Best of the Program | Guest: Zachary Levi | 2/14/25

46m
Glenn takes calls from the audience to sense their feelings on everything Trump has been doing. There's a shift happening in America as more people are supporting President Trump. Actor Zachary Levi joins to discuss his newest film, "The Unbreakable Boy," and the unbelievable true story it’s based on.
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Transcript

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Hey, Friday's podcast.

It's great.

There's a change in the country.

You felt the shift in support of what President Trump is doing so far.

We're not out of the woods yet.

Several pitfalls are still out there.

Callers share their excitement about the first three weeks of President Trump's second term and some of their concerns.

Also, Zach Levi promoting a new movie that comes out next week.

It's really good, The Unbreakable Boy.

All of that and more on today's best of podcast.

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You're listening to

the best of the Glenbeck program.

Hello, America.

Welcome to the Glenbeck Program.

Want to talk to you about some of the stuff that Donald Trump has done

and just get your feelings on how you think things are going.

Anything that you're concerned about.

888-727-BECK.

I've got a lot of stuff that's just happened over the last 24 hours that we have to talk about.

But I want to check in with you first on the phones.

Greg in Ohio.

Hello, Greg.

Hey, Glenn, how are you?

I'm great, man.

Thanks for listening.

I just wanted to call.

I've been voting since 1980.

My first vote was for Reagan,

which at the time also included McConnell.

I've been waiting for the last 45 years for somebody to come into our federal government and just turn the thing upside down.

And I'm loving every bit of this right now.

I know.

The team that he's put together, I'm fully in the camp that it was a good, it was actually good that what happened in 2020 happened.

The last four years were terrible,

but that provided a lot of focus for Trump.

He learned a lot of lessons and put together a team that every last one of them, I mean, they're just every part of our government right now is going through an overhaul, and I couldn't be happier.

I know.

It's amazing.

I've never seen, thank you, Greg, for your call.

I've never seen an administration have every cabinet person

so focused and working together.

You know what I mean?

It's like they're finding something.

They're like, yeah, that needs to go over to justice.

And justice is saying, I need this from Homeland Security.

They're all working together.

They're all working in lockstep, and they seem to have the people underneath.

I haven't seen a single person in the cabinet yet kind of floundering, like, I don't know, I'm being sabotaged by my people, except for Cash, who's not in yet.

Yeah, that's true.

There hasn't been a lot of that, which you usually do get.

Actually, one of my favorite moments of the past couple of weeks was the other day when Elon Musk is sitting there, standing there with his kid, you know,

and

they said something to him about something he, I guess, tweeted that was wrong, and they fact-checked it or whatever.

And Elon Musk was like, you know, some of the things I say will be wrong.

And I was thinking to myself, like,

that's not that you shouldn't say that, right?

Like,

every lesson you know about politics says you should not just say that.

But that's true.

It's true.

And it's true about every single person on earth.

You know what?

Some of the stuff I say will be wrong.

And you should know that.

And like, if we can, and he's moving so fast and he's going to break things.

And sometimes these things are, there's going to be mistakes made.

There's going to be, but like the intent here is to root all this stuff out.

And you wonder why all this stuff builds up over a long period of time.

It's because the intent is to keep it there.

The intent is not, is this not a mistake?

There's not $20 billion in some account because, oh, gosh, we missed the $20 billion.

It's because there's an entire, you know,

foundation and an entire city built on trying to keep those things in place.

And we finally have a couple of people who seem interested in rooting all that out.

And it's not going to be perfect.

There are going to be things that go wrong, I'm sure.

But, like, wow, it's just great to see that attitude and approach.

But here's the problem.

The complaints aren't even real.

First of all, you see the people that went into

a Senate hearing yesterday and they were, you know, protesting.

They're like, well, you got to fix

the aid to AIDS in Africa.

That's important.

And they were kicked out.

and the secretary just looked up to the Senate and said, they must not pay attention at all because that was fixed two weeks ago.

We did that two weeks ago.

To be fair, there's a lot to follow right now.

No, there is a lot to follow.

But you think if you're going to organize a group,

that's your one thing.

No, you should know that.

Let me go to Jeff in Arizona.

Hello, Jeff.

Glenn, I'm going to get right to it because this is such an important thought.

This is already a known thought.

It's out there, and I believe Trump was actually talking about it during his 2020 election campaign, and that is a national citizenship ID card, which he can do as the executive with the pen and the phone.

He can, from a national department, I'm going to suggest it's the Treasury Department, order out national ID cards.

And I think you know the reason why is because de facto, this can then act as voter ID.

And this will then act as the death nail, the actual knife in the heart of the Marxist progressive left to get control over our vote.

And the way it de facto acts as in a voter ID card is the states just adopt it.

And you're going to immediately have 15 to 20 states who already want voter ID who will just say, oh, we suddenly have a national citizenship ID card.

This will now be used as voter ID card.

And you will create a wave across the country, and you will kill the voting corruption from the progressive left.

I have a vision I want to cast on how he gets to that, but please.

Yeah, hang on just a second.

I just would like to say, I don't think I'm for a national ID.

I don't like anything national, especially when it comes to our ID.

That sounds like it's one step away from

a digital ID, which I'm absolutely against.

I could understand if you are not here legally, if you are

even here on a visa, you are not a natural-born citizen.

You could be required to have a national ID,

but

I don't like the government with any more lists of anybody else.

Just don't like it.

I'm surprised to hear you say that because everything in life has a trade-off.

And when you look at killing voter fraud when you hear i i get what you're saying glenn but when you look at the upside of killing voter fraud and killing you know these groups uh metcha lalraza i know i know leftist groups who want to literally overthrow our country by polluting our votes this will this would kill that because the national government can do that and then the states can just adopt it and then here's the vision on how it would go through the treasury department is you already have a national card this pathetic little piece of construction paper that comes mailed to you, this literally, the Social Security card, the most important number in your life

is to this day, just like we got this stupid mine seven stories down with paperwork for people's retirement.

The most important number in your life, this is why I said we come with the Treasury Department.

The Treasury Department just simply changes over to a hard card that protects beyond our Social Security number, protects the most important thing we have, Glenn, our citizenship.

Our citizenship.

They've already been talking about it.

It's already out there.

And I would love to see

Trump sign on July 4th of this year the protect citizen, secure citizen card, secure citizenship ID, July 4th of this year.

And everybody next year

on the 250th anniversary of the Declaration has a protect citizenship ID card in their hand.

Jeff, I'd like to hear more about it.

I am against national ID, but

when you're bringing up the Social Security, if it's nothing more than a glorified,

very, very, very hard to recreate and you actually have a fence around Social Security, maybe.

Maybe, but I don't know.

I don't know.

Again, they've talked about, when I've heard Trump talk about national ID, the idea is more for

typically we're talking about legal migrants, right?

Like the idea that you would have an

identification for those who are here legally that have to hit a different standard than a U.S.

citizen would have to hit.

Like a

sophisticated green card.

Yeah.

I think that's a little bit more,

because you talk about this, you know, the states will adopt it.

Well, what states?

Is California adopting it?

Probably not.

Like what you're going to do is, if anything, you'd have red states doing it, which would be great, I guess.

But I mean, there are probably a lot less, fewer problems in those states anyway.

And again, we have to also project past Donald Trump.

What does a national ID card look like when you have the next president in who wants to do all sorts of things with it that are going to make you very uncomfortable?

I think giving

there are a lot of ways to push back against voter.

I mean, a voter ID law is something that you could pass, but states would be the ones

in control of that.

And I think that's a better approach.

You must be in control of the vote, never the federal government.

Right.

It's really tempting because we all are like, oh, we want to get the vote results

immediately on election night.

We should just have a national election.

And it's very tempting to people, but there's a very bad path that that leads down.

All right.

Let me take Chuck in Kentucky.

Hello, Chuck.

Hey, Glenn, great to talk to you again.

We met about 15 years ago in Melbourne, Florida.

Oh, my gosh, Chuck.

Ah, Chuck.

We were just talking about you, Chuck.

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

No, no, no.

We love you.

We love you.

Thank you, man.

We love you.

Thank you.

A couple of things.

One, thank you for supporting Pre-Born.

My wife and I support them as well.

Awesome.

Great organization.

For the most part, I'm really happy with what Trump is doing.

I love the Doge stuff.

I'm a little concerned about the Gaza stuff and how that's going to work out.

Yeah.

Hang on just a second.

Let's say more than

on that.

If we're actually taking over things in Gaza, I don't think that's a good idea.

What if they build a nice pickleball facility there?

That would be nice.

Yeah, maybe we can just

make a big pickleball court.

Doesn't this just strike you, though?

It just strikes me as just pure Trump negotiation.

Yeah, it does.

Except I saw a story today.

Let me see if I can find it.

To where I think it's the UAE said, the ambassador to America from the UAE said, I don't think there's any way to stop that.

I just think that's the best.

You got a better idea.

Go for it.

And I'm like, somebody's got to come up with a better idea than that.

Now, I don't mind if we have American business over there.

You know, the Waldorf Astoria wants to build some hotels over there.

Yeah.

Go for it.

And he's kind of said that it's not going to be taxpayer dollars, not U.S.

troops.

Any troops over there.

But again,

it's not very America first.

It's not consistent with most of his platform here.

To me, it's just very much him saying, like, hey, guys, release these hostages.

Do it.

Because we will just take this land from you and you will go to different countries and we'll build resorts.

So get it done.

And I think what he has done is he's changed the narrative.

Yeah.

You know, all of the countries around were not talking about,

wait, the Gazans have to stay in the Gaza Strip.

No, no.

No, nobody was talking about that.

They were like, we can't have the United States come in and build anything there.

That's what I mean.

And that's what you need in that situation is to to change the conversation.

How long have we been talking about?

All right, two-state solution.

It's going to work.

Stop it.

Stop it.

Change the solution.

If you guys want to stay on this land, you will start acting like

civilized people.

And while I'm sure there are some there that have, generally speaking, when you look at the polls, it's not all that encouraging.

So change what you're doing, or things are going to change.

All right.

Let me

go to Rob in Indiana.

Glenn.

Yeah.

Thank thank you so much for taking calls, man.

There's so many of us that just want to get through and talk to you, and I understand things have changed, but

it just is what it is.

We love taking calls.

Call whenever you want.

We don't solicit for them enough anymore because we just get off ranting on stuff, but you're always welcome to call.

The line's always open.

DJ's in there screening your calls.

He's yelling at people most of the time.

I don't know what he's doing in there, but triple 8727 back.

Thank you.

That's right.

Mr.

Executive President.

You know, I've been a listener.

Yeah.

I've been a listener from the beginning, and

I'm a Blaze subscriber.

Last night I purchased tickets to go to the American Journey Experience.

Really?

Oh, cool.

I'm going to make a pilgrimage in March to Dallas.

I think I'm around in March, so you make sure you tell the

people over at the museum that we spoke, and I'd love to see you when you come.

But anyway, go ahead.

Okay.

Hey, that would be great.

But anyway, I love everything.

You know, I can't believe how close we came to the point of no return.

Yeah.

And, you know,

it is unbelievable.

You know, voting day, it was like this thing.

We all knew it in our gut, in our soul, and in everything within us knew how close we were and how dire

everything was.

And thank God,

you know,

that things went the way they did.

Yeah, and

literally, thank God.

Because I think he stepped in and did it.

Real quick, what is the one thing that you say concerns you?

Oh, well, if people don't start going to jail,

all this will just be a four-year blip.

Yeah.

Well, here's the good news.

Cash Patel got out of committee yesterday.

He's going to be confirmed maybe early next week

because they just had to go to Germany.

All these senators had to go to.

Stay home.

Take care of business here, quite honestly.

But they're going to confirm him next week.

Now you have Pam Bondi.

She's already issuing

charges around the country.

And when Cash Patel comes in, I think you're going to see a massive change in the FBI and DOJ.

And that's, you have to have the FBI to start putting people in jail.

That's the last piece to come into play, and it's going to happen next week.

So let's watch what happens beginning next week because I think it's going to happen quickly.

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Now back to the podcast.

This is the best of the Glenn Beck program.

And don't forget, rate us on iTunes.

Zachary, how are you, sir?

I'm well.

Thank you, Glenn.

Good to be back and talking to you.

Yeah, I know.

So good.

I thought you were coming in today, but Texas is a large state, and you have a cyber truck.

And what, you'd have to stop and plug that thing in three times?

I think it's a couple charges to get up to Dallas.

Well, good to talk to you again.

I just watched your movie last night, my wife and I, and just loved it.

It is such a good movie.

Thank you.

Yeah, I'm...

Listen, I'm very grateful for the career that God's blessed me with over these 25 years and very proud of lots of things I've done, but I am particularly proud of this film.

I think it's, honestly,

it was kind of a miracle that it even happened.

It's very God-breathed.

It happened in the height of the pandemic.

And

just the right of us, the right number of us and people came together to make this very, you know, it's a slice of life.

It's a grounded film, as you know, as you've seen it.

You know, there's nothing big or splashy or big special effects or anything.

It's a true story about a family.

you know, navigating life and all of its complexities, but specifically navigating the waters of having a child on the autistic spectrum.

And I have never seen or heard of a film like ours that tackles it in such an authentic and beautiful way.

And also, you know, diving into the human condition of the parents as they are trying to figure out how to love themselves and each other and their children.

And it's powerful, you know, but it's also done with such a

a big heart and and so it never feels like you're trudging through the drama too much or too long.

It's there to provide the groundedness of, you know, and the redemption in the story.

Because as you know, we all go through our darkness.

And if we don't tell that part of the story, then I don't think you ever really get the triumph of coming around at the end and having enlightenment and waking up to bigger and better things in your life.

I mean, my character specifically, the father, you know, his journey is and you know kind of then what the messaging in the film is in the large part is what it means to radically accept the life that God has given you and radically surrender to it.

And when you do, when we do that, you know, it's amazing the peace and the love, the radical love that flows from us and into those around us.

And so I just think it's something that's applicable to everybody, you know, and now, as it turns out, because autism has become so ubiquitous, you know, we're all touched by it in some way.

And so I think it's even that resonates with almost everyone.

I have to tell you, this rang so true in my life.

I mean, it was almost in many ways, many parts of it.

And I probably think you are kind of in this world too, where so much of it rang so true.

I spent a lot of the time

crying in a way of relating, but also

crying with tears of joy.

The kid that is represented,

which he's a real kid, this is a true story.

But the actor who plays him is incredible.

There is such joy in that kid.

What's he like?

He's a really special kid.

He's got such a beautiful heart, and we were so lucky to have found him.

Like I said, I mean, very God-breathed, everything.

And all the rest of the cast.

Megan Fahey, who plays my wife, and Peter Facinelli, Andrew Powell, and Amy Acker, Patty Heaton, Patricia Heaton, plays my mom.

She's great, too.

Yeah, and everyone kind of slid right into their role and inhabited it so authentically.

But Jacob, as you were pointing out, really has such a special energy that he brings to this character, Austin, who, as you said, yes, is

a real kid who's about 31 now.

But Jacob just brings that effervescence and optimism to life in a way that really, you know, affects obviously us in the story, but affects the viewer, affects the audience.

Like you can feel it.

It's palpable.

Yeah.

And

he doesn't have any disabilities himself.

He's just a regular kid.

As far as I know, yeah.

I've never heard Jacob having been diagnosed with anything neurodivergent.

Although, listen, man, at this point, I wonder how many of us could probably all be

categorized as being somewhere on some

spectrum, whatever it is.

I mean, it's fascinating to look at how all of our minds and bodies continue to change and not always for the better as we progress as a society, you know, specifically with all this technology.

I mean, how wonderful it is that we can be on the phone right now on your show that, or I could be, you know, zooming in or,

you know, the things that we have now at our disposal and at our fingertips, it's pretty incredible.

And also,

it's been a real,

it's been a real toxic thing in our lives.

And blue light, EMF, like all of these things, they reprogram us.

So, you know, even if we were born and had nothing going on for a long time in our lives, you start introducing these types of technologies.

Well, you might start reprogramming your brain in a lot of ways.

So, anyway, that's kind of a tangent, but also, I think, in line with some of the stuff we're going to talk today, like AI.

Yeah.

Um, I want to stay in the movie here for just a second longer.

Um, absolutely.

Oh, no, stay as long as you want.

I want to talk about it.

Yeah, no, it's, it's just, I just really loved it.

Um, the, um,

The kid doesn't only have,

you know, he's not only on the scale, but he also has a disease that,

man, I can't even imagine.

He has very great.

Osteogenesis imperfecta.

What is it?

Osteogenesis imperfecta, brittle bones disease, essentially.

Oh, my gosh.

I mean, and when the baby is born and you find out that my wife and I were talking about it as she was giving birth, we were like, why didn't that break any bones?

And you find out it did, broke two ribs.

And that's why the baby was crying all the time.

You didn't know it at first.

And then he's constantly falling and breaking bones on the simplest of things.

My gosh, what the real parents went through and what the kid went through too.

But I mean, my gosh, that's just turns your life upside down.

Yeah, no, it's it's definitely

It's definitely, you know, part of this overall journey that they went on.

And again, a journey that they got pregnant on their third date.

It was definitely a big curveball that they stepped up to the plate and were like, we're going to go have this child and we'll figure out our relationship as we go.

And so they were already kind of navigating those waters.

Then they've got this new baby that is crying nonstop and they don't even know why until years later when they finally are able to diagnose that he in fact did inherit the genes from his mother to have osteogenesis imperfecta.

And then to have them in pain and be worrying about them constantly that they're going to break another bone.

And I mean,

it's a ride, man.

Like, I can't even imagine what Scott and Teresa were going through in that time.

And for them to continue to stay strong and navigate through that, then just to find out, you know, later on in life, after having their second son, Logan, who, you know, God, God, you know, thank God he was.

He did not have osteogenesis imperfecta and seemingly was, you know, operating in a normal level.

But then Austin was starting to operate in very atypical ways, only for them to test him and find out that he indeed had autism.

And that's a whole other challenge, you know, that's that's, and that for Scott, I think

that was him, that was this real struggle with, with fighting

his life.

Like, this is not my life.

This can't be my life.

Like, I've got these expectations of what my life is supposed to be, which I think is applicable to all of us, right?

We all have these ideas of, no, no, no, no, my life is supposed to go this way or that way.

And we fight and we fight God, essentially, in that.

We're like, no, it's got to be different.

It's got to be different.

As opposed to radically accepting that, well, perhaps God knows better than me.

And perhaps though my son, I wish my son would have been born without having to battle these things through his life, that God is still going to use my son in beautiful ways and has.

And that's what was so transformative in that story.

Yeah.

And the fact that you're running away to alcohol.

And part of it being, I'm just a bad dad.

I mean, he's a, he's a normal guy

and, you know, he's out on the swings and his son, you know, has a horrible break.

And, you know, his wife is like, it always happens with you, not with me.

Notice that.

And he just starts to think he's just such a bad guy

and runs from life with alcohol.

And I mean, it's as somebody who's been there, I get it.

I get it.

And I thought it was really well done.

Thank you, man.

That really means a lot.

And I'm very grateful that you were able to see it before we even talked.

You know,

it gives it a lot more context for your viewers and listeners because I really would love for this movie to do well.

And not, you know, obviously biasly, I always want the things that I do to do well.

But I think that this is bigger than that.

I think this story is bigger than that.

And,

you know, particularly

nowadays with so much content that's out there that I don't think has good messaging or great messaging or that a whole family can actually watch together.

And it speaks to the human condition in all of us.

And so, yeah, I implore everyone listening, please go see it.

And if you enjoy it, please tell everybody that you know.

And also, not for nothing, but I do encourage people to go to movie theaters.

And I think for

some of the same reasons that some people in my industry talk about it, but I think there's one thing that is often overlooked, and it's very important, which is

theaters, you know, historically have been places

that provide us, the public of all different backgrounds and belief systems and whatever, to gather in the same place to experience the same thing.

And what's really powerful about that is, and I think something that's been lost as people have continued to like kind of leave theaters and watch things on television, is that when you're in a public theater with a bunch of people that are not you, that believe different things than you, and you know that, that, and you're all watching a thing, but yet, even though you all have these different opinions and different belief systems, you're all laughing at the same jokes.

You're all crying with the same moments of despair and pain.

And that, those types of things help to remind us that we're all on this planet together, that we're on team human together.

And yes, we might have differences of opinion.

And yes, we need to have more conversations about trying to find more middle ground.

But how can we even get to that point if if we don't see that the person on the other side of the aisle is a human being just like me that cries and laughs at nearly all of the same moments?

You know, there's something that's very unifying in all of that.

So I encourage people to go to theaters mainly for that reason.

Go, go put yourself back into a world where we start seeing each other again.

And I think this movie has a lot of that.

No matter what background you have, you're going to laugh and cry at a lot of the same spots because it's just about being a human.

Zach, I have to tell you, I got in huge trouble when I got home after interviewing you because my son was in town

and he was staying for a couple of weeks.

And he said, wait, wait, wait.

Who did you interview today?

And I said, Zachary Levi.

He's like, you interviewed the guy who played Kurt Warner, one of my favorite movies, and you didn't even tell me.

So

I got into huge trouble.

Next time you're coming up,

I have to tell him in advance, if you don't mind.

100%.

Yeah.

Anyway, no worries.

You know what that's like.

You know what that's like.

You're listening to the best of the Glenn Beck podcast.

Hear more of this interview and others with the full show podcast available wherever you get podcasts.

Well, I got to tell you, I think

the left just doesn't know what to do.

They are on the ropes.

And then you put somebody like David Hogan

as...

I mean, what are you thinking?

Vice chair of the DNC.

Yeah, what are you thinking?

They've learned nothing.

Nothing.

I I think they're just panicking right now.

And there is a reason to believe, if we're being honest here, that the American people are fickle and they usually just run out of gas for whoever's in office.

And I, you know, you can't look ahead and think, okay, this is 40 years of success ahead.

Like, they're going to do something.

Right now, they're flailing, though.

Yeah.

But we need this.

It's three weeks into this.

We need to remember that.

But you also have to remember that it wasn't too long ago that books were being written how the the Republican Party will never come back.

Yeah.

It's over.

It'll be 100 years of Democratic rule.

There was a book,

was it James Carville that wrote it about how Republicans would be a regional party only?

Yes.

This is after Barack Obama's 2008 election.

The 2010 election was the biggest wave election in 100 years.

That's how fast this stuff can dry up.

So this is why I'm so encouraged by what Trump is doing here, in that we are at a situation that he's realizing that he doesn't maybe have the longest road to do all of this stuff.

He's got to get it done and hopefully it works and excites the American people and we

don't lose the House, for example, in 2026,

which is usually what happens.

You have to have somebody competent to run, somebody who has vision.

I mean, you know, when you're putting in as your vice chair, David Hogg, it doesn't show

a somewhat meaningless role.

Yeah, I know that, but still,

it shows me that you

you're still on the same message.

You know, I was talking to somebody yesterday.

Do we have that picture of the front of Rockefeller Center?

This is one of the buildings in Rockefeller Center.

Pull it up if you can online.

And it is a glass cutting of the front of Rockefeller Center.

Do you have it?

They are working on it.

Okay.

They are working on it, Glenn.

Okay.

There it is.

So it's hard to see, but see, there's two horses, and then the strong guy, naked, standing, holding those horses back.

He's standing on a chariot, and the two horses are being held back.

Looks like he works out.

And there is a sunrise right in front of the horses, and you'll see the youth

in front of the horses, kind of leading the horses.

Okay.

Yeah.

All right.

So what this means is

this is the

socialist movement, the Democratic Party.

This is

the horses represent industry.

The strong man in the chariot is the government.

And it's holding back the reins of industry.

It's got industry completely in its grip and control.

And the youth of tomorrow lead us into the sunrise in the new chapter.

This is socialism.

This is what they're still offering us, where Trump is saying, no, we don't want the strong guy in the chariot.

We don't want that.

And we just want competent people.

I don't care if they're 12 or 112.

If they're competent, we just want competent people

setting the course for us.

And that could be, it doesn't necessarily have to be elected.

The elected guy is in the chariot.

I want that guy just to be

really small and really not even in the picture,

quite honestly.

Yeah.

I mean, this goes back to the speech J.D.

Vance made this week about AI, which we haven't really discussed all that much, but it was like really encouraging.

It was like saying, hey, we're freaking America here.

You know, we're going to, of course, we're going to dominate this industry, obviously.

Do we want it?

Yeah.

So we're going to take it.

And like that, we're not going to lose to China.

Like it was like,

it wasn't apologizing for that.

It wasn't saying, well, really, we should give this technology to everyone because everyone needs it.

No, it was just like, no, we're the best at it and we're going to do it.

We're going to do everything we can to make sure we're the ones in control of this because it's not only important for our economy, but also for the nation's security.

And the freedom of the world.

Yeah.

Quite honestly.

Do you see what James Cameron came out and said?

Normally, I don't care what James Cameron said, but because he's the guy with Skynet and the Terminator,

he came out and said,

you know,

I wrote a fictional nightmare.

He said, but this time it's not fictional, it's not speculation, speculation.

It's already happening.

That's a quote from him.

He said, it's a scarier scenario than what I presented in Terminator 40 years ago.

If for no other reason that it's no longer science fiction, it's happening right now.

You'll be living in a world that you didn't agree to, didn't vote for, are forced to share with a super intelligent entity that wants to follow the goals of a corporation.

This entity will have access to your communications, beliefs, everything you ever said, and the whereabouts of every every person in the country through personal data.

He said its ability to predict and influence human behavior.

This is surveillance capitalism.

And surveillance capitalism can toggle pretty quickly into digital totalitarianism.

This is the hard place is I don't want the government to own it, but I also don't trust corporations to own it.

I trust corporations more than I trust the government.

I do.

That one's not a tough decision for me.

I understand it's, I feel like it's a little more difficult than maybe conservatives felt at one point.

I mean, I distrust them equally.

It's not like I trust one more than the other.

I distrust both of them.

I trust corporations more, and the reason is that there's actual competition between them.

And I don't trust any individual corporation necessarily, but like the

impacts of the market, I think, generally speaking, lead us to good things.

But that it's up for debate, of course.

I mean, the problem here is you sort of have to choose one path or another.

And I can tell you, I do not want centralized control of AI.

No.

Do I want

guardrails around it for national security purposes?

Sure.

But when it comes to whether I don't love tech companies, for example, I think, you know, there's been a lot of good things,

but there's been a lot of bad things.

That being said, the difference between that and the government is, to me, there's a pretty bright line there.

I have to tell you that if you look at what's happening in Europe and Canada, I mean, did you hear that Canada, they are now trying to pass a bill that you can go to prison if you say anything favorable about oil, gas, or coal?

Go to jail.

That's sensible.

That's going to work out really well, isn't it?

I mean,

these are products that have built our civilization.

Exactly right.

You can't run, run,

not just built it in the past.

We can't live without any of that stuff.

Nope.

And they're like, oh, you can't even talk about it positively.

That's crazy.

It's basically crazy about everything, let alone something that's been really positive to our world.

Also, Linda McMahon, yesterday, she talked about in her confirmation hearing,

she said,

fund educational freedom, not government-run systems.

This is her plan.

Listen to the parents, not the the politicians.

Build up careers, not college debt.

Empower states, not special interest.

Invest in teachers, not Washington bureaucrats.

November proved that Americans overwhelmingly support the president's vision, and I'm ready to enact it.

Education is an issue that determines our national success and prepares American workers to win the future.

The legacy of our nation's leadership and education is one that every person in this room embraces with pride.

Unfortunately, many Americans today are experiencing a system in decline.

I think she's, I think, I mean, I don't know how you argue about, against these things.

I really don't.

We all know our schools are failing like crazy.

And she was asked, does that mean you're going to cut off the funds for schools that need, you know, help because they're in low tax base?

No.

No, we'll still help those, but we're going to get rid of all of this crap that you're required to do to get any of that money.

They have to be run.

The classrooms need to be run by the parents and the teachers locally, not some bureaucrats in Washington, D.C.

Yeah, and she, McMahon's a real advocate for school choice.

This is an incredible, I mean, we have a real opportunity to make a massive difference for millions of children in this four-year period.

And it's really exciting.

Even here in Texas, where we had an election,

you know, we talked about the House Speaker situation, who did not go the way that conservatives were hoping here in Texas.

But at least as of today, Burroughs, who is the guy who is not the more conservative option, is claiming that they are going to go forward with school choice in Texas.

We're at the point that now even what you might call the Rhino contingency is like, okay, yeah, we'll do that.

This is incredible, Glenn.

We've been talking about this policy for 20 years

longer than that.

But

as long as the show's been on the air, we've been discussing it as this sort of like pie in the sky.

Hey, maybe that will

vouchers.

Like it was this thing that would never occur.

And all of a sudden, it's occurring all over the country.

So here's what concerns me is Donald Trump is, I love these people who are coming out from the Democratic side saying, oh, have you checked inflation?

No, there is no inflation.

This is the greatest economy ever.

What are you talking about?

Bidenflation is, you know, the work against inflation that Biden has been doing, Bidenomics, that's working.

It's the greatest thing ever.

I can't believe people who told us for four years there was no such thing as inflation are now crying, you know, the inflation numbers.

And I'm happy to say that our president is saying, yes, inflation is, it's going to go up and it's going to be hard.

And we're working to reverse that.

He's at least recognizing the reality of the situation.

And it is going to go up and get worse before it gets better.

We talked about this before.

We talked about this before November.

It's concerning, though.

It is concerning.

if it goes, look, you know, think about the average person.

They're not sitting here like you are listening to, you know, a bunch of talk radio and

thinking about these issues.

If these prices go up and they continue to, if it feels like Biden, they won't care what else is going on.

You've got a very short runway.

with, hey, there's going to be some pain here.

You just need to take it and it'll get better later.

That can work.

Worked with Reagan, I would argue.

I mean, the early, remember, I mean, inflation

in 81, 82 was really high, and then it came down, and everything was fine, and he wanted a landslide.

So it's possible to turn it around, but

it's a tough

tightwire walk.

You know, I'm looking at the price of gold.

What is the price of gold?

It's almost $3,000 an ounce.

It was yesterday.

It was $269, or sorry, $2,961.

I'm looking for that because this is the seventh weekly gain on

gold, and it has something to do with the trade war,

but also something else is happening with gold, and we're not sure exactly what it is.

But it looks as though some people are thinking that we're going to go back and revalue all of our gold, which would be good if you had gold,

you know, really good if you had gold, but

it's going to be...

It's going to cause problems because of the dollar getting stronger, et cetera, et cetera.

It's the cure is not going to be worse than the disease, but the cure is going to make it seem as though the disease is getting worse before it gets better.

By the way, one other thing that happened yesterday, you know, Rachel Maddow came on and she was like, Yeah, I told you.

I told you, Elon Musk.

I'm sorry, it's Rachel Maddow.

I told you that Elon Musk was double dealing, right?

Am I right?

Emma C and MSNBC, Rachel Maddow viewers.

I'm always right, right?

Right.

So he's, you know what he did?

He just got the government to buy 400 million.

That's almost half a billion dollars of armored Tesla vehicles, and he got a contract through the state to buy me.

What a jerk.

Wow.

What a bastard.

That's unbelievable, Glenn.

I know.

You know, the fact is, he got, well, this is what happened, Glenn, is his money bought influence with Donald Trump.

Yeah.

And then Donald Trump gets elected, probably falsely, by the way.

And then

Musk becomes the real president and just directs all this money to his own company.

Right you are.

Thank you.

Says Rachel Maddow.

Unfortunately, 100% wrong.

The government, because of green energy, can you imagine how long these batteries last carrying around an armored vehicle?

Like what are they like 10 minutes out of the car?

Elon would not agree with that.

Yeah, so he's

so

Biden wanted armored vehicles for the State Department, and he wanted them all EVs.

So he put out a bid.

The only one that responded to the bid was Tesla.

Nobody else responded to the bid.

Everybody else was like,

10 minutes.

I don't think that'll be good.

So

he was the high bidder on the government's list of providing all of these vehicles.

However, Trump stopped that, said it's not going to happen.

So Rachel Maddow is, oh, geez, man, I got to tell you, a pack of cool cigarettes and maybe some Elka Seltzer and I'm going to be fine.

I've got to get over this, but I'm telling you right now, all lies.

All of that is not true.

They are so desperate.

Yeah, I'd be really, I mean, if you had a network that cared, you'd be really concerned about that.

I mean, she does one show a week.

The main focus of her monologue wasn't even true.

Like, that's got to be really concerning as a network, you would think, in any other circumstance.

you know i was going to say wow i didn't know she was doing one show a week and then i thought no the real wow is wow she's still doing one show a week it's amazing she's their star

i know i know she is

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