odds.
Speaker 3
That's not what Hans Solo said. So for, you know, you're going to have to adjust your theory there.
Yeah, no, I think it's really, it's a
Speaker 3 you know, it's a, it's a big game. And, you know,
Speaker 3 this is difficult, it's interesting because I always remember Trump talking so confidently and
Speaker 3 I mean, you know, at length about wanting a strong dollar. Like, I always thought that was a big part of his theory.
Speaker 2 I think what he's trying to do is
Speaker 2 here's how I would interpret what I read in the blaze. This is how I would interpret what he's doing.
Speaker 2 He's not actually trying to do that over the long term. He's not trying to bring the price of the debt down.
Speaker 2 What he's trying to do is bring our dollar down far enough, force China to keep their dollar, their one, up
Speaker 2 and kill them short term and then get out of this and reverse it.
Speaker 2 You know what I mean?
Speaker 2
I think he plays a great game of chicken. Oh, yeah.
And I think that's what he's doing. I don't think this is his plan on, yeah, this is my long-term plan.
We're always going to do this.
Speaker 2
I'm going to bring the dollar down to zero. It wouldn't make sense.
Right. And it doesn't go with what he says about a strong dollar.
You need to have a strong dollar. Okay.
Speaker 2 If you're going to be the world's reserve currency, this is not a good idea. However, if he's playing it short term and he's playing chicken,
Speaker 2 it might just work because China is in a very precarious situation. They lose, they lose the
Speaker 2
ability to trade their stuff cheaply. They're in trouble.
Overnight, they're in trouble.
Speaker 3
Yeah, that's very true. There's so much based on exports.
And it's funny, they've been manipulating their currency forever. They always do this.
Speaker 3 And they, you know, I, though, don't, I've never looked at that as a good thing for them.
Speaker 2 No.
Speaker 3
Right. Like, basically what they're doing is give, you know, they're subsidizing a giant electronics sale for the United States.
And that does not seem like a good policy to me.
Speaker 3 And one, I've never heard an American politician advocate, including Donald Trump.
Speaker 2
Well, we can't. We promised the world we wouldn't do this.
That's why we were in so much trouble in 2008. We changed our policy.
We said, you know what, take care of America first.
Speaker 2
We would not have bailed all of those banks out had we we stuck to the deal we made for the rest of the world. We won't do this.
So you can trust that the dollar will remain sound.
Speaker 3
Trust us. Yes, trust us.
Always just trust us. Don't worry about it.
And we'll be fine. Everything will be fine.
Speaker 2
Well, it worked for a very long time. We did it for a very long time.
But in 08, we violated that. And now, you know, I don't know where we are on that.
Speaker 3 The good thing about us is it's a comparative trust because luckily everyone else sucks. So that's our biggest advantage.
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Speaker 2 Okay, so on the TV show tonight, the Wednesday night special on Blaze TV, a closer look at how so-called free trade has destroyed American jobs.
Speaker 2 The markets are spinning from President Trump's tariff strategy.
Speaker 2 Globalists are all clutching their pearls, but I'm going to zoom out and show you a bigger picture tonight, the story how the elite-driven trade policies over the last 30 years have gutted the middle class.
Speaker 2 We went back, we looked at NAFTA, the WTO, all of this stuff that was supposed to be very, very good for America while the elites have won and the corporations have won and other countries have won you have not
Speaker 2 you've seen the shuttering of a good deal of your town
Speaker 2 that's all because of these
Speaker 2 these globalist plans and Trump's tariffs are not just policy they are rebellion against a managed decline a gamble to restore american self-reliance is it going to be prosperity from here or is it going to be chaos?
Speaker 2
You'll see tonight find out how free trade destroyed American jobs because it wasn't exactly free trade. That's tonight at 9 p.m.
Eastern on Blaze TV. Tomorrow at 6 p.m.
Eastern
Speaker 2 at youtube.com slash Glenn Beck.
Speaker 2 Hmm.
Speaker 3 That's going to be an interesting one to watch.
Speaker 2 I can't wait to tune into that. It is.
Speaker 3 It is. And you're to be on my show as well, Studos America, today.
Speaker 2 Maybe
Speaker 2 you can.
Speaker 2 Are you feeling okay? Oh, man. I'm
Speaker 2
white there. I'm sick.
I'm really, really.
Speaker 3 Oh, yeah, but we're going to talk about
Speaker 3 preview your show.
Speaker 2 Oh, I'm. And discuss.
Speaker 2
Are you hosting it? Well, yeah, it's horrible. Oh, my gosh.
Oh,
Speaker 2 my God.
Speaker 2 You look worse all of a sudden. Might be in the hospital.
Speaker 2 What time do you tape?
Speaker 3 Oh, just a little bit after.
Speaker 2 Wow.
Speaker 2
I think that's the time I'm going to have to be in the hospital. Oh, no.
Glenn Beck.
Speaker 2 Okay, you know what they say?
Speaker 2 Imitation is the sincerest form of flattery, but when somebody's out there buying flat-screen TVs, booking luxury vacations, and driving off at a brand new convertible, all pretending to be you, that's not flattering.
Speaker 2 Uh-uh. That's theft.
Speaker 2 You can try solving identity theft on your own. It'll be fun, kind of like wrestling a bear or diffusing a bomb blindfolded.
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You can get Glenn TV and Studios America so much more as well at blazetv.com/slash Glenn. Get 30 bucks off your annual subscription.
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Speaker 2 Stu and I were just talking in the
Speaker 2 break about how
Speaker 2 everything is very, very complex now. We don't know,
Speaker 2 you know,
Speaker 2 we're shifting as a people,
Speaker 2
as a movement, as a country. And there are new ideas that some of them are old ideas that we have been against.
And I still kind of am when it comes to tariffs, et cetera, et cetera.
Speaker 2 And I am for free trade.
Speaker 2 But you need to make sure that you
Speaker 2 understand
Speaker 2 the whole complex system of what happened. You know, what happened with our free trade,
Speaker 2 it's all built on the foundation of Nixon, of coming in and saying, okay, we're going to get off the dollar and
Speaker 2 we're getting off the gold reserve.
Speaker 2
And that way, you know, you can't turn your money in for gold anymore. And we're not pegged to gold.
And the whole world freaked out. And so what happened?
Speaker 2 Well, when the whole world freaked out, well, then
Speaker 2 he said, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay. We're going to become a consumer.
Speaker 2 You make the products now and we'll become the consumer because we have everything we need. So free trade, when it's built on that
Speaker 2
basis, it's not good. It's not good.
And that's kind of what we did. And so you have to understand
Speaker 2 when you have the reserve currency and you are violating it because you want to keep spending money.
Speaker 2 And so you promise everybody, so they keep the world reserve currency, they keep it in their vaults, we're going to buy all of your products. So we're going to become the big consumer.
Speaker 2 You can only do that for so long before you rot the country and you have nothing left because all you are are just consumers.
Speaker 2
So we're going to get into that tonight. Also, I have some good news for you.
Kind of a tax day miracle.
Speaker 2 It looks like over 20,000 IRS employees took Trump's second buyout offer.
Speaker 2 So we're only 60,000 away from actually getting rid of all those other ones that Joe Biden hired. Or did we fire? Do we just say we're not doing that? Do you know?
Speaker 2 I don't think so. Because I remember,
Speaker 3 I don't, I think a lot of them were hired, but I think we were able to bail on some of them before
Speaker 3 we stopped the process, essentially. That's one of the big things when we're talking about this on Studios America tonight as well, about how much of this money.
Speaker 3 We're talking about $5 trillion is still kind of hanging around and not spent yet that Joe Biden promised.
Speaker 2 Can we stop?
Speaker 3 Can we reverse that?
Speaker 2 I don't know. Can we pay down the debt? Wouldn't that be nice?
Speaker 3 Pay down the debt, lower taxes,
Speaker 3 do the things that we, as conservatives, have always argued that would be helpful to the economy. And by the way, things that Trump did in his first term,
Speaker 3
at least as far as the tax cuts go. But again, just renewing the tax cuts that we got.
in 2017 is not a tax cut. No.
It's not a tax cut. And it doesn't cost us anything
Speaker 3 to keep those in place or lower those rates. Because you know what? That's money that is ours, not the government's.
Speaker 2 I have to tell you,
Speaker 2 a tax cut I would really, really like, and this is more
Speaker 2 local and state,
Speaker 2 property taxes. I find property taxes the most immoral taxes, that and capital gains, the most
Speaker 2 wow,
Speaker 2
that's a big statement. Tell me what's more immoral.
I have earned my money, so I paid taxes on my money.
Speaker 2
Then Then I go take it and I spend my money and I spend my money on a house and I pay taxes when I buy that house. Right.
Now I'm just
Speaker 2 living in my house.
Speaker 2
Something you already purchased. Right.
Then they come to me for more taxes every year. Oh, yeah.
And even if I'm, even if my house, I buy a Rolls-Royce and I can't afford to keep it up.
Speaker 2
So now it's a Volkswagen. It doesn't really matter because my property taxes will keep going up.
Even though I can't fix the roof, so now I've got a Volkswagen and it's not a good Volkswagen.
Speaker 2
It's not working. It's an old beat up one.
My property tax is still going up. Huh.
Speaker 3 And then
Speaker 2
I can't pass it on to my kids because they can't afford the death tax or the property tax. It's immoral.
You don't really own. You're renting from a really bad landlord.
Speaker 3 Yeah, no, I think that's incredibly immoral.
Speaker 3 Capital gains, again, you've taken money, you've earned it, you've paid taxes on it, you invest it, and then you get taxed on it again.
Speaker 2
And double taxation. No, I'm wrong.
Triple taxation.
Speaker 3 I mean, you mentioned the death tax briefly there. That one feels to me to be slightly more immoral if you want an immoral scale
Speaker 3 because of the fact that
Speaker 3
you should be able to do with what you want with your money. Because your life has gone away.
The government shouldn't seize it.
Speaker 3 You should be able to give it to the people that you want to give it to. Your family,
Speaker 3 charity, whoever you want to support. Obviously, charity can help you get around those things.
Speaker 2 I put it in the same category as property tax.
Speaker 3 I think it's similar.
Speaker 2
I mean, they're just, they're absolutely immoral. I mean, look at property tax.
I pay my taxes. You know, my kids are in school.
I have no problem paying for my kids in school.
Speaker 2 I have no problem helping my neighbor's kid, you know, in school and pay for theirs.
Speaker 2 But at some point, when I'm old and I'm on Social Security and I can barely afford the property taxes to stay in the house that I've been living in my whole life, but you know, I never made a lot of money.
Speaker 2 I bought the house years ago and now it's worth so much money because the neighborhood and inflation and everything else, I can no longer afford the taxes. Well, wait a minute.
Speaker 2 Why am I still paying taxes? If I'm a senior citizen, why am I still paying property tax? I'm not, I'm barely going anywhere.
Speaker 3 Maybe I'm going to the store or, you know, out to eat at four o'clock in the afternoon when there's not a lot of traffic right you know what i mean and i'm not i don't have any kids in school why am i still paying that property tax yeah it's immoral i totally agree it's immoral can we at least enter into the conversation i mean uh payroll tax has entered the chat the payroll tax is another horrible tax with which i the the issue with like the death tax i think is more immoral perhaps than the pro than payroll taxes but you know when it comes to economic impact it's lower right like the you know most people don't pay the death tax, for example.
Speaker 2 Property tax. But they pay property taxes.
Speaker 3 Well, if they own a home, so you're talking about what, half the, I don't know, what the exact percentage is ownership.
Speaker 2 It's for people now.
Speaker 3
And of course, as a renter, you're still paying toward that for the landlord. Yeah.
So you sort of are paying property tax even when you rent.
Speaker 3 Payroll tax is another one I would argue. I mean, it is.
Speaker 3
It was designed specifically to make you believe you are paying into some system, Social Security, that's basically a savings and investment plan. It's not.
It's not at all.
Speaker 3 It's just like every other government program.
Speaker 3 The rich people pay into it,
Speaker 3 and you're not paying into your own system. You're paying into this giant thing where evil rich people, who we all hate so much, pay more into it in raw dollar amounts.
Speaker 3 But this particular tax, when it comes to percentages, is actually a regressive tax. It's a tax that
Speaker 3 all the, you always hear these arguments.
Speaker 2 Oh, Warren Buffett pays less than a secretary.
Speaker 3 Almost always not true, right? These are all BS arguments. When it comes to payroll tax, though, it is true because you only pay payroll tax on the first, what is it, $100,000, $200,000 in income.
Speaker 3 I can't remember what the number is. It changes every single year.
Speaker 3 But if you make $100 million, you just stop paying
Speaker 3
that payroll tax. It is a regressive tax percentage-wise on people who make less than that amount.
And that one, I think, it was also set up by FDR to
Speaker 3 specifically convince people of the validity of this program. Everyone inherently knows: wait a minute, welfare.
Speaker 3 We should be really tough on that welfare thing because, wait a minute, we're all paying into this and we're not getting anything out of it, right?
Speaker 3 It's this system that we all pay into and we don't get anything out of. It always feels that way, and people don't like it because of that.
Speaker 3 It feels like this system that we're just giving away our money to somebody else that, you know, look, might need help, but like, is that the government's role?
Speaker 3 With Social Security, we were fooled a long time ago to believe we're paying into this system that doesn't even exist.
Speaker 3 This payroll tax doesn't pay for the Social Security system.
Speaker 2 No, there's a lot of people.
Speaker 3 We're going insolvent. There's no lockbox.
Speaker 2 No, they put it in a lot.
Speaker 3 We are paying for the people, just like welfare, just like every other bad government program we might not like. We are paying now into this system
Speaker 3 to support today's retirees.
Speaker 2 If we would have put this, let's say in the year 2000,
Speaker 2 if we would have put our Social Security money as just individuals
Speaker 2 into
Speaker 2 the stock market, okay?
Speaker 2 And
Speaker 2 you think we'd have more money coming to us every month now in retirement
Speaker 2 if I had it in there for the last 30 years and now I'm pulling it out. Do you really think I would have had more money?
Speaker 3
Dramatically so, Glenn. Yes.
Really? You would have way more money.
Speaker 2 People are like, well, what about 2008?
Speaker 3 First of all, the policy actually, because it was Bush in 2000, talked about it, but he didn't actually start trying to put it in until 2005 after he won his re-election.
Speaker 3
That was kind of his big, hey, I won. I get to do something, right? I want to privatize Social Security.
It was something like 4%.
Speaker 3 He wanted to be able for you to be able to put into your own
Speaker 3
investments. Everybody complained about it.
Everybody said it was so terrible. So dangerous.
It was so dangerous.
Speaker 3 And of course, people are like, well, then 2008 happened and everyone would have lost their money.
Speaker 3 Well, first of all, no, because there was a specific thing in there for people that were close to retirement that they wouldn't be involved in this process. So that was shielded.
Speaker 3 It would not have happened. But
Speaker 3 the stock market went up enough that everybody now would have been making much more money, considerably more money in Social Security if that policy had passed. It was a policy that was
Speaker 3 obviously correct. Now, again, you can argue
Speaker 3
you don't want to participate. By the way, that was also part of the policy.
If you didn't want to participate, you didn't have to participate. There was nobody
Speaker 2 participating.
Speaker 2 Honestly, who would not have participated?
Speaker 3 Maybe some liberals would have been convinced by their politicians that it was dangerous.
Speaker 2 But
Speaker 2 after you saw that it wasn't dangerous.
Speaker 2 I mean,
Speaker 2 that would have only lasted a short period of time. When you saw that nobody would have lost their money in 2008.
Speaker 3
Well, yeah, I mean, like, I think there would have been some people terrified by 2008 or 2020, right? Correct. But they would have been scared away.
They're not.
Speaker 2 But you're riskiverse. You're shielded.
Speaker 3
Yes. Some people would have been shielded.
Like 2020, if you retired in 2020,
Speaker 3 you may have taken in less money than you would have in 2019.
Speaker 2 However,
Speaker 3 as compared to what people actually got in 2019 and 2020 by maintaining the same policy, you would have still been much better off in 2020. And that was obviously a pretty obscure year, right?
Speaker 3 Like if you happened to retire exactly at that point, most people would have said, well, wait a minute, maybe I work one more year here. Right.
Speaker 3 And then they would have bounced back up and done much better in 2021, even though, you know, there was lots of still issues going on with the economy.
Speaker 2 But, you know, again, you have a year.
Speaker 3
You seem to do well. The stock market did fine.
And you had all those years of gains before that. That's the point.
It's not a short-term thing where you pull all your money out in one bad year.
Speaker 3 It's just like right now, people that are pulling their money out, you know, is thinking, oh, gosh, it's down X percent from the absolute peak of when Donald Trump was elected. True, it is down.
Speaker 3 But I mean, when you look at the long-term trends, things are going in the positive.
Speaker 2 So I think you're right that that is immoral because
Speaker 2 they're lying to you. And
Speaker 2 you're getting, it's a massive ripoff for
Speaker 2 it. It's just bad.
Speaker 3
It's just horrible. So that's, I don't know if it's as immoral as the death tax or property tax.
You make a good case. Property tax is pretty immoral.
Speaker 2 Well, I mean, property tax. Let me just, let me just say this.
Speaker 2 What is the whole point of the Constitution?
Speaker 2 What's the whole point of our law? The whole point of the Declaration of Independence. Life, liberty, property.
Speaker 3 That was the original phrasing. Not pursuit of happiness.
Speaker 2 Right.
Speaker 2 You didn't want to say property because you didn't want to include slaves. And then you would have had this argument with the South that they would have said, hey, but that's my property.
Speaker 2
So they did pursuit of happiness. Life, liberty, and property.
Your idea in America is that everyone can own property, unlike the way it is over in Europe, where just a few people own property. And
Speaker 2
you can own a little bit of it around these giant estates. You were to be able to own your own property.
You don't own your own property. It's a violation.
Speaker 2 I continue to pay for something that I own, and it's a violation of our very idea. It is the most un-American tax there is.
Speaker 2 It guarantees you never own
Speaker 2 anything.
Speaker 2
I think it's immoral. Back in just a second.
In every family, there is one relative. You know the one.
The one that stocked their basement like they're planning for the apocalypse.
Speaker 2
The one that gets teased at family gatherings, you know, gets the tinfoil hats as gag gifts. You know that one.
I know. I'm that guy in my family too.
But let's be honest.
Speaker 2 When disaster strikes, whose door do you think the family members are going to be knocking on first?
Speaker 2 Right. And that's why I point out, I have loaded guns.
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Speaker 2 This is Glenn Beck.
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Speaker 2 So, Sarah Gonzalez from Blaze TV just wrote in. She said, hey, another thing on property tax,
Speaker 2
it's unrealized gains. It's a tax on unrealized gains.
I had never thought of it that way. It's a great point.
Speaker 3
She's absolutely right. You buy a house for $200,000.
It's now supposedly worth $250,000. You haven't gained that $50,000 yourself, but you're paying taxes.
Speaker 2 You should pay the tax on.
Speaker 2
I mean, look at, look, it was just... Now we're saying, well, you know, you should pay the tax on the lower.
No, you shouldn't pay the tax at all. The tax shouldn't happen at all.
Speaker 3 But if you're going to charge the tax, it should be on whatever you paid for the house.
Speaker 2 Right. How is that not unconstitutional?
Speaker 3 And then they give you the capital gains tax when
Speaker 3 you sell it at the higher value. Look at these people.
Speaker 2
They're unbelievable. They're so bad.
They're so bad.
Speaker 3 What about the immoral taxes, like the the emergency taxes? Like there was one in Pennsylvania from a flood many, many years ago. Oh, yeah.
Speaker 3 That the flood went away, but they just kept charging the taxes.
Speaker 2
Still to this day are. There's the one in Pennsylvania, too.
It wasn't just the flood. It was
Speaker 2
a railroad bridge. Okay.
Had gone out. One of those big, long, long bridges you used to see with a steam engine.
It went out, and they had to rebuild it. And so they put this big tax on.
Speaker 2 I guess they're still
Speaker 2 rebuilding that
Speaker 2 railroad bridge for the steam trains. training
Speaker 3 long bridge long bridge how about the taxes you pay increases when they want to build new stadiums for billionaire owners and they're like hey no those are good
Speaker 3 those are good for the city i love sports but i do not want to pay a tax to support some freaking stadium
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It's a threat to democracy. We begin in 60 seconds.
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Speaker 2 Well, we were lucky this time.
Speaker 2
It is strange that this happened on April 13th. I'll tell you why in a minute.
April 13th, 2025.
Speaker 2 Most of us were asleep when a man named Cody Ballmer scaled the fence at the governor's mansion in Pennsylvania. He smashed a window, he threw a Molotov cocktail inside, and
Speaker 2 had he found the governor there, Josh Shapiro, he planned to bludgeon him with a hammer. His reason?
Speaker 2 Hatred. Political hatred.
Speaker 2 Now, the governor and his family escaped physically unharmed. The fire left something smoldering in what should be smoldering in all of us.
Speaker 2 It's a question of what happens to a society when people no longer believe in the rule of law, in debate, in the votes, but instead believe in violence, when they justify that violence as morally righteous.
Speaker 2 And that's what's happening. There is a broader assassination culture culture that appears to be emerging within segments of our society.
Speaker 2
And I think the trend line is deeply troubling. Listen to this.
There was a survey. They questioned 1,264 residents of the U.S.
31%
Speaker 2 and 38% stated it would be at least somewhat justified to murder Elon Musk and President Trump. 31% said said yes to Elon Musk.
Speaker 2 38%, almost 40% of our population said it's okay to murder the president.
Speaker 2 These percentages, however, go way up when you isolate left-of-center respondents.
Speaker 2 So anybody who described themselves as either far-left, liberal, or slightly liberal, the numbers went 48% to kill Elon Musk and 55% to kill the president.
Speaker 2 That's half of people who say they're at least slightly liberal.
Speaker 2 Wow.
Speaker 2 40% said it's at least somewhat justifiable to burn down or destroy a Tesla dealership in protest. Now, this is not new.
Speaker 2 This deadly logic we've seen before. And strangely,
Speaker 2 it was 160 years ago, almost to the day.
Speaker 2 April 1865, President Abraham Lincoln attends a play at Ford's Theater. He comes in, he's late.
Speaker 2 Some accounts suggest that Lincoln had left a box open for a last-minute guest, possibly General Grant who declined, or maybe somebody else. Perhaps even John Wilkes Booth himself.
Speaker 2 He was a popular actor. He was known in Washington society.
Speaker 2 One of the people at the theater saw Booth send a letter up to Lincoln's box or send a note up to Lincoln's box.
Speaker 2
He might have been asking if he could sit with the president. We don't know.
And the president might have said, yeah,
Speaker 2 because John Wilkes Booth, he wasn't just a popular actor.
Speaker 2 So his family was very popular. as well, and they were known to be southerners.
Speaker 2 And maybe, because Booth was having a play the next week that was at Ford's Theater, maybe the president was trying to bring people together.
Speaker 2 I don't know. But
Speaker 2 there he is
Speaker 2 in the theater,
Speaker 2 and
Speaker 2 just a few days before he was giving his second inaugural address, and he said something that enraged Booth.
Speaker 2 He suggested that formerly enslaved people, at least the educated and those who had served, should be given the right to vote.
Speaker 2 And Booth at that point turned to his companion and said, that means N-ward citizenship. That'll be the last speech he makes.
Speaker 2 And so he picked up a pistol and you know the rest.
Speaker 2 But Booth wasn't acting alone that night, not just in the literal conspiracy, though there was one, but in spirit. He believed that he was saving democracy from a tyrant.
Speaker 2
Booth wasn't having, he wasn't some raging lunatic in his own mind. He thought he was a patriot.
He thought he was the liberator. He saw Lincoln as the usurper and Booth as the deliverer.
Speaker 2 We don't recoil at this.
Speaker 2
Now, we used to. We used to call that treason.
But how different is that from the logic
Speaker 2 than the kind we're we're hearing today? We're hearing the same kind of logic, and now we don't recoil. Now we don't call it treason.
Speaker 2 There is a new report out from the Network Contagion Research Institute. They found that half, 55% of self-identified leftists say Donald Trump is justifiable to kill him.
Speaker 2
This is not the fringe anymore. It is mainstreamed through algorithms, college campuses, op-eds, by any means necessary.
That's not just a slogan that was said in the 60s.
Speaker 2 That is now a permission slip to do whatever it is you think is right.
Speaker 2
In 1865, the stage was literal. And Booth used that stage to deliver his final act.
He entered
Speaker 2 Lincoln's box, point-blank range, one bullet to the back of the head. Then he jumped to the stage below and he shouted, Six semper tyrannis,
Speaker 2 thus always to tyrants.
Speaker 2 As if he was slaying Caesar,
Speaker 2
he limped off stage. He had a broken leg.
12 days later, soldiers found him cornered in a barn in Virginia and they shot him.
Speaker 2 And as he lay dying, Booth stared at his hands, the hands that had taken the president's life just a few days before, and he whispered a single word. Looking at his hands, he said,
Speaker 2 useless.
Speaker 2 Useless.
Speaker 2 I think that was the judgment of his own actions.
Speaker 2
His final clarity. Instead of saving democracy, he assaulted its very soul.
And it did nothing.
Speaker 2 Lincoln died, not just as a martyr for the Union, but a victim of the same delusion infecting our political climate today, the idea that democracy can be preserved through violence, that saving the republic by killing those that we disagree with somehow works.
Speaker 2 So here we are again.
Speaker 2 This time it's firebombs and hammers. And by the way, just so you know,
Speaker 2 that was somebody who wanted to free Palestine by killing the Jewish governor who's a Democrat in Pennsylvania.
Speaker 2 Okay, so that makes it even all the more heartwarming, doesn't it?
Speaker 2 If anybody thinks that you are not going to be victimized by these people,
Speaker 2 you will never be radical enough for these people.
Speaker 2
And the fever is rising. It's no longer limited to lone actors.
It's visible on how we excuse riots. We justify doxing.
We rationalize political intimidation.
Speaker 2 All of it, of course, is dressed up in the language of justice. I want to talk about justice this hour.
Speaker 2 Justice without law is not justice. It's vengeance.
Speaker 2 Vengeance is blind.
Speaker 2 So now,
Speaker 2 what do we do?
Speaker 2 Well, the first thing we have to do is remember the past and not as a moral bedtime story, but as a warning.
Speaker 2 Why is it that they want us to not know our own history?
Speaker 2
If you don't know your own history, you can't defend the things that you think are important. You no longer know what worked, what didn't.
You no longer know what shaped us.
Speaker 2 You no longer have any warnings to go, wait a minute, wait a minute, didn't this happen before? I don't know.
Speaker 2
Booth did not end tyranny. He deepened the division.
His bullet didn't preserve liberty.
Speaker 2 It set the reconstruction of the country that Lincoln fought to heal. It set it back.
Speaker 2 Second thing, we have to reject every attempt, left or right, to justify violence in the name of saving democracy. Because democracy doesn't need saviors, it needs citizens.
Speaker 2
When you think of yourself as a savior, you'll justify anything. In my book, there's only one savior.
There's lots of citizens. I'm a citizen.
You're a citizen. Citizens vote.
Citizens speak.
Speaker 2 Citizens challenge. Citizens disagree.
Speaker 2 But we're not saviors, so we can't take life. We don't get to choose who lives, who dies
Speaker 2 and the last thing again we have to learn from history maybe we should reflect on the words this April
Speaker 2 right after the assassination have you even did you know about this assassination attempt why isn't that everywhere somebody who was was saying they were trying to free the Palestinians tried to murder our governor of a very large state in our country who is Jewish,
Speaker 2 clearly an anti-Semite, somebody from the left
Speaker 2 tried to kill one of our governors. And why isn't that everywhere? Is it just me?
Speaker 2 Have I just missed this? This seems like a footnote story. This is a very large story.
Speaker 2 And because it's not a lead story everywhere for days,
Speaker 2 it tells you something about the media, doesn't it? It tells you something about the culture of the left. They're excusing it by burying it.
Speaker 2 So perhaps we should just
Speaker 2 reflect on the words of a dying assassin.
Speaker 2 Useless.
Speaker 2 Maybe I'm wrong, but I think he meant as he's looking at his hands, his hands.
Speaker 2 the hands that killed a president, and he sees nothing changed.
Speaker 2 Let's not forget the lessons of 1865 because we almost repeated them over the summer and we almost repeated them again just a couple of days ago again in Pennsylvania
Speaker 2 this time one was a Republican the next one was a Democrat more importantly a Jew
Speaker 2 and both times these seem to be just swept under the rug
Speaker 2 why
Speaker 2 Because there are people that are trying to convince you that violence is the answer.
Speaker 2 It's not.
Speaker 2 It's not.
Speaker 2 If we convince ourselves again that violence is ever the answer, then all of what we have done will be useless, just like Booth's final act.
Speaker 2 And just like the country,
Speaker 2 we will lose if we don't change course.
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Speaker 2 You know what really makes me sick is there was a time when rebellion actually meant something. It meant risk, you know, it meant friction with authority.
Speaker 2 You know, the kind rebellion didn't come with an audience clapping afterwards when you said something, you know, or give you extra credit for doing it. I love that one.
Speaker 2
You're in college, you get extra credit for rebellion. What kind of rebellion is that? Today, rebellions come with hashtags and press kits.
It's sanctioned, It's subsidized.
Speaker 2 It's expected now. It's encouraged by the elites.
Speaker 2
Those who all rail against the system are the ones following the newest programming from the system. Pre-approved outrage.
Curated dissent.
Speaker 2 Chomsky,
Speaker 2 he's the author of... A lot of really bad books, but he said that consent is now manufactured.
Speaker 2 The media through repetition and subtle cues, can sculpt public opinion until people believe their choices are their own. We've talked about this a lot on this program.
Speaker 2 He's not wrong, but he stopped short.
Speaker 2 Because if consent can be manufactured, why not rebellion? Look around. The kids in the street with the signs they didn't write, chanting slogans they didn't come up with.
Speaker 2
They were taught by their teachers. That's not rebellion.
That's rehearsal.
Speaker 2
That's what happens when you take young minds and minds meant to push back and preload them with a script. Parents do it, schools do it, now AI is about to do it.
Algorithms feeding us.
Speaker 2 Not what we want, but what shapes us, what molds us.
Speaker 2 That's not free will, gang. That's choreography.
Speaker 2 That should terrify everybody.
Speaker 2 Because as I've said on this program over and over again, we're about to lose the definition of free will. We won't know.
Speaker 2
Without critical thinking that separates man from machine, man from animals, we don't just lose freedom. We lose meaning to everything.
Consent becomes just a checkbox. Rebellion becomes a brand.
Speaker 2
And that's really what it is. People are fighting for a brand.
Republicans or Democrats. That's what it is.
Speaker 2 Our minds,
Speaker 2 they're just meat modems for the next approved idea. That's it.
Speaker 2 Because we don't think anymore.
Speaker 2
We don't know how to think, but we need to think. And not just about what you believe, but why you believe it.
You know, I've said this for years.
Speaker 2 Question with boldness even the very existence of God. For if there be a God, he'd
Speaker 2 rather
Speaker 2 have...
Speaker 2 honest questioning over blindfolded fear.
Speaker 2
Let me change that a little bit. Let me make it even more simple.
Question the ideas that are the most comfortable to you. Question those ideas first and foremost.
Speaker 2 Because if your rebellion is easy, it's probably not your idea. You know?
Speaker 2 And if all of your consent is manufactured, then your silence, your compliance,
Speaker 2
it was never a choice. And if you lose the ability to choose, you're not citizens.
You are a product line.
Speaker 2 These useless,
Speaker 2 useless idiots on the streets that are now going out to, you know, vandalize Teslas. They think it's okay to kill them.
Speaker 2 You are not a citizen. You're a product line.
Speaker 2 Stop it.
Speaker 2 Think, America. Think.
Speaker 2 This is Glenn Beck. By the way, I want to talk about the justice of Easter in a minute.
Speaker 5
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Speaker 2 It's Easter week.
Speaker 2 How do I know? Because the New York Times got Jesus all wrong
Speaker 2 this last Sunday. I don't know if you saw, there was a
Speaker 2 there was an op-ed in the New York Times on Sunday that said
Speaker 2 Christ's mission
Speaker 2 was
Speaker 2
all about an anti-Roman revolt. No, no, it wasn't.
No, no, no, it wasn't. That was Barabbas.
That is why Judas
Speaker 2
turned him in. Because he's like, where is this Messiah? The Messiah is supposed to come.
And no, that's not what the Messiah was doing.
Speaker 2 And, you know, you could excuse it if it was just a New York Times, you know, op-ed writer, but it's not.
Speaker 2 This is from the Episcopal Reverend Anru Fayer.
Speaker 2 And he says,
Speaker 2 Palm Sunday was a protest, not a procession. Oh, shut
Speaker 2 up.
Speaker 2
Jesus, he said, was killed for threatening the power of the Roman Empire. No, he wasn't.
No, he wasn't.
Speaker 2 And by the way, he only says that because, well, A, he has not read the Bible, apparently, because
Speaker 2
didn't Pilate say, I don't find any guilt. I don't, I don't find anything wrong with this man.
Why are you bringing him to me?
Speaker 2 But, you know, I'm not a preacher.
Speaker 2 I'm not as smart as the Reverend Thayer
Speaker 2 who brought, now this is going to come as a surprise to you, brought the New York Times reader to the conclusion that Jesus was fighting the Roman Empire, just like all the other saviors that are out there right now that are fighting against Donald Trump.
Speaker 2 Oh my, oh my,
Speaker 2 hell
Speaker 2 is awaiting for you.
Speaker 2 All right. I can't take,
Speaker 2 I can't take the talk of justice anymore.
Speaker 2 I can't. I can't because nobody knows
Speaker 2
what justice even is anymore. No justice, no peace.
Okay. So you're the lighting on, you're lighting Teslas on fire.
Okay.
Speaker 2 You're spraying red paint across churches And you're chanting, you know, from the river to the sea, Palestine will be free. And that's for justice?
Speaker 2
They say it like it's holy, like, you know, justice is a new gospel. They don't even know what the word means.
They have no idea where it even comes from.
Speaker 2 It doesn't come from TikTok mobs or massed arsonists.
Speaker 2 It doesn't come from a university president who can't even define genocide.
Speaker 2 It doesn't come from rage. Justice is born from law,
Speaker 2 real law, divine law.
Speaker 2 That law passed down to a very small suffering people in the desert called the Jews.
Speaker 2 The very bedrock of justice is the Old Testament.
Speaker 2 It teaches us that the world,
Speaker 2 that the world is
Speaker 2
not chaos, that right and wrong are not subjective, that every man, even a king, is accountable before God. You know, eye for an eye, it says that in the Bible.
Okay, all right, okay.
Speaker 2 Yeah.
Speaker 2 That wasn't said because vengeance was good,
Speaker 2
but because it limited vengeance. Okay, we're talking about 5,000 years ago.
It put a boundary on bloodlust. It was the first step taken away from
Speaker 2 being barbaric to each other.
Speaker 2
And then after that, something miraculous, literally miraculous, happened. The next Jewish lawmaker came, and not to abolish the law, but to fulfill the law.
His name was Jesus.
Speaker 2 Jesus came and said, you've heard eye for an eye, but I tell you now, turn the other cheek. Do you understand how revolutionary and radical that was?
Speaker 2 He came for justice,
Speaker 2 but not justice for vengeance.
Speaker 2 He transformed justice
Speaker 2 into something with mercy.
Speaker 2
And that's the problem with the modern left right now. That's the thing that they just don't get.
They shout about justice, but what they really want is revenge.
Speaker 2
And the movement is not political. It is religious.
Make no mistake. In fact, I think it's even more religious.
Speaker 2
You know, we've talked about how it has, you know, religious dogma, it has priests, it has excommunication, it has all of that. But it is also, it's becoming a religion of death.
It is becoming evil.
Speaker 2 It is evil at its core.
Speaker 2 Because
Speaker 2 any religion without forgiveness,
Speaker 2 any religion that doesn't have the Savior, that doesn't have grace,
Speaker 2 only collective guilt and collective redemption, that says you were born the wrong color, you voted for the wrong guy, you used the wrong word, confess, submit, pay reparations.
Speaker 2 Anything that says that, that is,
Speaker 2 that's not justice.
Speaker 2 That's unforgiving tribalism.
Speaker 2 That's the same pagan instinct that Jesus came to defeat. And defeat it, he did.
Speaker 2 Real justice, eternal justice,
Speaker 2 begins with you.
Speaker 2 Begins with me. That's why
Speaker 2
I'm a guy. Look, I am a recovering alcoholic.
I made every mistake you could possibly make.
Speaker 2 You know, I didn't think I was worthy of anything.
Speaker 2 I didn't think God would pay attention to me at all, would, should pay attention to me at all, should or would love me at all, because I had just done things that in my head were just the worst of the worst.
Speaker 2 And I know you have those in your head, too.
Speaker 2 And we're all hiding them.
Speaker 2 And that's part of a pagan belief.
Speaker 2 And there's nothing we can do to get out of it. There's nothing we can do.
Speaker 2 You know, you can save every cat and every dog and every animal and every whale on earth, and that's not gonna, that's not gonna help.
Speaker 2 Neither is the mob. Neither is the government.
Speaker 2 And you don't better yourself or society by electing high priests to rule over you.
Speaker 2 You better yourself by changing you,
Speaker 2 by changing your heart,
Speaker 2 by aligning yourself with true justice,
Speaker 2 with truth.
Speaker 2 When you change your heart and all you want to pursue is the truth, honestly, you become,
Speaker 2 well, you become Christ-like.
Speaker 2
I'm a long way from that. I don't want to say that I'm Christ-like.
I am way away from that.
Speaker 2 I wish I was closer.
Speaker 2
I work to be closer. But that's the message of Easter.
We're never going to make it. Never going to make it.
Now listen, what is the difference?
Speaker 2
The left will say, you're never going to make it because you were born the wrong color. You're never going to make it.
Okay.
Speaker 2
And there's nothing you can do about that one except hire some high priest to take care of it for you. That won't change anything in your life.
I'm saying, Jesus said, you're never going to make it.
Speaker 2
You're never going to be me. You can't.
You won't. But you don't have to do anything except just follow me.
Speaker 2 Just change
Speaker 2
yourself. It's not about the collective.
You'll never be able to earn it. It's just change you
Speaker 2 and align yourself with the truth.
Speaker 2
You know, if social media had existed in 33 AD, Jesus... you know, he had 12 followers.
Thumbs up on that one.
Speaker 2
And every one of them would have been de-platformed. Every single one of them.
They would have been flagged for misinformation or disinformation, shadow banned for hate speech.
Speaker 2
The hashtag resistance Rome would have trended 24 hours before it was censored as well. But that wasn't his message.
Render under Caesar that which is Caesar's.
Speaker 2 The world, and especially the power, always hates his kind of justice.
Speaker 2 He rode into Jerusalem, not in a tank, but on a donkey.
Speaker 2 As humble as you could possibly be.
Speaker 2 Not even a horse, a donkey.
Speaker 2
He didn't burn the city. He washed feet.
He didn't condemn the woman in adultery. He defended her.
He didn't overthrow Caesar. He overthrew death.
You want a revolution?
Speaker 2 There's only one revolution that will ever lead to true peace and real justice.
Speaker 2 And that one started in a garden tomb with a stone that was rolled away and a man who walked out alive again.
Speaker 2 That,
Speaker 2 Reverend Thayer,
Speaker 2 is what Easter is all about.
Speaker 2 Not because justice was demanded, but because he came to satisfy justice.
Speaker 2 And not because we earned it, but because he gave it.
Speaker 2 And all we have to do to participate in there is accept that gift. That's it.
Speaker 2 And if that truth, if that truth ever took hold again, not in just our churches, but in our homes and our hearts and our schools and our streets,
Speaker 2 Then and only then
Speaker 2 will justice change everything. Then and only then will justice roll like a mighty river.
Speaker 2 But let's never forget, justice
Speaker 2 has a name.
Speaker 2 And its name is Jesus.
Speaker 2
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Speaker 3
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Speaker 3 Because, you know, look, Wall Street doesn't care about your values.
Speaker 3 They care about profit and power and pushing agendas, ESG scores and corporate activism and policies that quietly chip away at everything you believe in.
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Speaker 2 Alrighty, so there's some more news on the Easter front.
Speaker 2 Cuba banned Christians from celebrating Palm Sunday in the traditional Catholic, Cuban Catholic way.
Speaker 2 The solemn stations of the cross had been rehearsed and prepared, and it was supposed to happen Palm Sunday, 6 p.m.
Speaker 2
And the government released on radio that is, sorry, it's been canceled. It has not yet been approved.
So they couldn't do it without the government approval.
Speaker 2 Stations of the Cross,
Speaker 2 you know, commemorates, you know, if you're if you're a Catholic, you know,
Speaker 2 it's all of the different things that happened on the last day of Christ,
Speaker 2 all the way to the resurrection of Christ. And
Speaker 2 the regime hasn't said why they've canceled this, but I'll tell you why. I'll tell you why.
Speaker 2 Because repressive regimes
Speaker 2 go one of two ways. They're either Iran and it's all about God and some distorted view of God,
Speaker 2 or it's godless.
Speaker 2 When people have actual faith and they know about actual justice and they know about actual God and actual Jesus,
Speaker 2
that empowers them. This is why from kings in the past, the priests of the past had to be in Latin.
You can't read it yourself.
Speaker 2 We'll read it for you because you can control people.
Speaker 2 But if you let people actually read it for themselves, if they actually know what the words say, it's unbelievably empowering and no government can shut that down
Speaker 2 because
Speaker 2 they'll stand up because they're serving God and they won't lose their first citizenship in the kingdom of God for their second citizenship. They appreciate their second citizenship.
Speaker 2 I do, but I'm not going to do something that
Speaker 2
gets me kicked out of the first citizenship. No, that passport's much more important to me than the secondary passport of the United States of America.
That's why they're doing it.
Speaker 2 They have to control the people of religion.
Speaker 2 That's why religion is under attack.
Speaker 2 That's why religion is always under attack, but especially now, and that is the reason why we were a good nation. Yes, we had problems.
Speaker 2 And yes, as always, religion, be it the religion of the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, or Islam, or this new socialist progressive religion, It can always go bad.
Speaker 2 It can always go dark because people are people.
Speaker 2 But when the people discipline themselves to know what that religion is, as long as that is a religion that talks about true justice and true peace and how to live and serve one another,
Speaker 2 that's something powerful that no man can stop.
Speaker 2
It's Easter week. We'll have more on this in a second.
Also,
Speaker 2 I want to get to a couple of other things things here next hour.
Speaker 2 First of all, I don't know if you saw that the New York Times is now admitting that ADHD is a scam.
Speaker 2 You see this?
Speaker 3 I mean, they're not quite saying that.
Speaker 2 Pretty close.
Speaker 2 They're saying that there's no real evidence of, you know, some of the... You know, you disagree with that?
Speaker 3 I don't think that's what they're saying. I mean, they are saying that some of the treatments don't seem to be as effective long-term.
Speaker 2 You think speed?
Speaker 2 It's not necessarily a good effective treatment.
Speaker 3
They're saying, you know, like autism, there's no test for it, right? Like it's just a series of symptoms. Right.
But that's not saying it doesn't exist.
Speaker 3
They're not saying it's a scam. That's not what they're saying.
That's not what, at least not the thing I, maybe you read something different.
Speaker 2 I don't know. We'll get into that next hour.
Speaker 2
This is Glenn Beck. So it always starts the same way.
There's a a strange sound outside, then suddenly darkness. The hum of the refrigerator cuts out.
Your phone signal vanishes and then silence.
Speaker 2 No power, no internet, no updates, and of course, no idea what happened. And for the first time, it hits you.
Speaker 2
You're not connected anymore. You're kind of on your own.
That's when reality shifts. The question isn't, you know, where's the Wi-Fi? It's where's the food? Where's the heat? Where's the light?
Speaker 2 What do you do? Well,
Speaker 2 if you've listened to this program and you've gone to MyPatriot Supply, you have the Grid Doctor 3300 from MyPatriot Supply.
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Speaker 2 Down the road where shadows hide, fill the dark on every side.
Speaker 2 Stand your ground when times get tight. Gotta face the dark and embrace the fire.
Speaker 2 The fusion of entertainment and enlightenment.
Speaker 2 This is
Speaker 2 the glenbeck program
Speaker 2 so according to the daily wire experts are finally admitting that adhd is a scam
Speaker 2 stu says not so fast i say what are you slow keep up keep up you don't you don't have any speed in yours come on come on come on come on come on keep up let's go let's go let's go let's go we'll talk about this here in just a second first let me tell you about lear capital if uh
Speaker 2 you know have you ever thought about what you're building not just for yourself, but for the people that you love?
Speaker 2 We spend years and decades working, saving, planning, building something that we hope lasts longer than ourselves, something we can pass on, a legacy.
Speaker 2 But the part people don't like to talk about is castles built on sand don't stand the test of time.
Speaker 2 And we've never been in a situation in this generation or the last few generations where we understand that the castle we are building everything on is
Speaker 2 on sand.
Speaker 2 It's, you know, the market fluctuations, everything,
Speaker 2 everything is built on confidence and certainty, except for the dollar.
Speaker 2 I want you to consider calling Lear Capital today.
Speaker 2 Did you see that gold is now up to 3,31? All-time high.
Speaker 2 All-time high. $300 more than it was, what, at the beginning of the year? I mean,
Speaker 2 we should have a talk here today if we have time about what I said 15 years ago about when gold is at $3,000 an ounce, you don't want to know what the world is up against.
Speaker 2
We're now past that on our way to $4,000 and $5,000 an ounce. Not good.
Please protect yourself. 800-957 gold.
That is a huge warning. When gold is up that much, that fast,
Speaker 2
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Speaker 2 All right.
Speaker 2 So even though Stu
Speaker 2
doesn't want you to hear this news, I don't. I don't want you to hear this news.
He does, because he hates children.
Speaker 3 I do. I have two of them.
Speaker 2
Well, yeah. Well, Mangalite liked them in pairs too.
So
Speaker 3 that one's really dark, really fast.
Speaker 2 I do have a tendency of
Speaker 2 launching nuclear weapons at the five minutes.
Speaker 2 Yeah, we should probably build up to that one. Anyway,
Speaker 2 there's a new article out now
Speaker 2 that
Speaker 2 talks about ADHD, and it's coming from the left and the experts that they're now starting to say, I don't know, maybe, maybe, maybe
Speaker 2 not everything we thought was true about ADHD.
Speaker 2 And I think this story is written by Matt Walsh, who's great. Whoever wrote this for the Daily Wire was great.
Speaker 2 More than 21% of 14-year-old boys in this country now supposedly suffer from ADHD. The number goes up to 23% for 17-year-old boys.
Speaker 2 As a result, prescriptions for drugs like Ritalin and Adderall have skyrocketed. Just want you to know that's speed.
Speaker 2 From 2012 to 2022, the total number of prescriptions for stimulants to treat ADHD increased dramatically by nearly 60%.
Speaker 2 From 2012, in a 10-year period, we've gone up with 60%
Speaker 2 prescription.
Speaker 2 Between the ages of 10 to 14, the demographic saw the highest increase in these prescriptions. So
Speaker 2 he writes, and I think this is such a great observation.
Speaker 2 For decades, you've been instructed to believe there's no significance to this correlation whatsoever. And here it is.
Speaker 2 As women increasingly enter the workforce and replace men in teaching jobs, we're not supposed to draw draw any conclusions about how the behavior of male children is now being addressed.
Speaker 2 The truth is, we've been told, not that a feminized education system has increasingly punished normal male behavior it doesn't understand.
Speaker 2 It's not that schools have lost their capacity to educate male students.
Speaker 2 It's not that smartphone use and electronics in general have become distractions teachers have been unable to control. Instead,
Speaker 2 we're led to believe that boys have suddenly become afflicted with a severe psychological disorder.
Speaker 2 Okay.
Speaker 2 I, you know, this is the first time I had ever heard this about, you know, how we feminized things. And we have.
Speaker 2
We've diminished boys. But I grew up at a school, I don't think I had a male teacher until I was in high school.
And I had all female teachers.
Speaker 2 There weren't a lot of nuns that were, oh my gosh, I remember that really,
Speaker 2 I remember that really male-like, maybe she was a man, but identified as a man. I'm not sure.
Speaker 3 And you, of course,
Speaker 3 to put it gently, are not exactly a recent student.
Speaker 3 No.
Speaker 2 It's better than where I thought he was going, Sarah. I thought he was going, you're not really a man.
Speaker 2
No, but I got it. No.
You're right, though. There are.
Speaker 3 There surely are more female teachers, I would think, just because of the workforce changes. Sure.
Speaker 2 But that was a pretty.
Speaker 3 I mean, all my teachers that I can always remember were female too.
Speaker 2
The one thing that has changed, though, is we just dismiss boys entirely. I mean, it's all focused on girls right now.
All of it.
Speaker 2
It's science, everything is just push the girls, push the girls, push the girls. You can be anything.
Shut up. Sit down.
Have some riddling to the boys.
Speaker 2 And that's a problem. And I have to tell you, as a parent, you probably have recognized this.
Speaker 2 Does Lisa
Speaker 2 understand your daughter better than you do? And you understand your son?
Speaker 3
I get the point you're going at. I don't know that it necessarily applies.
In some ways, she very well understands my daughter. Because I walk in,
Speaker 2 I'm just clueless. I have no idea.
Speaker 2 I walk in as
Speaker 2 a dad and I'm like, hey, put some pants on, would you? And my daughter's like,
Speaker 2 and I'm like, what the hell did I just say? And my wife just looks at me like, you don't say that to her. And I'm like, okay.
Speaker 2 But she'll say that to my son and my son doesn't go
Speaker 2 right they're different but i know they are they are and i can
Speaker 2 relate for instance my wife she'll say something and i know how she means it because i'm an adult but i can hear what wraith hears right because i heard it from my mom and i realize now that's not what my mom meant but you hear
Speaker 2
Pick up your room. You're always a mess.
You're always this. And that's not what she said.
You know what I mean? Sure. No, it's true.
It is.
Speaker 3 As they get into the teenagers in particular, it's really difficult.
Speaker 2 That's what I really mean. That's what I mean is the teenage years.
Speaker 2
I have no idea. Like, I had no idea how mean girls are.
Oh, my gosh.
Speaker 2
They are vicious. I would much rather be put into a room of rabid boys than normal girls.
They are dangerous.
Speaker 3 Guys can be jerks, but
Speaker 3 they're on the surface.
Speaker 2 They're stupid jerks.
Speaker 3 Yeah, it's just kind of nonsensical.
Speaker 2
So girls dig. They dig for the wounds.
Gosh, they just
Speaker 2
cut you open and then they'll eat your heart while you're still watching them. I mean, it's horrible.
Anyway, so
Speaker 2 the article goes on to say about how
Speaker 2 some of these studies, and they point one out, the University of Central Florida. conducted a grand experiment where they put a child in front of a computer and it shows the video in this.
Speaker 2
The research, and by the way, you can get this article at glenbeck.com. You just sign up for my free email newsletter.
You get all the stories we talk about every day.
Speaker 2 Researchers showed a child two separate videos. One video was about mathematics, and it involves a teacher talking about basic addition, subtraction, and
Speaker 2
multiplication. The other video was the pod racing scene from Star Wars.
Now, you'll never guess what they discovered. Oh, what did they discover?
Speaker 2 They discovered that when the math math lecture was going on, the kid started spinning in his chair and he was fidgeting and not paying attention. But when the child was watching ADD,
Speaker 2 yes,
Speaker 2 something deeply psychologically wrong with that kid, right?
Speaker 3 You're telling me when they showed the one good scene from the first prequel, they were interested in?
Speaker 2
Yeah. Wow, that's shocking.
I was fidgeting. The rest of the movie was like math.
Speaker 3 Yeah, I would say, I would, like, give me the one that is the pod racing scene versus the trade dispute scene from the Star. Why go to anything else? Just do the Star Wars thing.
Speaker 2 Right. So
Speaker 2 it doesn't prove anything.
Speaker 3 It proves that there wasn't a lot of good scenes in the first Star Wars. Wait a minute.
Speaker 2 I just did a study with my kids. They like sugary cereal over bran flakes.
Speaker 3 Oh my gosh, ADA.
Speaker 2 I know
Speaker 2 I've got these on the bran flakes. No, I got to get them on LSD or something.
Speaker 2 We are looking for these
Speaker 3 diagnosis,
Speaker 3 to diagnose kids in this way, I think, often. That doesn't mean that there aren't some that have these types of issues.
Speaker 3 When you refer to that article,
Speaker 3 you said Matt Walsh wrote this, Matt?
Speaker 2 I don't know. It's from Daily Wire.
Speaker 3
I thought it was Matt Walsh. Daily Wire is great.
We love the Daily Wire guys. Obviously, that's, you know, you're coming.
Speaker 3 The one I had read was some scientific, I thought we were referring to a different story where they did not say it was a scam. Obviously, it's an opinion to say it's a scam.
Speaker 3 Although,
Speaker 2 yeah, it's a pretty strong opinion.
Speaker 3
They might be the right one. I don't know.
But I mean, I was referring to a different article, which is why I was confused at the framing of it. But, like, these are,
Speaker 3 I think there are kids that are affected with really difficult, they have real trouble in school
Speaker 3 focusing on things
Speaker 2
that was that are maybe a little bit more than they can handle on. It's not a psychological disorder, right? It's not.
Yeah, it might not be. All kids are wired differently.
Yeah. Boys and girls
Speaker 2 are wired differently in the first place. Then it's just, you know, that's one of the things that AI can produce that will be good
Speaker 2 with you as a parent overseeing it every step of the way is
Speaker 2 it will it will adapt to the way you learn because everybody learns differently.
Speaker 2 You know, there are kids that just, they're into math and I don't get it and they can talk about math all day long and they've lost me.
Speaker 2 But a kid that likes to learn through stories, I'm there all day for him. I'm there all day.
Speaker 2 And I was the same way. I'm a visual learner.
Speaker 2 I'm a story. You know, I learn from stories.
Speaker 2
And if I have a really boring teacher, some of the kids are really going to love that teacher because he's just all about facts and just gets it all out and can explain it. Fact.
That doesn't help me.
Speaker 2
It doesn't help me. That doesn't mean I have a psychological.
Well, let me make it clear. That by itself does not indicate that I have a deep psychological problem.
Okay.
Speaker 2 Other things might, but not that.
Speaker 2
That's just everybody is different, especially the difference between boys and girls. And here's what they said.
The conclusion was that ADHD
Speaker 2 is triggered by cognitively demanding tasks.
Speaker 2
No, no, it's not. No, it's not.
I was painting yesterday, and I can't tell you how many times I just kind of like was holding the brush and I walked around the house and I'm like, oh, wait a minute.
Speaker 2
I was painting. I mean, I just get, I just, you know, lose train of thought and I start thinking about something else.
And I'm like, wait, I, oh, wait. I got to go back into the art room and paint.
Speaker 2 You know, I don't know if anybody else is like that, but you know, it's honestly, it's kind of like going to the fridge all the time.
Speaker 2 You know, there's no reason to go to the fridge and just stare at the fridge that you just, you just opened up and stared at. You know, that's not a deep psychological problem.
Speaker 2 That's just the way you're wired.
Speaker 3 Okay. Fat.
Speaker 2
Yes. Yes.
Okay. Yes.
The fat is directly wired right to my brain.
Speaker 2 Right to the brain. So, you know, I personally think a lot of things
Speaker 2 are solved, and not for everybody, not universally, but are solved by
Speaker 2 understanding that we're all different and then, you know, just
Speaker 2 not being such a
Speaker 2 Mamby-Pamby-wishy-washy society that's trying to understand everything. Do you ever see the South South Park episode on ADHD?
Speaker 2 Listen to this.
Speaker 2 Hello, I'm Dr.
Speaker 6 Richard Shea, here to tell you about my exciting new drug-free treatment for children with attention deficit disorder.
Speaker 6 This treatment is fast and effective, but doesn't use harmful drugs. Watch closely as I apply treatment for the first time.
Speaker 2 Did you call my horse a lot?
Speaker 2 Sit down and study.
Speaker 2
Let's go, let's go, buddy. Let's go raid the rays.
Let's go.
Speaker 6 Sit down and study.
Speaker 6 If you would like more information on my bold news table, please send away for this free brochure entitled.
Speaker 2 So part of it is, part of it is, and this is obviously way over
Speaker 2 here.
Speaker 2 No, what I'm saying is, and this is, you know, this is a very broad brush.
Speaker 2 One of the things that we have a problem with now is just saying, knock it off. Study.
Speaker 2
Knock it off. Focus.
and I know not everybody can but if you couple that
Speaker 2 with actually knowing that kids are different and trying to find the best way for your kids to learn because it's not that's the problem honestly with big class sizes and a lot of public schools public schools are made for everybody to be the same okay
Speaker 2
Everybody has to be the same. Well, they're not the same.
Some kids, some kids learn really well in that atmosphere. Some kids don't.
Speaker 2 It's not one size fits all.
Speaker 2 And they're not teaching you, you know, it's a lot more exciting when you are learning things. I mean, honestly, how many times have you heard your kids say, well, your kids aren't teenagers yet.
Speaker 2
So you'll start to hear this. One is, yeah.
Yeah.
Speaker 3
Really? How old? Zach's 13. 13.
About to turn 14.
Speaker 2
Wow. Yeah.
Crazy.
Speaker 2
He's about to be married and have kids. Or at least just have kids.
Anyway.
Speaker 3 No, please know. So,
Speaker 2 you know, you'll hear from your kids,
Speaker 2 why do I have to know this? Why am I memorizing this? I'll never use it.
Speaker 2 I'll never use it. And, you know, as a parent, you want to say, you're right.
Speaker 2 There's no reason why you need to know, memorize that name and that year.
Speaker 3
I tell my kids all the time, AI is coming. You're not going to have to know anything.
All you have to do is just type it in, and it'll do all the work.
Speaker 2
It might not be a good. Don't worry about it.
It might not be a good thing.
Speaker 3 Never learn another thing, son.
Speaker 2
See, I don't tell them it's coming. I tell them it's already here.
Why are you working on that? Why are you questioning?
Speaker 2 Just take a picture of it, give it to Grock, and it will finish it.
Speaker 2 But there's, we have to start,
Speaker 2
we have to start going back to a lot of the common sense, you know, that we used to have. And there's a lot of things that were really bad.
I mean, you know,
Speaker 2 I was afraid of our principal.
Speaker 2 She was, it was sister Una.
Speaker 2
Okay. It just says enough right there.
Sister Sister Una. And she had a paddle that she hung up in her office that she made herself.
Speaker 2
And it was a wood paddle and she had drilled holes in it to pick up speed so there wasn't real resistance. Oh, yeah.
Oh, my. And she, you know, she was proud of it.
She was proud of it.
Speaker 2 But you know what I was more afraid of?
Speaker 2
I mean, I would have taken the paddling. Give it to me twice as hard, sister.
Just let's keep this between us.
Speaker 2 Just don't call my parents. Okay.
Speaker 2
We don't have that anymore. We don't have that anymore.
And there are some things that come from discipline, some things that come from kids being different, and some,
Speaker 2 you know, because they do have an issue. You know, you can't, you can't talk a kid out of, you know,
Speaker 2 dyslexia. You can't understand your way out of dyslexia.
Speaker 2 You can't, you know, you can't do anything except understand understand that that makes your child different and there are ways for them to learn.
Speaker 2 But the worst thing you can do is to medicate your child so they don't adapt.
Speaker 2 They have to. You either are wildly successful or you're going to live under a bridge if you have AD ADD.
Speaker 2 You decide, you either adapt to it and use it as a strength.
Speaker 2 Or you just, you don't adapt to it and you just are crushed by the rest of your life. Back in just a second Z Factor ever try to go to sleep and your brain is like great great.
Speaker 2 Let's relive every bad decision You've made since the third grade. Let the games begin It's midnight.
Speaker 2 You're staring at the city ceiling suddenly remembering the time you waved back at somebody who wasn't waving at you That was 11 years ago by the way Meanwhile your body is doing you know its part your legs are cramping your back is staging a protest somehow your left foot is too cold your right foot is inside of a volcano you flipped your pillow several times and you're still wide awake planning an imaginary argument with your spouse, you know, the one you're going to lose again.
Speaker 2
All right, slow things down. A lot of that stuff's not going to happen.
You know, actually get some sleep. And for that, may I recommend something that is all natural, Z Factor from Relief Factor.
Speaker 2 I love kids who are like, parents are like, my kid can't sleep. Is he on ADD medication? That's speed.
Speaker 2
Anyway, for the first time, if you're a first-time Z Factor buyer, you're going to get 46% in savings. It's $19.95 for a 30-day supply right now at ReliefFactor.com.
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Speaker 2
That's 800, the number 4 relief. ReliefFactor.com.
10 seconds, station ID.
Speaker 2 You know, I didn't get a chance to talk about Andrew Cuomo yesterday,
Speaker 2 but
Speaker 2 Andrew Cuomo is...
Speaker 3 Awful.com.
Speaker 2
Hey, it's me, Andrew Cuomo. I'm thinking maybe you forgot about all the people I killed.
You know what I mean? I'm just saying. Remember, grandma? Let's not think about her too much.
Speaker 2
I had nothing to do with her death, even though I had everything to do with her death. Hey, I'm back.
Vote for me. It is crazy.
Speaker 3 He's 100% going to win that race.
Speaker 2 No.
Speaker 2 Yes. Yes, I know.
Speaker 3 I think so, too.
Speaker 2
We predicted it before he left. Yep.
We said he would leave. He would whitewash the whole thing.
The Democrats would allow him to do it. He'll never be held responsible.
Speaker 2
Everybody will say it was no big deal. And he'll come back and he'll run for office again and he'll win.
He probably will.
Speaker 3
I'm convinced of it at this point. And I don't know.
They've forgotten about all the people that he led to their deaths, allegedly, truthfully, in my opinion. And then also
Speaker 3 all the women he groped, too.
Speaker 3 That's forgotten as well.
Speaker 2 All can be forgotten. When you look at the bright side, at least he wasn't groping dead women.
Speaker 3 That's true. I don't think he groped any of the dead women.
Speaker 2 That's true. You know what?
Speaker 3 Good way to look at the positive. Thank you.
Speaker 2 That should be on his freaking campaign slogan. That is his bumper sticker.
Speaker 3 Vote Cuomo, I didn't grope any of the dead people.
Speaker 2 Yeah.
Speaker 2 Well,
Speaker 2
you broadened it even more. You made it better.
I was just.
Speaker 2 I was just saying women.
Speaker 2 Who knows? People is probably better and more really today
Speaker 2 than old-timey past.
Speaker 2 This is Glenn Beck.
Speaker 2 You ever pull something in your back just by
Speaker 2 existing? You know, you drop a pin, you go to pick it up, suddenly your spine feels
Speaker 2 like it's got to file a formal complaint with HR.
Speaker 2
Welcome to adulthood. When pain shows up uninvited, it never seems to leave, at least with me.
It's your worst roommate.
Speaker 2 It eats your energy, hogs your sleep, makes sure that you grunt like a 90-year-old every time you stand up. Isn't that the worst? They stand up now and I'm like,
Speaker 2
okay. They're like, are you okay? Yeah, I'm good.
I'm good. Oh.
Speaker 2
You have really bad back problems. You know, there's one thing.
Well, there's two things.
Speaker 2
There's three, actually. You could hit me in the head with a hammer.
That'll put me out for a little while. I could take massive drugs and I'll just be like, hey, man, I don't care about anything.
Speaker 2
Yeah, I hurt, but I don't really care. You know, and the other thing that will really knock the pain down for me is Relief Factor.
Relief Factor is all natural.
Speaker 2
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Speaker 2
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Speaker 3
And it's Blazetv.com slash Glenn to subscribe to Blaze TV. Just use the promo code Glenn.
You'll You'll save 30 bucks.
Speaker 2 Welcome to the Glenn Beck program. We're glad that you're here.
Speaker 2 Wednesday, the Wednesday night special is happening tonight at 9. You don't want to miss it.
Speaker 2 We're going to talk about the real problem that Donald Trump is trying to solve, and that is the trade issue.
Speaker 2
But I think you need some historic context to understand it. So we're going to show you the dismantling of America tonight at 9.
You don't want to miss it.
Speaker 3 Let me ask you this, Glenn. Are we seeing a change in
Speaker 3 SNL?
Speaker 2 Saturday Night Live? Yeah.
Speaker 3 Is there a cultural change in Saturday Night Live, or am I just seeing a couple of sketches that are
Speaker 2 showing something? I think they are.
Speaker 2 They sense
Speaker 2 the winds blowing in another direction, and they,
Speaker 2
you know, unlike the rest of the left, they may be understanding it, or maybe not. You're talking about the sketch they did.
Do we have that sketch from Saturday with a gay couple?
Speaker 3 Yeah, because that's the most recent thing. I mean, Shane Gillis is maybe the best example of this.
Speaker 3 They hire the guy, they find out he made some jokes about people years and years previously, then they fire him, and a year later or two years later, he's back hosting, not as a a cast member, not as a B writer, which he probably would have been.
Speaker 3
Instead, he's hosting it because he embraced who he was. Correct.
So, here,
Speaker 3 this sketch reminds me of it.
Speaker 2 This sketch would not have been done two years ago.
Speaker 3 And it reminds me of one that would have been done 25 years ago.
Speaker 2
Yes, easy. Listen to the sketch in case you missed it.
Oh, my gosh. Whose baby is that?
Speaker 2 Sitting with a baby.
Speaker 2 Wait, but how? Okay, I'm sorry, but gay people can't have a baby.
Speaker 2 Yeah, but like, where did it come from? Excuse me? Excuse me? Wow, you are not allowed to talk like that. That is so invasive.
Speaker 2 Okay, but like, we were with you last night, and you did not have a baby.
Speaker 2 Yeah, and you guys said that after dinner you were going to go to a rave called Bulge Dungeon, and now today you have a baby. What we're asking is, how did this happen? Okay, I'm sorry.
Speaker 2 Why is it when it's us, an interrogation? I think we're just wondering who the mother is. Hey, well, between the two of us, I'm more emotional and I like shopping, so me, I think.
Speaker 2 Yeah, but I mean, I have long hair and he is an alcoholic, so I guess it's like two moms, I guess.
Speaker 2 Guys, how did you get this baby? I guess what's confusing us is you never mentioned that you were having a baby, so this feels pretty sudden. Uh, yeah, because it wasn't planned.
Speaker 2 Sometimes it's an accident. How does a gay couple have a baby by accident?
Speaker 2 Where is your baby from? Us!
Speaker 2 But how did you get it?
Speaker 2 You mean she, they, until he tells us otherwise.
Speaker 3
It's amazing. It's funny.
It's amazing.
Speaker 2 It's very funny.
Speaker 3 It's actually a funny sketch.
Speaker 2 So there's, is this a sketch that is opening up
Speaker 2 comedy to do things? Is this a sketch about a gay couple
Speaker 2 being able to the
Speaker 2 how do I say this?
Speaker 2 Is this a sketch that shows us that things are changing and political correctness is going away?
Speaker 2 Or is this a way to mainstream
Speaker 2 gay couples having a baby and adopting a baby? That's the argument that I've read. Really?
Speaker 2 And I think it's more of the first, but there are people that are saying, no, no, no, no. Don't be fooled.
Speaker 2 No, John Roberts has a plan.
Speaker 3
No one lets you have any fun anymore. God, can you just laugh at a sketch? Again, that doesn't.
It's very funny.
Speaker 3 So I don't think, honestly, it makes much of a point either way to encourage or discourage gay parenting or anything like that.
Speaker 3 What it is, is it's pointing out a very obvious thing, which is there is tension
Speaker 3
around saying something blatantly obvious. And there shouldn't be.
Yes. And by the way, one of the guys in the sketch is gay.
Speaker 3 In reality,
Speaker 2
he wasn't wearing a... John Hamp.
No. The other guy is gay.
Speaker 3 Oh my gosh. And he's talking about...
Speaker 2 I didn't see the marking on his clothes. I know.
Speaker 3 Shocking.
Speaker 3 I don't know why they allowed John Hamm to culturally appropriate the gay role.
Speaker 2 Why he couldn't.
Speaker 3 I'm just pointing that out.
Speaker 2 Maybe he slept with somebody.
Speaker 3 Maybe he did to justify the appearance.
Speaker 3 But all that is, is we...
Speaker 3 This is an uncomfortable thing to say, and it is
Speaker 3 a thing that society has made uncomfortable, and they're saying it out loud. That is the basics of comedy.
Speaker 2 And they're saying you can't say that. Right.
Speaker 3 They're noticing how bizarre it is that you can't question it. Correct.
Speaker 3 When every single person on earth is aware that asking, hey, where did the baby come from to two men is a reasonable question because, of course, two men can't produce a baby by themselves.
Speaker 2
Especially if you didn't have one or talked about it the night before. Yes.
Yeah. That would be, you know, that's where the comedy is.
Speaker 3 Two gay men cannot have a baby by mistake.
Speaker 2 That's a really good point. You think that's signaling a change i think i you know uh
Speaker 2 i think a lot of companies put all of their chips on the table betting it's going this way i think donald trump i think you'll see if donald trump is successful and you keep the republican congress and the senate and a republican is uh voted in as president in the next election, I think you're going to see massive change.
Speaker 2 Right now, I don't think you look at any of the changes like this and think it's anything but hedging your bet. Yeah.
Speaker 2
Just, it's not, I don't think anybody is, is woken up and went, oh my gosh, we were so wrong. We were canceling speech and that's not what comedy is.
I don't think anybody was waking up to that.
Speaker 2 I think
Speaker 2 at best, maybe some did, but at best, it's the group saying, this is not going to work. And
Speaker 2 we don't want to be on the wrong side of which way this falls out.
Speaker 2 Let's just go make fun of things that we made fun of. No harm, no foul.
Speaker 2 And without articulating this, if it turns around, we're right back where we were.
Speaker 3
Yeah. And I don't think that you're going to start seeing all these conservative things going on on Saturday Night Live.
The point is that can you find comedy wherever it is?
Speaker 3 We went through a period, I think, through the Barack Obama era and into the woke, you know, Biden era where you basically weren't allowed to find comedy in things that were funny.
Speaker 2 Oh, no.
Speaker 3 And that's always been the way that comedy has worked.
Speaker 2 It went for claptor
Speaker 2 for
Speaker 2
years. And it still isn't like on a lot of shows.
Oh, I know. It's for over a decade.
Speaker 3 Over a decade. Jimmy Kimmel
Speaker 3 is doing that still. Seth Meyers, you know, was
Speaker 2 they'll be dustbin of history.
Speaker 2 Those guys will be.
Speaker 3 I don't think that's going away per se.
Speaker 2
No, but it's not going to be as mainstream as it was or tolerated like it was. It looked boring.
You know,
Speaker 2
you see what's happening to Snow White. Disney is still doubling down.
So Disney is still going, we're going that way. Okay, well, go ahead.
Here's what I find fascinating about this is that
Speaker 2 the left, those like Disney who are continually doubling down,
Speaker 2 Disney is.
Speaker 2 I mean, Disney has always been the number one storytelling company, right? Sure. And what is it that the right does
Speaker 2
horribly for forever in my lifetime? Tell stories. We're not good storytelling people.
We, you know, just conservatives, they capture the heart. We try to capture the mind.
Speaker 2
And you got to go to the mind through the heart. And so that's how they can move so many mountains that we just can't seem to move because they're good at storytelling.
What are they doing now?
Speaker 2 Look at the Christian movies and how good they are.
Speaker 2
Okay. They're fantastic now.
Not all of them, but some of them are really, because they're just telling a story. Have you seen House of David? You've been watching that at all? No.
It's unbelievable.
Speaker 2
It's unbelievable. And I don't feel preached at.
I don't feel, I don't feel anything except that's a great story. Okay.
Speaker 2
And you don't have to believe the Bible to look at it and say, it's a great story. It's not screaming at you.
And this is true.
Speaker 2 And you'll burn in hell if you don't buy every single word of it you know it doesn't do that that's what christian movies used to do it's so fascinating to me that right now
Speaker 2 we're learning the lesson that no matter how hard people screamed at christian movie making people they never seemed to get it i want to bring my friend to go see this i want my friend to experience a moment where they're just filled with the love of God.
Speaker 2 But
Speaker 2 if you, if you beat them over the head with it, they're never going to.
Speaker 2 How many times did you ever take a friend to a movie because you really wanted to see them and you were trying to, you know, help them find a path or whatever.
Speaker 2
And everybody said, oh, you got to bring your friend to this. And so you did.
And then you're sitting like five minutes in and you're like, oh, dear God.
Speaker 2
And you just want to look at your friend and go, I'm sorry. I'm sorry.
I'm sorry. Because this is so
Speaker 2 transparent that it is just trying to make these guys look bad. And that's, you might be, you might actually hold that point of view, but you're not like that.
Speaker 2
You're not like that. And all the people that believe differently, don't believe in God, are not all of a sudden in work for Satan.
You know what I mean?
Speaker 2
And we just beat people over the head. And now, suddenly, we've gotten it and we've learned how to tell great stories.
And so now,
Speaker 2 what's growing like crazy?
Speaker 2 God stuff,
Speaker 2
Religious programming. And it's just because it's good.
It's a good story. And they've left the preaching for Sunday.
Speaker 2 And what's happened? Look at Snow White.
Speaker 2
It's all about a message. You don't even think about Snow White anymore.
You think about
Speaker 2 what everything means in that movie. Don't you understand what that means?
Speaker 2
Well, I know you'll probably miss it. That's why Snow White tells you exactly what that means off screen and on screen.
And they just beat you over the head with it. And they're failing.
Speaker 2
I find it fascinating that we've switched places. Because for them, it should be easy to see.
Somebody should be sitting in a boardroom at Disney going, hey, hey, hey, hey, wait, wait.
Speaker 2 Remember all those Christian movies that we used to make fun of? Because they were so bad because they were all just about messages. And
Speaker 2
they made decent people who just disagreed look like they were in league with Satan. Remember that? And we used to make fun of it.
Has anybody noticed here at the table, we've become those people?
Speaker 3 Do those conversations even happen? I wonder. I mean, you have to
Speaker 3
happen. I think there has to be people who agree with those types of questions.
Whether they have the bravery to say it in those meetings is another question.
Speaker 2 Because look, what was it? The message was more important than money.
Speaker 2
Okay. And that's the way Christians used to be.
They would be like, no, we have to get this message out. And you'd be like, but nobody's coming to come and watch this movie.
Speaker 2 Yes, but if we can only get one person to understand, wouldn't it be better to get millions of people to come in and hope maybe we could save a handful of them? Open their minds a little bit.
Speaker 2 Just open their minds a little bit. And the next movie open their mind a little bit.
Speaker 3
Right. Maybe 25 conversations down the road, something good happens.
Who knows?
Speaker 2 Just plant the seed.
Speaker 3
This is one of the, of course, the miracles of the market, by the way. It doesn't require you to be a good person.
It doesn't require you to have the best intentions.
Speaker 3 Oftentimes, it leads to really good conclusions anyway. And by the way, you know, speaking of that, we've been talking about the King of Kings, the movie from Angel's Studio, which is out right now.
Speaker 3 How'd that do? Number two at the box office, only behind Minecraft, which is one of the biggest movies of all time. I mean, it's going to wind up with, it's already $300 million at the box office.
Speaker 3
King of Kings already, they did $20 million in the first week. And of course, this is Easter weekend.
This is what I'm going to see it this weekend with the kids.
Speaker 2
I want to go and see it just to support. I mean, seen it.
I just want to go and support it.
Speaker 3 Yeah,
Speaker 3 for sure.
Speaker 3 And I think there is part of that, right? But like, they always try to demean some of these things. Well, these are message movies and people are,
Speaker 3
you know, they're buying tickets and then they're buying tickets for other people. And there are people that do that.
You can do that at angel.com slash stew.
Speaker 3 You can go there and you can actually check.
Speaker 3 I want to pay it forward for other tickets. That's great if you want to do that.
Speaker 3 But these are just movies that people like and are interested in and enjoy.
Speaker 2
Yeah, you don't get to be number two. Yeah.
You know, you might get to be number two, but next weekend, you'd be off the charts because the word of mouth would be so bad.
Speaker 2 And the word of mouth on King of Kings is great.
Speaker 3 Yeah, still number two, even yesterday. And it's increasing because, you know, I mean, obviously the tie to Easter helps, but it's a good movie that people really like.
Speaker 3 And that's much more important than, you know, some purity test
Speaker 3 where you're going to wind up wasting millions of dollars on a movie that nobody cares about.
Speaker 2 Look at what happened with
Speaker 2
the Mel Gibson movie. What was the one? It was in it.
Passion of the Christ? Yeah, Passion of the Christ. It was in the whole thing was in Aramaic.
Speaker 2 Like four people on the earth speak Aramaic, but it was such powerful storytelling that it just cleaned house at the box office. And it wasn't just one week or two weeks.
Speaker 2 It went on and on and on and on.
Speaker 2 It's interesting to watch and see how we're now finding ourselves in the driver's seat with storytelling, and they're still out in the parking lot kicking rocks going, what the hell just happened?
Speaker 2 Why did Snow White fail?
Speaker 2 I actually hope they don't catch on for a while. Let's get some space in between us before they catch on.
Speaker 2 Somewhere out there in America, as the sun is sinking towards the western horizon, a father is grilling burgers in his backyard where the flag flies above the fence line.
Speaker 2 Inside, mom sat in the table, kitchen filled with laughter and homework and stories from school. There's nothing fancy going on here.
Speaker 2 It's just something real, something pure, something as American as the meat that dad's about to put on everybody's plate.
Speaker 2
Those burgers, they came from good ranchers, which means they weren't imported overseas. They came from cattle raised right here in the U.S.
That's really important because we're losing ranches.
Speaker 2 We're losing farms.
Speaker 2 We lose one ranch, I think it's every three hours now. That's crazy.
Speaker 2 This family chose to support good ranchers and ranchers they'll never meet, farms farms they'll never visit, because they believe in the idea that we can and should care for our own and grow our own food.
Speaker 2 When you subscribe to Good Ranchers, you're joining them in that quest.
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Speaker 2 Dumping DC's garbage while the swamp cries constitutional crisis. Back is back after this.
Speaker 2 We should talk about this tomorrow.
Speaker 2 Autism Society of America, the CEO, says autism is not linked to vaccines.
Speaker 2
I don't know. I don't know.
You know what? Did you find it was weird that RFK came out and said,
Speaker 2 we're going to get to the bottom
Speaker 2 of
Speaker 2
autism. We're going to figure this one out.
We got a lot of work to do, and I'll have it for you in about 10 minutes. Right.
You're like, wait, wait.
Speaker 3 I mean, again, like, I know this is a big debate and everything, but RFK has a very specific opinion on the debate.
Speaker 3 It's not like he's just, you know, I'm going to look at this and let's see what happens. He knows what he believes.
Speaker 3 He's going into it with advice.
Speaker 2 Right or wrong, that's what I'm saying. When I first heard part of that sentence, I was like, oh, maybe at the end of four years or five years, we'll have some progress.
Speaker 2 Nope, we'll have an answer by September. Yeah.
Speaker 3 Because he's got the answer already.
Speaker 2
All right, we're going to talk to you tonight about the dismantling of America. You don't want to miss the Wednesday night special tonight at nine on Blaze TV.
Glenn Beck.