Diddy’s NOT GUILTY Verdict Shows How Sad Our Legal System Is | 7/2/25

2h 9m
Pat and Stu in for Glenn. The One Big Beautiful Bill Act passed in the Senate yesterday and heads back to the House. How much government spending will be added to fund this bill, and how much will be cut? A part of the bill that is up for debate is something called “Trump accounts,” where the president plans to give $1,000 for each new baby born between now and 2028. Pat and Stu discuss the downside of what that would lead to, especially if illegal aliens are allowed to qualify for these accounts as well. A new poll shows that Democrats have a lower level of pride in their country than in 2001. But a further dive into the numbers show how much the change has occurred over the last decade. Is it because they were not ever truly proud to be American, or is it because of Trump derangement syndrome? Sean “Diddy” Combs was found not guilty on three of the five charges, with guilty verdicts on two counts of bringing a prostitute across state lines. What does this outcome say about the state of our legal system?
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Today with Pat and Stew,

888727BECK, is our number.

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had some news from the big, beautiful bill front.

We'll get into that and much more coming up.

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Exactly.

Yeah.

Yeah, huh?

What he said.

I'm just going to say the same thing.

It's weird that that was on both our minds at the same time.

All right.

So yesterday, the big, beautiful bill happened in the Senate.

And here's what happened with J.D.

Vance in there.

On this vote, the yays are 50.

The nays are 50.

The Senate being being evenly divided, the Vice President votes in the affirmative.

The bill, as amended, is passed.

Ta-da!

Wow, the excitement is palpable.

It's amazing.

And the crowd goes wild.

There's just nothing like a good C-SPAN to get you fired up for the 4th of July.

Yeah.

And you're welcome.

You're welcome.

So.

We haven't talked much about the Big Beautiful bill together.

That's true.

What are your thoughts on this passage of the Big Beautiful Bill in the way the Senate just passed it?

Right, because it's not

the same bill.

And there's still a lot of work to do on the Big Beautiful Bill.

There is a sort of fakey deadline of July 4th, which is not actually a deadline.

I keep talking to people.

They got to get this done.

July 4th is right around the corner.

It doesn't matter, actually.

It doesn't really.

It's an artificial construct.

It is.

It is a very good usage of that term.

Basically, Donald Trump said he wanted it done by a holiday.

And everyone was like, well, Donald Trump said we need need to get it done by the holiday, so we better get it done by the holiday.

That's essentially all it is, right?

There's no legislative reason it needs to be done by July 4th.

But I mean, I think there is a legitimate worry that if they don't get it done by July 4th, it could, you know, you know how Congress is, right?

Like they start getting focused on other things.

They come up with new complaints they didn't know about.

They might, I mean, this is the worst case scenario.

They might read the bill

and then figure out what's in it.

No, that would be crazy.

i mean i doubt it that would be crazy someone in their office might read a chat gpt might get all the text in it to tell them what they should oppose in it um so that happens i think like it's it's actually a somewhat complicated picture i think and that does tend to happen when you have thousand page bills there is a lot

that they did have the

uh they did have it read was it monday they did the 16 hour thing oh my gosh i only stayed around for 14 of the hours, though.

I didn't hear that.

What did you have something going on?

Is everything okay?

I had to go to the bathroom.

Yeah, I sat there listening and watching intently for 14 hours, and then I'm like, nah, I got to go to the bathroom.

See, I had a television that only carries C-SPAN installed in my bathroom.

Oh, so now even if when I have to go to the bathroom, I don't miss any bill readings.

Oh, that's awesome.

Yeah, that's just that.

That's a great idea.

We had it installed when we bought the home.

It was the first thing we said.

We will buy this home.

However, there is a lot of things.

We need this C-SPAN television in the bathroom.

That was our big negotiation.

Yeah.

So we got that.

And you got it.

Nice.

There is a lot of good in the bill, right?

The tax cuts being made

is big.

Yes.

It's huge.

There's other things.

You get rid of some of the green subsidies.

You know, there are.

You got some border.

Border stuff is important.

Yep.

That's a big one.

I have an entire list of everything in the bill.

There's a lot.

Yeah.

It's a lot.

There's a lot.

And some of the cuts are pretty good, I think, as well.

There's not enough of them.

There are a lot of problems in the bill.

They've cost to get votes.

There's two ways to do it, Pat.

You either bribe people, like they did with Lisa Murkowski, to get the 50-50 vote.

Just bribed her, just gave her all sorts of stuff that she wanted for her state.

Or

the alternative, which will also occur here, is Donald Trump comes and yells at everyone and they do whatever he says.

Those are the two ways you pass bills in today's Congress.

Bribe the congressman or Donald Trump yells at them.

That's what we have here.

And threatens them to be primarily whatever.

Yeah, he'll say, you're not MAGA, you're going to get primaried.

Tom Tillis was one of these.

And there's two ways to react if you are a Republican.

You almost never stand up for what you believe in.

No, why would you do that?

Right.

You can't do that.

Why would you?

With exceptions, Rand Paul being one of them.

We all knew Rand Paul was going to be no to this bill because it's a giant bill that increases the debt a lot.

And he's been consistent on this every single time, basically, since

the dawn of man.

He opposes these things.

You knew he was going to be a no from the beginning.

He said, I might be able to get to a yes, but at no point did I believe he would go and get a yes because he has an ideological opposition to this.

And

I tend to respect that.

A lot of people don't.

No.

A lot of people are just pissed off at him.

Yeah.

I'm not one of them.

Right.

I'm not one of them.

Not.

I'm not mad at him.

I'm not mad at Thomas Massey.

No.

They're both really good legislators.

They're both good representatives, and they stick to, as a rule, what they believe.

Yep.

And I don't have problems with people like that.

No.

You know, Chip Roy's another one who actually did vote yes initially on this and is now saying this version of it he can't support.

He will be very happy to tell you exactly why he's doing that.

It's not because he didn't read the bill.

It's not because he doesn't have any idea what's in it.

It's not because Donald Trump hasn't yelled at him enough yet, right?

It's not because because he hasn't been bribed enough yet.

There are a few representatives who think that way.

It's just really rare, really rare.

So, I mean, I think a better solution to this, and I'd love to get your thoughts on this, Pat, would be a less big.

Perhaps I would argue more beautiful bill that did attempted

less, attempted to do,

you know, didn't have a lot of these giveaways, didn't have all this stuff in there.

I just talked about this on my show.

Break it up into a whole bunch of different bills if you have to.

Let's get the tax cuts done.

Do that separately.

Let's get the border bill done.

Let's do that separately.

And then, you know, we can, we can hash out all the rest of the stuff.

There's no reason, I don't think, to put it all into one big

beautiful bill because it's not as beautiful as it could have been.

Right.

The only thing is, of course, the reconciliation process.

And it's like to get that, to get only 50 votes, you have to have, you only get one shot at that here.

And that's fine.

And I think you can put, I mean, you can, I think, even put in the tax cuts and the border package and a couple of other things.

But like, they have, I mean, you know, the list of things that are in here,

I mean, if I started reading it right now, just the list, not the whole bill, we would not get through it before the end of the show.

I mean, there's just so many different things

that are in there that are just, you know.

Well, it's 1,100 pages, I think they said, when they started reading it.

So, I mean, yeah, there's a lot of stuff jammed in that thing.

Yeah, a lot.

It's a lot.

It's a ton.

And nobody can know everything in it, you know?

Even though they read it, you know, they weren't paying attention.

There's not a single human alive who knows all the things in this bill.

Right.

It's like one of those Netflix series about 1700s England.

Like, you might watch the series, but you don't know what's going on in it.

Right.

Right.

They're just saying these words, and they sound like English, but no one, they don't mean anything.

As he would say, Pat, they're just speaking gibberish.

Right.

So no one could possibly know.

I think, so

at the end of the day, I would love to have a bill that was less big and more beautiful.

You know, I think

you do need to get these tax cuts passed.

It has to happen.

Absolutely.

It's a requirement.

I think it's sensible.

People are like, well, this is what Donald Trump ran on.

Some of this is what Donald Trump ran on.

You know, I mean, sure, the border and the tax cuts are on there and things like no tax on tips, which, you know, again, it's fine.

It's a very, by the way, it's a very small piece of this.

When you look at the overall, you know, what are the costs, Pat?

The costs in here.

The costs are almost $5 trillion of it are the tax cut extensions.

Okay, so almost all of it.

The next highest cost.

To me, that's not a cost.

To me, it's not a cost either.

First of all, it's the current law.

Right.

Number two, it's not a cost.

The government takes less of our money.

It is not a cost to the government.

Sorry, that wasn't yours to begin with, so that's not a cost to you.

I reject this completely.

Yeah, that pisses me off.

It's an infuriating

construct, Pat,

to call this a cost, but that is what one of the, that's by far the biggest cost of this bill.

Second biggest is other tax provisions.

What's that?

It's stuff like no tax on tips.

And the cost on no tax on tips is $32 billion over 10 years.

Okay?

It is not even.

$3.2 billion a year?

I don't even wake up.

I don't even wake up for $3.2 billion a year, Pat.

No, we don't.

And you certainly don't get out of bed for that.

No.

So absolutely not.

You roll over and you go right back to sleep for that.

No, it's like a lot of these programs that people talk about are

not even factors in this.

There are also some temporary tax cuts that

kind of come on and expire.

One of his other,

there's kind of those, no tax on tips, no tax on overtime, I think is one of those.

Oh, right.

There's no tax on, you know, they wanted to do no tax on Social Security.

They didn't actually do that, but they did wind up cutting a decent tax cut for seniors, I think, you'll see out of this bill.

There is a lot there.

It's just one of those situations where

That's basically all it is.

When it comes to savings, they keep talking about Medicaid cuts.

Have you looked into what the Medicaid cuts are, Pat?

I guess.

Just the cuts to illegal aliens.

You know, that's, you know, there is some of that.

Like, they keep saying, well, it's waste, fraud, and abuse.

And every, first of all, the reason they say that is every single person on earth is against waste, fraud, and abuse.

Right.

It's 100% of people,

except for the people abusing and

wasting.

That is the, those are the only people who actually ever say anything about that.

But

the biggest Medicaid cut, and I'm going to put this in massive air quotes for those listening on radio or podcast,

the cut is, and I was like, I kept looking at this.

I'm like, why do they keep saying this?

How are they coming up with this being a cut?

They keep saying they're cutting it because of work requirements.

And I was like, well,

it can't be what I'm thinking here, right?

They can't be saying a work requirement is a cut for the reason I'm thinking.

And I was like, it can't be it.

So I did a bunch of research on this.

You'll be surprised to hear it's exactly what I was thinking.

Oh, wow.

Which is, what they're saying is,

they say, hey, you have to work 20 hours a week to

get Medicaid.

Okay.

And there will be a bunch of people out there who will say,

A, I don't want to work 20 hours a week.

Or B, I don't mind.

I

don't really feel like doing the paperwork to prove that I tried to work 20 hours a week.

So therefore, I'm not going to bother attempting to get Medicaid.

And

that's a cut.

So it will cost less.

And they're saying that's a cut to Medicaid.

Unreal.

Which is insanity.

To say that it's a cost

that our taxes won't be as high

is insane.

Yes.

I think it might be more insane to say it's a cut.

No people who are eligible to Medicaid will lose their Medicaid.

Only people, they will just say, because they're adding some requirements, some extra paperwork.

And we all know how these programs work, Pat.

Like, if you've ever known someone who's been on, you know, who went on unemployment,

you go on unemployment at the first, I don't know how long.

I'm just estimating this.

But like, I remember I had a relative who went on unemployment, and he was like, well,

you know, it was like...

The first 13 weeks were basically nothing.

He had to do basically nothing other than just apply to the program and get accepted.

And then after after 13 weeks, they were like, hey, you need to prove that you're doing some interviews.

And so he did.

He would go and he would do the interviews, but I don't know how interested he was really in getting a job, but he went and did whatever basic requirements they did.

And it was not particularly hard to stay on there.

Eventually, you do get to a point where it gets kind of difficult to stay on or it runs out.

Right.

Yeah.

That is the situation with these Medicaid.

We all know that like for a while, you're probably going to just get the Medicaid if you just say you're trying to get a job.

And eventually they might get a little bit harder on this.

They passed a program like this in Arkansas

where some people did fall off the Medicaid rolls.

But again, I keep saying this.

Oh, I know.

If you will not go through a basic round of requirements to get this program, you probably don't need the program.

Now,

there could be some exceptions, right?

Someone with like severe health problems that maybe can't get out.

So, you know, you have a heart attack in the middle of this process.

You don't file the paperwork.

You lose your Medicaid.

That shouldn't happen, right?

There are certain things that need to be covered.

But generally speaking, that is the Medicaid cut they're talking about.

They're talking about people who don't fill out the forms.

By the way, if you don't get a job, okay, because there are people who might maybe can't get jobs and work the 20 hours requirement, right?

Those people can fill out forms saying, I'm trying to get a job.

They can volunteer in certain circumstances.

There's plenty of other ways to get around this.

So it's not just like, oh, because I could see, you know, you want to get a job and you can't get it.

That happens to people.

So you have to have a way to carve that out.

Of course, there are these carve-outs for this.

They're just saying some people won't go through with it.

Now,

I think there's a good argument to say that at least some of those people probably didn't need Medicaid.

They probably have some other way of getting what they need.

Some people might be too lazy to do it.

Some people might be too stupid to do it.

Some people might get caught up in red tape for real reasons, as we were discussing.

But generally speaking, that's what they're saying.

That's what they're all worried about.

We can't cut Medicaid.

Have you heard any Republican explain that to the American people?

I have.

I don't think

I have either.

I have.

I don't understand why they can't do it.

This is why I had to look it up.

Because I was like, wait a minute, this can't be.

How is it possible that you can't explain that to the American people?

We'll find out in just 60 seconds or so.

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Yeah, we were just talking about what is bad in the big program.

From a conservative standpoint,

what are the things that we would object to?

Despite the best efforts of some of the people we talked about, there are some green subsidies in here.

There are some Biden spending programs.

You know, because we always talk about these big bills, these big programs.

People get used to them, right?

They get locked in.

We said this with Obamacare at the time.

People are going to get used to their free health care, and then they're going to say, well, you can't take away my free health care.

Right.

Now, some of that stuff makes sense when the program has been in place for 20 years, right?

It doesn't make sense when it was passed by Joe Biden.

However, some of that spending, not all, but some of that spending is still in there.

Some of the green subsidies are still in there.

You know, there's been a big effort by conservatives to say, hey, wait a minute, get rid of these completely.

There's no reason we can't get rid of the green stuff passed by Joe Biden in the last term.

A lot of that money's not even spent yet, Pat.

Some of the money that's not spent, they got rid of.

Some of the the money were like projects have already been designated.

They're like, well, they've already started.

And so a lot of that money still gets spent, right?

Like the Senate was worse on that than the House.

Yeah.

Oh, well.

Stop them.

Yeah.

Not that.

So that's in there.

I mean, the biggest problem is, again, the scope of it.

You're talking about a $5 trillion increase in the debt limit.

Most of that's from the tax cuts, right?

Making them permanent?

Well, yes.

Yes, I think that's true

from a cost perspective when they say, quote unquote, cost.

There's also some defense spending, new defense spending.

There's Homeland Security and Immigration spending.

And then there's

a slice of a bunch of other stuff in there.

Most of it is the tax stuff.

Now, tax provisions also uses some of that

green subsidies and things like that would be included in that.

I don't like that stuff.

There are a lot of people in Congress who have these projects might employ a thousand people in their states, in their districts.

And so they

say, even though they're quote-unquote conservatives or Republicans, they say, well,

I've got to be loyal to my state.

These people are working or they're going to have these jobs and I don't want to cut these jobs, which, again, I don't agree with, but that's the reasoning behind it.

And I and like the tax cut extensions,

to me, should not be thought of as a cost at all.

And I don't, you know, but that with all that said,

the trillions of dollars are going to pile up because we're not balanced now.

So extending current policy now and adding some new spending is still going to increase the deficit.

This is the rand ball problem with all of this, right?

Yeah.

You know, we are, we're not in alignment with how we're supposed to be spending.

We're not spending what we make.

And that is a big problem.

So it just locks in for multiple years in a Republican vision of the future, massive debt and trillions of dollars of spending.

So that is, I think, the biggest problem with it.

888-727-BECK or Pat and Stoop for Glenn coming up.

This is Glenn Beck.

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Hey, it's Patton Stuford, Glenn, 888727, B-E-C-K.

So, also in the Big Beautiful bill, is a provision for all babies born between now and 2028, they all get $1,000.

Yeah, you were asking

what's bad in the bill.

Yeah.

This would be an example from my perspective of something bad.

Flat-out giveaway.

Just giving away.

Because you got born, you get $1,000.

Yes.

They're called Trump accounts.

Okay.

And, you know, again, the president's done many good things, you know, but this one, I would,

it's a nice, I can understand why you'd want your name on it, right?

A family has a baby born, they need money, they like money.

You know, having a savings account where there's a giveaway to

your child,

they will appreciate that, right?

Someone handing you $1,000 is something appreciated, typically.

You're not going to say no to it.

You're not going to say no to it.

So that is why

you want to put Trump.

It's why

when they did the stimulus checks, he put his name on it, right?

He understands that dynamic well.

Trump accounts, to me, are a terrible idea, and I really don't, I hope they get stripped out of this bill somehow.

I really doubt that they will.

Basically, it gives a tax advantage savings account for children when they are born, $1,000 per child if they are born between 2024 and 2028.

Now,

you might

pop into your head.

Number one, this is a government giveaway program.

It's an entitlement.

I mean, as pure as entitlements can be, the only requirement is birth.

Okay.

That is as pure as an entitlement can be.

Without regard for income.

Right.

Without regard to income.

You could be a billionaire, have a child, and that child will get a $1,000 account.

Yeah, someone actually pointed this out one of the congressmen who was opposed to it.

I don't remember who it was.

It was like, Elon Musk has like 12 kids a week.

We're going to keep giving him $1,000 every single time he has a kid.

That's enough to bankrupt the barricade right there.

I'm terrified by the cost of this.

Oh, man.

And this is interesting.

Listen to this carve-out.

Late changes to this provision, this is according to the New York Times, late changes to this provision removed a requirement that a parent be a U.S.

citizen to qualify

for the $1,000 contribution.

They removed that requirement.

They removed that requirement.

So you could be an illegal alien who just gave birth to a child.

That child gets $1,000?

Yeah, or at least not a citizen.

They could be a green card holder, or you could be a visiting student, or whatever.

But if you have the kid, and of course, the kid, by the current

interpretation of the 14th Amendment, is going to be a citizen no matter what.

So they all get the thousand dollars as well so two students that come over hook up that's the thousand dollars now a couple things on this pat number one do you believe in 2028 when we're in the middle of this presidential campaign that there's going to be either candidate no either a democrat or

likely jd vance running on a you know a third trump term essentially is going to say we need to get rid of these uh thousand dollar giveaways to be absolutely not.

It won't happen.

Of course.

There's one thing that will happen, though.

One of the two sides, probably the Democrat, but maybe J.D.

Vance, I don't know, will say, $1,000 isn't enough.

It needs to be $2,000.

What can you do with $1,000?

Maybe it's $5,000.

Maybe it's $10,000 per baby.

There's no way this just becomes $0 in 2029.

No, right?

It becomes much more than $1,000.

Of course, it does.

This is the start of a massive entitlement program that is in the middle of this this bill and should just be stripped out.

It's silly.

You don't get a $1,000

lottery ticket scratch off that wins every time when you're born.

Come on.

I mean, it's just, I can't even believe we have to make this point.

I understand why it's in there.

I understand why it seems like a wonderful giveaway or why you might promise it during a campaign, but come on.

This is the United States of America.

We should not be buying children for $1,000.

No.

That should not be the thing that we do.

And certainly not under a Republican administration.

Right.

And a Republican majority in the Senate and the House.

There's no reason for that.

Because

we all know that

the Republican position will be the most restrictive possibility for this going forward.

And when it becomes $5,000 in four years or eight years or whenever that occurs, there will be some evil Rand Paul character that will come in and say, I think we should cut this to only $2,000.

And everyone will call him a fascist

and that he hates children.

Yes.

And that

he is the, they will show every poor mom

who wants to have wants their kid just to have $10,000 in free money and they don't have it anymore.

Or they will show the kid who got the savings account and spent it on college and now has a wonderful family and is a doctor,

they will show that sob store and they will say, gosh, why is it only $10,000?

It should be a million dollars.

You know, I mean, this is the, it's the minimum wage argument.

It's everything.

And they will be present it, by the way, as a cut.

They will.

They will say, to only $2,000, that's a cut.

You're cutting money to poor families.

Blah, blah, blah, blah.

We've been through this so many freaking times.

And the only way to stop this is why we were were so hardcore on obamacare at the time is before it starts

that's the only time to stop it yep this is the week to stop this program and the perfect example of that is social security and medicare

those two programs you can't even speak about cutting or or making more difficult to obtain in any way or just pushing back the time that you receive all of that stuff It's just completely out of the question now.

It's untouchable now.

We've become so accustomed to it that it's just a part of our lives.

And we demand it.

We don't just expect it.

We demand it now.

Yeah.

I mean, Pat, Donald Trump will call his opponents fat slobs on television.

He will say literally anything about anyone.

That's one of the things we love about him, right?

Yep.

Yep.

Even he.

He has said over and over and over again, he will not touch any of those programs, which is why it's so dumb.

The big attack on him every single campaign is like, oh,

he's he's going to cut all these programs.

He has said over and over again for

the beginning he will not touch any of them.

He just said the other day, I don't like doing a lot with cuts.

He just said it the other day.

I don't like doing a lot with cuts.

That's the Republican president, who, by the way, I think has done a lot of really good things.

But

there's no appetite for this anymore.

There used to be at least the appetite to say they wanted cuts.

They don't even do that anymore.

That's where we are.

So you implement a new program that, you know, again, supposedly only cost $15 billion to start for four years.

What's that going to cost in 10 years, 20 years, 30 years?

I just, again, it's a bad idea.

Stop it before it starts.

I don't think anybody voted for Donald Trump because of the Trump accounts.

And then there's anybody who's like, gosh, I'm going to vote for him because I want $1,000 and a go-in-up savings account that my kid can spend in X amount of years.

I don't think that that is, you know, it's a a nice, it, there's some nice feelings behind it, Pat.

Yes.

Nice feelings behind it.

There's a lot of nice feelings behind literal socialism as well.

And we should avoid those things as much as possible.

Because, I mean, that, I don't know.

Is there when you have a giveaway to someone just for being born?

And I think there's an argument from some on the right who say, well, this is encouraging families.

I don't know.

Pat, you had 91 children.

92 now.

92.

I'm sorry.

I I didn't love it.

Very early this morning, and my wife just had a baby.

Oh, really?

Yeah.

I was going to say, you're like Joe Biden with grandkids that can't even keep track of how many you have.

And some of them, I think you acknowledge all of yours, which is great.

That's really nice of you.

But the point is, you know,

would you have had

fewer children or would you have had more children?

Would you have 96 children today if you got promised $1,000 for each one?

I would not.

No.

That's not how people live.

No.

Especially when you can't access the money right away.

Right.

Like, it's a savings account that is going to be for the child, like, you know, throw towards college or throw it towards a new car when they need it or whatever later on in life.

It's not like you just get $1,000 to spend on baby stuff.

And if you're having kids based on financial considerations,

it's going to cost a lot more than $1,000 to have the child.

It used to be something that we were very critical of

back in the day.

You know, there was a time where we said, hey, you know, people who are having lots of children to get, if it's like welfare, extra welfare money, that's a bad thing.

Very.

So I, and I don't, I don't understand why this would be a concern.

I can understand why Democrats would propose something like this.

I just don't.

But again, we should point out it's a small part of this bill, and there is a lot of good.

There's probably more good in the bill than bad.

So I think that's why a lot of these congressmen are like, well,

I guess.

I mean, did you hear the Lisa Murkowski thing?

I love the Lisa Murkowski thing.

She is the holdout of the Senate.

So, of course, what they do, again, there's two things you can do.

You can have Donald Trump yell at her.

Murkowski, largely immune to that.

She does not seem to care that much about Donald Trump yelling at her.

She's one of the few who doesn't care about that part.

She is not immune at all to bribery.

So she's like, well, I want these things for Alaska.

So she gets all these things for Alaska.

And then she's like, all right, I'm a yes.

And then she says, well, I really hope the House rejects it and sends back something else.

This is a bill she voted for.

And she's saying she hopes the House doesn't vote for it and then sends it back to them in another version, which may very well happen.

It might.

This thing is not going to happen by Friday.

It would be surprising, but

it's pretty clear that's Wednesday.

We got one day to get this done and then signed in both chambers.

I don't think it can happen.

And Trump, by the way, again, is a negotiator.

He knows, he says it must be done by July 4th over and over again.

Everyone acts as if it needs to be done by July 4th.

And then when it comes to July 4th, he'll say, well,

July 5th.

He made it seem like a strong deadline because he wants it done soon.

And so I understand that.

And it seems to work on a lot of these people in Congress.

Like, they act as if they all know the rules.

There's no reason it needs to be done by June.

It needs to be done by the end of the year, is when it needs to be done.

And, you know, at least for the tax cuts to be put into place so we don't get the rise.

It's an important, that's a really important deadline.

July 4th is not a really important deadline.

It's a holiday.

It's an important holiday.

Our Independence Day is something we love to celebrate.

It's not necessarily germane to this bill.

But so I don't think, you're right, it's probably not going to get done.

But again, Donald Trump has a way of just saying do it.

Yeah.

And they do.

And they do.

And they do.

You know, it's the

jump and how high.

And

for

95% of Republicans, that's usually enough.

I don't think most of them even think of it, think of the situation beyond that.

Does Donald Trump want it?

I think you're right.

This is something I've been thinking about a little bit.

I was talking to you at Chris Bedford on my show last night about this.

We have this criticism we've made a million times, Pat, of Republican GOP Congress.

Oh, well,

they never do the right thing.

There's the establishment, the Mitch McConnell's of the world.

And we've said all that stuff a million times.

Does that apply to our current current situation anymore?

Who are these people?

I guess Tom Tillis is your example.

Who are these people?

Lisa Murkowski's on it.

I mean, I guess Susan Collins voted no.

Rand Paul's a totally different situation we've already discussed.

None of these people are going against what Donald Trump is saying to do.

There's a few in the House and Congress that you have to deal with, but it's, I mean, Donald Trump is saying he wants this.

He is saying he wants, this is the bill he wants.

Now, we all know it's not perfect.

It's not exactly what Trump wants.

And there are things in there that I'm sure Trump would strip out if he could.

But he says this deal is good enough.

And almost all Republicans are going along with this.

This idea that there's this big stress between some establishment figures and Donald Trump,

where's the evidence for this these days?

Yeah.

10 years, you know, eight years ago in 2017 or whatever, 2018, I think you did see that.

I don't think you really see it anymore.

No, you don't.

There's not much of it.

They pretty much will go along.

If he finds it to be really, really important, they'll pretty much go along with it.

888-727-BECK, more coming up.

Can't believe he used to be a top 40 disc jockey.

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It's Pat and Stu for Glenn today, 888727 BECK.

This is a really nice message from an unexpected source.

Elon O'Marr actually

yesterday wished everybody a happy Independence Day.

And you might think, well, that's a little early, but okay, that's really nice.

That's nice.

You'd be glad to see that.

You feel like you wouldn't get that that normally from an Ilan Omar character.

Yeah.

But the reason you're getting it is because she's talking about Somalia.

That's the Independence Day

she's speaking of.

So happy, happy Independence Day, everybody in Somalia.

Ilan Omar is still thinking about you.

Okay, Somalia first.

And shocking, isn't it, though?

It's so good.

It's unbelievable.

Will we get a Happy Independence Day on July 4th from the 20th?

My guess is no.

Now, maybe because she did this, she would do it as a throwaway.

Maybe, and you would think that, but a lot of times she'll surprise you by, nope, not even that.

She doesn't even feel the need to do that.

You pathetic losers.

She does not care at all.

You know, all of these, the

Hamas squad, the, you know, Alana Mars and Rashid Talib and all of those people,

they don't seem to care what Americans actually think of them.

They seem to be representing who they believe are their constituents.

And for Alan Amar, that's people who immigrated here from Somalia.

For Tlaib, it's Palestinians.

I mean, they don't care what Americans think of them.

But they keep getting elected.

So

I don't know when

they're going to wake up in Minnesota, but

no time soon, apparently.

Triple 8727BECK.

Much more coming up with Patton Stewart for Glenn today.

This is Glenn Beck.

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This is

the Glenn Beck Program.

Today, featuring Pat and Stew for Glenn,

we got this Gallup poll that you may have heard some about.

We got to

get into this, dig into how proud Americans are to be Americans, and break it down by

political parties,

ethnicity, and age groups.

We'll get into this a little bit coming up in one minute.

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So a Gallup poll has shown that Americans apparently are not quite as proud to be Americans as they once were.

Back in 2001, they did a survey that found that 90% of Republicans were proud to be Americans, either very proud or extremely proud, and 87% of Democrats were either extremely or very proud to be Americans.

That's changed just a little bit in the last 24 years.

In fact, it's gone up for Republicans.

It went from 90 to 92% for Republicans.

For Democrats, a little bit different.

It went from 87%

to 36%.

It's noticeable, Pat.

It's kind of noticeable.

Yeah.

Yeah.

A little bit of a drop-off.

You might be thinking, well, okay, was that when it was abnormally high right after 9-11?

This is the exact question I had for Glenn when he brought this poll up because, you know, if you look back at George W.

Bush's approval after 2000, he's in the 90s, right?

Like,

there was a lot of weird stuff going on in polling in 2001 after 9-11.

Yeah, we were together and everybody was kind of on the same page for about a month.

So, did it happen then?

Is that why there's such a big difference?

And it turns out that's not the case, though, right?

No, it was interesting because I had the same question, and I was like, oh my gosh, you know, was it just 9-11?

Actually, no, the Democrats remained positive on America for quite a long time.

Like, I don't have the numbers right in front of me, but it was like, you know, 10 years later, 2000, like, let's say 11.

Still in the

80s.

80s.

It wasn't quite as high as 2001, but it was still very high.

Almost all the drop-off has happened since.

about 2016.

Now, you fill in the blanks on what happened in 2016 that you think may have occurred in the Democrats' mind to say that they're not all that impressed with America anymore.

It did bounce back up, you'll be surprised to hear, for about four years, and now has dropped off again to the lowest point of all time.

This has something to do with Donald Trump very specifically.

Yeah.

With people on the left, they don't like him.

Now, it had dropped off, though, from the heights of 90% before Trump, but most of the drop has happened since Trump came into office.

So I don't know.

Is that a good thing or a bad thing?

Is it, okay, maybe they just, you know, they're partisans.

They don't like this.

They have Trump derangement syndrome.

Maybe it's not as large anti-American sentiment.

I tend to think it's long-lasting.

I think it's going to last.

I think it is true.

Yeah.

Yeah.

Fascinating that independents, if you're independent, you still, 53% of independents are extremely or very proud of America.

It breaks down with 63% of men, 55% of women.

White, 66% are proud of the country.

Non-white, 45%, so quite a bit lower.

The real problem area, though, is with the youth, 18 to 34 year olds.

The youths are down to 36%.

36% are either very or extremely proud of America.

And I think you can blame a lot of that on

what's going on in education.

They're being taught that America is not something to be proud of.

From 35 to 54, the number is 60%.

And 55 plus 72% of people are proud of the country.

Interesting.

It'd be fascinating to see

how proud, for instance, Somalians are of

Somalia.

Be a Somalian.

I've heard

Elon belt that one out on Independence Day the other day.

It's wonderful.

Yeah, that would be...

I think, you know, it's interesting.

I think there is a let me give you two scenarios here, Pat.

Okay, and you tell me which bad one is true.

Okay, okay,

so scenario number one, I think the one we're kind of all thinking here: Democrats, we used to be a more united country, people love the country over time.

Democrats have turned more negative on it, have faded away.

As we pointed out, a lot of this has happened since the Trump era began, and now they hate it.

Okay, that's scenario one.

Yep, okay, scenario two:

Democrats, even in 2000, 2001, didn't really love the country all that much.

Maybe they were more negative than they let on, but they knew

the right thing to say

was they loved America.

And now that

cadence,

the current of the river that is America has stopped pushing people to think they need to say that.

Right.

Now, the current is going the opposite direction and it's pushing people to say, hey, you know what?

I think it's cooler now on the Democratic side to say you hate the country rather than it's a good place, but there's got lots of problems.

Yeah, I think that's, yeah, that could be part of it.

I think it's a lot of people.

That could definitely be part of it.

Yeah.

Maybe it's both of those things.

Because I do think that's part of it.

Like there probably were a lot of people.

I mean, I don't know.

I remember 2000, 2001, 2002.

There's a lot of complaints.

by Democrats about America.

They didn't like it all that much.

Yeah.

Certainly less than Republicans.

I have this poll now in front of me, Pat.

In 2001, it was 90% of Republicans, 87% of Democrats, 84% of Independents who thought it was great.

If you fast forward 10 years,

you've got 92%

of Republicans,

78% of Democrats.

So it had fallen off from 87 to 78 in that period.

Okay.

Go to 2013.

Republicans were the same or a little bit higher.

Yeah, and that was during Obama's reign of terror.

Let's go to 2013.

Yeah.

Okay.

Democrats 85%.

Wow.

So you think about that.

They've gone from 87 to 85 in 12 years now.

And Republicans, by the way, are at 93 in that scenario, and Independents at 80%.

So again, in the middle, you think of 2013.

This is right after Mitt Romney loses.

I mean, this is a moment of real despair for a lot on the right right because, you know, a lot of people point at that and say, this is what's changed the Republican Party.

A lot of people say

that loss for Mitt Romney in a time where obviously Obama was not doing a good job as president, and that's not me saying that.

His approval ratings sucked and he got reelected.

And a lot of that was to do with Mitt Romney's performance, frankly.

And obviously, as we saw after that, not really a conservative.

But that

factor led into such frustration on the right that they wanted somebody who was going to do something totally different.

And that's when Donald Trump stepped into that void and was able to really change the party in a lot of good ways.

Some ways you might not like, some ways you might love.

But certainly the change is noticeable

from that party.

93% of Republicans approve of America at the time.

85% of Democrats, 80% of Independents.

The fall all starts after this.

2015, it's still 80% for Democrats.

2016, 68%.

2017, 67%.

2018, 60%.

2019, 51%.

2020, 42%.

It bounces back up for the Biden era, but only to 62%.

Then drops to 52% in 2022.

2023, 55%.

2024, 62% in an election year.

And then they lose that election and now it's 36%.

So some of this is partisanship.

Some of this is Trump.

Some of this, I think, is, I think it's fair to say, especially when you look at the Biden bounce back, if you will, only going up to the 60s and 50s, a lot of this is just core in the Democratic movement.

There is a core element of the left that is based on the idea that we are not a great country that has had some problems.

We are a horrible country that's done maybe a couple of good things here and there.

That is the major separation because throughout this entire period, Republican approval

never dropped below 84%.

And what year was it, 84?

2022, which is the peak of inflation during Biden.

It actually improves the last two years of the Biden administration, if you believe that, up to 85%.

And now, of course, it's a lot of people.

It just goes to show, though, that it's not affected by who's president.

Not affected all that much.

Yeah, not really.

Because it only vacillated from 93 to 84%.

That's amazing.

Yes.

Given who was president during some of that time, during 12 of those years,

you had Obama for eight of them, which we hated.

We hated the Obama years.

And then the Biden years were even worse.

So for 12 of those years, we had presidents we

really disliked, very strongly disliked.

Yeah.

Uh-huh.

I very strong, but still love the country.

Still love the country.

Still very proud to be American.

Still very much say this is

the best place to be.

Tells you a lot.

I agree with you.

I think there is an element that has creeped in a little bit on the right.

I think it's, but I mean, it's quite clearly in the polling is very much at the fringes saying, you know,

you notice this a little bit with some of the

Israel-Iran stuff.

Like basically, well, we kill people too.

And, you know, we do bad things too.

It's not just Iran.

How can we get on our high horses and say we're better than Iran?

And we are.

Pretty easy.

Frankly, we can easily do it.

Very easily to do.

Yeah, I can do it without any problem at all.

Can I give you the most concerning thing in this poll for me?

I'm not shocked, frankly, that Democrats

don't like the country that much.

As I said, I think even in 2000, I think that number's inflated for Democrats.

They're saying the right thing early on in this polling for the first 10 years of this year.

The thing that's concerning to me more than anything else are independents.

Independents start off at 84%, and this is pretty standard through the first, I don't know, 15 years of this polling, which is they are about at the level of Democrats and oftentimes slightly lower than Democrats, saying America is a great place.

Their fall, though, has been pretty consistent since the Trump era began as well.

Started in 2015 at 76%.

This is down a little bit from the very early days in 2001 of 84%.

So 84 to 76 in 14 years.

2015 at 76, goes down to

73%, 2017, 70%, 2018, 66%, 2019, 64, 2020.

And you say, okay, well, maybe they didn't like that first Trump

presidency.

He was certainly a figure that divided people.

Maybe it's that.

But they don't bounce back for Biden, right?

They continue to see, this is a crap heap.

It goes down to 63%,

down to 60% in 2024, and then how it's dropped now to 53%

in 2025.

So just barely a majority of independents say America is great.

And I think that in some ways backs up the theory number two of how to read this poll.

It has now become kind of

okay,

popular, the cool thing to say that America is a bad place

rather than it's generally a good place.

And now you're seeing people, independents, who aren't necessarily pushed around by partisanship as much, agreeing to this.

I mean, from 84 to 53% among independents.

It's almost like a social contagion.

Yeah, yes.

It's why we have 19 times the amount of trans people in our society every month.

Exactly right.

I just, I'm concerned about that.

Because I'm not concerned that the left.

I'm concerned about it, but I'm not surprised at all that the left would turn against America.

It's frankly fundamental to everything they believe in, that America is a bad place.

If you want something like Zoron Mom Dani,

yeah, of course you think America sucks.

Right?

It's doing, it stands for everything this person is against.

Yeah.

It stands against capitalism.

It stands against free speech.

It stands against so many of these things that a momdani or a Bernie Sanders would be against.

If you're on the left, I can kind of get why you might have problems.

If you're in the middle, though,

we shouldn't be seeing fall off like this.

Yeah.

Especially, you know, and again, in a period where

things are better than they are.

And again,

I know maybe Elon Omar would choose Somalia over this, but other than that, I don't think there's many people who would.

And speaking of Zaran Momdami, we'll get into some interesting policies of his coming up in one minute.

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Breaking news, Pat.

Breaking news here on the Glenn Beck program, 888727BECK is the number.

It looks like we have verdicts in the P.

Diddy trial, or the Diddy.

What are we supposed to call him?

Sean Combs.

Sean Combs.

The Sean Combs trial.

They had gone back and forth.

I think there were five charges.

They had four of them set yesterday, and they were still stuck on the fifth one.

They said there was no way they were going to get to a resolution.

Then this morning they came and they said, hey, we came to a resolution on the fifth one.

So

it is a unanimous, they have unanimous among all five.

I'm just reading through this.

Count one,

not guilty.

What was that count?

Does it say?

It says U.S.

Combs.

My write-up does not have that.

Sex trafficking of Ventura, not guilty.

Transportation for prostitution, guilty.

Oh.

Sex trafficking, not guilty, for the other, the woman, Jane, which is known as Jane.

Transportation for prostitution for Jane, guilty.

So basically, they got him on the prostitution stuff, not on the sex trafficking stuff.

So flying from state to state is what he's being,

what he got convicted for, right?

Yeah.

I think taking these women across state lines, sounds like.

Yeah.

But But he wasn't sex trafficking them.

But that is, you know, again,

I think

interesting.

It's an interesting line.

I will say when you look at the facts of the case, you know, the sex trafficking thing,

you know, I don't know.

Take it out of the law for a second here.

Talking as people who have an understanding of the basic English language, when I think of sex trafficking, what I'm thinking of is someone who's got a team of prostitutes that they're forcing in a slavery way to do a bunch of things.

I don't know that that describes what he actually did,

at least my understanding of it.

Do you agree with that?

I do.

I don't know.

I think of something totally different when I think of sex trafficking.

And I really haven't followed it closely

because I

have never been a P.

Diddy fan.

What?

Yeah, Sean Puff Daddy Combs or whatever he called himself.

I've never.

You?

Surprising, right?

Yeah.

I don't have a single

P.

Diddy, Puff Daddy album if he has them.

None of them?

A none.

You don't even know if he has them.

I don't even know if he has them.

I'm sure he must.

He must.

Right?

He must have something.

Odds are he does.

Odds are he does.

And I don't own any of them.

Nor have I ever listened to him on, let's say, a Spotify where you wouldn't own, but you're just kind of borrowing the song to play it whatever you want.

Right.

Never done that.

So are you sure?

I haven't followed him all of that, all that closely,

but

it's interesting.

I did hear that he probably wasn't going to be convicted on the sex trafficking thing.

And sure enough, he was not.

And he was not guilty on a racketeering conspiracy either.

It's tough, too, because there's a lot of texts that would indicate, at least for a significant period of time, the women were into this.

Right.

Yeah.

There's definitely, now, again, if they decide to change their mind on that, they deserve that opportunity

and that wasn't always given to them and there were seemingly I mean the stuff I had read that I was more shocked and and horrified about was seemingly physical abuse towards these women it wasn't necessarily transporting them for prostitution

there was absolute proof of it in video form right in that hotel uh hallway

yes that's true yeah it wasn't just the text really ugly it was accused it was really video of it yeah but he wasn't being charged with that but bizarrely that's not what this is about.

Right.

Very strange.

The law is very complicated, Pat.

It is.

But it looks like P.

Diddy is convicted on two counts, not guilty on three counts.

We'll see if we can give you the

biggest one was the racketeering conspiracy charge, which was not guilty.

So that's the biggest one.

We'll give you more detail coming up.

This is Glenn Beck.

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It's Pat and Stuffer, Glenn, 888727BECK.

Let's go to JD in Ohio.

Oh, is this JD Vance hanging out at his home state?

Hey.

Welcome, JD.

We shouldn't have kept you on hold so long.

Sorry about that.

Well, luckily, I was on a little meeting here in the car, so it's okay.

Okay.

So I want to talk about this child

bank account.

So if you do the math,

there's about 3.6 million babies born a year, besides the one that are killed in abortion, but the ones that are actually born.

If you give them an $8,000 bank account the day they're born, they don't touch it the rest of their lives, at age 63, it's worth over a million dollars.

That cost annually is about $30 billion.

So if we could really get rid of Social Security by allocating about $30 billion a year for this program, and that's if they never put another dollar in it.

If they put something else in it, if they contribute to it, it's worth, you know, even more.

Millions more.

Much more.

Yeah.

Now, of course, you have to get rid of Social Security, though, to make that

viable, right?

I mean,

that's what you're proposing?

There'd be a transition phase, you know, from people, you know, I'm in my 40s, somewhere in that age, you know, we'd have to transition now.

I don't know exactly how to do it.

Yeah.

Yeah.

Well, the cost up front would be, you know, the cost savings would be huge.

Yeah.

It would.

Now, and now, I love this world that you're talking about.

I love it.

I'd like to live there, right?

Let's talk about how it would look here, though, JD, and I think you'll agree with this.

What would happen, number one, is we'd give $8,000 to the baby accounts.

Then we'd keep Social Security.

It would not go anywhere.

That is right.

Then there'd be arguments that you have to raise the 8,000 to more.

It would have to to be 20,000.

Why isn't it 20,000?

Because, you know, AOC would come in and say it should be $20,000 or $30,000.

And then, of course, the other thing that would happen is in the interim, the government would spend all those $8,000 accounts and say they were in a lockbox, spend it all in other crap, and then people would get to the end of their lives and not have any of the money.

Does that sound about right?

That sounds pretty accurate.

I'm going to have to do some safeguards put in, but that sounds pretty accurate.

Yeah, unfortunately, but I do.

It would be great, though.

Yeah, thanks.

Thanks, JD.

Can I give a quick quick basic example of what JD is talking about?

We had a proposal that was similar in a way to what JD was talking about.

It was made by George W.

Bush in 2005.

Man, I wanted that to happen.

He came through the 2004 election and he used what he believed was his political capital to try to get through Social Security privatized accounts.

And the left beat the crap out of him.

Beat the crap out of him.

Made it like he was trying to steal your social security from you and ruin Social Security when A, it was optional.

It was optional.

Yep.

You could not enter it if you were really close to retirement.

They would not allow it.

Right.

It was a very small, I think

it was between 4% and 8% of your Social Security accounts.

So it was a very, very small amount that you can contribute into these.

At the time, though, Pat, you could see some of the worry of people who were like, well, wait a minute, what happens if

the stock market goes down and all these things could go wrong?

And we don't know what's going to happen in the future, which is true at that time.

It is no longer true, however.

We do now know what happened in the future.

And what would have happened is people would have had between two and five times the amount of money that they have now in Social Security.

It would have worked

in an incredible fashion, as JD was essentially hinting to,

in

an accurate way.

If you actually had a country that was disciplined that that could do this, you're right.

And

basically

all scenarios, and that was the truth with the George W.

Bush plan, in all scenarios, everyone from the beginning to the end of the program that would have entered it would have wound up in a better place than actually they are today.

All of them, 100%.

Because there was a drop off, I guess it was a 2004, so that great financial

great recessions period, 2008, 2009, we had a drop-off in the markets, but no one could have retired in that period, would have been affected by that because they weren't eligible.

Not to mention, again, it was only 4% to 8%.

I think there's two different proposals.

I just went over this data a little while ago, but the proposals were like a minimal amount.

It wasn't like, hey, you could put all your money into stocks.

They didn't even allow that, which, again, I would argue that if it's our money, Maybe we should be able to do what we want with it.

But this was just a very small slice.

And even that, it would have been much, much, much more than

we actually do have for these people.

So we basically, this nonsensical argument that everyone in the media made against George W.

Bush at the time, he was proved completely correct about and

costing people who are now retiring tens and sometimes six figures, low six figures in income that they could have had today.

So good job, everybody.

Good job.

Yeah, we did it.

We did it, America.

We did it once again.

We did it to ourselves once again.

Unfortunately, this is the real world we live in with a media that does these things.

Yeah.

You know,

it's why I, when the

fair tax used to be talked about all the time, it's one of the reasons I basically oppose that because.

Can you remind people what the fair tax was?

The fair tax was

an evalue-added tax.

It was a sales tax, essentially.

National sales tax.

On everything that's new.

So if you built a home, you would pay the tax on it.

If you bought a new car, you would pay the tax on it.

If you bought an existing home or an existing car, you don't pay the sales tax.

So it was originally talked about to be around 23%.

So it's a hefty tax.

However,

they said they would do away with the IRS.

So you would have no income tax at all.

Your gross is your net.

It's the same number.

That's appealing.

So if you make $100,000 a year, you get $100,000, not $60,000.

So you get all your money, and they eliminate all of the hidden taxes and all of the FICA stuff and all of that.

And it would be replaced by the sales tax.

Well,

I just knew that what would happen is they wouldn't get rid of the IRS.

They would tell you they're going to try or they're going to do it, but then they wouldn't.

And you would wind up with both the sales tax of 23%

and the current income tax.

Which, by the way, is the situation in Europe.

Right.

They have all of those types of taxes.

That was, that's what you get hit with in Europe like crazy.

I agree.

That's probably what would have happened here.

I mean, the argument by some of them at the time was, hey, you know, it has to be essentially part of the same amendment of the Constitution, which would be the only way you could even entertain it.

Yes, you would have to, first of all, get rid of the IRS.

When you do that, then, okay.

Yeah, maybe we can talk about the sales tax, the national sales tax, or a flat tax would be great.

And I don't know that you necessarily have to get rid of the IRS if you just do a flat tax.

You do 15% or whatever it is we decide on, but everybody pays the same.

That's another tough sell because supposedly the rich would be paying less than, or the exact same as the poor, which is so ridiculous.

Yeah, I was listening to, I mean, you just realize how this stuff happens.

I was listening to a CNN interview, unfortunately, with a congressman about the big, beautiful bill.

And

the setup to the question, I wish I could remember the congressman.

We could find the audio, but the setup to the question was so offensive to anyone who knows anything about the situation.

It's like,

Donald Trump is going to increase the deficit by $5 trillion

with tax cuts that almost exclusively go to the wealthy.

And it's like all of this stuff, you know.

This is not true.

It's not true.

None of that statement was true.

No.

And

the congressman was like, well, I take issues with the way you framed this, first of all.

And he went through the stuff and it was, it was, yeah, I gave up what I remember to be a relatively fine answer.

But,

you know, they're not always there to push back, right?

All these stories are written with that tone.

Yes.

Before.

Anyone gets a chance to push back.

And then when you push back, you're just seen as this, like the Medicare, Medicaid cut thing we talked about earlier.

If you missed this earlier in the show, we went through what they are calling Medicaid cuts.

What they are largely calling Medicaid cuts are these, what they say are work requirements.

So they're saying, hey, you got to, if you're able-bodied, so not someone who's disabled, for example, I know that's not the right terminology, differently abled.

If you're differently abled, so stupid.

If you're disabled, or if you're out of the age range, like if you're

a senior or whatever, and you have Medicaid, you're not affected by this at all.

What they're saying is work requirement.

If you're a 35-year-old guy, that's totally fine.

You got to get a job or at least try to get a job.

Okay.

You can't just sit at home

with no income at all

and no work requirements and still get our free or very heavily discounted medical care.

What they are saying, what they are calling a cut is that they figure that some people in that group will just not bother.

They won't file the paperwork, so they won't,

or they won't want to work.

They'll choose to not work and not get the insurance.

And those people will not go into the Medicaid system.

Therefore, the Medicaid system will cost less.

It's not that they won't have access to the program.

They will have access to the program.

They're not cutting anybody's access to the program at all.

They're just saying, if you don't hit these requirements, some people will just not bother to get it.

And then

the program will cost less.

They're calling that a cut to Medicaid.

That's what they're calling a cut.

And it's insanity.

It is insanity, but that is what they're doing.

And when, when

that is so much the conversation that you probably, before today, haven't even heard that's what they're doing,

you understand how these programs get locked in forever.

And I have no ability to have any optimism over an $8,000 account that will solve our problems when babies are born.

It's just, frankly, it's just not the way our country operates.

The media will always be there.

The Democrats will always be there.

And frankly, a lot of Republicans will always be there saying, oh, these are Medicaid cuts.

We have Republican senators today saying the reason they won't vote for this bill is because of the Medicaid cuts

when this is the reality of the situation.

So, I mean, I think

you got to deal with the world that we live in, unfortunately.

Yeah.

And it's not always so positive.

Yeah.

And it's stacked against any kind of conservatism

because you got the mainstream media that you have to navigate against, and you have the left.

So

it's very difficult.

Triple 8-727-BECK.

You can ignore reality,

but you can't ignore the consequences.

There's rough terrain ahead.

Saddle up, my friend, and stay tuned.

Glenn Beck will be right back.

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It's Pat and Stu

for Glenn.

This is amazing that

CNN

has claimed now

that shutting down USAID, which happened, I believe yesterday was their last official day at USAID,

but it's going to contribute to 14 million deaths.

And here's 14 million deaths.

14 million.

Cut eight.

Here's a CNN.

Talking about it.

Secretary of State Marco Rubio is hailing the end of USAID, the nation's largest foreign aid agency.

Get this.

Even as a new analysis finds that its closure could contribute to some 14 million deaths in the next five years.

Really?

14 14 million?

14 million.

Yeah, this is the problem I have with conservatism overall, which is, I mean, we were shooting for at least 20 million dead, right?

Well, I was hoping for 100 million.

Yeah, well, yeah.

But I was shooting for the sky.

Yeah, you're hardcore.

Yeah, I'm hardcore.

The majorities aren't large enough to get 100 million dead.

We were shooting for at least 20 million, though, 25 million.

Maybe.

Yeah, yeah.

And we're only getting 14 million dead.

Well short of that.

And that's over five years, Stu.

So that's not even.

Some of those might not not even happen.

What is that?

3 million, a little over 3 million a year?

Some of those people might even escape us.

They might.

And that's terrible news.

So stupid.

What are you talking about?

14.

Where is that coming from?

Seriously.

It's got to be some UN analysis.

I'm sure it is.

But I want to hear the breakdown of how all of these people are dying because of the non-existence of.

Well, a lot of it assumes, by the way, and a big chunk of this is they assume nothing ever happens in its place.

Yes, that's true.

Like we fund fund a bunch of, like, for example, HIV medication for Africa

in a program that has been largely successful.

Yeah.

And we pull that money away.

They say everybody now dies.

Now, in reality, what will happen, of course, is charities, maybe other nations will chip in for some of this.

I don't know.

We've been doing it for, you know, for a long time.

Maybe they'll step up.

Maybe the countries find it to be a priority.

Somebody?

Right?

Like, it's not all us or nothing, but that's how they assume and come up with these ridiculous numbers.

And by the way, here's what Russ Vogt was talking about them spending that money on anyway.

Americans have been funding the following.

$5.5 million to LGBTQ advocacy in Uganda.

$800,000 for transgender people, sex workers, and their clients in Nepal.

The clients are $12.6 million.

LGBTQ in Nepalese training, pastry, cooking, psychological, psychosocial counseling, a cyber capital, and the dance focus groups for male prostitutes in Haiti.

Okay.

Female prostitutes should get some of that money, too.

Come on.

And what about the gender non-specific?

Where's their money?

Only male prostitutes are getting this dancing cash?

That's sad.

So, yes, while 14 million people may be dying over the next five years, most of those are going to be male prostitute dancers in Outer Mongolia

or someplace.

Somewhere.

One-legged, deaf, transvestite nuns.

I mean, I'm sorry.

Do we live in a world where we want our male prostitutes to be bad dancers?

No, we do not.

Of all things.

No, we do not.

I don't want that world.

It will be a total embarrassment.

I want them to be fair

dancers.

I want the choreography to be brilliant.

Whenever I'm hanging around male prostitutes, I want them to just be able to get down at the first note with their bad selves.

Yes.

Yeah.

And not only that, but when they're tipped.

While they're dancing, these male dancing prostitutes, I want them not to be taxed on those tips.

That's true.

That's true.

I mean, I will say, waiters, waitresses, strippers, whenever you get tipped.

Right.

And I don't know if this is going to help everyone.

I mean, I guess it will.

It helped me a little bit because, you know, I do it on the weekends.

Right.

But it's only a part-time job for you.

I don't know if it's central to your vote.

You know what I mean?

When you're doing your exotic dancing, that's usually only on Saturday afternoons.

Usually.

Sometimes it goes into evening, but

this is Glenn Beck.

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.

The fusion of entertainment and enlightenment.

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the Glen Beck program.

All right,

we gotta get into the Zoran Mandani situation.

This is the communist Islamist running for mayor of New York City.

He's the lead candidate right now.

Can anybody stop him from becoming mayor of New York City?

Doesn't look good, really.

We'll get into that and talk about some of his policies.

The grocery store policy is interesting.

We'll talk about that coming up in one minute.

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It's Pat and Stew for Glenn.

Oh, good.

I love Pat and Stew for Glenn.

We're talking about Zoron Mamdani.

He is the

Democratic nominee for mayoral

battling the other day about

not moderating your message

as a socialist, right?

Oh, the one when he's in space?

Yes.

Do not moderate that message.

Why did you run as a Democrat then?

Weird.

Why didn't you run as the lead socialist of the socialist party or a communist?

What are you talking about?

Of course, he moderated his message so that he could become the Democrat nominee.

He's not a Democrat.

Yeah, you know, I think that's this clip.

This is the one where he's talking about seizing the means of production.

I think it's the same clip.

Can we do it?

Yeah, he's in space.

Here's Zoran Mamdani with a weird background of a video where he's actually in space.

What the purpose is about this entire project, it's not simply to raise class consciousness, but to win socialism.

And obviously raising class consciousness is a critical part of that.

But making sure that we have candidates that both understand that and are willing to put that forward at every which moment that they have, at every which opportunity that they're given.

we have to continue to elect more socialists.

And we have to ensure that we are unapologetic about our socialists.

There are also other issues that we firmly believe in.

Why'd you run as a democracy?

Whether it's BDS, right, or whether it's the end goal of seizing the means of production,

where we do not have the same level of support at this very moment.

And what I want to say is that it is critical that in the way that we organize, in the way that we

set up our work

and our priorities, that we do not leave any one issue for the other, that we do not

meet a moment and only look at what people are ready for, but that we are doing both of these things in tandem.

Marxism with a smile.

You love to see it, don't you?

That's a big part of this.

Huge.

I will say, you know, the delivery mechanism of someone like Bernie Sanders with this exact same message, or I will even say AOC, who's often angry and dour and like, you know, again, she's a more attractive package, I guess, than Bernie Sanders.

But like, you know, there's very rarely smiling happening with AOC.

She's angry at everybody.

This guy is doing it the totally different way.

He's so nice about his Marxism.

The biggest smile he has in that entire thing, and he smiles throughout the entire thing, but the biggest smile he has is, he said, after we seize means of production.

Right.

Right.

Like he, he's saying

he knows what he's doing.

And

if you really like listen to what he said there, it's basically like, we can't just take the popular parts of socialism, right?

Like free health care, and just push for that.

We have to go for all of it.

However,

he is doing that with his mayoral election.

He's just doing it with a smile.

And an example of this is his, when you say seize the means of production, a good step of this is taking over grocery stores and making it so.

Which he plans to do.

Yeah, this is one of his central policies.

This is how it's going to become affordable to live in New York City.

You You don't have to pay for your food, I guess, or he's going to lower the prices so low because they're government-run that they can operate at a loss or

just a break-even spot.

I don't know.

This is infuriating to me.

It kicks me into a rant that I always have on this thing because

this seems crazy.

Would you say, like, to the average person living in Ohio,

in a medium-sized town, it would be crazy for your town to just open up a grocery store?

Yes, right would be a town owned grocery store and

anybody who said they were going to do that would lose.

Yes, I agree.

And you'd think too, like if they were to say, hey, and one of the big benefits is we'll make it, we'll undercut the

prices of the actual businesses that opened in our town because we don't have a profit motive and of course have no reason to actually make the budget balance as no one seems to have in government.

We just always raise taxes more.

We have that backing.

We'll get it built for free.

We won't have to pay that back.

We'll take all tax dollars.

We won't have to spend a dime of our money to build it.

We'll get all tax dollars to build it.

And then we'll undercut the people who are here actually paying taxes to the community.

That would be a really bad idea.

I will note to almost everybody.

In a medium-sized town,

in the entire listening audience, this is exactly what every town does with rec centers instead of gyms.

And it's like everyone seems to think that's okay.

Well, we're just going to build a beautiful multi-million dollar rec center in our town, and the established like gyms that people pay, you know, membership fees to will undercut those membership costs, and then we'll still collect money from our competition to pay for our gym.

This happens all over America.

It's not just gyms, but that's just the easiest example.

It is amazing what flavors of socialism we'll put up with and which we won't.

I'm just, I know that no one else cares about that issue except me, but it just is infuriating to me.

It's like, wait, why did I have to spend all this money in taxes for you to build this thing when there's three gyms in the area?

That I don't want to go to any of them, by the way.

I should know.

I didn't say I really want to go to a gym.

I quite clearly do not.

Anyway, but that is what he's proposing here.

The exact same thing, except with grocery stores.

Exact same thing.

He's saying he's going to build grocery stores.

He's going to take...

Now he's going to pay for these pat.

That's the tough thing because you know what?

The conservatives will say, how are you going to pay for this?

This is his proposal as he describes it with

giant

smiles throughout how he's going to take over the grocery store system in New York.

Grocery prices are out of control.

The cost of eggs and milk has skyrocketed.

Some stores are even using dynamic pricing, jacking up the cost over the course of a day depending on what they can get on the street.

Are they?

It doesn't need to be this way.

I'm Zahran Mandani, and as mayor, I will create a network of city-owned grocery stores.

It's like a public option for produce.

We will redirect city funds from corporate supermarkets to city-owned grocery stores whose mission is lower prices, not price gouging.

These stores will operate without a profit motive or having to pay property taxes or rent and we'll pass on those savings to you.

Now think about how

unbelievably unfair that would be to other grocery stores.

He's going he's not going to they're not going to have to pay rent.

They're not going to have to pay taxes.

They're going to get all the buildings built for by taxes, right?

And so, all these places, like, wait a minute, we need to charge $3 for eggs.

They can just charge $2 for eggs in theory.

Again, this is all in socialist theory.

But there's a bigger problem with this particular proposal.

He's smiling throughout that, by the way.

It is the exact pitch you got for Obamacare.

If you remember, the public option.

I do remember.

Right?

Yeah.

That was you're going to pay $2,500 less per family per year.

If you want to keep your grocery store, Pat.

keep your grocery store.

If you like it, you can keep it.

But no, here we are now with grocery stores and we're all like,

I mean, and it does sound completely insane.

But it's better than that.

It is better than that, Pat.

Because what his plan is to pay for that, that would be the first thing anyone would point out.

Like, wait, how are you going to pay for that?

You know, raise taxes?

No, no.

He's going to redirect money that's going to corporate grocery stores.

Yeah.

The big, evil, big grocery.

We all hate so much.

Right.

So in theory, like depending on what your grocery store is around you, a Kroger or an Albertsons or a stop-in shop or a Whole Foods, whatever it is.

The New York City government is taking millions of dollars and giving it to these grocery stores for some reason.

Now, that to me stands out as something odd, right?

What do you mean?

Why are they giving away money to grocery stores?

Why aren't grocery stores just doing what every grocery store?

My understanding was they just come in and they open it up if they think they'll be profitable and they stay open as long as they can be, right?

That's my understanding of grocery stores.

Now,

it's so funny to hear this because, first of all, it's built on a left-wing lie.

First of all, the reason why there would be any reason to give money to grocery stores in New York City is because they complained about food deserts.

Okay.

They said, there's no grocery stores here for people to eat.

They have to go too far to get their groceries.

So we are going to try to promote a program that forces these places or incentivizes them, I suppose, with lots of money to build grocery stores in these areas where there are none.

Now, I had a series called Wonderful World of Stew on Blaze TV, which preceded the Studos America.

And in that, we had a series called Deserted was a segment we did.

And we would go to the government website and we would find food deserts and we would travel to the food deserts and I would take people inside the grocery stores that very much did exist inside of these food deserts.

Right.

There really weren't food.

They weren't food deserts.

These were lies.

In fact, some of them were in New York City.

Yeah.

So that on its

was big when we lived in that area.

Right.

When we lived there.

They were talking about food deserts

all the time.

And we're like, where is this food desert?

Right.

There's food deserts.

There's grocery stores, restaurants, freeways.

There's foods, foods, bodegas, everywhere.

Yep.

So this wasn't even true.

But the only reason this system exists at all that he's proposing, which is money going to corporate grocery stores, is because the left demanded it happen.

Okay.

However, there's even more to the story than this.

Because what happened with this program is he's saying $140 million goes from New York City government to these grocery stores.

However,

where this is not true at all,

where where he gets this number is a program, and he describes it called Fresh.

It's called Food Retail Expansion to Support Health.

Again, does that sound like a conservative program?

It is not.

It is a food desert attack program, supposedly.

It's called Fresh.

If you go to the website, they have a fancy website, tells you about the program.

And let me just show you, Pat,

you can explain this to the audience.

But this is the website here.

And you see,

that's like promoting the website.

Hey, look at all these wonderful things that we did.

You saw the, what did did you see?

The one big yellow box, right?

There's one big yellow box on the website.

The yellow box says $140 million, the amount of money invested in New York City's economy through Fresh.

That's the program name.

Okay.

So that's what he's saying.

He's saying we're going to take socialists.

That money and give it to socialist groceries.

Give it to socialist grocery stores instead of the evil Kroger or whatever they have in New York for Whole Foods.

Yep.

Okay.

So in some ways you'd say, all right, I guess that kind of makes sense.

I mean, it doesn't make sense to me, but in a socialist mindset, you're a New York City voter, maybe that makes sense to you.

The problem with it is the $140 million number that's in the yellow box on this website is actually not the amount of money given from the government to corporate grocery stores.

That number is the amount that corporate grocery stores have invested to bring grocery stores into New York.

These this this money does not come from the government.

It comes from the corporate grocery stores who invested their own money to build and open up grocery stores inside of New York City.

This website is bragging about, hey, we did this system and we brought in all this corporate money into New York.

That's what they're bragging about.

It's not money that goes to the grocery stores from the government.

The only thing that happens with this program, in fact, No money, Pat, goes from the government to these stores.

Zero dollars.

The only thing that happens is they get a couple of tax benefits.

That is something like a couple of million dollars,

which again is not New York City's money.

It is the corporate money of the grocery stores.

And they get a slight reduction in their taxes to come into these areas.

So none of this money exists.

Now, this is a central program of his mayoral run.

It is the thing he's probably promoted more than anything else outside of free or no rent increases, which is a whole nother socialist catastrophe waiting to happen.

So

now let me take it to another level, because this is a fascinating story to me.

This story was written by Tim Carney.

Tim Carney is a guy, you might know him.

He's been on my show, maybe he's been on yours.

He's a conservative writer, and he writes for the Washington Examiner.

Tim Carney is a good guy.

He's a good writer.

I'm glad he did this story.

Why is it left to Tim Carney, a conservative in a Washington newspaper, to figure this out?

The New York Times has probably written a thousand articles about this race.

And at no point did they bother to look at any detail of one of his central proposals.

Wow.

That's unbelievable.

How on earth did none of the New York media,

basically the center of all the independent states?

Not even the post.

Nobody.

Nobody bothered to look at anything

that actually was going on with this story.

No one said, hey, wait a minute.

Where is this money coming from?

Shouldn't we check into that?

Are we really giving $140 million away to grocery force?

Why would we do such a thing?

Nobody bothered to check it.

And of course, the answer is they're not.

They're not.

They're not giving that money.

So where is he going to get that money?

Well, he doesn't have it now.

And of course, does he come out and say, gosh, holy crap, did I blow it?

I'm so sorry.

I just saw this yellow box and based my entire campaign on it.

No, he doesn't bother to do that.

What he instead does is just ignore this.

And is anyone pushing him on it?

No.

Nope.

Nope.

Nope.

Even after this, no one's pressing him on it.

Not been asked at all.

No.

He hasn't had to release a statement.

At least as of several hours ago, maybe he's addressed it.

But this has been several days since the story came out.

Wow.

So the money doesn't exist.

The program is based on a lie, a misreading of a giant yellow box on a website.

That's the amount of research he did to announce a brand new program.

This guy might be mayor of our largest city in our financial center.

Not good.

Not only is he a socialist and, as we noted a couple minutes ago, has shown support for communism multiple times.

Yep.

That guy might be mayor of New York, and no one's even bothering to fact-check the nonsensical socialism he's proposing.

888-727 back.

More coming up in one minute.

So many people are living with pain every day, and they think they're just stuck with it.

I mean, it just is what it is.

But it doesn't have to be.

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She lives in Texas, and let me share her Relief Factor story.

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Nothing she tried for her lower back pain worked.

Her husband heard about Relief Factor on the program.

Jenny said, okay, it's worth a shot.

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Hey, it's Pat and Stu for Glenn.

Did you see that the

actual Iranians have now admitted?

This comes from government spokesperson Fatema

Majorani.

He just admitted that after assessing the damage in Iran done after the bombing,

it was

severe is how he labeled it.

Severe damage was done to their nuclear sites.

Hmm.

So the leakers here in America are trying to do their very best to hijack the narrative and hurt the president and the country and the message.

But this comes directly from Iran.

Amazing.

Amazing.

It was another acknowledgement that Fordo, Isfahan, and Atans, the key sites within the nuclear program, had been seriously or severely damaged by the American strikes.

And that's from their state-run news agency.

And

it's probably more reliable than some of the leaks we've been hearing lately.

You'd think so.

I think it would.

You know, what would motivate them to lie about that, for instance?

To say

that the damage was more severe than it actually is?

I mean, I guess maybe.

Maybe to stop the bombing?

Yeah, you don't need to bomb anymore.

You really are not so bad.

I mean, it's possible.

That's not usually the way they handle this.

It's not likely, not likely, though, because, yeah, they like to actually do the opposite with their people and try to, I mean, it's like their Ayatollah crawled out from underneath

a shelter and claimed victory.

Yeah,

I mean, Israel was about to be wiped off the map, but that's the only reason the Americans stopped bombing.

That's what they said.

They actually claimed that they destroyed one-third of Tel Aviv and that millions were fleeing Israel.

Oh,

you're seeing different reports than we are, that's for sure.

So So you think we'd notice it.

But that is the way that they typically handle those things, so that's a good sign for the efforts.

Yeah.

888-900727 actually.

B-E-C-K.

This is Glenn Beck.

You know me.

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Pat and Stew stew for Glenn today, triple eight seven two seven B E C K

So Diddy was found

not guilty of three of the five charges, including the most serious ones, yes, yes, including sex trafficking, the racketeering situation.

He was the only thing he got convicted on was two charges of transporting prostitutes across

this is so weird.

It's always that, it's always the problem.

We seem to be totally fine with people having prostitutes in state.

Like, as long as you're doing it in your local community, it's totally fine.

But if you bring those prostitutes from Florida into Georgia,

that's where the problem is.

You've got to put our foot down now.

I think it's even okay to travel to Georgia to hook up with Georgian prostitutes.

You just can't bring them from Florida to Georgia.

Okay.

That apparently is a big line in our society, which is odd.

It's a weird line.

Right?

It seems to always be the thing that is the big issue.

Well, they transported them across state lines.

Yeah, but like, isn't the thing they were doing with them the problem?

Like, my problem with Diddy has been, I don't know, his tendency to be beating women up in hotels.

Like, that seems to be really bad to me.

Yeah, yeah, that was not good.

And, like, prostitution, not a good thing, not a good practice, Pat, despite all the hullabaloo around it.

But

my issue with it isn't typically the flight.

It's more of the prostitution and like the,

even more importantly, forced prostitution for some of these people.

You're a stickler.

You're really a stickler.

It doesn't.

Like, it seems like there was a lot of prostitution going on with Diddy.

But much of it, at least supported by a lot of text messages, was showing that it was agreed upon between the parties, at least for a large chunk of it.

The issue that I think the main problem most people would have with it was when it went beyond the situation of agreement and

fists were thrown to enforce it.

That kind of seems like the bigger issue.

And he wasn't even charged with that.

I don't understand our legal system sometimes.

No, it's very bizarre.

Very bizarre.

But he could, I guess he faces, is it 20 years?

Yeah, up to 20 years in prison.

Now, I don't think there's any indication that's going to be the penalty.

Yeah.

Like, his supporters are very happy with this outcome, it seems.

Like, they were celebrating outside the courtroom.

He was saying thank you to the jury afterward.

So, it does appear that they are happy with this outcome.

You would assume a first-time conviction for someone on prostitution charges is probably not 20 years, right?

It's a year or two, maybe, maybe probation.

Probation and a fine?

Yeah, like that sort.

Usually,

you know, we have, again, like, we seem to sometimes give punishes away, punishment away to, like, people who, like, molest children, and it's like probation.

And, like, you know, someone speeds too much in a particular zone, and they go to, you know, they go to gulag for 40 years.

Like, I don't understand what's happening sometimes in our system, but that it does seem to be

the punishments are strange to me.

Very.

Yeah.

Very.

Not a good guy.

I think we could say that.

Again, we have this on video where he's beating women up in hotels, and for some reason, that was not the charge.

some weird things, but you know, who am I?

You know,

to decide what is weird and what isn't.

He was into some different things, though.

And yeah, and then there's the video of him actually beating his girlfriend in the hotel, which is really horrible, really horrific.

All right, we got this climate activist, former friend of Greta Thunberg, who now says that the climate change movement is a scam.

A decade ago, Lucy Biggers was like a lot of people in their 20s.

She believed that climate change

posed an immediate and catastrophic risk to mankind, that we should rapidly eliminate fossil fuels to address the problem, that renewables are up to that task, and that our wealthy, privileged lives in the West are a mark of shame.

Her fans cheered her on.

She interviewed people like Greta, became friends with her.

Over time, though, she began to question her leftist ideals, and she started to see the climate movement as anti-human and ultimately harmful.

She now calls the climate movement a scam, and she's making videos on TikTok and elsewhere in hopes that young people will consider a more positive view of modern life, one they can hopefully be grateful for.

In turn, they can escape the anxiety she says the climate movement causes young people to feel.

Man, is that not so true?

People like, well, Greta Thunberg, who obviously believes the world is about to end,

she said years ago that we had, what, 12 years left before

catastrophic extinction begins on this planet.

And that's what's being told to these kids.

And so they grow up with this fear that the world's about to end.

So, yeah, there's a lot of anxiety in this movement.

I mean, it's legitimately a terror.

It terrorizes them, right?

Like, you think about a horror movie, right?

That has some scary villain, some boogeyman, that would scare a child.

And like, they would, their lives get changed.

Every time they want to go to bed, they were afraid there's a monster under their bed.

That is how a lot of kids actually are right now because of climate change.

Because of a 0.9 degree Celsius temperature rise over a century, they're sitting here freaking out, thinking that they're not going to make it to their golden years because the world is going to end.

Think of what a psychotic thing that is to do to a child.

You're ruining their life.

It's despicable.

Despicable fear mongering.

Yeah.

With no concern for what it does to kids.

No.

Michael Schellenberger wrote a great book about this, and one of his

main motivations was seeing

his daughter's friends terrified by by global warming, worried they were going to die.

Yeah, because he too was a believer.

He was a believer, but he was, I don't think he was ever that psychotic about it.

Like, you know, he would, he was like, you know, I remember the first time I remember seeing him was he was in a documentary about nuclear power.

And he was talking about, I mean, that was one of the things that was featured.

He was an advocate, I think, for nuclear power.

He was saying, hey, you know, nuclear power would be a great way to, we have really serious climate concerns.

This is a great way to address them.

And so he was always, you know, he was, he got all sorts of environmental awards from the left, but he was all maybe a little bit more sensible uh than some of the crazy people the gretas of the world were

but i mean think of what the the population and the media in general did to this poor girl i mean

they completely used her to try to get their plans through they use the emotional i mean look this is no secret When you're one of the most the greatest correlations with youth is stupidity.

When you're young, you're kind of dumb.

You don't know.

You start off, you don't even know the language, right?

You don't understand math.

You slowly grow out of your stupidity as you grow.

That doesn't mean you land in a place where you're smart, but you supposedly learn things as you go on through life.

And so when you're 11 years old and you're skipping school because you think the world is going to end from climate change, the appropriate response from adults is, honey,

I understand you're concerned here.

We can go through some of the facts on that, but it's not appropriate to do what you're doing.

And there's no reason to panic like this.

Yeah, sure, we have concerns in our world, but you don't, there's no reason to be like this.

Instead, it was, she's right.

She's the only one telling the truth.

She's so brave.

Look at all the wonderful things she's doing for the world.

Every piece of this idiocy was

awarded and rewarded over and over and over again.

Yep.

And so she understandably, I think, for a child, she took that that as everything I'm doing is great.

Everyone's approving of it.

I'm being lauded by the United Nations for what I'm doing.

And therefore, I should continue doing it.

Now, she's taken it to another place that is rewarded by the United Nations, hating Jews.

That's where she is now.

Amazing, yeah.

And again, now there are some people who are like, gosh, I don't know.

Maybe we shouldn't have just, I don't know, embraced her so hard.

Maybe we embraced her so hard we suffocated her and her brain turned off.

But I mean, she was, you know, again, like a child who's at some level, at least at one point, was a victim in this.

Now she's an adult now.

So she was actually headed at one point right for Gaza.

She was going to support Hamas at Gaza when the Israelis headed her off and said, yeah, you know.

And kidnapped her, Pat.

They kidnapped her.

They kidnapped her.

They did.

It was just frightening.

It was a weird kidnapping.

It was.

We kind of told her about it in advance.

Yeah.

And they didn't actually take her anywhere and keep her someplace.

No,

they put her on a nice jet, fed her, put her on a nice jet, and flew her back to her home.

Now, you know, someone pointed this out, and it was a great observation, which was it was the first ever kidnapping where the only qualification to get out of the kidnapping was to leave.

The only request was, please get out of here.

That is a weird kid.

It's a weird kidnapping.

Usually a kidnapping means you must stay.

Their kidnapping was, you must go.

Oh, wow.

Which is odd.

Sort of defeats the purpose of the kidnapping.

I mean, maybe the Israelis are just bad at it.

They don't, you know.

They're bad at that.

Yeah.

They're bad at genocide.

Yes, terrible at genocing.

They're really bad.

They keep feeding the people they're supposed to be killing.

Yeah.

Which is strange.

And warning them to leave places that they're about to bomb.

That's not a good way to commit genocide.

Yeah.

Yeah.

So

they're really good at killing terrorists, but bad at genocide, bad at kidnapping.

Yeah, they need to work on it.

They're going to have to work on that.

They're going to need to work.

But it is sort of like, I mean, first of all, it's good to see that some of the kids that were in this movement at the time, friends with Greta, are coming out of it.

Yes, that is good to see that.

That's good to see.

Again, you can look at climate change.

Some people do think there are issues with climate change.

However,

when you look at it,

this is something that we're very capable of handling.

Yeah, the biggest problem with climate change right now is that there's

more food, which, man, I hate that because it's making us all fat.

That's the problem we're having on this planet right now.

We're getting too fat because there's too much food to go around.

Yeah.

Yeah, gosh, that terrible abundance.

I just, I actually saw an honest article written a week or two ago, and they were talking about the fact that the warmer temperatures are causing

more food to grow.

Wow.

Good for you for at least acknowledging that aspect of it.

Now, if we get to the, what is it they're afraid of?

Fahrenheit, like five degrees Fahrenheit or four degrees Fahrenheit or whatever.

If we get to that point,

yeah, that would be a real problem.

And

then the food becomes

burned up and we've got famine at that point.

But I mean, that is

A, not happening right now.

And

the forecast for

the temperatures to end up where?

Are they trying to keep it under two degrees Celsius?

Is that the deal?

2 point something degrees, yes.

I can't remember the exact number.

I mean, they change it all the time.

Also,

you know, it's such a ridiculous standard.

Like, as if there's this switch that goes off.

Yeah.

At this particular time.

As if we can control any of it anyway, which I, you know, I guess if you, if you believe that every bit of the increase is brought on by CO2 coming from mankind, I guess you'd think that cutting back on the CO2 is going to fix the problem.

But you could remove every car on the planet, and it still wouldn't,

it wouldn't be enough to get them where they want to be.

No, of course not.

And of course, we've also had real improvements on this anyway, right?

I mean, just the switch from coal to natural gas has led to a real decline in emissions.

We've declined ours quite a bit without all these massive climate initiatives that they said they wanted.

Yeah, and let's talk to China about the fact that they burn more coal than not just the United States, but every country on earth combined.

So, yeah, and they are by far

emitters of

carbon dioxide.

So, it's a situation that is laughable

and is obvious to anyone who's not a child, right?

Like if you're not a 15-year-old skipping school, this is probably pretty obvious to you.

If you're embracing it, most likely you have another agenda, right?

At least, especially if you're in this world, right?

These politicians, I mean, I think there's a lot of people who are just generally left-leaning that are, you know, oh, I like the, you know, I like the planet.

Clean air, clean water.

Of course, everyone's for clean air, clean water.

Everybody likes the planet.

It's just a stupid catchphrase.

And I can understand a lot of those people just being fooled by this, right?

Yeah.

I mean, it's a scary thing that's out there somewhere.

This future that could collapse on you at any moment.

You can see how it works on some people, but like, you know, the people that are proposing it know.

888-727-BECK.

They want you silent, obedient, and blind.

Well, shoot, here we are with open eyes and a bit of rebellious nature.

Hold in line, my friends.

Glenn Beck will be back in a minute.

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It's exactly why I switched to cozy earth sheets.

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I didn't realize how much of a difference it would make until Tanya and I tried them.

Studies show that when your body sleeps cooler, it releases more melatonin.

So you fall asleep faster, you sleep deeper, and you wake up feeling actually rested.

Plus, cooler sleep can even help regulate your mood.

Cozy Earth will completely transform your five to nine, the time that matters most.

And with their 100-night sleep trial, you've got nothing to lose.

Test them out during the hottest nights of the year.

And if you don't love them, send them back.

But I don't think you're going to want to, because they work.

Upgrade your summer.

Go to cozyearth.com.

Use the promo code Beck, save up to 40% on temperature-regulating sheets, apparel, and so much more.

That's cozyearth.com promo code Beck.

Sleep cooler, lounge lighter, stay cozy.

Honey punches the votes la forma perfecto de empeza elia acconto familia.

Cono juelas crucientes andi elberd qual los niños les encantas.

Ademas delicios os trosos de granola nuesces y fruta que todos vanadis frutar.

Honey punches devotes para todos.

Today albener para sabermás.

Something we didn't get to today.

We'll have to get into this tomorrow because the University of Pennsylvania

just agreed to take back the performances of Leah Thomas

and his swimming records at the University of Pennsylvania.

Well, he didn't have swimming records.

He had female swimming records.

Female swimming records.

Yes, right, right.

And medals and awards.

Because when she was a he,

she was finishing, he was finishing last in the races against men.

Yeah.

And then switched and started competing against women.

It went a little better for him.

Well, actually, Pat, there's no scientific evidence that men are better at sports than women.

No, none at all.

None at all.

Like, there's not an under-15-year-old boys' team that just beat the women's national Swiss soccer team seven to one.

That's not science.

That's not science.

No, that's just circumstantial evidence.

Exactly.

All they are is just endless anecdotes.

Right.

That's all it is.

Over and over and over again.

Throughout all of human civilization.

But other than that.

No proof.

No proof.

This is Glenn Beck.