The Dirty Truth About 'Tax Cuts' that Congress Hides from You | 4/15/25
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Press play and read along
Transcript
Speaker 1 This episode is brought to you by Progressive Insurance. Fiscally responsible, financial geniuses, monetary magicians.
Speaker 1 These are things people say about drivers who switch their car insurance to Progressive and save hundreds. Visit progressive.com to see if you could save.
Speaker 1 Progressive Casualty Insurance Company and affiliates. Potential savings will vary, not available in all states or situations.
Speaker 2 I want to talk to you a little bit about Ammo Squared. Ammo is not something that you, you know,
Speaker 2 you just have. It is something you need to stay on top of.
Speaker 2
Life gets busy. Prices go up.
Stores run dry. Before you know it, your stockpile isn't a stockpile anymore.
It's just half an empty box in the closet.
Speaker 2 That's where Ammo Squared changes the game for you. You pick the calibers you want, and they've got over 70 to choose from.
Speaker 2 Then you set your budget, even if just a few bucks a month, and they automatically build up your ammo for for you there's no stress there's no running to the store when you're ready they will deliver it to you they ship it straight from their climate controlled facility right to your door whenever you're ready there's no minimums no extra fees this is just preparedness taking its natural conclusion 80 000 members are already using it and they're they're loving this system this is the best because you just automatically do it every month you don't have to think about it it's ammosquared.com check out all the hassle ammo
Speaker 2 80,000 members and thousands of five-star ratings are not wrong. AmmoSquared.com.
Speaker 2
Hello, America. You know, we've been fighting every single day.
We push back against the lies, the censorship, the nonsense of the mainstream media that they're trying to feed you.
Speaker 2
We work tirelessly to bring you the unfiltered truth because you deserve it. But to keep this fight going, we need you.
Right now, would you take a moment and rate and review the Glenn Beck podcast?
Speaker 2 Give us five stars and leave a comment because every single review helps us break through big tech's algorithm to reach more Americans who need to hear the truth. This isn't a podcast.
Speaker 2
This is a movement, and you're part of it, a big part of it. So, if you believe in what we're doing, you want more people to wake up, help us push this podcast to the top.
Rate, review, share.
Speaker 2
Together, we'll make a difference. And thanks for standing with us.
Now, let's get to work.
Speaker 2
Down the road where shadows hide, feel the dark on every side. 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
Well, hello, America. Welcome to the Glen Beck program.
It is Tuesday and we've got a lot to cover today.
Speaker 2
We're going to take you into Coachella, Bernie Sanders. I didn't get a chance to talk about that.
Women in space today,
Speaker 2 the great remake, and how it is
Speaker 2
a little like the Nixon shock. We'll get into that and so much more and what China is doing all in 60 seconds.
First, let me tell you about the Burnett launcher. It happened so quickly.
Speaker 2 One minute, everything was fine, and the next.
Speaker 2
You don't want to start a story like that. Every day, if you happen to be looking, you'll see the headlines in the news reminding you how quickly everything can change.
It's just like that.
Speaker 2 Things like violence don't announce themselves, you know, from the next hill over. They rarely give you any time to prepare, which is why it's important to be prepared ahead of time.
Speaker 2 That's why I have the Berna launcher, and it's why I have one for each family member. I believe in the Second Amendment, but sometimes a firearm is not the right answer.
Speaker 2 Maybe you're in California, you can't have a firearm. Maybe you're in New York, can't have one.
Speaker 2 Maybe, you know what, maybe you're a teacher in a school where you can't have a firearm. I don't know why these aren't in all of the schools all across America.
Speaker 2 Burna looks and feels like a gun, but it fires Connecticut and pepper rounds from a CO2 cartridge.
Speaker 2 It'll put a full-grown man dead in his tracks for at least 40 minutes, and that's enough time for police to come. Do not leave your family safety up to chance.
Speaker 2 Visit Burna, rna.com slash glenn 10 off your purchase burna.com slash glenn
Speaker 2 all right let me take you on a little ride through uh history here um through the uh smoky rooms of the 1970s actually 1971 into what we're experiencing today in the last few weeks with the markets It is a story of money and power and an idea to pull something off rare, something audacious, to remake the global trade and financial system.
Speaker 2 That's what we're doing today, but we've done this once before because this is not a new story. It's one that we've almost forgotten.
Speaker 2 And we can't forget this one because this is how things went wrong, how everything in America is broken. And maybe, just maybe what we're doing now might fix it.
Speaker 2
Let me start in August. It's August 15th, 1971.
Did you you know that France sent warships over to New York? We had French warships.
Speaker 2
I don't even know what those looked like. A little tugboat with like a pea shooter on it.
I'm not sure. But French warships were in the harbor of New York demanding their gold back.
Speaker 2 Because of what Nixon did when he stepped to the microphone, he said on April 15th,
Speaker 2
He announced what would be known later as the Nixon shock. No more gold backing of the dollar.
10% tariff on all imports and wage price control to tame inflation.
Speaker 2 Some call it a shock.
Speaker 2 I think that's an insane understatement.
Speaker 2 What he did was he broke the Bretton Woods system, that grand agreement that happened right after World War II, tying our dollars to gold and the stability, all nations' stability
Speaker 2
to gold and the U.S. dollar.
And that crumbled overnight. The dollar all of a sudden was free, free, and with it, it was free to change the world and everybody along with it.
Speaker 2 Nixon said he wanted to save jobs and fix a $2 billion trade deficit, but that's not true. What Nixon was doing was paying for war and the great society.
Speaker 2 Any of this sound familiar? You know, save American jobs, fix a trade deficit, make sure that we don't go into debt anymore. But what he did is unleash a storm that we're still weathering today.
Speaker 2 And I'm not saying that everything was perfect before 1971. Life never is, but I want you to look at the numbers and tell me:
Speaker 2 was this a good shift or a bad shift?
Speaker 2 In 1971, the top 1%
Speaker 2 held about 8% of the nation's income.
Speaker 2 By 2010, the top 1%
Speaker 2 held 20%
Speaker 2 of the nation's income, their wealth climbing from 16%
Speaker 2 to now 23%
Speaker 2 last year.
Speaker 2 The middle class, the heart of America, 61% of us in 1971, we had 61% of all of the income. By 2021,
Speaker 2
They're half the country scraping by with only 42%. And the wages, they tell another tale.
From 1979 to 2024, productivity, how much we make, jumped 81%.
Speaker 2 But the wages for the people who are making that
Speaker 2
barely budged. Now, this is the wages for the bottom 90% of our country, they didn't go up.
Well, I shouldn't say that. From 1979 to today, they went up 29%.
Speaker 2 The houses that cost three times your salary in 1971 now cost six times your salary today.
Speaker 2 The debt has doubled from 60 cents per dollar
Speaker 2 to
Speaker 2 $1.20
Speaker 2 by 2007. If you check the charts, everything,
Speaker 2 everything started to break when Nixon cut the gold cord.
Speaker 2 So what happened? Well,
Speaker 2
we birthed a new world. Without gold, money supply ballooned.
M1 money supply, so you know that's the money. That's the cash everybody has that's liquid.
Speaker 2 That's in your checking account, that's what's in your wallet, that's what's available to you at an ATM.
Speaker 2
It's whatever you buy pizza with, that's the M1 supply. Okay, that's not, I've got money in stock market or whatever.
Your available cash.
Speaker 2 The supply ballooned
Speaker 2 9%
Speaker 2 in 1972 alone. That means means printing more money.
Speaker 2
We have more money chasing few goods. That means inflation.
Inflation was up by 11%.
Speaker 2 Financial wizards cooked up futures and options and everything else where all the things that keep busting, like 2008, all of those things that are just these, you know.
Speaker 2
It's just alchemy. These financial wizards are like, I'm going to make gold.
And it's alchemy. And they keep busting, and we keep paying for it.
And they get richer. Meanwhile, factories closed.
Speaker 2 Manufacturing jobs fell from 26% in 1970 to 8%
Speaker 2
by 2020. Globalization sent jobs to Japan, then China.
The trade deficit swelled to $13 billion by 1980. Now, don't get me wrong.
Speaker 2 Nixon didn't mean to break us. What he was doing is he saw a world slipping, gold reserves shrinking against
Speaker 2 $14 billion in foreign dollars, and he acted like
Speaker 2
a farmer burning the crops to save his crops. The fire spread.
Stagflation came about, 9% unemployment. Prices started to soar.
The oil crisis didn't help, quadrupling gas costs. Confidence broke.
Speaker 2 The middle class started its long slide into where we are now. That's the history, raw and real, etched in the Congressional Budget Office numbers and Pew Research.
Speaker 2 Fast forward to April 2025. Now here's Donald Trump staring down a trade deficit
Speaker 2 of $971 billion,
Speaker 2
announcing tariffs 10% on everybody and 125% on China. The market does what a market does when it's spooked.
S ⁇ P 500 down 5.4% in a week. Volatility, kind of like 87 or 88.
Speaker 2
Treasury yields what we have to pay when we're borrowing money. We sell treasuries.
That's like going to the bank and asking for a loan, depending on your credit.
Speaker 2
What is your interest rate? If you have bad credit, the interest rate is higher. We are having bad credit.
It's up now to 4.49%.
Speaker 2 That's a 50-basis point leap.
Speaker 2 And people are starting to say, let's get out of this.
Speaker 2 China is hitting back. They are dumping
Speaker 2
our T bills, our treasury bills. Taiwan stocks wobbling.
Consumers, people like you and me bracing for higher prices. University of Michigan survey says inflation fears are spiking.
Speaker 2 It's Nixon. This is Nixon.
Speaker 2 But take a step back.
Speaker 2 Trump's not stirring the pot.
Speaker 2 What Nixon did was he took us off the gold standard so we could spend more money and to make us, this is what he promised the world, that he would make us consumers, not
Speaker 2
producers. So we would consume what everybody else was producing.
So in a way, that was his plan and he got it.
Speaker 2 But it cracked the system for the average person.
Speaker 2
Nixon's tariffs lasted four months. It didn't fix the core.
Trump is going bigger and bolder. He says he's going to bring jobs home.
Could it backfire? Yeah.
Speaker 2
Yeah. Tariffs might add another 1 to 2% to prices, maybe 3 to 5 on your Walmart card, because everything from Walmart's coming from China.
The Peterson Institute, by the way, has run the numbers.
Speaker 2 Higher yields could strain our $2 trillion deficit, make mortgage prices higher.
Speaker 2 The retaliation from China is real, and China China is not blinking and neither are we.
Speaker 2
Now, do we stumble into recession, stagflation like the 70s? I don't know. In the 70s, real wages fell 5% in a year.
Here's the flip side.
Speaker 2 If Trump pulls this off,
Speaker 2 if we start setting things right
Speaker 2 where We mean what we say and say what we mean, we get everything under control. We're not just spending and we have no real assets that we actually are sitting on.
Speaker 2 If wages rise 1 to 2%, like the IMF predicts, if supply chains come home, we could see something new, not a return to 1971, but a system where the middle class isn't crushed, where houses don't cost your soul, and where the top 1% don't control almost everything.
Speaker 2
Even Bernie Sanders would agree with this, but no, no, no, he's not because he's busy at Coachella. I'll get to that here in a second.
But here's the thing. History is a very tough teacher.
Speaker 2 Nixon's shock showed good intentions can spark long fires, inequality, debt, a
Speaker 2 hollowed-out heartland.
Speaker 2 This is a very big stakes game.
Speaker 2 But what has a higher cost is not trying to fix the system.
Speaker 2
That's a slow bleed, and we're almost out of blood. There's been 50 years to prove the point.
This doesn't work. The The system is broken, but it's not dead.
Speaker 2 Imagine a world where our children's jobs actually pay enough, where America is not just buying, but it's building. That's the gamble, and that is the next generation's new American dream.
Speaker 2
So we're at a crossroads like we were in 1971. Hopefully, we're wiser.
Trump's not Nixon. He's got a history map, scars and all.
Will he fix what is broke? I don't know.
Speaker 2 Things are getting a little dangerous
Speaker 2 and tough. This is where
Speaker 2
the big boys play. This is why Trump earns the big money, even though he doesn't actually take a paycheck for any of this.
But this, we're playing the highest stakes of a game.
Speaker 2
Here's the latest from China. And I don't know how many people are really focusing on this, but this is the ball game.
China now says that
Speaker 2 they're going to
Speaker 2 cut us off on rare earth minerals. We have plenty of rare earth minerals.
Speaker 2 There is a new space race. Do you remember when JFK said this?
Speaker 2
We choose to go to the moon and this decade and do the other things. Not because they are easy, but because they are hard.
Apparently even harder than saying decade, not decade.
Speaker 2 I don't, anyway, I digress.
Speaker 2
So this was really important because it was a space race. This would change the world.
Whoever got to space first, got to the moon first, would change the world.
Speaker 2
But there's a new race, and it is just as game-changing. This one is even more critical.
And that is the race for rare earth minerals, the tiny elements that power everything in our future.
Speaker 2
Right now, China has just pulled a giant gun and they're holding it to our head. They are threatening to cut off all exports of rare earth minerals.
And if we don't act with a
Speaker 2
JFK kind of moonshot, we will lose the AI race. We'll lose quantum computing race.
We will lose every technological leap that is just over the horizon.
Speaker 2 Rare earth minerals are not just elements and rocks in the ground. They are the backbone to our modern world.
Speaker 2 Everything from high-tech weaponry that will defend our skies to the smartphones that are in your pocket, to the
Speaker 2 wind turbine eyesores that the left love so much and mean nothing, and the quantum computers that will redefine what is possible.
Speaker 2 Here's the deal: in 2024, we produced 45,000 45,000 metric tons of rare earth oxide concentrate from the U.S., mostly in the mountain pass in California.
Speaker 2 Sounds great, but we only refined about 6,500 metric tons of usable material.
Speaker 2 66,000, 6, yeah, 6,600 metric tons is our demand every year.
Speaker 2 So we're close, and yet so far away because 70% of
Speaker 2 what we need still comes from China and Beijing knows this. And this month they've halted all exports saying it's in their national interest to stop.
Speaker 2
We knew this was coming. We've talked about this for a long time.
Do not be held hostage.
Speaker 2 They are weaponizing the rare earth minerals. So what's at stake and what do we do? We'll do that in 60 seconds.
Speaker 2 First, out on the wind-rustled prairies that still exist in this country, between the veins and the arteries of American cities, towns, and even just some wild spots in the road, there still exist the men and women who have always made sure that America's supper was waiting for them on the table.
Speaker 2 There are farmers and our ranchers, and every day through toil and sweat, they raise the cattle and the pigs and the chickens.
Speaker 2 and all of the food that we have so you don't have to so i don't have to so we can go to the grocery store and fill our baskets but every year there are fewer and fewer of them.
Speaker 2
Meat gets shipped in from overseas. Giant meat packing plants drive the small farms and the small ranches out of business.
But don't worry, Bill Gates is here.
Speaker 2
And Good Ranchers is here. They're working to change it.
They source 100% of their meat from American farms and ranches.
Speaker 2 Just real beef, real chicken, real pork, born and raised and harvested right here in the United States. So when you subscribe to Good Ranchers, you're putting your money behind American agriculture.
Speaker 2
I want you to go to goodranchers.com. Subscribe and get your choice of protein for a year.
Stand with American ranchers and farmers. We need these guys to survive.
It's goodranchers.com.
Speaker 2
It's goodranchers.com. American meat delivered.
10 seconds, station ID.
Speaker 2 Okay, so everything we need: batteries for for our cars,
Speaker 2 chips,
Speaker 2 everything that we need for quantum computing, for AI, et cetera, et cetera, it comes from rare earth minerals. China now produces 270,000 metric tons a year.
Speaker 2 That's 70% of what the globe consumes every year. We're second at 45,000 tons.
Speaker 2 But we're at the mercy of their refining. It's like we have lots of oil, but no refineries.
Speaker 2
I can't just pour raw barrels of oil into my car. I need somebody to refine it, and we don't make refineries.
Here is the danger of globalism.
Speaker 2
We gambled on a world where everybody plays fair, where supply chains are just a matter of efficiency. But globalism has left us exposed.
And we're handing all of the power over to China.
Speaker 2
And that power is the power to choke us to death. It was a reckless bet.
We all knew this was bad.
Speaker 2
We have everything we need. Mountain Pass in California, Bear Lodge in Wyoming, Round Top in Texas.
We have the talent. MP Materials, Rare Element Resources, already stepping up.
Speaker 2
MP Materials invested $2 billion to get 6,500 metric tons refined output. They're ramping up.
Rare Elements Resources says with $500 million, they could have a full-scale plant running in 18 months.
Speaker 2 We have all of the pieces we need. We just need the will.
Speaker 2 Experts estimate $10 to $15 billion to make sure that our full domestic supply chain, refining plants, alloy production, magnet factories, everything,
Speaker 2 everything is done here.
Speaker 2 And for the money that it would be a rounding error in the federal budget, we spend twice that on stupid crap every year. If we can fund carbon study, you know, carbon footprint studies on,
Speaker 2 I don't know, turtles and elves,
Speaker 2 I think we could probably fund this because the timeline is so important.
Speaker 2 If we use the mandate that we found in November, we could be self-sufficient in five years. In five years, the whole world will be different.
Speaker 2
Without a push from the federal government, We're looking at eight to ten years and that's way too late. We lose.
We lose.
Speaker 2 This is about the future right now.
Speaker 2 We need somebody and President Trump to stand up and define what is important to our future. What are the important things that we have to do and we have to do right now?
Speaker 2 Because jobs coming back is not enough. The right jobs have to be here.
Speaker 2
All right. This is Glenn Beck.
Every day there are men and women that put on a uniform knowing that they might not come home.
Speaker 2
Soldiers, police officers, first responders, they all know the risk, but they don't hesitate. They go kick down doors that we wouldn't kick down.
I wouldn't.
Speaker 2 When the unthinkable happens, when a hero falls in the line of duty, what happens to their family? When a hero is horribly injured, what's next?
Speaker 2 Well, that's where Tunnel to Towers comes in. They step in to provide these families with mortgage-free homes, including smart homes where they're needed.
Speaker 2
You know, somebody loses their legs, they're there. And this isn't charity.
This is gratitude. It's a promise that says, thank you for what you did your whole life.
Thank you for your sacrifice.
Speaker 2 Right now, they could use your help because the need is growing.
Speaker 2 Even with a small monthly donation, you can help make sure these families never have to worry about losing their home on top of losing the loved one. America's heroes have given so much.
Speaker 2
Together, we can say thank you in a lasting and meaningful way. If we want our government to do less, we have to do more.
Donate $11 a month to Tunnel to Towers at t2t.org. That's tthenumber2t.org.
Speaker 3
Issue two of Frontier magazine about to come out. You can get on board at blazunlimited.com/slash Glenn.
Blazeunlimited.com slash Glenn.
Speaker 2 Well
Speaker 2 my gosh, what a great moment for all of women kind
Speaker 2
yesterday. One giant leap for women.
Wouldn't you just say Stu? For women kind.
Speaker 3 Yeah.
Speaker 3 That was impressive.
Speaker 2 Jeff Bezos, who was just all jacked up.
Speaker 2 He's just all jacked up on
Speaker 2 some kind. I don't know what, but.
Speaker 2 I just want to have sex with that, babe.
Speaker 2 He's a little disturbing. Yeah, but if you see my rocket ship,
Speaker 2 it's made to look like one of my private parts.
Speaker 3 Really? It is, by the way. It does look phallic.
Speaker 2 You know how much thrust it has!
Speaker 2 So
Speaker 2 he
Speaker 2 disturbingly was at the launch of the giant phallic symbol yesterday. And I put women in there.
Speaker 2 And so he had women, just some great, great women.
Speaker 2 He put in his
Speaker 2 lover.
Speaker 2 She's a wart.
Speaker 2 So she was in there. and then uh
Speaker 2 and then you had katy perry and uh gail king
Speaker 3 and i can we can we focus on one little thing that bothered me from the coverage of this other than the fact that it was covered at all um yes but my girlfriend isn't usually covered
Speaker 2 i'm gonna have sex whatever
Speaker 3 It's an interesting Bezos impression you've got working here.
Speaker 2 I mean, doesn't he look like he's just about out of control with all of the steroids that are raging through him?
Speaker 3 Allegedly. Yes.
Speaker 2 All right, anyway.
Speaker 3 It does feel like there's something.
Speaker 3 I feel like it's one of those, like
Speaker 3 not quite in GNC, but near GNC supplements. Like there's a GNC, and then there's also a stand outside of it that's not related to GNC, but selling similar products that might not be legal.
Speaker 3 Like, I feel like that's where he shops.
Speaker 2 I don't know. I could be wrong.
Speaker 2 I'm not sure.
Speaker 3 We don't know allegedly um so uh
Speaker 2 i get my steroids the same place that my main squeeze gets all the replacement
Speaker 2 um
Speaker 3 they kept calling these women the crew
Speaker 2 i'm sorry what did katy perry do on this flight to be considered crew am i am i on the crew every day
Speaker 2 to get on
Speaker 2 let's not talk about that
Speaker 2 because that could be
Speaker 3 a whole nother story. But, like, when I'm on an American Airlines flight to Des Moines, am I on the crew?
Speaker 2
No, you're not the crew. I'm just sitting there.
No, you're not the crew. You're a passenger.
Speaker 3 I'm a passenger.
Speaker 2 You're a passenger. Right?
Speaker 3
Yeah. So I don't think necessarily the crew is the right way to say it's an all-female crew.
Is it?
Speaker 2 Do we have any of the audio of the
Speaker 4 crew? Those are like the guide parachutes.
Speaker 4 Just free-falling right there until those drugs came out.
Speaker 4 And then the next would be the main parachutes that get pulled out
Speaker 4 by that screaming inside the capsule.
Speaker 2 It's a very soft software. Oh my gosh, that is 640
Speaker 4 perceptor.
Speaker 2 There it is.
Speaker 3 Are they screaming out of terror, or is they screaming out of like you know, roller coaster-ish joy?
Speaker 2 Who cares? I'm gonna attack with that woman!
Speaker 2
I don't really. I don't know.
I don't know. But it's not a good look.
It's not a good look.
Speaker 2 Now,
Speaker 2 his girlfriend said,
Speaker 2 everything is so
Speaker 2 nasty and so vitriolic nowadays. I mean, if everybody could experience that peace that we had up there,
Speaker 2 the kindness and what it takes to do what we did, the very world would be a better place.
Speaker 2 Uh-huh. Uh-huh.
Speaker 2 Gail King said,
Speaker 2 I'm so proud of me right now for the courage.
Speaker 2
What? What? She said that. So proud of me? Yeah, we have that.
Go ahead.
Speaker 5 But the best part was when we got back in our seats after Zero G's, Katie sang, what a wonderful world.
Speaker 5 She did have an ice.
Speaker 5
She sang, what a wonderful world. I see dreams.
Oh, yes, yes, yes. Oh, God.
Because we'd been asking her to sing all the time, and she wouldn't. And she wouldn't.
Speaker 5 Because everybody said, sing, roar, sing, fire.
Speaker 5
And she said, it's not about me. I wanted to talk about the world.
Wow.
Speaker 2 And it wasn't that nice of you.
Speaker 3 I'd be praying for this thing to crash into a mountain on the way down. If I was on that thing,
Speaker 3 I would be hoping for it to burn up in the atmosphere.
Speaker 3 Oh, God, please don't sing again, Katie.
Speaker 2 We missed the part of her actually saying, I'm so proud of me right now because it took so much courage.
Speaker 3 I mean,
Speaker 2 it did it.
Speaker 2 Well, she was the crew.
Speaker 2 She was probably the captain. She stood.
Speaker 3 We know, no, she stood up.
Speaker 3
She sat back down and she heard singing. Yeah.
What else did she do?
Speaker 2 Not much.
Speaker 3
Not much. I didn't think so.
Again, now I would say it is brave if we trusted those people to be the crew. Well, then, yeah, it would be very brave to get on that thing.
It would be.
Speaker 2 I'd rather get on Perry as like my co-pilot. Right, exactly.
Speaker 3 I'd rather get on a submarine to the Titanic.
Speaker 2 in an experimental small little sub?
Speaker 3 Yeah, I think so. So, I don't, I mean, I guess there's some bravery if they actually were responsible for anything, but I think they were just passengers.
Speaker 2
Yeah, I think so, too. Okay, you have some more video here? Hey, you're up there.
Flynn, I got you.
Speaker 2 I got you, Flynn.
Speaker 2 Look.
Speaker 2 Look at the moon.
Speaker 2
Who's that woman? She's not even from the Bahamas. She's not even mentioned in the industry.
That's amazing. Or her.
Speaker 2 That's amazing.
Speaker 3 That's a butterfly.
Speaker 2 Oh, that's really, that's really cool. So
Speaker 2 you have that going. I'm sure it's a cool flight.
Speaker 3
I'm sure it was. I'm like, it's a cool ride.
It's like going, you know, I'm sure it's like an amazing roller coaster. Well, you don't know that necessarily we should have been hearing about it at all.
Speaker 2 I think Katy Perry said it best when she said, and I quote,
Speaker 2 I wanted to model courage oh my god and worthiness and fearlessness uh i feel really wait she wanted to model worthiness these are not like these aren't even sentences i wanted to model worthiness she was she worried of that kind of society's yes yes she was more than worth
Speaker 2 uh she said i feel
Speaker 2 well i'm sorry what does this mean can we just dive into this what does it mean to model worthiness by taking a flight as a celebrity into a spaceship somebody just let you get on she well how does that make you she had to work she was worthy to become a passenger on a ship yeah she had to work to become famous so she could get on that ship that nobody else can because she's super famous and because of her mediocre singing that she could get on a on a flight owned by the guy who delivers all of our pet food yes
Speaker 2 Now she went on to say, and this is where her worthiness comes in. She says, I feel really connected to that strong divine feminine right now.
Speaker 3 In the ship that looked like a giant penis that a guy built?
Speaker 2 Take out the grid.
Speaker 2 We're going to be so connected tonight.
Speaker 2 All right.
Speaker 2 Okay, Jeff.
Speaker 2 So
Speaker 2 that's great. I think they were all very worthy of that flight.
Speaker 2
I mean, I have no problem. He wants to give the flights away to people.
Yeah, totally. I mean, I'd love to.
I I would go, but I wouldn't come down going, I was so worthy. I was so worthy and so brave.
Speaker 2 So brave. I think I model
Speaker 2
worthiness and bravery. I wanted to model that.
That's why I was up, you know, when we were up in the Arizona.
Speaker 2 That was,
Speaker 2
that was good. That was good.
Is this?
Speaker 3 I honestly ask you this question.
Speaker 2 Yeah, okay.
Speaker 3 Is this in any way a newsworthy newsworthy event? Now, look, it's an achievement.
Speaker 2 Wait a minute, wait a minute, wait a minute. Shooting celebrities into space? Yeah,
Speaker 3 if the thrusters kept going,
Speaker 2
it's like, you know, we're just shooting them into space. I think that's very newsworthy.
We're halfway there. We just shouldn't return them.
Speaker 3
So this was a test flight eventually. We'll just start picking celebrities to launch into the sun.
I hope.
Speaker 2 I just, I don't,
Speaker 3 there's been tons of people who have done this. This was like sort of like
Speaker 3 quote-unquote space, right? Like it was like a really, I mean, I'm sure it was impressive. It would be really fun to go on, I'm sure, but it's like
Speaker 3 it's just a big high flight. Like, it's not, it wasn't like
Speaker 3 anything that hadn't been done before, right? Like, wasn't there was no, no, I guess just the fact that they put a bunch of people with vaginas on the flight, that was the big notable thing.
Speaker 2 That's a big thing. That's it.
Speaker 2 Is it?
Speaker 3 Yes. Is it notable?
Speaker 2 Do we care about that? Yes. Why? But because,
Speaker 2 because,
Speaker 2 because they
Speaker 2 don't represent mankind, they represent womankind.
Speaker 2
One big step for, one small step for women, one large step for womankind. That's what happened yesterday.
If you don't think that's newsworthy, well.
Speaker 3 I just feel like this was just
Speaker 3 Jeff Bezos looking to hook up with a bunch of people. And we were all like, let's watch it on the news.
Speaker 3 I mean, he put a bunch of people that he wants to sleep with on a penis and threw descendant into space.
Speaker 2 I mean, it's honestly, it is like a
Speaker 2 Austin Powers movie. It really is like what you would see in Austin Powers.
Speaker 2
And everybody would laugh. And he's doing it.
And we're all laughing. So, you know, God bless you there, Jeff.
That's.
Speaker 2 I mean, for him, I got, you know, look.
Speaker 3
He's a guy. He does whatever he's doing.
You know, I mean, there's been questions about his personal life and maybe the supplements he's taking.
Speaker 3 However, like, hey, you got a bunch of money, this is how you want to spend it.
Speaker 2
All right. That's totally fine.
I mean, you know, I know that. It's impressive technology.
Speaker 3 Obviously,
Speaker 3 it's not industry-leading technology.
Speaker 2 It's not.
Speaker 3 It seems like it's like third or fourth place technology, but still, better than I could do.
Speaker 2
It's the best way to pick up women, though. But it seems like an expensive spaceship, I got to say, to pick up women.
Yeah, well,
Speaker 3 there's got to be something easier than sending them into space.
Speaker 2 Jeff Bezos.
Speaker 2 Yeah.
Speaker 2 I mean,
Speaker 3 I just figured these supplements could help you.
Speaker 2 His girlfriend doesn't look cheap, does she?
Speaker 2 It doesn't look like that. That's not a cheap date that's happening right there.
Speaker 2 You're paying in all kinds of cash
Speaker 2 for that, for dating that one. Anyway, there is one other piece to this.
Speaker 2 Bezos, as he's going to get his hot babe out of the capsule, here's what happens.
Speaker 6 We love being able to share this experience with you, and thank you for sharing.
Speaker 2 There's Bezos there.
Speaker 6 How you feel out here with our audience.
Speaker 2 He's looking, he's running around the capsule.
Speaker 6 He's really incredible. So yeah.
Speaker 3 That was a Biden-esque fall.
Speaker 2 That was a three-step fall. Yeah.
Speaker 3 I keep hearing he face planted, which he sort of does, but it was like, it was a slow
Speaker 3 descent to the earth with Bezos falling there. It was like a fall onto the knee, onto the chest, onto the face, and the hands don't really get there in time to stop it.
Speaker 2 And that's kind of amazing because he looks like he's incredible.
Speaker 2 Right. Yeah.
Speaker 3 I mean, considering
Speaker 3 all the time he seems to spend in the gym these days, you'd think. I mean, because when Biden fell off the bike, it reminded me of that.
Speaker 2 Remember how slow that happened?
Speaker 3 It's like he's seeing this coming, right? We had full conversations in the time when it went from the bike standing up to the bike being on its side.
Speaker 2
You know, you should put your leg down. You're going to fall.
Yeah, you're falling.
Speaker 2
You should do something. Okay, there it is.
Oh, there it is. All right, let me tell you about Cozy Earth.
Speaker 2 Have you guys slept on the sheets? Oh, yeah.
Speaker 2
They are awesome. They are awesome.
Very, very nice. Yeah.
Speaker 7 Yeah. I actually dislike you a lot.
Speaker 2 Because I gave you Cozy Earth sheets?
Speaker 7
Because I can't get out of bed. Okay.
That's why I've been late.
Speaker 3 I dislike them too, but for different reasons.
Speaker 7 Oh, that's fair.
Speaker 2 Exactly the kind of woman I'm looking for.
Speaker 2 Cozy Earth is
Speaker 2
there to help you have a great night's sleep. They make everything for their sheets.
Their pajamas are unbelievable. Unbelievable.
Speaker 2 Everything is engineered to regulate regulate temperature, to wick moisture, to deliver
Speaker 2
the rest that your body was made for. It's made from a premium viscose from bamboo.
That does not sound like good. It just doesn't.
They should drop this from the advertisement.
Speaker 2
But it's, I don't know how, I mean, it's, I mean, they're the softest things I have ever had. I go home now, four o'clock in the afternoon.
I'll be, I'll be in my
Speaker 2
cozy earth pajamas, like all, all day. I I mean, you're never, you're knocking at my door.
I don't care what time it is. I'm in my cozy earth pajamas.
Speaker 2
Cozy Earth makes it easy to try for yourself, get 100 nights risk-free to fall in love. Plus, every bedding product is backed by a 10-year warranty.
So take the time to prioritize your sleep.
Speaker 2
Prioritize you. Visit cozyearth.com.
Use the exclusive code BEC and get up to 40% off the sheets, the pajamas, the towels, and so much more. Cozyearth.com, promo code Beck.
Speaker 2
You get a post-purchase survey. Let them know you heard about Cozy Earth from Beck.
Sleep Better with Cozy Earth. Cozyearth.com.
Speaker 2 Well,
Speaker 2 I guess we'll give you a minute to let all that sink in.
Speaker 2 More Glenn Beck coming up.
Speaker 3 Most people, probably you included, have locks on their doors at home. You've got alarms on your cars, you got passwords on your phones, all that protection that we think of all the time.
Speaker 3 But what's protecting the title to your home right now? And if the answer is, oh,
Speaker 3 wait, is that something I need to even worry about? Then you need to check out home title lock right away because you're in danger of literally losing your home to someone who wants to steal it.
Speaker 3 And it's happening more often than you think. Home title theft is a new but rapidly growing kind of crime, one that doesn't require a break-in.
Speaker 3 Just a few pieces of stolen data and a criminal with a computer. And with the rise of AI, forging documents, faking signatures, and transferring a home title isn't too hard anymore.
Speaker 3
It's automated, it's efficient. And if you're not actively protecting your title, you may never see it coming.
That's why I use Home Title Lock. That's why I encourage you to use it as well.
Speaker 3 They have triple lock protection that gives you 24-7 monitoring into your home's title, instant alerts if anything changes, and a US-based restoration team just in case something goes wrong.
Speaker 3
And that's at no extra cost to you. So fixing this, I will say fixing this after it happens is not easy.
It's expensive. It is exhausting and it's not guaranteed.
Speaker 3
But stopping it before it starts, well, that's easy. AI is changing the world.
Do not let them change the name of your home's title. Go to hometitalock.com, hometitalock.com.
Use the promo code Blaze.
Speaker 3
Protect your home, protect your title, protect your financial legacy. It's home titlelock.com.
The promo code is blaze, home titlelock.com.
Speaker 2 Shea writes in, watching the Blaze.
Speaker 2
Glenn, I agree with you. But Trump has to do something big to help American people right now, or he will lose.
The tax cuts must come through. Shea, I couldn't agree with you more.
Speaker 2 I think tax cuts should have come before all of the tariffs and everything else. That is up to Congress, and he needs to push for it.
Speaker 2 Kara says,
Speaker 2 and dead silence from the hate-the-rich lefties.
Speaker 2
Let's see. S.
In 1973, they started EPA standards on cars. So cars turned into crap after that.
And John said, opening up China for U.S.
Speaker 2 investments and getting off the gold standard were the worst things Nixon did. And that's saying a lot because I think he did some really bad things.
Speaker 2 By the way, today is tax day.
Speaker 2
Don't you feel so charitable? My gosh. Salsa dancer, Salsa Dancer, Salsa Dancer.
I just feel like celebrating
Speaker 2
and I feel so charitable. I almost feel like Mother Teresa today.
Now, you won't be working for yourself yet until the 20th or 23rd of this month.
Speaker 2 It means everything you've done between January 1st and next week, you've only done it for the federal government.
Speaker 2 In the United Kingdom, you don't stop working for the government there until June 12th. In Canada, June 13th,
Speaker 2 you're working six months a year. Let me ask you, all the work that you have done from January 1st until next week,
Speaker 2 do you believe that your government deserves that much? Do you believe working for them, you've worked for them, you've worked for yourself,
Speaker 2 not at all until next week. You've worked to pay them
Speaker 2 from January 1st until next week. Do
Speaker 2 they do enough to deserve that? Time is money. How much time
Speaker 2 are they worth? Because I don't think they're worth this much time. Do you?
Speaker 2
By the way, that's just for the federal income tax. That's not state or local or any other tax.
That's just the federal government. This is Glenn Beck.
Let me tell you about Jace Medical.
Speaker 2
They're doing their best to stay on top of your medical needs. Their Jace case, for example, is a pack of antibiotics.
Excuse me. I should stop doing the Jeff Bezos impression.
Speaker 2 The medicine that you might need might be on back order or sitting on a cargo ship halfway around the world. That's why they have the Jace case, all the antibiotics that you need.
Speaker 2 With what's going on with China, you might want to consider getting this now.
Speaker 2 They also have the new parasite use case.
Speaker 2 It is a 90-day supply of essential medications, including ivermectin and other anti-parasitical pharmaceuticals, designed for situations where you are, you know, where you can't wait.
Speaker 2 Nobody wants to deal with that for very long. Whether you're traveling, facing a supply chain delay, or just want to be ready for the unexpected, peace of mind's right in your own hands.
Speaker 2 Go to jace.com, enter the promo code Beck at checkout, and you get a discount on your order. That's promo code B-E-C-K at Jace, J-A-S-E dot com.
Speaker 2 Jace.com. Jace Medical.
Speaker 8 At Blinds.com, it's not just about window treatments. It's about you, your style, your space, your way.
Speaker 8 Whether you DIY or want the pros to handle it all, you'll have the confidence of knowing it's done right.
Speaker 8 From free expert design help to our 100% satisfaction guarantee, everything we do is made to fit your life and your windows. Because at Blinds.com, the only thing we treat better than Windows is you.
Speaker 8 Black Friday deals are going on all month long. Save up to 45% off site-wide, plus an additional 10% off every order right now at Blinds.com.
Speaker 2 Rules and restrictions apply.
Speaker 2
Down the road where shadows hide, feel the dark on every side. 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
Hello, America. Welcome to the Glenbeck Program.
I want to talk a little bit about the economy, things that are going on on our campuses, and
Speaker 2 a little blast from the past just to remind you,
Speaker 2
some things change, and some things never ever change. We'll get to that here in just a second.
First, let me tell you about the International Fellowship of Christians and Jews.
Speaker 2
It is easy to support Israel when things are, well, easy in the world. But that's so rarely the case.
In the Bible, God tells us he will bless those who bless bless Israel.
Speaker 2
And right now, they need support. They need somebody to bless them.
And I don't know about you, but I think our country needs some blessings.
Speaker 2 So can we get together and agree on let's do what the Bible tells us to do? Ever since October 7th, to even a greater degree than before, danger isn't just a possibility for millions of Israelis.
Speaker 2
It's a daily reality. Their kids are on their way to school and they got a, there's a bus stop.
And the bus stop doubles as a bomb shelter.
Speaker 2
You know, all the time these bomb shelters are in use, the sirens go off. You don't know what it's like to live in Israel.
We would never put up with it.
Speaker 2 If Canada was doing this to us, we would never put up with it.
Speaker 2 Well, the International Fellowship of Christians and Jews is showing up and they're funding emergency bomb shelters, providing food boxes for families trapped in war zones, and helping the elderly evacuate to safety.
Speaker 2 They're supplying protective gear to first responders, meeting needs fast with the help of people like you.
Speaker 2 If we want our government to do less and be less involved in some of these things, then we have to do more. Let's stand with God's people.
Speaker 2 You're positioning yourself to receive blessing that God Himself promised those who would bless Israel. Give a gift to bless Israel and her people by visiting supportifcj.org.
Speaker 2
That's one word, supportifcj.org. 888-488-IFCJ.
888-488-IFCJ.
Speaker 2 Welcome, Stu Bergier, our executive producer.
Speaker 3 Glenn,
Speaker 3
I'm looking at some economic data. I want to get your take on this.
Okay. So this is
Speaker 2 the
Speaker 3 New York Fed's survey of regional manufacturers.
Speaker 2 Okay.
Speaker 3 Okay. So asking
Speaker 3 manufacturers what they see going forward about six months.
Speaker 2 What are you ordering? What are you ordering? What are the materials?
Speaker 3 What are you expecting? Okay.
Speaker 3 And so this is from Joe Wiesenthal. He says, basically, every line, new orders, employment, et cetera, is going down with the exception of prices, which are going up.
Speaker 3 Now, I'm looking at the data itself, and you see, you know, general business conditions, new orders, shipments, all of these are going down.
Speaker 3 In fact, all three of those in particular are worse than at any point since even 2020, including the COVID era. So they were believing six months ahead, general business conditions.
Speaker 3 worse than they thought it was going to be even in 2020. When you go to prices, you see it, yes, ticking up, but now almost to the peak levels of the Biden inflation era.
Speaker 3 Prices paid and prices received. So they think all of this is going up.
Speaker 3 Capital expenditures down.
Speaker 3 Number of employees way down to the point of basically as low as 2020.
Speaker 3 All of these things are, and again, which pointed out this is not just
Speaker 3 generalized people predicting the economy. These are manufacturers.
Speaker 3 These are the people ideally would be helped by uh these types of policies and it might just be that it takes more time than this might just be other economic factors
Speaker 3 there's so much to deal with when you're talking about an economy and especially one that's you know on a global scale do you have any sense as to what's going on here shouldn't we be seeing i mean prices don't surprise me right right that they would be up but shouldn't we be seeing more optimism from manufacturers
Speaker 2 uh
Speaker 2 no here's here's why let's say you make uh
Speaker 2 Let's say you make that computer and
Speaker 2
you make it here in America and you're going to sell it, but you don't make any of the parts here. You just assemble it here.
Okay.
Speaker 2 Are you buying a whole bunch of pieces to make that computer right now? If you're ordering, are you like, let's stock up?
Speaker 2 You doing that right now or not?
Speaker 3 I mean, I would think probably not.
Speaker 2 Why?
Speaker 3 Well, I mean, the prices are going to be higher and maybe the just generalized instability, like not knowing what the future holds.
Speaker 2 Okay, I would say I'm not doing it because the price is so high. And once I buy that, if the price comes down because of tariffs are relieved,
Speaker 2
then I'm stuck with all of this stuff that I'm now going to have to pass on to the company. I'm going to have a hard time selling that stuff.
Okay, because the price is so high.
Speaker 2
So I'm hoping, this is just my guess. I'm hoping as somebody who is running manufacturing that I got enough on hand.
Let's not order anything. Let's not do anything.
Speaker 2 Let's hope that these tariffs are going to come down to be more reasonable. But as you do that, you know how long it takes to get stuff and to build stuff.
Speaker 2 So you're looking six months out into the future.
Speaker 2 What you're saying is, I don't know what it looks like six months from now for me ordering stuff, but in six months from now, I'm going to have fewer things on hand.
Speaker 2 And if the tariffs haven't come down, I am going to have to pass those prices on for a longer period of time because all of that buildup.
Speaker 2 And at that price, I don't know how many people are going to be able to afford my product because it has a lot of product that's from China in it.
Speaker 2 So I don't know what to do. I don't want to be stuck with all this expensive inventory.
Speaker 2 And I'm hoping that things change. So it's the instability, it is the not knowing what's going to happen with these tariffs that I think is doing the biggest damage when it's coming to those numbers.
Speaker 2 Does that make sense to you?
Speaker 3 Because business owners are looking at their next six months, their next year,
Speaker 3 where those prices have not hit average people at all.
Speaker 3 At all, you know, I mean, a lot of these, the first.
Speaker 2 Unless you're buying a car.
Speaker 3 Right.
Speaker 3 Because those went on a little while ago, right? Yeah.
Speaker 3
Because you actually told me a story. I think you said you were talking to a friend of yours that was a car dealership owner.
Yes. And how does that affect them?
Speaker 2 So he went and he just
Speaker 2 took all of his money because, you know, dealerships run on, you know,
Speaker 2 mortgage, you know, a loan, a revolving loan.
Speaker 2
They're not sitting around with all that cash. And so they have to buy the product.
So it comes in from GM or wherever, and all that product is sitting there. And they own own it.
They own it.
Speaker 2
They owe the bank for it. And they are hoping that that product will sell in the next 30 days, 60 days, or 90 days.
Okay. And the bank is expecting that to turn like that.
Speaker 2 So you go out and if you were thinking ahead, you bought all of that product at the lower price in hopes that you could have two or three months. of low price product sitting on your lot
Speaker 2 in hopes that when people come in to buy stuff, you don't have to have, you're not tariff-free, you're tariff-exempt because it was already here in the United States before the tariff came on. Right.
Speaker 2
Okay. So you're tariff exempt.
So your prices stay the same. The problem is after three months,
Speaker 2 you don't have the cars.
Speaker 2 So you have three-month cushion in hopes that A, the economy doesn't go to crap, so nobody's buying cars. If people are going to buy cars, you have them at the right price.
Speaker 2 You have them at the old price so you can sell them through. If you don't sell them through,
Speaker 2
now you're in real trouble because you have three months, not one month. You have three months of product sitting on your lot.
Okay. That's a huge gamble.
Speaker 2 So you're sitting there with all that product, hoping that that's going to sell at the old price.
Speaker 2 But if the economy goes down and everybody's like, I can't, I don't know if I want to buy a new car even at the old price,
Speaker 2
then they're in trouble. And if they do sell through all of that and the tariffs are still high, now they've got to buy all those cars at a higher price.
And
Speaker 2 can you get them
Speaker 2 on shore? Who's going to order them? You know what I mean?
Speaker 2 Can you get them even to get across? Are these companies even going to ship them? And who are they going to ship them to? Because how many are they going to buy? How many people are going to buy it at
Speaker 2 35, 25, 35, 50%
Speaker 2 more than what they were paying? Right.
Speaker 3 Because, yeah, I think too, I'd be hesitant, right? Because I think there's a chance this works out.
Speaker 3 You know, maybe, like, because you imagine if you have this big shipment coming from a place that maybe has
Speaker 3 some higher tariff rate on it coming to the U.S.
Speaker 3 And you're like, I was, you know, talking to somebody who was talking about delaying the shipments, like basically just saying, like, leave it there for now. Yeah.
Speaker 3 Because we hope it's going to change this situation is going to change. So you're like, ah, let's just hope, hold the hold the containers in the port in wherever it was, Vietnam, and just wait.
Speaker 3 And hopefully, this clears up and then we can ship it.
Speaker 2 Because what and then what happens? Well,
Speaker 3 then I guess then you have a lower supply of goods, right?
Speaker 2 You have a lower supply.
Speaker 2
Yeah, you're not replenishing. But then when it's all when the tariffs happen, now you have a glut.
You have all of those ports filled with stuff that now needs ships to come over.
Speaker 2 And because the shipping has been hurt, because they haven't been shipping stuff, do they, how long can you go holding those ships, you know, because they all have mortgages on those ships too.
Speaker 2 So if they're not in use in three months from now, what condition are those ship shipping companies in to be able to say, Full steam ahead, open up all of the ports, open up all the ships.
Speaker 2 Do they, are they in any condition to be able to do that and so you have this glut on that side then you have to get them across the country or i mean across the sea and then you have the same problem we had with covid when covet when they opened up the ports again then it was like we couldn't move it fast enough right it got bogged down with the trains i mean yeah this is going to be a real problem and that was a big part of one of the causes of the inflation right was that yeah
Speaker 3 so that that's not good so what do you do i mean obviously obviously these policies are what they are, whether you agree with them or not. Is there anything else you can do to offset that?
Speaker 2 Tax cuts
Speaker 2
and regulation cuts. I can't believe the president is not pounding Congress on this.
You've got to, right now, all you have,
Speaker 2 if I'm running a business right now.
Speaker 2 I'm looking to assemble all these parts and I'm paying 25%
Speaker 2 more.
Speaker 2 Okay, I can't pass 25% on to my customer. I mean, my product won't sell at 25%, you know,
Speaker 2 unless it's food, and then that'll be riots. You know what I mean? So I got to pass on 25% tariff.
Speaker 2 Is there anything I can cut to make that? Well, if you cut regulation and you cut taxes, you ease that burden.
Speaker 2 You give these corporations and
Speaker 2 you give the average person some relief. The Republicans are only cutting, when they say they're cutting taxes, they're only making the Trump tax cuts permanent.
Speaker 3 This is infuriating.
Speaker 2 Yeah,
Speaker 2
you've already experienced that cut. So you're not getting more cuts.
I mean, here we are on tax day.
Speaker 2 Today is Tax Day. The president should be all over television today talking about pushing a huge tax cut.
Speaker 3 And we should be clear, there is a contingency within the White House. And I do not think Donald Trump is part of this contingency.
Speaker 2 There's no way he is.
Speaker 3
But that they are floating tax increases on the evil rich people. Again, that does not sound very Donald Trump-ish.
I don't think that faction will win in this battle.
Speaker 3 Though if it does, I will be critical of it, and I'm sure you will be as well.
Speaker 2 If you do tax increases at this point and tariffs, I don't know how you survive. I don't know how the country survives.
Speaker 3 Especially if you're doing it to the business owners.
Speaker 2 Because those are the people who pay the the taxes.
Speaker 2 You won't have the giant corporations. You'll have every single middle
Speaker 2
middle upper income that is somebody who's an entrepreneur that's struggling to make ends meet. Those are the people that are going to be hit.
IBM's not going to be hurt. Apple's not going to be hurt.
Speaker 2 They'll be hurt in the sales of their products because they're paying the tariffs, but they're not going to be hurt in taxes. They'll figure out a way to
Speaker 2
get around the taxes. They'll pay less tax or the same kind of tax they've been paying.
They'll find the loopholes.
Speaker 2 It'll be the people who are in the middle who are struggling to keep their businesses open. It will be exactly like COVID.
Speaker 2 It will hurt the small business and it won't necessarily hurt the big business.
Speaker 3 And the thing that's good about the tax and regulation cuts you're talking about is it does
Speaker 3 it basically achieves part of the goal of the tariffs, which is it doesn't alleviate the burden on foreign countries, but it does alleviate the burden on Americans, right?
Speaker 3 American business owners, American taxpayers.
Speaker 2
Yes. And it does, it helps, it's the second part of the tariffs.
It's right now we're all stick.
Speaker 2
Yes. Okay.
Move to the United States or we'll put you out. Well, you know, okay, maybe.
Speaker 2
But can you give me a carrot too? I need a carrot. Here's the carrot.
You'll pay, you move it, you you won't pay the tariff, and you move it here.
Speaker 2
I'm going to have you pay the lowest income tax as a business in the world. So there will be no place better for your taxes than the United States of America.
That's why Texas is growing.
Speaker 2 That's why Florida is growing.
Speaker 2
That's what the United States needs to do. They need to make the income tax shockingly low.
So people will say, and the regulation, shockingly low. So I don't have to have a whole bank of attorneys.
Speaker 2 I don't have to do, I want to build a building. Would I have to do a wildlife refugee and Indigenous people study for four years first? I get what, what?
Speaker 2
Forget it. I'm not going to do that.
Yeah. People say all the time.
Speaker 2 That's the stuff they've got to cut. I love that.
Speaker 3 I also, you know, certainly the tax cuts and
Speaker 3 getting them lower would be a great outcome.
Speaker 2 I,
Speaker 3 you know, I think that would excite people,
Speaker 3 Right now, there's a fear of
Speaker 3
prices going up and economic activity cutting. And remember, again, this hasn't hit Americans yet at all.
I mean, none of this has hit Americans yet, other than businesses.
Speaker 3 And you talk to business owners and they're freaked out about it. But
Speaker 3 the thing that got shipped
Speaker 3
from China is still in transit probably by the time these higher tariff rates went into effect. Like it's not even here yet.
So these prices have not even kicked in.
Speaker 3 At some point, the American people are going to to start feeling them. If you don't give them something to get excited about as well, and I know, we all know Trump wants to do this.
Speaker 2 I mean, I don't like it. It's the first time I have seen him in this administration, this time around,
Speaker 2 and he never does this. So,
Speaker 2 I'm going to sit down with him in the White House in a couple of weeks for an interview. And I can't wait to talk to him about this because
Speaker 2 he's not,
Speaker 2
he has a better gut on him and a better sense for the American people. He's got to know how the American people feel.
I'm sure he does.
Speaker 2 What is happening?
Speaker 2 Why aren't these things happening?
Speaker 3 I mean, it just could be Congress that's not doing it.
Speaker 2 That's what I think the answer is.
Speaker 3 With a three-seat majority or whatever it is, it's really hard to get these things across. But then
Speaker 2 channel that energy to them and not on what is Trump doing.
Speaker 2 Channel it.
Speaker 2 That's the bully pulpit that he has. Back in just a minute.
Speaker 2 You know, ever notice how nobody around you thinks there's a problem until there is you look at things like the national debt current inflation global instability looming trade war you start making changes you cut back a little you get out some of those you know risky investments you start saving money uh you know and then you it gets worse and worse and worse and everybody's like no it's not so bad and then you're like i gotta find something that will hold value People roll their, oh, you're buying gold now.
Speaker 2 Oh, you think the dollar is going to collapse. Sounds like you've been listening to too much, Glenn Beck nerd.
Speaker 2 They should be asking themselves, what if you're right? What if you're right? Because here's the thing: history is not on their side, it's on yours, it's on mine.
Speaker 2 Currencies collapse, markets collapse, but gold, gold endures. Lear Capital understands that.
Speaker 2 For over 25 years, they've been helping people just like you move a portion of their savings into gold for that reason.
Speaker 2 Telling you, you don't, Americans don't have any concept of what this means, of what we are playing the biggest game of chicken right now we've played since the Cuban Missile Crisis.
Speaker 2
And it's all revolving around our economy. Please call Lear Capital right now, 800-957-GOLD.
Get your free $4,200 gold report. Call 800-957-GOLD.
800-957-GOLD.
Speaker 2
You know, during the Cuban Missile Crisis, you know what people were doing? They were building bomb shelters. They were storing food.
And they had good reason.
Speaker 2
What are people doing now? This is the Cuban missile crisis of currency problems. Call 800-957-GOLD.
Get your fallout shelter in gold.
Speaker 2
800-957-GOLD. 10 seconds.
Station ID.
Speaker 3
Quick question here for you, Glenn. And And I have not seen any focus on this.
We need to cut spending. And we know the president's been very clear.
Speaker 3 He's not going after, despite what the left says all the time, he's not going after your Medicare. He's not going after your Social Security, these big entitlement programs.
Speaker 3 So it's difficult to cut. However, we did just have a president that spent
Speaker 3
multiple trillions of dollars on things that are brand new. People are not locked into it.
They don't expect it. They're not lifelong entitlements.
Not at all.
Speaker 3 I haven't seen anybody on the right in Congress even even bring this up. No.
Speaker 3 Why aren't they going after whatever, every dollar there is spent by Biden that you can still bring back in and end all the programs?
Speaker 2
Some are, some. Chip Roy is one.
Go back to the 2019 spending. Yeah.
Just return the budget back to what it was in 2019.
Speaker 2
That'll save you trillions of dollars. Trillions.
Remember, we didn't go crazy until 2020, 2019, 2020. Yeah.
So go back to the pre-COVID spending.
Speaker 2 That would, that alone would bolster our dollar and bring our dollar back up. It would help people buy our treasury bills.
Speaker 2 Right now, with China dumping and now the treasury saying, well, we might buy our own treasury bills back. With what? With what money?
Speaker 2 Be really
Speaker 2 very aware. Be very, very aware on how high stakes this game is.
Speaker 2 This is Glenn Beck.
Speaker 2
Pain isn't just something that you feel. This is something that takes.
It takes your energy. It takes your sleep.
It takes your patience. It takes your drive.
It takes your mood.
Speaker 2 After a while, it starts to become your identity. It takes your identity and replaces it with just pain.
Speaker 2 That's who you are now? Please say no. A person just living with pain, please say no.
Speaker 2 When pain becomes your norm, you stop doing things that you love.
Speaker 2 You start saying no to people.
Speaker 2 You shrink your world to fit into that body that is always in that fight mode. Listen,
Speaker 2
I was in that place. I don't live that way anymore.
Please try Relief Factor. It was built to target the root causes of pain.
That's inflammation. from aging and exercise or just life.
Speaker 2
And it's not a drug. It's not a masking agent.
It was invented by doctors who wanted people like you and me to get their lives back.
Speaker 2
Hundreds of thousands of people have tried Relief Factor, and hundreds of thousands are still taking it every single day. Please call 800 for Relief.
800, the number for Relief.
Speaker 2 Get their three-week quick start, 1995. ReliefFactor.com.
Speaker 3
Subscribe to Blaze TV. Go to Blazetv.com/slash Glenn and get 30 bucks off your subscription.
Blazetv.com/slash Glenn.
Speaker 2 Welcome to the Glenn Beck programs.
Speaker 2 We're so glad to have you join us today. It's tax day,
Speaker 2 and our taxes are only going to get worse and worse and worse if we don't control our spending and inflation. I was looking at the
Speaker 2 budget deficit
Speaker 2 in 2019.
Speaker 2 Just listen to this. The 2019 deficit
Speaker 2 or
Speaker 2 let me see if I can find exactly what I was talking about.
Speaker 2 Yeah, $2.7 trillion
Speaker 2 in 2019.
Speaker 2 $2.7 trillion.
Speaker 2 Inflation adjusted is $3.3 trillion today.
Speaker 2 Excuse me? Wow.
Speaker 3 That's a...
Speaker 2 Happens fast. Wow, that happens fast.
Speaker 2 $600 billion difference?
Speaker 3
That's your Biden inflation era. Yeah.
Right. That's all that.
Yeah.
Speaker 2 That, I mean, that, that says a lot.
Speaker 2 Says a lot. It does.
Speaker 3 And what's fascinating is what's the cause of all of that? Well, at least a lot of it was spending, right? Giant and multiple new bills.
Speaker 3 I mean, Biden authorized about $4 to $5 trillion of new spending when he was in office. They went for it, remember?
Speaker 3 Like, this was not a, this is not a, you know, remember Biden was brought in as like a return to normalcy. And we're just going to, we're going to be sane people.
Speaker 2
We're just not, we're not going to go crazy. We're not going to be AOC.
Right.
Speaker 3 Remember, he was going against Bernie Sanders, right? We're not going to be like Bernie Sanders. Well, then he was just like Bernie Sanders and did all the spending and really went for it.
Speaker 3 And I, you know, we brought this up before, but like, I just don't understand why Republicans aren't looking at every single dime spent and saying, absolutely not.
Speaker 3 These crazy bills that were passed,
Speaker 3 we can overcome them.
Speaker 2 We can reverse them. Trump cannot.
Speaker 3
Trump can't buy himself. No.
No. I'm talking about the reconciliation bill that's going to go through Congress, which has these tax cuts.
Speaker 3 And part of the trick, as you've mentioned before, is they say tax cuts, but what they mean is making the current tax rate permanent.
Speaker 2
Yeah, it's not a tax cut. It's not a tax cut.
That's the case. This is not the current tax.
This is not what the American people voted for. No.
Speaker 2 You know, Donald Trump said tax cuts, and everybody interprets that as an actual cut to the taxes I'm paying,
Speaker 2 not an extension of the same tax I'm paying into the years going forward. We want a tax cut.
Speaker 3 So these are the two things the right are talking about right now, apparently, which is one, make Trump's previous tax rate
Speaker 3 the ongoing tax rate permanent,
Speaker 2 which again
Speaker 3 would be better than raising raising it to the former rate.
Speaker 2 It's not, but it's not enough. It's not good enough with the tariffs.
Speaker 2 You have to attract people to start businesses and bring businesses here by actually giving them the most competitive tax in the world.
Speaker 2 Right.
Speaker 3 And of course, obviously, when it comes down to prices, you have tariffs are a tax, right?
Speaker 3
So you already have that. That's a little bit of pain, as Trump's talked about.
So you need to be able to alleviate the pain, not by making the current rate go on.
Speaker 3 That's not going to alleviate any of the pain.
Speaker 3 The other proposal by the right seems to be making the tax rates permanent from the Trump tax rates, except for the highest bracket and returning those to the old rates.
Speaker 2 That's insane.
Speaker 3 If those are the two proposals, we're in serious trouble.
Speaker 2 We're in real trouble.
Speaker 3 Part of the problem here, though, to be fair, is scoring this bill.
Speaker 3 When it goes through this entire process, the reconciliation process,
Speaker 3 the reason why you need that is because you don't have to get 60 votes in the Senate. So you have to go through this reconciliation process to get this passed.
Speaker 3 So you only need 50 votes, which the Republicans have. The problem with that is
Speaker 3 it has to be a situation that lowers the debt, the deficit on the country. So that's the rule to only have to do with 50 votes.
Speaker 2
I have that answer. Okay.
Go ahead.
Speaker 3 Well, I mean, my only point here was going to be.
Speaker 3 What they're saying, the way this gets scored, right, is that they say the keeping the rates permanent is a cost because if we didn't change the law, the rates would go up and we get more money from taxes.
Speaker 3 That's how that's scored, which to me is unfair and ridiculous. But
Speaker 3 when you can dive into these programs that Biden has passed and authorized a bunch of spending, much of which has not gone out the door yet,
Speaker 2 you can go in there, cut slash all of that stuff,
Speaker 3 and make all sorts of savings against those
Speaker 3 BS
Speaker 3 cost increases. Yeah.
Speaker 2 I mean, I feel like Jeff Bezos. No.
Speaker 2 I have sex with that idea.
Speaker 2
But yeah, that is the answer. Okay, so you got to say, okay, well, I can save you a lot of money.
How much was the
Speaker 2 Inflation Reduction Act, which Biden is on record saying it had nothing to do with inflation, had everything to do with global warming. Well, the president doesn't believe in that nonsense.
Speaker 2
The Congress doesn't believe in that nonsense. The Republican senators don't believe in that nonsense.
Why aren't you just cutting that? Yeah. Because most of that has not gone out.
Speaker 3 A lot of it has not gone out. And
Speaker 3 the way, again, these things get scored is if the money, if the money is expected to be spent and you say now it will not be spent, that is a good improvement on your scoring.
Speaker 3 Like it's going to help you get across the finish line. And what they would say, pay for the tax cuts, terminology I despise more than anything in the world, but pay for the tax cuts.
Speaker 3 You have to be able to get that thing to score out appropriately. Republicans are flirting with an idea, which I think is the sane idea in reality, which is, hey, well, we're...
Speaker 3 This isn't costing us anything because we're just keeping the rates the same. That is not the way that it's typically scored, and we don't know how that will work in the courts.
Speaker 3
Seems like they're trying to do that. And it would help them become more aggressive with rate cuts.
But like, you need the aggressive rate cuts.
Speaker 3 The tariffs may help as well, by the way, with the scoring process, which is one of the reasons it's been rumored that they're doing them. Now, I don't know if that's accurate.
Speaker 3
I kind of hope it is, because if it's just a scoring mechanism, maybe they go away. We will see on that one.
I don't know.
Speaker 3 But in theory, if this tariffs are bringing in a bunch of money, they could say, well, if they put them
Speaker 3 in a bill, they could theoretically get the
Speaker 3 expected savings from that,
Speaker 3
expected gains, excuse me, from that, as far as revenue. And that could, you could offset that with cuts.
That would be a positive way that this might play out.
Speaker 2 So let me just, let me explain something on how things work. Okay.
Speaker 2 When people say,
Speaker 2 you know, tax cuts, that's only for the rich.
Speaker 2 First of all, that's not true.
Speaker 2
Second of all, because the really, really, really, really rich, you think George Soros really is paying any taxes? No. Why? Because he's not making an income.
So income tax doesn't affect him. Okay.
Speaker 2 He's living
Speaker 2
off of his capital gains, which is what? 15, 20%? I don't even know. 15 or 20% capital gains.
Okay.
Speaker 2 He's not paying 50%.
Speaker 2 So the Uber, Uber rich, they're not paying it. And if you don't like that, then you have to change the law.
Speaker 2 and make capital gains over a certain amount income.
Speaker 2
But that's the the way the law is. And that's never going to change.
Why? Because the rich are all powerful and will call up every friend and every favor they have and say, don't let that pass.
Speaker 2
So they're not, that's not affecting them. Who is it affecting? It's affecting the people that might have a million dollars.
Okay.
Speaker 2 Now you think that's a lot, but if you're a businessman, That's about what it takes to run a business.
Speaker 2 You've got to have the money to be able to open up the business, start the business, and hire people. Okay.
Speaker 2 Those are the people that are going to be hurt. Those are the people that were hurt during COVID.
Speaker 2 All of your local employers that were struggling to make ends meet might have had a business that was doing a million dollars. That doesn't make them a millionaire.
Speaker 2 That means their business is doing about a million dollars.
Speaker 2 And they're still living on the edge, even though they own a business and everything else, but they're the ones who hire people.
Speaker 2 If you cut their taxes, then they can hire more people and expand their business.
Speaker 2 And if you cut their taxes along with the lower, you're going to have people that can buy those products, go to those restaurants. So what happens? Well, that's nothing.
Speaker 2 We just lose money because they're not paying their fair share. No,
Speaker 2 you're expanding the base.
Speaker 2 For every dollar that they are not spending going to the government, they're probably going to spend it on their business to enhance their business, grow their business, which means they will hire more people.
Speaker 2 And those people now share the burden by paying taxes. You end up making more,
Speaker 2 not less.
Speaker 2
If you grow your way out of it, this is Donald Trump 101. He knows all of this.
So, why it's not happening, I don't know, but he knows all of this.
Speaker 2 So, you get more jobs, more tax revenue is collected. When you spend less, you incur, just think of the United States as somebody coming into a bank for a loan.
Speaker 2 You going into a car dealership to get a loan. If your credit is 400, you're going to get a loan?
Speaker 2
Maybe. It'll be hard.
And what will happen? Your interest rate will be through the roof.
Speaker 2
We are somebody that's walking into a car dealership. with bad credit.
We spend more than we make. We don't look like we're good for it anymore.
We're on the decline.
Speaker 2 They don't believe we're going to get another job.
Speaker 2 They see their numbers. Okay,
Speaker 2 you want us to take that loan? Well, we lose a lot of banks like China and Japan and Germany and everybody else that was holding our treasuries. China in particular is dumping.
Speaker 2 So we've lost our biggest bank.
Speaker 2 Because we don't look dependable.
Speaker 2 So when you go in and you really reduce your spending, all of a sudden the world says, oh, well, they're serious about fixing their problem.
Speaker 2 If you do just one of these things, tariffs, cutting spending, or taxes, it's not going to solve your problem.
Speaker 2 But cutting spending is the only one that will make people go around the world, oh, looks like they're serious this time.
Speaker 2
If we cut taxes, we cut spending, and then we cut regulation. Well, we have to have regulation.
Do we? How much regulation is enough regulation?
Speaker 2 Because for everything that is set into regulation, that means every business, every person has to file more paperwork. You have to have more attorneys.
Speaker 2 You have to have more people in between you and the thing you're trying to accomplish. Time is money and money is money.
Speaker 2 I got to spend money on attorneys to make sure I'm in compliance with everything.
Speaker 2
The more attorneys I hire, the less regular people I hire. And I don't know about you, but I think America has far too many attorneys.
Attorneys don't build anything.
Speaker 2 Attorneys are the no police. They are there to say no so you don't get into trouble.
Speaker 2 If you leave things up to an attorney, nothing's going to happen because they just view the world differently than creators.
Speaker 2 The creators come in and they need good attorneys, but you don't want a buttload of attorneys because now you're outnumbered and they're going to say no.
Speaker 2 And you're spending all of your money on attorneys.
Speaker 2 That's not a good idea for any business.
Speaker 2 And what is Congress? It's filled with attorneys.
Speaker 2 So we cut the regulation. That means I have an easier time to accomplish my goals as a small business person.
Speaker 2 I can start this because I don't need
Speaker 2 millions of dollars just to get through all the regulations, all the hurdles that the government is going to do as a small business person or a big business person.
Speaker 2 If I'm a country that has to deal with more regulations than any other country in the world, that's why Europe is dying. You want to go ahead and wrestle through their regulations.
Speaker 2 You'll never get anything done.
Speaker 2
We're becoming that. You have to cut that.
Then you cut the taxes on everybody.
Speaker 2
You cut your spending, and then you have tariffs. That's the package that Donald Trump was talking to us about.
He's done what he can do.
Speaker 2 It's now Congress's turn to go in and just return us to the spending of 2019.
Speaker 2 What's the problem with that? Why is that so controversial? Return us to the spending of 2019.
Speaker 2 Back in a minute.
Speaker 2 You know, it doesn't take much to lose control of your identity. Maybe just a data breach or a credit check that you didn't ask for.
Speaker 2 One piece of personal information lands in the wrong hands and suddenly someone else becomes you and they're opening accounts, they're taking out loans, they're pretending to be you while the real you is left to deal with all the wreckage.
Speaker 2
You think to yourself, I'm careful online. I don't click sketchy links.
That's great, but it's not enough. The truth is you can't do everything right, you know, all the the time.
Speaker 2
And even if you did, you're still going to get hit. I mean, this has happened.
Tanya will call me once in a while. She'd be like, hey, do you know? I'm like, just don't click on it.
Speaker 2 Okay.
Speaker 2
Your data is everywhere. Hospitals, banks, payroll systems, government databases.
You're not in control of any of it. And that's why there's LifeLock.
They monitor what you can't.
Speaker 2 They scan billions of data points looking for any suspicious activity tied to your name, your social security number, your identity.
Speaker 2 And if the worst happens, well, you've got a U.S.-based restoration team in your corner ready to fix it. Thankfully, it's easy to protect yourself with LifeLock, Lifelock.com.
Speaker 2 Join now, save up to 40% off your first year with the promo code BEC1-800-Lifelock. 1-800-LifeLock, or go to lifelock.com, make sure you use the promo code BEC and save 40%.
Speaker 2 Glenn
Speaker 2 Beck.
Speaker 3 So, what's the unhealthiest meal that you have eaten lately?
Speaker 3 I don't even want to sell you mine.
Speaker 3 There's very few that are actually healthy.
Speaker 2 Kanye hasn't been home since Saturday.
Speaker 3
Oh, gosh. So, you know, it's ugly.
It's been ugly. Lots of fried whatevers.
It's ugly. You're supposed to eat five servings of fruits and vegetables in a day.
You've been hitting that number.
Speaker 3
Not happening. No.
No. Even if you count like French fries, that's a good thing.
Speaker 2 Are they the little orange slices that are covered, you know, the little orange, you you know, like in the
Speaker 2 shadow head about circus peanuts.
Speaker 3 I think that's a vegetable.
Speaker 3 There we go.
Speaker 3 Look, we're human and we don't always eat healthy. That's, you know, I understand that, but that's why Field of Greens exists and it's why doctors created it.
Speaker 3 If you drink a delicious glass of Field of Greens every day, it's like nutritional armor for your body. Each fruit and vegetable in Field of Greens was doctor-selected for specific health benefits.
Speaker 3 And we're talking about, you know, a heart health group, lung and kidney group, metabolism, even healthy weight groups, which are not always living up to that standard myself.
Speaker 3 You're going to love the energy you feel with Field of Greens.
Speaker 3 And if you're going to have that burger, you're going to have that chips in the middle of the afternoon, or you take a whole cheat day for that matter, you can at least smile at the end of that day, knowing that you've done what you need for your body.
Speaker 3
Field of Greens, it's not hard to do. Just drink a glass and you're going to like it anyway.
So, Field of Greens, it's going to make you feel better. And check it out.
Speaker 3 You get your money back if it doesn't come along to those standards. So, you get 20% off right now if you use the code blaze at fieldofgreens.com the code is blaze
Speaker 2 welcome to the glenbeck program so sarah just said in the break she said you know uh
Speaker 2 it all sounds good she said what you just said i was like okay i got it right sarah i got it it's great but
Speaker 7 but the other side tends to do a a really good breakdown also, so I get confused on which side I should be with.
Speaker 2 Well, who pays your paycheck?
Speaker 2
No. But you know what? It's great.
So
Speaker 2
let me give you the strongest argument against it maybe next hour. Okay.
So I'll give you my argument and then the strongest argument against it. And let's take it from there.
Speaker 2 So you have both that you could look at. And
Speaker 2 gee, I wonder who's going to win on my talk show. But no, I'll be fair and try to give the best argument again.
Speaker 3 What are they called? Steel Man? I mean, a steel man that argument?
Speaker 2 I've never heard that. Oh, really? No.
Speaker 3 Like, it's like,
Speaker 3 your argument is a straw man.
Speaker 2 It's a steel man. A steel man.
Speaker 3 The best version of that argument.
Speaker 2 So it's kind of like Bernie Sanders at Coachella. He was a steel man.
Speaker 3 Sort of, yeah.
Speaker 2 Was that the most ridiculous thing you've ever seen?
Speaker 3 I think it was like sixth of this week.
Speaker 2 Okay. Yeah, all right.
Speaker 3 I just watched a bunch of women go into space and claim they were crew members and say they were very brave and worthy.
Speaker 2 Yeah.
Speaker 3 And we're examining their worthiness or something.
Speaker 3 So no, I don't think Bernie's crazy.
Speaker 2
You're right. Okay, when you're right, you're right.
You're right, you're right. Nobody has to make a counter-argument.
Sarah knows which side is right on that one.
Speaker 2 All right, back in just a second.
Speaker 2
Wombs that might be sewed into men. We have that for you.
And oh, so very much more. Stand by.
Speaker 2
This. is Glenn Beck.
Let me tell you about the Berna launcher. The Bernal Launcher, something goes wrong.
You either rise to the occasion or you fall to the level of your lack of preparation.
Speaker 2 It's a hard thing to hear, but it's true. Sometimes the situation just
Speaker 2 doesn't count for a firearm. Some places won't let you carry one anyway, but that doesn't mean you walk in unarmed.
Speaker 2
The Burna Launcher is a non-lethal self-defense tool that gives you real stopping power without taking a life. It is legal in all 50 states.
If you're over 18, you can get one.
Speaker 2 Looks like a handgun, feels like a handgun. But it fires kinetic projectiles like chemical irritants like pepper and tear gas
Speaker 2 it is legal in all 50 states if you're over 18 you don't need registration or anything else you just order one online they'll send it right to you it is the option between do nothing and go too far if you've ever found yourself in a moment where the action is required this is what you want a burna launcher by rna.com slash beck burna.com slash beck
Speaker 2
Down the road where shadows hide, fill the dark on every side. Stand your ground when times get tight.
Gotta face the dark and embrace the fire.
Speaker 2 The fusion of entertainment and enlightenment. This is
Speaker 2 the Glen Beck Program.
Speaker 2
Hello, America. Welcome to the Glen Beck program.
We're talking about what should be done to be able to help our economy. Tax cuts, cutting spending.
It's not that hard. It's really not.
Speaker 2 You just have to get out of the way and let people fix the problem. We're going to talk about that, although people fixing the problem, I guess New York is, you know, that's full of people.
Speaker 2 And they got rid of Andrew Cuomo. It looks like he's back.
Speaker 2 We'll give you the information on that. Also, sewing wombs in Tamin.
Speaker 2
What could possibly go wrong? We begin in 60 seconds. First, imagine for a moment you got out to dinner with your friends.
Everybody orders what they want. You order what you want.
Speaker 2 Ted's new girlfriend, Rita, orders what she wants, which is the most expensive and disgusting item on the menu. It's a kale-infused cottage cheeseburger with soy fries.
Speaker 2 And when the check finally arrives, you're not only getting charged for your meal, but you have to pay for Rita's too.
Speaker 2 You know, not only do you have to pay more for that, but your money went to something you really don't like and want to support. Rita can pay for that, right? Am I right?
Speaker 2 Would you put up with that from your mobile phone company?
Speaker 2 I mean, they're not only charging you through the nose, they're using your money to fund leftist causes, and it's much worse than the soy fries.
Speaker 2 Patriot Mobile offers the solution. They're on the same cell towers, you're getting the same service, and their customer service is U.S.-based.
Speaker 2 Plus, most importantly, they stand for the same patriotic values that you stand for. And they use a portion of what they make to donate to those causes and work for those causes.
Speaker 2
Go to patriotmobile.com/slash back or call 972-Patriot. 972-Patriot.
Use the promo code PEC. Get a free month of service.
It's patriotmobile.com/slash back. Call 972-Patriot.
Speaker 2 Sorry, Rita, you got to pay for your own food.
Speaker 2 All right.
Speaker 2
Can't wait to get to Andrew Cuomo here. I'm sure Stu has something to say about that.
Maybe a little bit.
Speaker 3
I've been hearing some stuff. Yeah.
He's trying to make a little bit of a comeback.
Speaker 2 Yeah, yeah, sure.
Speaker 3 And obviously, we should make sure to welcome him with open arms.
Speaker 2
We'll do that maybe a little in a week. I'm excited for it.
You can go through the whole welcome back Andrew Cuomo list because I know you've got a long list of things that you can
Speaker 2 excited about.
Speaker 2 So the Trump administration has uh has frozen billions of dollars in federal funding for harvard
Speaker 2 um because the ivy league is refusing to comply to hey let's not uh let people say let's kill all the jews on campus i don't know seems pretty easy you know if you want your money spent you know there uh go ahead i'm i'm really done with the university thing i'm way past that you know harvard you know you have more money than Jesus.
Speaker 2
Okay. And I know at the time he didn't have pockets, so he didn't have a lot of money.
But the guys who are out there collecting money for him, now they got a lot. And you have more.
Speaker 2 I'm done bailing your ass out. You don't pay taxes and I'm still paying for you?
Speaker 2 No.
Speaker 2 You get no federal money.
Speaker 3 Absolutely no reason for not be giving Harvard one dime.
Speaker 2
No, not a dime. None of these Ivy leagues.
No,
Speaker 2 not a single dime what was it what do they have 50 billion dollars in endowment that they could just milk forever and let everyone go to the college for free if they wanted to i think it's more than that is it more than you should you should look it up i think it's a lot more than that um but these ivy league schools there's no reason that we are we're paying for them none
Speaker 2 none
Speaker 2 Why? Why should we send them a dime? Especially when they're doing the same thing. You know, this is not new.
Speaker 2 This whole thing, you know, of hating the Jews, this is exactly what they did in the 1930s. You know,
Speaker 2 they were overlooking any kind of anti-Semitism.
Speaker 2 And it was all driven by elitism. It was all driven by
Speaker 2 anti-Semitic thought.
Speaker 2 There was even, you know, they embraced the Nazis. Harvard.
Speaker 2 The person that was running Harvard, the Harvard president at the time, James Conant,
Speaker 2 you know,
Speaker 2 he was keeping ties with the Nazi-controlled universities. And then he brought people in from the Nazi party, including a Harvard alumni and a Hitler confidant to campus in 1934.
Speaker 2 Well, anti-Nazi students were like, hey, this is a problem. And so what did Harvard do? Called in the police.
Speaker 2
beat the protesters. Protests were suppressed.
They tore down the signs. They arrested the demonstrators, you know, all because they had a Nazi on campus.
And they thought maybe that's a bad thing.
Speaker 2 So also, Harvard, who, by the way, Trump is thinking about defunding, thinking there should be no thought in that. I'm sure there's no thought there.
Speaker 2 I'm sure he's already went, I don't have to think about it very long. Cut it.
Speaker 2 But anyway,
Speaker 2 they worried back in the 1930s, there were just too many Jewish students and just
Speaker 2 too many Jews that are
Speaker 2 teaching from all over the world that are now coming here. We can't have all this, quote, Jewish thought.
Speaker 2 Oh,
Speaker 2
okay. All right.
That sounds
Speaker 2 whew.
Speaker 2
Okay. Then you have Columbia.
They were just as good. They had Nicholas Murray Butler.
Speaker 2 He had the Nazi ambassador.
Speaker 2 on campus and then did exchanges with the Nazi universities.
Speaker 2 And it was great because
Speaker 2
they had all these Nazis on the campus, and they were good for the Jewish population. They loved it.
They
Speaker 2 loved it.
Speaker 2 And the Columbia University said, well, you know, we have academic ties.
Speaker 2 We're not talking politics. Okay, well, they're...
Speaker 2 Do you know they're gassing the Jews over there? And it started with the universities getting rid of the Jews.
Speaker 2 Yeah. Yale,
Speaker 2 they were
Speaker 2
time in eugenics. It's like Stanford.
They were the eugenics leaders, and those guys all had ties with
Speaker 2
only the best medical people in Germany. So nothing has changed.
Nothing has changed. This is who they are.
They're the elites. And I say they're the elites, but not all the elites.
Speaker 2
Like, they didn't want to hire any of the elite. professors that came from Heidelberg.
If they were Jewish and out of a job, they're not getting a job here because they're the wrong kind of elites.
Speaker 2 We don't want to play golf with them or be around them or hear any of their Jewish thought. This should be a no-brainer on several levels.
Speaker 2 Why are we giving Harvard that is just making money hand over fist
Speaker 2 and putting it into a big endowment so they can last forever? They could live off their endowment forever.
Speaker 2 Why are we paying them money? Why?
Speaker 2 I'll tell you why, because we're in bed with the
Speaker 2
educational industrial complex. We're producing people the government wants produced.
That's why. That's why that's happening, period.
Speaker 2 You know,
Speaker 2 these are the same kinds of people that brought in all of these, you know, Operation Paperclip people.
Speaker 2 When we had, we win the war
Speaker 2 and we find some of the worst of the worst.
Speaker 2
And we find them over in Germany. We're like, oh, we got to have that guy.
We got to have that guy. Let me give you a couple of
Speaker 2 Herbert Strughold.
Speaker 2 He was known as the father of space medicine. Ooh.
Speaker 2 How did he become the father of space medicine? Well,
Speaker 2 he oversaw the experiments at Dachau.
Speaker 2 Where all of the prisoners were subject to extreme conditions, high altitude. Hey, how high can we fly before somebody pops?
Speaker 2 Hey, let's put them outside, pour water on them and see how long it takes them to freeze. Or let's just
Speaker 2 force seawater in them and see how long they can last with just seawater. Okay.
Speaker 2
They didn't end well for the patients that were there, but it didn't matter. You know, Columbia didn't mind because they're all Jews.
They're all Jews, so we can get rid of those guys.
Speaker 2 So
Speaker 2 he's one of the guys that oversaw all of the doctors.
Speaker 2 he then went to the Air Force School of Aviation
Speaker 2 for medicine,
Speaker 2 uh, where he was the guy here in America that advanced all of our space medicine. Uh, he's the guy who said, hey, you know, we did this with Jews.
Speaker 2 We saw how high you could go before they popped, before their heads exploded. Uh, you know, what happens to them if they get really, really super cold.
Speaker 2 So, I kind of know I have a little expert, uh, expertise in this. So, uh, let me design
Speaker 2 all of the regulations and all of the safety protocols
Speaker 2 for Mercury and Apollo.
Speaker 2 By the way,
Speaker 2 he has an award named after him, the Strughold Award. This is still being given out,
Speaker 2 but
Speaker 2
don't worry about that. So then you had the Surgeon General of the Third Reich.
He was brought over.
Speaker 2 He's the guy who supervised all of the medical experience, including typhus and plague weaponization. He approved all the tests, exposing the prisoners to lethal pathogens in camps like Buchenwald.
Speaker 2
High-ranking SS kind of guy. Don't worry.
He just came over. He was just doing stuff
Speaker 2
with our medicine. Kurt Blum came over.
He was great. Nazi biological warfare guy.
He was the tippy top of that. You know, strangely, all these guys worked at the concentration camps.
Speaker 2 I don't know what.
Speaker 2 I don't know what was going on in those concentration camps, why they were working there, but this guy was working at Auschwitz and other camps, and he was just exposing people to all kinds of biological.
Speaker 2 He's the guy who came over here and he helped us
Speaker 2 make aerosol bioweapons. Isn't that great?
Speaker 2
All these guys were academics. All of them were academics.
All of this needs to be burned out of our society.
Speaker 2 All of them.
Speaker 2
We should not have any awards named after Nazis. I'm sorry, I'm not a guy for tearing down statues.
I want people to remember who these people are.
Speaker 2 I want the building, you know, the names of all of the buildings in Stamford.
Speaker 2 I want the building to remain with those names on because I want everybody to know they named them after the worst eugenicists in the world.
Speaker 2 Stanford University.
Speaker 2
And in the meantime, I don't think we pay for any of it, myself. I don't think we pay for any of this stuff.
They haven't changed.
Speaker 2 They're exactly the same people and they keep reintroducing the same pathogen, anti-Semitism, over and over and over again. No.
Speaker 2
By the way, I don't know if anybody's noticed. They have plenty of money in their pockets.
How much money do we have in our pockets? Okay.
Speaker 2
None. We're borrowing money to give money to people who have all the money.
I don't think so. I don't think so.
Are we going to give
Speaker 2 grants to Bill Gates?
Speaker 2
I don't think that would be very smart. I bet you we're doing it.
Wouldn't be real smart, would it?
Speaker 2 That's what we're doing.
Speaker 2
So we got that going for us. Let's see what else is going on.
Oh, while we're here on medicine and Nazis and universities,
Speaker 2 a transgender activist that was employed as the community navigator for the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, the Children's Hospital,
Speaker 2 suggested that women should be allowed to donate their wombs to be transplanted into transgender women, otherwise known as men, to allow them to give birth.
Speaker 2 Now, I don't think you can just sew those parts in and it works, you know?
Speaker 2
I don't think so. Might be a little more complex than that, but what do I know? I'm not a doctor.
Oh, I am a doctor. No.
Speaker 2 No.
Speaker 2 So Allison Kathleen Simpson reportedly made the comments that surfaced in a video on social media. She said the possibility of womb transplants was theorized in the trans community.
Speaker 2 Yeah, you know when they did this the first time? 1925. You know where they did it? Berlin, Germany.
Speaker 2 Whoa, wait a minute. Are you saying all of this sexology and transgenderism and all that stuff was being done in Berlin, Germany, right before the Nazis took over? Yes, honey.
Speaker 2 That's exactly what I'm saying. It's exactly what I, and you know what? When the Nazis came in
Speaker 2 and they decided that this was unacceptable, see,
Speaker 2
homosexuals do have gay community. You do have a reason to fear Nazis.
They're not your friends. I don't know why you march for them.
You know, the new Nazis are just the Palestinians.
Speaker 2 I don't know why you march for them, but you do have a reason to be afraid of Nazis because they didn't like you very much.
Speaker 2 And when it got completely out of control and all of the literature about sowing wombs into people were in the schools and the
Speaker 2 sexology university, I think of Berlin.
Speaker 2 All of this stuff was coming from them and it went and it permeated their schools just like it's doing now. That's when the Nazis came to power and so many Christians were like,
Speaker 2
I can't fight this. It's completely out of control.
You know what? Who these guys will?
Speaker 2 The first book burnings were all the burnings of the stuff that we're pumping into our society right now. So you don't want to grow Nazis.
Speaker 2 You might want, might not, might not want to be an extremist and then shut everybody down who says, hey, that's extreme because you produce extremists.
Speaker 2 The natural consequence is the other side produces extremists. And then all of us in the middle are like, oh, dear God.
Speaker 2 That's what's happening.
Speaker 2 So
Speaker 2
it's good. She went on in social media.
She said, I have these parts. I don't want them.
I want you to have them because you need them. What if I gave you my womb?
Speaker 2 Well, if you did,
Speaker 2 he'd probably die. I think his body would reject the womb.
Speaker 2 That's what happened to the first guy they tried to sew it into. In 1929, 1925 is when they started, you know, putting breasts on him and everything else.
Speaker 2
And 1929, he finally, you know, he got that womb and they sewed it inside of him. For some reason, the male body rejects a womb.
Who would have seen that coming? And he died in 1929.
Speaker 2 But hey, let's do it again. Because
Speaker 2 what did she say?
Speaker 2
The transgender community has been theorizing about this for a while. Yeah.
yeah, since the 1920s.
Speaker 2
Not a lot has changed. Science doesn't change.
Real science doesn't change. A man will always be a man.
All right, back in just a second. Imagine you leave the faucet running, just a drip.
Speaker 2
It's barely noticeable. You come back a few months later and your water bill looks like you've been running a car wash outside of your kitchen sink.
That's what high interest debt is like.
Speaker 2 A few credit cards here, a personal loan there, a balance transfer that never got paid off. It doesn't look like much until you realize you're pouring hundreds of dollars a month down the drain.
Speaker 2
And that's where American financing comes in. They're not trying to sell you anything.
They're not pushing products at you.
Speaker 2
They're just helping you to find ways to get out of debt and start building up your financial house so you can have future success. The call is free.
The process is simple.
Speaker 2
And the savings could be absolutely life-changing. If, I mean, you wouldn't let your sink run all day, right? For months.
Why on earth would you let your money run that way?
Speaker 2
Why keep throwing your money away on debt? Money that could help you and your family in the years to come. It's American Financing, 800-906-2440, 800-906-2440.
Go to AmericanFinancing.net.
Speaker 2 It's AmericanFinancing.net, 800-906-2440.
Speaker 9
NMLS 182334, NMLS Consumer Access.org. APR for Rates in the Five starts at 6.799% for well-qualified borrowers.
Call 800-906-2440 for details about credit costs and terms.
Speaker 2 10 seconds, Station ID.
Speaker 2 I'm going to talk to you about another taxpayer-funded debacle that should go away, and that's PBS.
Speaker 3 I narrow that down quite a bit. I know.
Speaker 2 PBS and NPR.
Speaker 2
Donald Trump is talking about ending the taxpayer funding for that. There's no reason.
There is absolutely no reason. You know, they're violating all of their non-commercial bull crap.
Speaker 2 They're not supposed to be able to talk about the benefits of a certain product. They can say, paid for by people just like you, like,
Speaker 2
you know, George Soros Foundation. That's all they can say.
They can't say the George Soros Foundation, which specializes in such and such and is making the world a better place. They can't say that.
Speaker 2 By law, they can't say that. They've been saying that for years.
Speaker 2
And they're making money. Lots and lots of money.
Can we stop giving funding to people that are already making money?
Speaker 3 Yeah, we did this with Big Bird. Remember when Mitt Romney said something about PBS or something? And then they were like, they're going to try to kill Big Bird.
Speaker 3 It's like, well, Big Bird, they make billions of dollars a year on merchandising a lot. Hundreds of millions of dollars a year just on merchandising.
Speaker 2 Merchandising.
Speaker 3 Right. Like they should be able to function with a budget yeah you know like other people like I know we can run the blaze on just a fraction of big bird plush toys oh gosh yes yeah
Speaker 3 I don't know why they can't run their whole thing and that's the thing like do you have a list of things I have a list of things that are loosely in my head of of what the government we shouldn't even consider spending money by the government unless you hit certain things like for example
Speaker 3 no one else can do it right like the military yeah no one else can really do that well they can but we don't want them we don't want them to
Speaker 3 We expect and will
Speaker 3 afford ourselves and whatever program is being funded some level of inefficiency. Like the military is another good example of this.
Speaker 3
Some people would argue medical research is. Like I'm kind of okay with the government and its military wasting some money on some new weapon system that doesn't wind up working out.
Yes.
Speaker 3 I'm like okay with them failing at that. I want them to.
Speaker 2 I want the DARPA stuff.
Speaker 3
I want that in that particular. I have to.
So that makes sense. If arts are a great example of what you should never fund because A, people already like doing them, right?
Speaker 3
Like they already, people do art all the time. They pay to go do art.
They like doing art. People enjoy it.
You don't need to pay for it by the government if there is already.
Speaker 2
You know, I really like Dallas. I like Texas.
You know, Rick Perry came to the Dallas people because Boeing rejected moving to Dallas because there weren't enough arts.
Speaker 2 And he came to the community and said, you need to build some stuff. This is.
Speaker 2 And they did.
Speaker 2 Private
Speaker 2
without any taxpayer funds. All right.
Let me tell you about real estate agents I trust. There are certain jobs which simply must be done by professionals in order for them to be done right.
Speaker 2 Sad but true. Your airline pilot should have more experience than you.
Speaker 2 You know, and he probably should have more experience than all of the missions he flew playing Star Fox on Nintendo 64 back in the day. You know what I mean?
Speaker 2 Your surgeon has to do a little bit more than just, I played operation. Okay, real estate agents,
Speaker 2 you know, they have to have more than just a, you know, a powder-coated metal sign with their name on it. That's why I started Real Estate Agents I Trust.
Speaker 2 We make sure that when you reach out, we hook you up with an agent that we've vetted, and I mean vetted hard.
Speaker 2 This is somebody who knows the market inside and out, who understands your need, who doesn't disappear five minutes after the paperwork is signed.
Speaker 2
If you're selling, they will fight to get you the best price. If you're buying, they'll help you find the right place at the right time.
There are just certain jobs that
Speaker 2
need people that you can trust. That's why we started RealEstate Agents I Trust.com.
Go there now. We'll help you find the right real estate agent no matter where you are.
Realestateagentsitrust.com.
Speaker 3
Head over to Blazetv.com/slash Glenn and subscribe today. You'll get 30 bucks off your annual subscription.
It's Blazetv.com/slash Glenn.
Speaker 2 You know, we've been talking today because it's tax day.
Speaker 2
We should all be offended on what our government is spending money on. All of us.
I mean, there are some good things, but there's a lot of stuff they shouldn't.
Speaker 2 For instance, you know, we talked about Harvard. Why are we giving money to Harvard or to Princeton or any of these universities? Why?
Speaker 2 Because the government is counting on them to teach them what to think so they can have more droids up at the State Department. Honestly, that's why.
Speaker 2
There's no reason that our government should be funding any of those universities. None, zero.
They all have plenty of money. You want to help out a welding school? Okay, help that out.
Sure.
Speaker 2
Not these Ivy League universities. Not a dime should be going to them.
Trump's talking about cutting them off because of the anti-Semitism.
Speaker 2 I think that's great, but I think we should also cut them off because we don't have any reason funding them.
Speaker 2 They have money. The United States government does not have money.
Speaker 2
Then we move to he's trying to take on the corporation for public broadcasting. You know whose idea that was? I mean, not originally.
What a surprise.
Speaker 2 It originated, you know, in the Wilson and FDR administrations.
Speaker 2 But
Speaker 2 it was LBJ that started the corporation for a public broadcast okay and you know why because the elites said there's just too many people they're not going to be educated they're just going to be watching this crap on television so it was the elites that got together and said this is bad for society we've got to have something that no one will watch
Speaker 2 you know so i started looking up some things about the founders how would the founders have felt about this public-private partnership in education, public-private partnership in
Speaker 2 media?
Speaker 2 Listen to a couple of things. Jefferson said, the man who reads nothing at all is better educated than the man who reads nothing but newspapers.
Speaker 2
Let me put that into contemporary. The man who reads nothing at all is better educated than the man who only reads social media.
That's absolutely true. That's absolutely true.
Speaker 2 James Madison, he's the architect of the Constitution.
Speaker 2 No way he would have been for NPR and PBS and being funded. No, absolutely not.
Speaker 2 Because he talked about how
Speaker 2 you can't have the government paying for things that will compromise the ability to challenge the authority.
Speaker 2
You can't pay somebody who's supposed to be the watchdog. Okay? John Adams, listen to this one.
Tell me this doesn't sound like today.
Speaker 2 Power always thinks it has a great soul and vast views beyond the comprehension of the weak.
Speaker 2 And that it's doing God's service when it's violating all of his laws.
Speaker 2
That is absolutely true. They all just think that, well, you know what, we've got to help out all these poor little people.
Oh, yeah. Quick example of this.
Because they just don't understand.
Speaker 3 Yeah, quick example of this.
Speaker 3 The SAVE Act, which the government is currently trying, Republicans are largely trying to pass with a couple of Democrats actually on board, but not many, is basically a voter ID act.
Speaker 3 Hey, you have to have an ID when you go to the polls. The government has to provide an alternative form.
Speaker 3 Like if you don't have a driver's license, they have to have some sort of system for you to get it. So if you can't afford it or you don't want to drive, you can still get one.
Speaker 3 Basic, basic, basic thing.
Speaker 3 This is one of the most popular
Speaker 3
arguments that we have in the media. We see it all the time.
It's constantly on television. However, it is one of the most popular proposals in all of policy discussions.
Speaker 3 70, 80% of almost every single demographic. Almost.
Speaker 3 Yeah, almost. Almost.
Speaker 3 Every demographic.
Speaker 2 Yes.
Speaker 3 Agree on this. It's very popular across the board, even with liberals and even with Democrats, right?
Speaker 3 However, what's fascinating about it is the groups that are on MSNBC telling you it's terrible for poor people,
Speaker 3 those people
Speaker 3 support it at lower rates. than the people supposedly
Speaker 3 affected by it. For example, white liberals support the policy for voter ID at lower levels than black liberals do.
Speaker 3 Rich people support it at lower levels than poor people do. The people supposedly victimized by this support voter ID at higher levels than the people warning you about it.
Speaker 2 Listen, listen. Because
Speaker 2
those poor people don't understand, they don't have the intelligence to understand. That's exactly it.
Exactly it.
Speaker 3 You know, we were thinking about this going back to shows of yours in the past when you used to explain this with the progressive movement and their view of sheep and
Speaker 2 ranchers.
Speaker 3 I don't know. You want to go through that?
Speaker 2 Yeah, the ranchers, real quick.
Speaker 2
The ranchers are the progressives, and they see everybody else. They're either in the ranch house helping them, and that's all their friends, and all the other elites.
We all just go out.
Speaker 2 We're taking care of these poor little sheep.
Speaker 2
We make it easy for them. And they see you as a sheep, and they will brand you.
They will feed you and keep you until they lead you to slaughter.
Speaker 2 They're in charge.
Speaker 2 What happens to you, the sheep, doesn't really matter.
Speaker 2 Yes, they're trying to keep the wolves from out of the pen because they lose power, they lose money, they lose whatever it is that the ranchers have if wolves come in.
Speaker 2 So they'll keep you safe, but only because they're profiting on it.
Speaker 3
That's 100% what they do. It's how they view the world.
It is. And they, it's important to note that generally speaking, they don't see this
Speaker 2 as
Speaker 3
awful as it sounds. Right.
A lot of them see this as we are doing God's work. They don't say it is God probably, but they're doing charity to sacrifice.
Speaker 3 They care. They're working hard to protect these people from their own stupidity.
Speaker 2 Right.
Speaker 3
That's how they see the world. Yes.
I don't see the world that way. I don't either.
I at all. In fact, you know, if you're going to be an idiot, you could could be an idiot.
Speaker 2
I'm not going to protect you. You know what? Some of the people that you would say, oh my gosh, they're an idiot, turn out to be genius.
Yep.
Speaker 3 Over and over and over again, that's happened throughout history.
Speaker 2
Oh, look at that guy. Look what he's doing.
Holy cow. Why didn't I think of that?
Speaker 3
You know what I mean? There's plenty of times, too, where it doesn't work out. Right.
Right. Yeah.
But that is
Speaker 3 your lot in life. It's
Speaker 3 your role in your own existence is to figure that out. But not for some elite to figure it out for you.
Speaker 2 Can I just tell you something?
Speaker 2 I've always made fun of you know what natural selection why do these people why do these people who believe in natural selection
Speaker 2 why are they trying to tape monkey tails onto people you know why do we have all these warnings like don't use snowblower on roof right did i tell you this no
Speaker 2 two winters ago the snow was so high it was above the roof line
Speaker 2 And I get a, I get, I get a, an email from the guy who's trying to get the snow off the roof.
Speaker 2 And he sends me an email of just these two holes at the end of the roof because he was using the snowblower on the roof to remove the snow.
Speaker 2
And he got, he passed the roof and they just went down into the, all the way to the ground. And I'm like, oh my God.
You're the guy. I'm the guy.
I'm the guy. Don't use snowblower on the roof.
Speaker 2 I get it now. I get it.
Speaker 2 Well, but I mean, the snow broke his fall, so it's okay.
Speaker 3
Yeah, he was fine. He was fine.
He was fine.
Speaker 2 He was fine. He was a snowblower myself.
Speaker 3 He was ripped up in the snowblower and the snowblower now doesn't work.
Speaker 2
Separate hole. Yes.
Separate hole. Totally separate.
Separate hole. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
So, I mean,
Speaker 2 that is the
Speaker 2
problem with all of this is, and that is, I mean, look at how they treat Donald Trump. And look how they treat Donald Trump's supporters.
Those people are just too stupid.
Speaker 2
I don't think the other side is stupid. I think they're wrong.
I think there are people on both sides that are absolutely evil. They know exactly what they're doing.
Speaker 2 They're all in it for their own power, their own control, and they don't care about people.
Speaker 2 I think that that's a reality on both sides.
Speaker 2 But I don't think they're stupid. I actually say all the time, I think their genius, the way they have pulled all of this off, is genius.
Speaker 2 And
Speaker 2 I think that's only like that because
Speaker 2 We're busy building things.
Speaker 2 They're spending their whole life in a think tank. They're spending their whole life in a university.
Speaker 2 We go out, we take the university, we take the knowledge that we gain from school, no matter when you stopped, and we go out and we try to apply that. And we build something.
Speaker 2 They are just think, think, think, think, think, think, think, how do we destroy?
Speaker 2 Think, think, think, think, think, think, think, how do we destroy?
Speaker 2 And then
Speaker 2 they twist that and pervert that into, no, I'm actually helping. No,
Speaker 2 you're destroying. You're destroying.
Speaker 2 There is help to some degree, and then it becomes destruction. And it becomes destruction when you just think you know what's right, what's wrong, and everybody else is wrong.
Speaker 2 It becomes destruction when you think you are better than other people, that you know so much more that you should tell others exactly how they should live their life.
Speaker 2 You know, the problem with
Speaker 2 for the left, with preachers, they see that and they're like, who's that to say that's the way you should live their life? Some fake God.
Speaker 2 What's your God?
Speaker 2 Seriously, because you preach to me all the time exactly how bad of a person I am because I don't believe in X, Y, or Z.
Speaker 2 Well,
Speaker 2 what's your God?
Speaker 2 How, is it just you? that can tell me that I'm an evil person because I won't accept your truth?
Speaker 2 I mean, you you know, at some point you have to say, look, I disagree with you, but you have a right. Otherwise, it just ends up in eliminating people.
Speaker 2 So I'm, you know, when I was growing up, that's, that was, that happened. People said this all the time, all the time.
Speaker 2
I don't agree with you, but I agree with your right to say whatever it is that you believe. I'll fight to the death for your right to believe.
That's when we all believed in the Bill of Rights.
Speaker 2 When we believe in the Bill of Rights, and that's that's what brings us together, those protected freedoms for you to say what you believe, not to destroy, not to kill, not to burn,
Speaker 2 but to say
Speaker 2 what you believe and not force others to believe it,
Speaker 2 that's when we get along.
Speaker 2 Because we have a free exchange of ideas. You know what convinced me? You know, Bob, for years I thought you were crazy, but you know what?
Speaker 2 I think you're right.
Speaker 2 That's how the world gets together.
Speaker 2 That's not what the current group of elites wants to do. And it's proven by just that poll, just by that, just by that information about,
Speaker 2 you know, they don't want anybody to have ID. Yet I'll bet you those are the same people that want us to have the national real ID.
Speaker 2 that want a database of everybody's name into a federal bank. I'll bet you those same people.
Speaker 2 No, you can't have an ID to vote, but we need all of your information in a central database in Washington, D.C. Guarantee you, same people.
Speaker 2
There's a big difference between panic and preparation. Panic is what happens after the shelves are empty, after the power has gone out, after you realize DoorDash isn't coming.
Wait a minute, what?
Speaker 3 What's that about DoorDash?
Speaker 2 Preparation, on the other hand, happens right now, and nobody makes it easier than My Patriot supply.
Speaker 2 Their emergency food kits are built to last up to 25 years in storage and right now you can get their mega three-month emergency food supply kit.
Speaker 2 It's got everything their standard three-month food kit has plus $360 in real meat, fruit and vegetables that are added on at no extra charge.
Speaker 2 This new kit has been upgraded to give you 2,500 calories per day, which is incredible. Everything comes in sturdy, stackable tubs that are designed to stay safe, dry, and ready.
Speaker 2
You store it once and you don't have to think about it again until you need it. This kit will be there for when you need it.
It stays fresh for up to 25 years and ships fast and discreetly.
Speaker 2
If you've been waiting for the right time, it's right now, mypatriotsupply.com. Claim your mega kit while this offer lasts at mypatriotsupply.com.
10 seconds station ID.
Speaker 2 History has got a warning label. And if we don't read it, we'll live it.
Speaker 2 Stay sharp, friends.
Speaker 2 Glenn Beck returns in a gif.
Speaker 2 So there's a new poll out about Donald Trump's approval ratings, and it is not good. It is not good with independents, especially.
Speaker 3 Yes,
Speaker 3 he's now minus 22 among independents.
Speaker 3 And on the economy, this is the part, because he's always had good ratings on the economy, even when he wasn't a popular president.
Speaker 3 In January, he was plus one among independents, and he is now minus 29. Ow.
Speaker 3 It is the
Speaker 3 way his economic, this is Harry Anton, his economic net approval with independents at this point in a presidency is so low, it has no historical analogy. Oh my gosh.
Speaker 3 Now, again,
Speaker 3 just because you usually get that sort of honeymoon period, which seemed like he had there at the beginning.
Speaker 2 I think he had more of a honeymoon period than most presidents. Most presidents get a, ah, you know, give him a break.
Speaker 2 There was enthusiasm, I was enthusiasm all across the board, with an exception of, you know, the diehard Bernie Sanders. Of course.
Speaker 2
But he had enthusiasm. He's got to turn this around.
This is going to be. He can.
And
Speaker 3
it's not easy. It is.
It is important to
Speaker 2 know
Speaker 3 what the floor looks like.
Speaker 2 Congress has to do it. If you missed any of the show today, we talked about
Speaker 2 what Trump has done to turn it around, but he needs to turn the pressure up on Congress now to do the rest with tax cuts and regulation. It has to be done.
Speaker 2 We also, by the way, talked about
Speaker 2 Bezos and his
Speaker 2 phallic ship to space
Speaker 2 with the women screaming all the way.
Speaker 2
Weird. What a weird.
So weird.
Speaker 3 What a weird time to be alive.
Speaker 2
Really is. It really is a strange time.
It really is. That guy, a billionaire, and you know that's why he built that rocket to look like that.
Speaker 3 It would be like, you know, and honestly, you think of Elon Musk as the guy who likes to make jokes like that, which he does.
Speaker 2 He does. No,
Speaker 2 I think Bezos might not have been full-fledged, badcrack, crazy.
Speaker 2 And then I don't know what he's taking, but he's probably taking some lived forever kind of, you know, supplement.
Speaker 3 serum yeah you know
Speaker 2 i don't have sex with her and he's got so he sent his girlfriend up i don't know if she was dressed she might have been she was dressed in a space bikini i'm not sure um but uh
Speaker 2 that's a weird story it's a weird story weird story and it's tax day you missed the uh podcast uh we started the show today with uh gee how did we get here how did we get here in this mess?
Speaker 2 Well, it actually ties back to a day 50 years ago, and we tell you that story. You can find it on the podcast, wherever you get your podcasts.
Speaker 2 This is Glenn Beck.