Glenn DESTROYS ‘Coward’ Judge for Refusing to Oust Fani Willis | Guests: AG Ken Paxton & Sen. Eric Schmitt | 3/15/24
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Speaker 2 It's a new day, a time to rain.
Speaker 2 Welcome to the fusion
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Speaker 2 This is the Glen Beck program.
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I want to talk to you about where we are and what the problem is, and the straight and narrow path to be able to correct that.
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It all begins with understanding history. We go there in 60 seconds.
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Speaker 2 All right, we just had some breaking news here.
Speaker 3 Yeah, we have our Fonnie decision. Fonnie Willis, remember, the course, what was on the line was, is she going to leave? Is she going to be forced out?
Speaker 3 And they're going to have to find an entirely new
Speaker 3 situation, basically restart from scratch, was what was on the line here.
Speaker 2 Because she perjured herself.
Speaker 3 Against,
Speaker 3 and this is, of course, in the case against Donald Trump in Georgia.
Speaker 3 And the judge, Scott McAfee, has come out in a 23-page ruling issued. He said that the defendants...
Speaker 3 failed to meet their burden improving Willis's relationship with the special prosecutor Nathan Riggs was a conflict of interest enough to to merit her removal from the case.
Speaker 3 The judge did find an appearance of impropriety and said either Willis
Speaker 3 and her office may leave the case or Wade must withdraw from the proceeding. So basically, what's going to happen here
Speaker 3 is the dude's going to get fired and she's going to be able to, you know, keep going.
Speaker 3
This is not a, you know, this is, I've never seen that. It's unbelievable.
It's incredible.
Speaker 2 After
Speaker 2 have you ever seen a clearer case of perjury?
Speaker 3
Everyone on earth knows she was lying. Everyone on earth knows she was lying.
He was lying.
Speaker 2 Everybody knows she was lying. There is no justice.
Speaker 2
There really is no justice. I mean, if you want to know how African Americans felt in, you know, the 1930s, 40s, 50s, especially in the South, here it is.
Here it is.
Speaker 2
You can see it with your eyes. You hear the testimony and you just know it's rigged.
It's rigged. Because there's no way any reasonable person would come up with that.
No way.
Speaker 2 What do you mean?
Speaker 3 An appearance of impropriety? I mean, how can you possibly think this is just an appearance of impropriety?
Speaker 3 Now, again, we talked about this at the beginning. If they had come out and said, look,
Speaker 3
Nathan Wade is just the best guy out there. Yeah, I had an affair with him.
He's an incredible man. Had to have a piece.
I just had to.
Speaker 3 But he's an incredible attorney, and we admit to everything, and I hired him because he's the best.
Speaker 2 Probably,
Speaker 3 they just skate. Instead, they decided to lie throughout the entire thing.
Speaker 2
Boldly. Boldly.
Boldly. I mean,
Speaker 2 it is not like
Speaker 2 you can debate, well, I just made a mistake.
Speaker 2 Well, I was. No,
Speaker 2 they boldly took the stand,
Speaker 2 wanted to lie.
Speaker 3 And did lie.
Speaker 2 And did lie over and over again
Speaker 3 over and over and over again. This was,
Speaker 3 it was noted by by the, you know, the judge that this was not, this situation was not proper. However, basically, they're just going to make him leave.
Speaker 2 Yes, but how does she stay? Forget the relationship. How does she stay even an attorney if she has perjured herself?
Speaker 2
I mean, this is so far beyond the relationship. I barely cared about this story when there was a relationship involved.
You know, I was like, okay, whatever.
Speaker 2 But once she started lying on the stand and he he started lying on the stand,
Speaker 2 and it was proven,
Speaker 2
there is absolutely no way she should be in a position of power. And she certainly, and so should he, loses law license.
There is no law if attorneys can get away with that. None.
None.
Speaker 2 None.
Speaker 3 It's quite the statement, but it's hard to disagree with. I mean,
Speaker 3 they were overt in this, Glenn. We all know.
Speaker 3 Just looking at it from a human perspective, everyone can know they were lying. Now, did they, did they, they didn't go through a perjury trial, right? They didn't go through
Speaker 3 a bar hearing where they had to fight for their license. They went through something that was supposed to, you know, a proceeding that was supposed to rule on this case.
Speaker 3
And in this case, they're going to let her stay on. Obviously, that's going to be the choice she makes, by the way.
But how?
Speaker 2 How? Especially with can the judge believe anything that she is presenting or saying if the judge knows she boldly, knowingly lied in two other cases?
Speaker 2 How?
Speaker 3
I certainly can't believe a word she's saying. I don't know how he can.
I can't.
Speaker 3 It is incredible. And you'd be
Speaker 3 right to look at this and say this is seemingly very unfair. I mean, I don't know how you can look at this and say anything other than
Speaker 2 they
Speaker 3 look, they definitely want Donald Trump to get in legal trouble.
Speaker 3 There's no question about that.
Speaker 3 And if they don't, if they keep Fonnie Willis on the trial, there's a chance that these things can come to fruition before the election. If they throw her off, basically it's over.
Speaker 3 And they don't want that.
Speaker 2 A new study shows that what
Speaker 2 the Supreme Court doctrine that was the old doctrine created by the Supreme Court allows 96% of private property is open now to warrantless searches.
Speaker 2 The DAA, a DEA, in a completely other new story, shows
Speaker 2 that they had a surveillance program on Americans. They have collected massive amounts of telephone records for 20
Speaker 2 years,
Speaker 2 and it was shuttered because of the
Speaker 2 Edward Snowden revelations in 2013.
Speaker 2 The Inspector General has released a report heavily redacted,
Speaker 2 and
Speaker 2
that has been released. That was released six years later.
The Washington Examiner has just received a copy of it. The Office of Inspector General exists to provide oversight of government agencies.
Speaker 2 Among the new details of the DEA program is that it refused to comply with parts of the IG investigation for seven months, and no one
Speaker 2 faced any consequences.
Speaker 2 Can you trust Inspector General reports anymore? Can you trust that Congress even has oversight or even if they want to have oversight?
Speaker 2 This,
Speaker 2 the country
Speaker 2 has broken down.
Speaker 2 And all of the problems that are happening right now are because we've abandoned all of our principles.
Speaker 2 Does it ever feel to you?
Speaker 2 Let me take a break. Let me just take a break.
Speaker 2 Sorry, we didn't expect that news broke just as I was finishing that commercial.
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Speaker 2 Okay, I want to talk to you just about the loss of sovereignty because that's what's happening.
Speaker 2 We have abandoned all of our principles and now we are, much of our life is ruled by unelected, unaccountable administrative agencies or courts
Speaker 2 facing,
Speaker 2 you know, just this forever powerless feeling, no matter how you vote. Or we breathlessly wait to hear from world bodies on anything from acknowledgment of Hamas's rape or genocidal atrocities to
Speaker 2 legitimizing our existence.
Speaker 2 We stress over whether the ICC or the ICJ, which who even knows what those are,
Speaker 2
ruling on what self-defense is allowed. Why do we care about the WHO? I didn't elect them.
I didn't start them. They have nothing to do with our Constitution.
Speaker 2
Feels at times we're trapped in a nightmare. And it's not your nightmare.
It's Woodrow Wilson's nightmare.
Speaker 2 He was the tip of the progressive movement. Like Lenin,
Speaker 2 like Lenin was only Bolsheviks' monster's head.
Speaker 2
Wilson was the head of the monster of the progressive movement. They had a lot of friends.
But things would have been very different without them. The good news is, there's some books.
Speaker 2 In case you don't understand what's happening to us, may I recommend for starters Ronald Pastrito's America Transformed
Speaker 2 and Arthur Herman's 1917.
Speaker 2
You can see the imprint of Wilson. And what is that imprint? One word can describe all of this, and that is arrogance.
A tower of intellectual arrogance.
Speaker 2
Wilson and all those who follow in his footsteps, they just know better. They don't have to include you.
And in fact, if you disagree or you oppose them, it's not wrong. It's evil to them.
Speaker 2 It is a religion.
Speaker 2 Under Wilsonian progressivism, select responsible adults will just decide what should be done based on the perfect enlightened scientific reason.
Speaker 2 Thus it's the best and the right thing to do, leading to the best possible result.
Speaker 2 What law is this judge reading? What law? He just knows what's right. He doesn't have to follow the law.
Speaker 2
You follow the science, new science. In Wilson's time, it enabled the powerful elites of supposedly disinterested and impartial expert administrators.
They didn't exist then, and they don't exist now.
Speaker 2 You think these scientists, these experts, don't have have an axe to grind? They don't have an agenda? Please.
Speaker 2
Progressives might even get a pass that we shouldn't give them because maybe it was all new back then. They didn't know.
This ideal of pure-minded, rational scientists
Speaker 2 had not yet been punctured by the cruel needle of reality, or better said, the scalpel of mangela.
Speaker 2
Wilson started the fundamental transformation of the United States. Yes, that one.
Obama kicked it off the cliff. He flatters himself, implying that it started with him.
Speaker 2 For a purported historian, Wilson's blindness to the lessons of history and human nature is staggering and willful, exactly what's happening today.
Speaker 2
It was Wilson that started the living document thing. And this is where it all goes wrong.
He made the case the Founders' era was so different. The Constitution is inadequate now.
Speaker 2 Progressives knew better. They had to destroy it so they could have all of their socialist utopia and
Speaker 2 all of their control.
Speaker 2 They could unleash the government to solve all of the problems.
Speaker 2 And Wilson pretended that to understand the Declaration of Independence, you had to discard its preamble, which in fact contains all of our principles.
Speaker 2 Without all of those principles in the preamble, it's just a dear John or a dear George letter. It has no moral or spiritual significance at all.
Speaker 2 And this understanding is what gave us the administrative state.
Speaker 2 You vote, but smarter people decide.
Speaker 2 It gave us the League of Nations,
Speaker 2 for which Wilson was willing to sacrifice anything, even the self-determination of peoples.
Speaker 2 Wilson promised to keep us out of World War I.
Speaker 2
Not because he was a pacifist. He wasn't.
Not because he believed in George Washington's warning against foreign entanglements or the Monroe Doctrine.
Speaker 2 No, he saw the promised land, the progressive League of Nations.
Speaker 2 He would keep America's hands clean of blood and gunpowder and then just swoop in in in the end. And a wise, impartial judge would settle the kids' disputes once and for all.
Speaker 2 And Wilson
Speaker 2 sent in her calling on Congress in April 1917, her all unprepared, not because of the Lusitania that was in May, but because Russia's czar had fallen in March, turning the conflict into one of democracies against old-style European empires.
Speaker 2 So Wilson believed we had to send her in. We had to send our troops in.
Speaker 2 He now believed taking America in, tipping the balance of the democracies in our favor, was the quickest way to his utopia of a safe world safe for democracy.
Speaker 2 All organized under the League to solve all of the problems and forever end all wars. Well, in the process, He inadvertently enabled the birth of communist Russia.
Speaker 2 Russians are responsible for that, starting with Lenin, Stalin, and Trotsky.
Speaker 2 Germany sent in Lenin at the worst time.
Speaker 2 But none other than Wilson might have stopped Lenin and didn't.
Speaker 2 Wilson, by missing every single opportunity, helped steer Russia away from the cliff, ensured we'd inherit the history of communism from the USSR down to the CCP, and it ain't over.
Speaker 2 He thrusted America onto the world stage.
Speaker 2 He's the guy who was really responsible, in my opinion, for World War II.
Speaker 2
Then we got into World War II. Russia had to do most of the bloodshed.
They lost more people than the rest of us combined.
Speaker 2 And it's continued over and over and over again. Why? Why?
Speaker 2 Why do we keep following these people?
Speaker 2 Why do we keep saying, oh yeah, well, the State Department knows better.
Speaker 2 We should just keep getting involved and doing the same thing over and over again. It's insanity.
Speaker 2
Not saying that America shouldn't have a hand in world affairs. Some help for Ukraine or Israel is probably good if it was done differently.
Still,
Speaker 2 the league was predictably impotent.
Speaker 2 Didn't do anything. Didn't solve World War II.
Speaker 2 Yet the vision just doesn't die. Mm-mm.
Speaker 2 Some radioactive zombie just keeps coming back. Now it's the UN, where China's vote counts as much as America's, Libya's as much as Argentina,
Speaker 2 where
Speaker 2 the Council on Human Rights is run by Iran.
Speaker 2
Oh my gosh. And they forever bash the United States.
They bash Israel. But they don't present wars.
Speaker 2
How many wars has the UN prevented? I'll help you out on this. Zero.
Massacres? Zero. Genocide? Zero.
How many times have they stopped nuclear proliferation? Zero.
Speaker 2 It also keeps Palestinians in perpetual aid.
Speaker 2 provides them with a dedicated agency, the UNRWA, which provides terrorists with salaries, material, and moral support, and yet they just continue.
Speaker 2 WEF, same mold, always the same idea. You're ignorant, you're selfish, you're stupid, probably evil.
Speaker 2 Here's what has to happen.
Speaker 2 Responsible adults must take charge of their own individual freedom and national sovereignty.
Speaker 2 We're trapped in Wilson's dream. You want to wake up?
Speaker 2 You have to go back to the beginning where Wilson took America and the world off track, put the eternal principles that he despised so much back in their place at the apex, something that all of these world globalists just do not believe.
Speaker 2 That all men are created equal, that they're endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, and these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
Speaker 2 And to secure these rights, governments are instituted among men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed.
Speaker 2
Recognize these moral and eternal words. They're the next best thing to scripture.
Restore what Wilson discarded.
Speaker 2 Humility, gratitude, wisdom, knowledge of true history, a genuine understanding of America's founding,
Speaker 2 and let us all be humble and return to God.
Speaker 2 God bless the USA.
Speaker 2 I don't think he can anymore.
Speaker 2 Glenn Beck.
Speaker 2
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Speaker 2 Welcome to the Glenn Beck program.
Speaker 2 Is there any justice?
Speaker 2 We have the State Attorney General of Texas coming on in just a few minutes. I'm trying to get a hold of Megan Kelly, maybe Josh Hammer from Newsweek, who have been following this Fannie Willis thing.
Speaker 2 I do not understand how the court
Speaker 2 could possibly, how the judge could possibly allow Fanny Willis to continue the case against Donald Trump.
Speaker 2 The case can continue, but how does anyone, how are we expected to believe anything she presents or says when she has lied under oath?
Speaker 2 And if you want to say she didn't lie under oath, then every single person in this country that has been convicted on GPS triangulation of their phone should be released.
Speaker 3 She's blatantly guilty in my mind when it comes.
Speaker 3 If that's the standard,
Speaker 2 if you cannot say, well, I'm not sure if that puts him at her house with a GPS triangulation.
Speaker 2 Do you know how many people have been nailed for crimes, murder and everything else, because of GPS triangulation?
Speaker 2 If you, if this case,
Speaker 2 if that doesn't prove that he he was there, then
Speaker 2
I'm sitting on death row for a murder, and it was all based on the GPS location. I'm filing a review.
I'm filing, I want a new hearing because a court just said that's not evidence that's good enough.
Speaker 3 Especially if you were convicted
Speaker 3 under Fonnie Willis.
Speaker 2 Oh, my gosh.
Speaker 2 Good luck, Georgia. Good luck.
Speaker 3 You asked how the judge can possibly make this decision, and you mentioned Megan Megan Kelly. Can I bring you back to a Megan Kelly tweet from March 6th?
Speaker 3
She tweeted this at the time. I hadn't heard it.
She's the first person I heard bring this up, but I'm, I don't know, somewhat won over by this particular argument.
Speaker 3
She said on March 6th, terrible news for Team Trump in Atlanta. Judge McAfee was running unopposed.
Now you get a Jesse Jackson disciple challenging him in a district that went 73% for Biden.
Speaker 3 McAfee is going to need a rock-solid spine to disqualify Faney Willis now.
Speaker 2 And I think what we see here
Speaker 2 is he doesn't.
Speaker 3 He does not have that spine.
Speaker 3 He tried to just kind of please both sides, it seems like, which is, of course, not going to please anyone. And going through the public.
Speaker 2
Judges, stop. Trying to please people.
This is why we have a constitution. This is why it's not a living document.
You cannot try to please people.
Speaker 2 You have to read the law as written and apply it as written.
Speaker 2 You can't
Speaker 2 look at how the injustice in the outcry for justice.
Speaker 2 Look at the injustice that this is creating. We are going back to a time
Speaker 2 just like the 1930s, 40s, 50s, 1800s, when some people could not get a fair shake.
Speaker 2 If you were poor, you couldn't get a fair shake because the judges were on the take.
Speaker 2 Had to solve that one, didn't we?
Speaker 2 Then blacks couldn't get a fair shake because the constituents that they were being,
Speaker 2 they were trying to please
Speaker 2 were white.
Speaker 2
Couldn't get a fair shake. Had to stop that.
Why are we starting this? Why? Why are we starting this? We're at the very beginning of this. Stop.
Stop the train.
Speaker 3
Let me give you a quick rundown of what their argument is, what the judge's argument is in this case, Glenn. Basically, they start off and they go through...
I have the ruling here.
Speaker 3 I've been reading it as you've been talking, but they go through the idea whether she financially benefited from this first. And their argument is basically, we don't have proof of that.
Speaker 2 We don't know for sure.
Speaker 3 They essentially buy the Fonnie Willis argument of, number one,
Speaker 3
she already makes a bunch of money. She doesn't have like massive debts.
There was no, she wasn't doing this purely for financial gain.
Speaker 3 She, they bought the idea that, okay, she paid for one of these trips, which it does seem like she did, one of the birthday trip that she mentioned many times. So it wasn't like,
Speaker 3
and I think I sort of agree, right? Like, I think you probably do too. Yeah.
This isn't necessarily entirely about, like, oh, we hired this guy just so I could take trips.
Speaker 3 Like, I don't think that's necessarily what happened. Right.
Speaker 3 I think
Speaker 3 they were hooking up and they wanted to take trips, and he bought a lot of the trips. And hey, it just happened to work out very well.
Speaker 2 Right.
Speaker 3 But I don't know that that was the primary reason. It was more like she wanted the guy she was sleeping with to be close.
Speaker 3 And
Speaker 3
that's a massive problem there. But let me give you this paragraph.
This is after they basically say, look,
Speaker 3 there's issues here, but we can't prove that that was her motivation.
Speaker 3 Without sufficient evidence that the district attorney acquired a personal stake in the prosecution or that her financial arrangements had any impact on the case, the defendant's claims of an actual conflict must be denied.
Speaker 3 This finding is by no means an indication that the court condones this tremendous lapse in judgment or the unprofessional manner of the district attorney's testimony during the evidentiary hearing.
Speaker 2 hearing.
Speaker 3 Unprofessional. He's admitting he knows that she was lying, basically.
Speaker 2 That's not unprofessional. It's much
Speaker 2 perjury.
Speaker 2 I would agree.
Speaker 3
I mean, that's a separate, you don't necessarily get charged with it in that way. You'd have to have a separate hearing on it.
But still, it
Speaker 3 rises to that standard to me.
Speaker 3 He says, rather, it is the undersigned opinion that the Georgia law does not permit the finding of an actual conflict for simply making bad choices, even repeatedly.
Speaker 3 And it is the trial court's duty to confine itself to the relevant issues and applicable law properly brought before it.
Speaker 3 Other forums or sources of authority such as the General Assembly, he's giving a path here, the General Assembly, the Georgia State Ethics Commission, the State Bar of Georgia, the Fulton County Board of Commissioners, or the voters of Fulton County may offer feedback for any unanswered questions that linger, this is directly from the ruling.
Speaker 3 But those are not the issues determinative to the defendant's motions alleging an actual conflict.
Speaker 3 So he's basically, you know, I think you could very fairly look at this and say he's being challenged by a Jesse Jackson disciple. He's terrified he's going to lose his job.
Speaker 3 You can argue that he just
Speaker 2
wants to make sure he's lose your job. You can argue.
Terrified. He would deny it.
What a coward. Well, he would.
You're terrified to lose your job.
Speaker 2 How dare you? Your job is a constitutional post.
Speaker 2 And you're terrified. You know what I'm terrified of?
Speaker 2 I'm terrified of being shot and killed. I'm terrified of an out-of-control government swooping in and arresting my employees or arresting me.
Speaker 2
That's what I'm that's what I'm afraid of. Okay.
Plus everything else that's going on that I'm worried about my family and my children.
Speaker 2 How dare any of you judges be afraid that that you'll lose your job? Boo-hoo, cry me a river. It is our Constitution and our country that is at stake.
Speaker 2
And none of this monologue has anything to do with Donald Trump. None of it.
We all know she perjured herself.
Speaker 2
I don't care about their relationship. I don't care about the money.
The people of Georgia should.
Speaker 2 What I care about more than even the case with Donald Trump is that this woman perjured herself and so did her boyfriend. They knowingly, gleefully,
Speaker 2 wickedly
Speaker 2 perjured themselves over and over.
Speaker 2 Neither of them should have a law license today.
Speaker 2 Neither of them.
Speaker 3 Allegedly. So we...
Speaker 2 Allegedly.
Speaker 3 Just trying to protect you from getting sued. No, but I mean, I think there is a
Speaker 3 standard here where, like, as a person who is a normal human being looking at what they said, I'm not a lawyer. I don't know every little in and out of what they're doing here.
Speaker 3 Well, we'll have them on to talk about it.
Speaker 2 But it's, to me, blatantly obvious.
Speaker 3
I said this a hundred times. No human being in history has actually done the things they said they did.
Nobody. Nobody.
Speaker 2 And that is outside of the cell phone data. And even
Speaker 2 she was there.
Speaker 3 It's so blatantly obvious to any human being.
Speaker 2 It is the cell phone data.
Speaker 2 It is that.
Speaker 2 Forget about
Speaker 2 what address that says, et cetera, et cetera. It is the cell phone GPS location by triangulating the phones that they know he was,
Speaker 2 may not know that he was in bed with
Speaker 2 but I'm sure the CIA has some satellites that can see the heat of bodies through roofs of houses.
Speaker 3 They can look through now and see through Wi-Fi and see who's in the room.
Speaker 2 Exactly right.
Speaker 2 If that triangulation doesn't hold up as evidence.
Speaker 3
To be fair, I don't think that's what he's saying. I don't think he's saying the cell phone data doesn't hold up.
I think he's blatantly
Speaker 3 basically admitting they had this relationship and they were lying.
Speaker 2 Yeah. So
Speaker 2 he can allow them to go on a case when they shouldn't be, when they perjured themselves
Speaker 2 in his court as well as another courtroom.
Speaker 3 Again, I disagree with this ruling, but that's why I read that paragraph, because he's basically stating, I don't have the legal authority to do this on these grounds.
Speaker 3
He's saying these other institutions should be the ones doing this. They should be the ones disqualifying her.
I can only act under the law that I have
Speaker 3 at my behest right now.
Speaker 2 Well, look,
Speaker 3
I tend to agree with you strongly, but that is his argument. He's saying he's limited by the law.
It's not just that you can't, if there was the financial aspect, he could throw her off.
Speaker 3 He's saying, I don't have the financial aspect locked down enough, therefore, I can't do it.
Speaker 2 One is fraud,
Speaker 2 the other is perjury under oath by an officer of the court.
Speaker 2 I got news for you, gang.
Speaker 2 If this is the way you can just go to court, you think any lawyer is not going to tell murderers and everything else exactly what to say? No, no, no, no, no.
Speaker 2 Change that story a bit.
Speaker 3 Yeah, stick to your story. I mean, this is, you know, this is a mafia tactic, right?
Speaker 3 If the mafia were to exist, this would be one of the tactics.
Speaker 2 And of course, they donate.
Speaker 2 So we need more enemies.
Speaker 2 And if they do exist, I love the mob.
Speaker 3 But I think that is real, right? Like, why all you have to do, and they prove that they talked, they talked,
Speaker 3 coordinate your story. That's basically what occurred here.
Speaker 3 They had a very similar story. And like,
Speaker 3 again,
Speaker 3 I don't think Fonnie Willis was saying, hey, if I hire this guy, I will be able to go to Napa Valley in six months. I don't think that's the full motivation.
Speaker 3 But to your point, a much greater violation has occurred.
Speaker 2 They went in front of this judge and blatantly lied, in my view, over and over and over and over and over again.
Speaker 3 And that doesn't, I mean.
Speaker 2 I mean, I just want to say, in your view, no, let's follow the science. GPS coordination.
Speaker 3 According to the GPS coordinates.
Speaker 2 Yes. And if that is not reliable technology,
Speaker 3 to your point, there are a lot of criminals out on the street later today.
Speaker 2 Let me just
Speaker 2
say this real quick. Please, dear Jesus, come or send us an asteroid because I can't take much more of this.
Good ranchers. Hey, how'd you like a free Easter ham?
Speaker 3 It could solve some problems.
Speaker 2 How'd you like a free Easter ham and the knowledge that none of the meat that you buy has the mRNA vaccine in it? Because unlike what Biden says, it doesn't cure cancer.
Speaker 2 Good Ranchers can do both of those things.
Speaker 2 During their say no to mRNA sale, Good Ranchers is offering you a free 10-pound Easter ham with any subscription when you use the promo code Beck, top quality ham and mRNA vaccine-free.
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Speaker 4
You're listening to the swinging sounds of Glenn Beck. Sit tight, boys and girls.
We'll be right back after these messages.
Speaker 3
So, I don't know, maybe six months ago, and I'm sitting in this very seat. And this, you know, guy sits down over here.
Occasionally, he'll sit to my side.
Speaker 2 Mess with me today.
Speaker 3 He messes with me. And he tells me about a movie he's seen.
Speaker 2 And he raves and raves and raves and raves and raves and raves about it.
Speaker 3
He's like, it's not even done. I didn't even see the final cut.
It's incredible. When this comes out, it's going to change everything.
Speaker 3 And I'm like, it sounds amazing.
Speaker 2 And then it gets closer.
Speaker 3
And all of a sudden, I start seeing other people saying very similar things about Cabrini. You saw this months and months and months ago.
And
Speaker 2 it is.
Speaker 2 I had somebody from the film industry write to me,
Speaker 2
still in Hollywood, one of the good guys undercover, and he said, Glenn, halfway through, I felt exactly the same way you did. I'm watching The Godfather.
I'm watching that quality of a movie.
Speaker 2
This is a Christian film. This is a great film.
Made on our side. The world's changing.
It's on the side of the studios. Yes.
Speaker 3
It really is. Cabrini's out there, 98% audience score, 91% critic score on Rotten Tomatoes.
Everybody likes this. The left, right, everybody.
This is a film that really everybody can celebrate.
Speaker 3 It's Cabrini.
Speaker 3 It's a story
Speaker 3
about, well, I mean, I can't even explain the whole thing. It's too great.
Just agree with Glenn's raving and go see this movie, angel.com/slash blaze. Angel.com/slash blaze.
The film is Cabrini.
Speaker 3 You're going to love it.
Speaker 2 Welcome to the Len Beck program.
Speaker 3 I mean, there's Look, this is a bad day, I think, for justice going forward.
Speaker 3 There's a part of me who's kind of happy the Fonnie Willis thing is not ending, though. I mean, I just...
Speaker 3 She's so insane, and she just is going to do 500 other crazy things.
Speaker 3 And I part of, just as a person who has to do a show every day, and in fact, multiple shows every day, I didn't really want Fonnie Willis out of my life quite yet. I kind of want her out.
Speaker 3
Now, that's a terribly selfish way. And our country is disintegrating.
And they're trying to destroy not only our justice system, but also national elections in the process.
Speaker 3 But selfishly, she's really fun to talk about because she's nuts. And I kind of want to hear her say 25,000 other crazy things.
Speaker 2 So let me ask you,
Speaker 2 what do you do? You're living in Georgia and you realize that it has just become Washington, D.C., where the prosecutors and judges can get away with anything.
Speaker 2 Do you live in Georgia?
Speaker 2 I mean, the state as a whole is not this district, right?
Speaker 3 I mean, this is...
Speaker 2 Do you live in that district? No.
Speaker 2
You sell your house down. You love your house.
You have a long time ago.
Speaker 2
You have a house. You have a job there.
Do you sell your house?
Speaker 3 I mean, I think so.
Speaker 2
I think I would want out. I mean, look, we live in Texas for a reason.
Yes. And not New York.
Speaker 3 I mean, there's a reason we're here.
Speaker 3 I think our actions have proven that we would do such things.
Speaker 3 I would be worried that I would be targeted in a district like this. I mean, they clearly have
Speaker 3 no idea what justice is or any intention of applying it.
Speaker 3 So, I don't know.
Speaker 3 I wouldn't want anything to do with a place like that.
Speaker 2 We have our attorney general from the great state of Texas coming on. I'm hoping he has a few things to say about this.
Speaker 2 More in a minute.
Speaker 5 The Glenn Beck Program.
Speaker 2 Let me tell you about American Giant. American Giant is just
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wearing some clothing from American Giant. He's on board with American Giant as well because they care about America.
They care about... creating jobs.
Speaker 2 They care about communities.
Speaker 2 I've never heard a businessman talk more eloquently about the pride
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Speaker 2 Sarah, just stop the music here for a second. I just, I
Speaker 2
just have to talk to you here. I started this morning, I came in this morning, and I looked at Stu and I said, I do, I want to be more philosophical today.
I want to talk about bigger issues.
Speaker 2 I, I, I, and I, you know, it's Friday, let's have fun. And immediately, I'm, it's what, 50, exactly 60 minutes ago, uh, this story broke on the Fonnie Willis case.
Speaker 2 And a very,
Speaker 2 a very cowardly judge decided to split the baby in half and say that, you know, Wade has to leave, but Fanny can stay. I don't know how
Speaker 2 she's even allowed to practice law ever again. She perjured herself over and over again.
Speaker 2 And if the GPS location from triangulation of your phones isn't good enough to prove where you were and show that they were absolutely lying, then we should release all of the prisoners that have ever been convicted because of GPS location data.
Speaker 2 And all I keep thinking about this hour is I shouldn't be on the air today because I'm so angry and I don't want to be angry. I don't want to be that guy who is angry on the radio.
Speaker 2 It does you no good.
Speaker 2 Does me no good.
Speaker 2 But I'm angry as hell today.
Speaker 2
And I don't know what to do except this. If you are somebody who gets all riled up when you hear somebody angry, don't listen to me today.
Please, please.
Speaker 2 Nobody in the history of radio has ever been as stupid as this, but please go listen to another show.
Speaker 2 If you're somebody who can live vicariously through my anger and not get riled up, but feel better, then good.
Speaker 2 Blow some steam off through me today.
Speaker 2
We have Ken Paxton coming on in just a second. He's the Attorney General for the state of Texas.
He's got some news that broke yesterday that I'm excited to talk to him about.
Speaker 2 But I got to ask him about this Fannie Willis thing.
Speaker 2
I don't understand it. There is no law if you can perjure yourself and get away with it.
And there is no law if an attorney can do it, let alone a district attorney.
Speaker 2 All right, let me tell you about, this is not going to improve my mood either. Let me tell you about the International Fellowship of Christians and Jews.
Speaker 2 This is a group that I have been around and worked with for a very long time.
Speaker 2 And they have been doing such good work all around the world with Christians and Jews standing together.
Speaker 2 It was started by a great rabbi who knew that there were lots of Christians that wanted to stand. How many times have you heard now, well, Christians are the real enemies of Jews?
Speaker 2 Well, they have been in the past, but that's the past. Never again is now.
Speaker 2 So I've been working with them for a long time, and they've been doing great things for Israel and for individuals
Speaker 2
by helping destitute Holocaust survivors have food. But they've also been putting armored vehicles and armored ambulances in Israel.
for a long time, flak jackets for individuals.
Speaker 2
They have saved the lives. In October 7th, they actually saved lives because of the work that they had done.
Now, Israel needs bomb shelters everywhere. I've been,
Speaker 2
I have been in Surat, Israel, when Hamas launched a rocket. I should bring that rocket in again.
When they launched a rocket.
Speaker 2
The mayor of Surat and I were walking around. He was showing me how close they are to the border.
And a Hamas rocket landed and we ran into one of the bomb shelters.
Speaker 2 I think it was one of the bomb shelters that the IFCJ IFCJ put in.
Speaker 2 Now they need bomb shelters and it's so expensive. Please, please,
Speaker 2 can we be people of merit?
Speaker 2 Can we
Speaker 2 beg the Lord for blessings
Speaker 2 to stay his hand?
Speaker 2 Can we support
Speaker 2 the Jew?
Speaker 2 Can we please grab the hem of the Jew
Speaker 2 so we can be worthy to at least ask and approach the holy bench to say, please help us.
Speaker 2
Supportifcj.org. That's the web address if you want to give.
There's a generous donor who's going to double your money. You put a dollar in, he'll put a dollar in.
You put 100, he'll put 100.
Speaker 2 You'll double the impact. Please
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go to supportifcj.org. That's supportifcj.org.
Ken Paxton is with us now. Hello, Ken.
Speaker 7
Good morning. You know what? I feel better.
I'm not going to go to another radio station.
Speaker 2
I don't know what to do, Ken, anymore. I'm so frustrated.
And I honestly, and I'm glad I have you on before we talk about some stuff that's happening here in Texas, I'd like to know from you.
Speaker 2 This judge has dismissed the triangulation from cell phone data that proves the two of them were lying, bald face and enjoying their lie
Speaker 2 to two, not just one, but two courtrooms, two judges. How can they possibly be trusted?
Speaker 2 How can they even have their law license after that?
Speaker 7 So, as you know, today the rule of law is completely going by the wayside. And I think it really started under President Obama.
Speaker 7
And we've just moved to this place where now judges and I deal with this. I know President Trump deals with this.
He's dealing with it with this. The rule of law means nothing.
Speaker 7 And they look at things politically, and they want a certain result, which is to get rid of him so that he cannot be president because they don't feel like, even with
Speaker 7 some potential voter fraud out there, that they can beat him. And so they are willing to ignore normal rules of procedure, normal rules of conflict, normal rule of law to say the result matters here.
Speaker 7
Let's just keep on going. It's wrong.
It's unethical. And if our system of laws breaks down, we don't have a constitutional republic.
Speaker 2 Do you have a case?
Speaker 2 If I'm somebody who's been convicted on GPS phone data
Speaker 2
and that was the lynchpin. Do I have a case in Georgia to go and say, apparently it doesn't matter.
It's not good enough?
Speaker 7 Well, I think you do, but the problem is they apply the law differently depending on who you are. If this were President Biden, we saw what happened when that prosecutor dismissed
Speaker 7 his crimes, acknowledged crimes, and said, well, he's not capable of
Speaker 7
testifying or he's not capable of standing trials. We'll just dismiss it and let him run for president.
They treat people so differently now, and
Speaker 7 it ruins the credibility of our court system.
Speaker 7 We become Venzuela. I mean, we are no different.
Speaker 2 So
Speaker 2 what do the people do, Ken? Because I got to tell you, if I lived in that district that's just told me everything I need to know,
Speaker 2 I don't want to go to Washington, D.C. because I don't trust.
Speaker 2 I mean,
Speaker 2 this is exactly what African Americans went through in the South in the 1950s and 60s. It's completely corrupt.
Speaker 2 There is no rule of law for anybody if you happen to be, in this case, of the wrong ideology. It's not skin color, it's ideology.
Speaker 7 I think you do what we tried to do in Texas.
Speaker 7 You know, I've talked about this on your show, how we had three Court of Appeals, which is a statewide position over all criminal matters, and they completely blew off the law that had been around for 71 years and stopped the Attorney General from prosecuting voter fraud.
Speaker 7 So it took a lot of effort, a lot of time to overcome three incumbents, but we beat all three pretty overwhelmingly.
Speaker 7 So there are ways to attack the system in a way that is very different than what they do.
Speaker 7 We're always limited by three things: the law, the truth, and decency. They are not.
Speaker 7
So they have a lot of advantages that we don't have, but we still have to operate under those three premises, or we're no different than they are. So, yeah, it's a lot harder.
It's frustrating.
Speaker 7 But the good thing is, you know, we still have opportunities. And the second good thing is God is still in control.
Speaker 2 I know he's not surprised by this, but I certainly am, which makes sure that it makes, reminds me always, I'm not God.
Speaker 2 So is this going to affect this case at all if he quits?
Speaker 7 I don't think so. I mean,
Speaker 7
in my opinion, they want the result they want, want, and they're going to get the result they want. And I don't know how you stop that.
I mean,
Speaker 7 it's what I've dealt with.
Speaker 7 You get moved around to courts where you know you have no chance, where the jury is rigged rigged against you, where the prosecution is rigged against you, where the judge is rigged against you, and it's very challenging, and you just got to pray that somehow there's a miracle.
Speaker 2 What is the
Speaker 2 what is the lawyers association called?
Speaker 2 The
Speaker 7 bar?
Speaker 2 The American Bar Association? Yeah, American Bar Association.
Speaker 2 As an alcoholic, I'd like to join that association, but it's slightly different.
Speaker 2 But
Speaker 2 the American Bar Association,
Speaker 2 why aren't they going to spring spring into action and to spar people who perjured themselves?
Speaker 7 Because most of them have become so political as well. I mean, I look at the Texas Bar Association.
Speaker 7 They came after me and my first assistant for suing over the election in four states, which we got two Supreme Court justices to agree with us, and yet they said
Speaker 7 it's frivolous. Of course, the whole committee is made up of Democrats, and
Speaker 7
we have a Republican Supreme Court that oversees them, and they let this happen. I wish they would pay attention to this group because they don't operate under the law.
They operate politically.
Speaker 7 And the same thing is true of the American Bar Association. They've infiltrated, and I don't participate in the American Bar Association for that very reason.
Speaker 7 It is a political organization that's leaned far left, and they don't worry about the rule of law.
Speaker 2 Unbelievable.
Speaker 2 Let me change the subject here to the rule of law here in
Speaker 2 Texas.
Speaker 2 When I went to Colony Ridge,
Speaker 2 I looked at that, and this is that, you know,
Speaker 2 this giant town that is being built that is going to turn a whole county red eventually. And it is illegals that are, you know, they say most of them are from Houston, but they're advertising
Speaker 2 online in Spanish and saying, make your home America. And so it's this
Speaker 2 town that is, quite honestly, I think it's Pottersville.
Speaker 2 I think the guy is, I don't know if he's doing anything illegal or not, but he is just crushing the dreams of America, you know, of American dream.
Speaker 2
You come here, you can own your own property, et cetera, et cetera. But I just think it's criminal the way they're doing it.
But I don't know if it's actually criminal.
Speaker 2 You have just filed charges and saying that they are breaking the law.
Speaker 7 Yeah. So this was a, believe it or not, this was created by the Texas legislature by
Speaker 7 one member of the House, Ernest Bales, and Senator Robert Nichols in the Senate. These are Republicans that created this really
Speaker 7
weird district to allow this to happen. Now, here's the good news.
Ernest Bales just got beat in his primary. Of course, he also invoted to impeach me, so I'm glad to see him go.
Speaker 7
And Robert Nichols, I've heard, is going to retire. I don't know if that's true or not.
These are the people that actually created this. Now, we've actually sued them.
We have no criminal authority.
Speaker 7 Of course, the DAs are very unlikely to go after them criminally, but we have gone after them civilly, arguing that they have committed a deceptive trade practice because they are misleading the consumer about how these things work, the value of the property, the infrastructure isn't there that they say is there.
Speaker 7 And then we feel like they've misled them on the financing part.
Speaker 7 And so many of these people come and they buy these shoddy homes and then they end up in foreclosure and then they just resell them over and over.
Speaker 2 Yeah, I talked to him about that in our special that we did where he's like, I said,
Speaker 2 then you just, because you're underwriting the loan, you just take the property back and you resell it, you know, 30% of the time, I think what the number was, 30% default rate.
Speaker 7
Yeah, the foreclosure rate is higher than anywhere I've ever seen. Yeah.
Yeah.
Speaker 2 So this is not criminal. This is civil?
Speaker 7
Well, I have no authority in Texas. I've tried to change that.
The legislature's left that with the local DA to make all criminal decisions.
Speaker 7 And the problem that we have is we have so many DAs, especially in the big cities, that won't do anything because they're controlled by Sora.
Speaker 7 So until the legislature deems it fit to allow the AG to have current jurisdictions, there are literally thousands of crimes, including human trafficking, that are not going to be prosecuted.
Speaker 2 So I said the other day, changing the subject, I said the other day that
Speaker 2 this
Speaker 2 corporate transparency act that the government has done for small businesses that
Speaker 2 have under 20 employees. I've got several small businesses that are under 20 employees.
Speaker 2 I have to now file with the Treasury
Speaker 2
Criminal Division and give them all kinds of information. This is going to destroy.
small businesses.
Speaker 2 You don't have the ability, most people in a small business, to even understand what all of this is.
Speaker 2 They're going to give us until the end of the year to file. I want to file a case against them.
Speaker 2 I mean, who the hell do they think they are that they can do this? And if I change my driver's license and don't let them know or I move and don't let them know, I can go to prison.
Speaker 7
Is there. Well, you ought to get, yeah, you ought to give us information about this.
I don't know. Is this something they did statutorily? Was it Congress?
Speaker 2 Yes, no, statutory.
Speaker 7
Wow. That's remarkable.
Yeah.
Speaker 2
No, it's up to 10. I want to know more about it.
I will send you the information today because it is absolutely so.
Speaker 2 anti-American and it will make criminals out of, you know, none of the big businesses, even medium-sized businesses have to do it.
Speaker 2 It's just for these small businesses and they're going to cripple them.
Speaker 7 Why did the Republicans agree to this?
Speaker 2
They didn't. It was done statutory.
It was done by the, I want to say, oh, done by the Treasury Department.
Speaker 7
Oh, well, that's regulatory. Yeah.
So they didn't have. Oh, yeah.
Speaker 2 I'm sorry, regulatory.
Speaker 7 Yeah, that makes it more likely we would have some angle to pursue that as a state.
Speaker 2
It's crazy. It's absolutely crazy.
Ken, I don't know how you do this every day, but
Speaker 2 I appreciate it. It's crazy.
Speaker 7
Thank you so much. It is crazy.
It is. All right.
You have a great day.
Speaker 2 Have a great weekend. Bye-bye.
Speaker 2 We're going to continue our conversation on what happened
Speaker 2 with Fannie Willis, get another opinion from Eric Schmidt.
Speaker 2
But there is some bright news also coming. He was, by the way, the former Attorney General of Missouri.
He is now the senator from Missouri.
Speaker 2 He filed a case to end big tech and the collusion with the government, and it is about to go to SCOTUS now to be heard, and they have the chance to end that collusion.
Speaker 2 We're going to talk to him about that. Also, the Fannie Willis case
Speaker 2 as the show
Speaker 2 progresses, I guess, or regresses. I'm not really
Speaker 2
even sure. Let's say that you want to sell your house.
If that idea sounds simple, I guess you never have really done it before.
Speaker 2 All I hear, whenever I hear the idea of selling our house, I hear my wife say over and over again, we've got to clean the house.
Speaker 2 People are coming over and it just goes on and on and on. And it makes your life just miserable.
Speaker 2 At least it makes your wife's life miserable. You need a great real estate agent that can sell this damn thing.
Speaker 2 And you need somebody who can absolutely make sure it's marketed the right way, that they have an idea of exactly who should take pictures of the house so they can be posted, who can help fix the house, the consulting on all of it, stage the house if it's empty.
Speaker 2 You need a real estate agent you can trust. And that's why I started my company, realestate agents I trust.com.
Speaker 2 We don't charge you for the referral at all. All you have to do is we have vetted these people and
Speaker 2 we have endorsed them to say, yes, this is somebody who is in best practice. They're generally listeners of our show, so they have have the same kind of view on life.
Speaker 2
They're not going to be offended by the words master bedroom. Go to realestateagentsitrust.com.
That's realestate agentsitrust.com. 10 seconds, station ID.
Speaker 2 I don't even feel like I'm doing a show today. I'm just...
Speaker 2 Just reacting. I'm just talking.
Speaker 2 I'm just, I'm in my, I'm in my pajamas screaming at the television.
Speaker 3
That's what I feel like. Old man screams at cloud.
Yes. Is that where you are?
Speaker 2 That's where I am at. I am there too.
Speaker 3
I am there, too. It's frustrating because it doesn't feel like there's any justice at all.
And there's a good argument that there isn't.
Speaker 2 That being said, you know, you can't give up on this country, right?
Speaker 3 I mean, it's the best country.
Speaker 2 I'm not giving up. I'm not.
Speaker 2 I just can't believe. How many, I'm sorry, I had a conversation with somebody yesterday and it's still bothering me because
Speaker 2 I talked to them about, you know, our history is being destroyed and rewritten and they rolled their eyes.
Speaker 2 And I said,
Speaker 2 how about the World War II kissing picture that was just, they just tried to disappear it from all VA hospitals and everything else because you think that that's where it's going to end?
Speaker 2
That's a stupid thing. That's a stupid thing that they want to ban and make sure nobody ever sees it again.
You think they're not going to go after our documents and everything else?
Speaker 2 So I'm kind of stuck there because I can't believe people can't see this.
Speaker 3 We've upended our entire foundation, it feels like.
Speaker 2 And
Speaker 2 look, I. Do you know why this is being done?
Speaker 2 You know what this is?
Speaker 2 This is...
Speaker 2
The real experts saying that we know China is going to be the ruler of the world soon. So we don't want a war.
So let's demolish the ability of the United States to be capable of a war against China.
Speaker 2 Just clear the deck because we know it's inevitable anyway. We're doing the right thing for the people of the world.
Speaker 2 That's actually,
Speaker 2 I think, a big part of what they're doing.
Speaker 2 They're just saying, we're just going to save lives, you know, so America and China don't go to war, because that's what happens when world powers start to change. There's a big war.
Speaker 2 That's what's happening in the world.
Speaker 2 What right do you have to screw with people like that?
Speaker 2 Patriot Mobile, when you get enough companies to draw a line in the sand saying we're not going to be a part of this culture anymore, we're not going to do this.
Speaker 2 All of these companies, corporate America, just gone. I don't know why,
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Speaker 2 There's companies like Patriot Mobile, which is offering amazing self-service.
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Speaker 2 I need some good news. I think I'll get it from
Speaker 2 Senator Eric Schmidt from Missouri.
Speaker 2
Eric, how are you, sir? Senator, how are you? Good, Glenn. I'm doing great.
How are you? Oh, well, I'm not having a good day.
Speaker 2 I'm stuck on this Fonnie Willis thing
Speaker 2
that there is no justice. There is absolutely no justice.
If the judge found that they couldn't prove there wasn't enough evidence that she perjured herself over and over again, and so did Wade,
Speaker 2 when they have
Speaker 2 the cell phone triangulation data, then why shouldn't every person who has ever been convicted on that cell phone triangulation data, especially in Georgia,
Speaker 2 why should that stand? And how can you trust that there's any kind of justice in this country if not only an attorney, but the district attorney can
Speaker 2 boldly, gleefully lie in court and get away with it?
Speaker 7 Yeah, no, I think under most circumstances, the fact pattern that's been laid out in that case, it'd be just potentially disbarred.
Speaker 2 Exactly.
Speaker 7 Not just stay on the case,
Speaker 7
but certainly face disciplinary action. Yes.
It is just, it's ridiculous.
Speaker 2 Okay.
Speaker 2 Give me some good news, will you?
Speaker 7 Well, I will. So
Speaker 7 Monday,
Speaker 7 Missouri versus Biden is being argued at the Supreme Court. And
Speaker 7 it is, as we've talked about before, it's the most important free speech case in the history of the country, certainly in a generation, because it deals with
Speaker 7 the federal government in this vast censorship enterprise, coercing, colluding, cajoling these social media giants to censor speech.
Speaker 7 And what the judge found at the lower court, when I filed it when I was attorney general in Missouri, what the judge found at the lower court was that this was almost exclusively conservatives being censored.
Speaker 7 It reaped a viewpoint discrimination, which violates the First Amendment. And it was Orwellian.
Speaker 7 I mean, what was uncovered, Glenn, were tens of thousands of pages of emails and text messages from high-ranking government officials to social media giants saying, take it down, or we're going to launch an investigation, or
Speaker 7 we're going to sue you under antitrust issues. I mean, really, really, the full power of the federal government was being used to suppress dissent, to silence Americans.
Speaker 7
And so that's been shown in the case. And so that now has been appealed by the government.
They want to continue to censor people.
Speaker 7 and the Supreme Court's going to hear oral arguments on that on Monday.
Speaker 2 And how do you think it's going to go?
Speaker 7 I'm hopeful. I'm hopeful.
Speaker 7 I just think the case is going to, a lot of it will come down to what was the government actually doing,
Speaker 7 and were they, in fact, coercing, right? Were they using the power of the federal government to get these social media giants to do the things that they can't legally do themselves?
Speaker 7 What makes this case unique is typically social media companies are sued by people who've been deplatformed or their posts have been taken down, and those go to the Northern District of California, and they're never going to be seen again.
Speaker 7 What was unique in our case is that we sued the federal government itself
Speaker 7 and the actors like Jin Saki and Anthony Fauci.
Speaker 7 I had a chance to take Anthony Fauci's deposition, took Elvis Chan's deposition, who was, of course, the FBI agent in charge, who was pre-bunking the Hunter Biden laptop story, calling it Russian disinformation, a hack and leak operation, even though they had the laptop already they were pre-bunking this uh getting ready for 2020 the COVID uh uh the uh the efficacy of masks you know they were suppressing that speech vaccine issues origins of COVID where they were shutting anybody down who talked about this coming from the lab and in Wuhan and so all that's uncovered in this in this lawsuit and if it wasn't for this lawsuit Glenn and then later Elon Musk buying Twitter with the Twitter files and then later some of the congressional hearings, this stuff would still be in the dark.
Speaker 7 You know, it would still be a conspiracy theory, but it was happening. And what we refer to it in lawsuit is a vast censorship enterprise.
Speaker 7 The number of agencies and people involved here is breathtaking.
Speaker 7
And the, you know, sometimes willing behavior of social media companies to comply and deplatform and censor people. But in some instances, they actually didn't want to do it.
Right.
Speaker 7 And they changed their rules.
Speaker 2 So that's
Speaker 2 what I wanted to ask you about. How much of this do you think was willing, and how much of it was fear of the government?
Speaker 7 Both. So,
Speaker 7 yeah, I mean, these social media platforms typically were very aligned with the left. I think in many instances, Facebook, for example, after 2016 and Donald Trump ones,
Speaker 7 they made it clear publicly they were never going to let that happen again, right? They were never going to let that happen again. And so, I think some of this was
Speaker 7 overtly political on their part, and they were willing participants. But there are, I mean, there are documents that were uncovered where they were pushing back.
Speaker 7 That is not, you know, it didn't violate their terms of service. And as one judge said
Speaker 7 in one of the previous arguments, that's a nice social media company you have there, right? It'd be a shame if something happened to it. Almost like a mob ball.
Speaker 7 Oh, yeah, that is coming from the government.
Speaker 2 That is. Yeah, so
Speaker 7 So this is, again,
Speaker 7 all the power that the federal government has exerting that on these social media companies to do what they can't legally do themselves, which is to censor.
Speaker 7 And so this case is a, it's, it's hard, for me, as somebody who believes deeply in the right to free speech and what that means for a country and
Speaker 7 freedom, this is, in my view, one of the most important cases that in general the court's heard in a very, very long time.
Speaker 7 But certainly as it relates to the First Amendment, how is this going to affect?
Speaker 7 Because we're dealing with
Speaker 7 a virtual town square now, Glenn.
Speaker 2 How is this going to affect the
Speaker 2 new systems that they're putting in for mis and disinformation? And the governments
Speaker 2 work with five eyes
Speaker 2 and with social media and the rest of the media where they are just training them and guiding them through mis and disinformation. Will this case have anything to do with that? Because
Speaker 2 that's upon us right now.
Speaker 7
Absolutely. And so that is the intention of this, too, is to bust that up.
Because there's agencies like CISA that most people have never heard of. Right.
Speaker 7 But was, yeah, very involved, Glenn.
Speaker 2 Explain to the audience what CISA is.
Speaker 7
It's basically the agency that was created not that long ago to deal with sort of cybersecurity. Right.
Okay. And what it found itself doing
Speaker 7 during COVID in particular was under the guise of disinformation and misinformation, as you clearly articulated, looks,
Speaker 7
that's a ploy by one of the tyrants to control speech. Yes.
The truth of the matter is you get to say your opinion even if somebody else thinks it's wrong.
Speaker 7 The government doesn't get to shut that down. The government doesn't get to tell you what you can say and what you can hear.
Speaker 7 It's up to the individual to decipher what they, you know, how they want to move forward and what they, as they analyze facts and what their decisions are. Right.
Speaker 7
It was sort of like with the mandates, like with mask mandates. You know, people can make their own decisions.
They can judge if this is a good thing or not for their family. Same with the vaccine.
Speaker 7 And so all of this was about command and control for these sprawling agencies. And the other thing that was exposed in this too, Glenn, is there were universities,
Speaker 7 University of Washington at Stanford, were involved with helping, you know, sort of determine what the disinformation and misinformation was.
Speaker 7
So again, they're outsourcing this to their sort of web of allies to censor Americans. And this case would prevent that.
This case, if the court rules the right way, and I hope that they do,
Speaker 7 It would essentially, there would be an injunction on all these agencies from engaging in that kind of activity. That'd be a huge win.
Speaker 7 Now, no matter what happens, the case, of course, stands for exposing all of this.
Speaker 7 But the remedy that hopefully will play out is preventing this.
Speaker 7 But as we've talked about before, I've got legislation in the Senate that would empower individuals to sue individual government actors if they've been censored. If they're right to
Speaker 7 censor, you can go sue. Yeah, it would, because instead of just one AG, in the state suing, you'd have an army of citizens being able to stand up for their First Amendment rights.
Speaker 2 The Treasury, I think, in cooperated, I'd have to look this up. I think it was the World Bank or, I don't know,
Speaker 2 some
Speaker 2 world organization got together and ran a
Speaker 2 kind of a war game with the central banks around the world. And
Speaker 2 one of the things that came out of that was we have got to shut down voices. And
Speaker 2 this is an exact quote.
Speaker 2 We have to shut down voices that disagree in the case of an emergency, a financial emergency, that disagree with the actions of the central banks, even if they are correct, because
Speaker 2 they could
Speaker 2 further the collapse of the system. And I've been saying on the air for a while now, I know I'm not going to agree with
Speaker 2 the
Speaker 2 global central banks on whatever it is they're planning to do.
Speaker 2 The people who created the problem, I don't want designing a new system or anything else.
Speaker 2 And
Speaker 2
that snuffs out freedom of speech quickly. Quickly.
It does.
Speaker 7 It does.
Speaker 7 And I think what you're seeing play out in real time is
Speaker 7
the broad diffusion of information, which is good. That's good.
The democratization of how people get information.
Speaker 7 You're sort of
Speaker 7 on the front lines of all this a long time ago. But
Speaker 7 what they really fear is that individuals will then
Speaker 7 take different inputs and make up their own minds, as opposed to three networks that tell you everything they want you to hear.
Speaker 7
And again, I just think that we ought to be unafraid, I think, as conservatives to talk about this is about this is about freedom. This is about liberty.
This is about making up your own mind.
Speaker 7 And they know how powerful that idea is.
Speaker 7 Absolutely. So what's the game play? And you saw it play out in COVID, which is create a crisis, have a cry, whether it's real or manufactured, right?
Speaker 7 And then you consolidate power, you fear monger, you other, the othering of those who are dissenting. I mean, think about, go back in time just a little bit.
Speaker 7 They were, you know, in Australia, which we thought was kind of like us, but with cute animals,
Speaker 7 they had camps.
Speaker 2 You know,
Speaker 2 camps.
Speaker 7 People were being arrested in parks for not wearing masks. I mean, we can't memory hole all this stuff.
Speaker 7 That is a glimpse of the kind of world that some of these folks want to live in if you disagree with the regime. And we have to fight back with everything we have to make sure that doesn't happen.
Speaker 7 And that it would, it also depends on us defending somebody else's right to say something we really disagree with. That's sort of the hallmark of it.
Speaker 7 But they want to bulldoze all that glen to have a regime narrative. And anybody that stands in the way is othered, marginalized, called all sorts of names, lose their job, deplatform.
Speaker 7 I mean, that is a real, so this whole like lecture we get from Joe Biden on threats to democracy, we have seen the threat. We have seen the threat.
Speaker 7 And it is Joe Biden's administration with their censorship enterprise and trying to throw political opponents in jail.
Speaker 7 So I think people are waking up to this, and I think we just got to stand up for it.
Speaker 2
Good. Thank you, Eric.
I appreciate it. We'll be watching Monday.
Speaker 2 If maybe you'll come back Monday or Tuesday, you could tell us how it went
Speaker 2 and
Speaker 2
dissect the arguments back and forth between the two. Thank you, Eric.
Appreciate it.
Speaker 2
Thank you, buddy. Senator Eric Schmidt from Missouri.
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Speaker 2 The Glenn Beck program.
Speaker 2 Glenn's newsletter is free and full of useful info delivered every day right to your inbox.
Speaker 5 Sign up at Glenn Beck.com.
Speaker 2 Okay,
Speaker 2 here we are.
Speaker 2 Yeah, it's Friday.
Speaker 2 You know, my mom said when you don't have anything nice to say.
Speaker 2
And I really don't. I really don't.
Nothing nice to say. No?
Speaker 3 Do you have anything nice to say? Let me give you a couple of organizations that might have something that can be helpful.
Speaker 2 Okay.
Speaker 2 Alcoholics Anonymous?
Speaker 2 That's a good one for you in particular. Joe's Joe's Bar?
Speaker 3 Not as good.
Speaker 2
Church is Jesus Christ, Latter-day Saints. Probably that one.
A lot better. For me, too.
Yeah.
Speaker 3 Yeah, maybe. Maybe the first and the third and not the middle one.
Speaker 2 Okay. Okay.
Speaker 3 How about the
Speaker 3
General Assembly in Georgia? The Georgia State Ethics Commission. The State Bar of Georgia.
The Fulton County Board of Commissioners.
Speaker 3 The voters of Fulton County.
Speaker 3 Those are the organizations specifically cited by the judge in this case. Now, again, we are not,
Speaker 3 I think the judge did the wrong thing here. What he's doing is passing, he's punching
Speaker 2 a little bit. He knows what is true and what is right, and he's being a coward.
Speaker 3 He said,
Speaker 3 this is the quote, this finding is by no means an indication that the court condones the tremendous lapse in judgment or the unprofessional manner of the district attorney's testimony during the evidentiary hearing.
Speaker 3 That's not just, hey, we think you handled the situation wrong. This is, we know you lied during this hearing.
Speaker 3 He's saying, I can't do anything about that. I'm limited to the issue brought before me, but you know who should?
Speaker 3 The State Bar of Georgia, the Georgia State Ethics Commission, the General Assembly. He says, maybe they will offer feedback on any unanswered questions that linger, which
Speaker 3 is a kind of a funny phrase.
Speaker 2 I don't know.
Speaker 3 There might be a couple of unanswered questions that linger
Speaker 3 as it applies to this.
Speaker 2 Here's one, and I mean this sincerely. If you happen to be listening to me from prison in Georgia and you were convicted on cell phone triangulation data,
Speaker 2 I would be on the phone with my attorney.
Speaker 3 I agree with that, but remember, Fanny Willis's district is crazy, but the state of Georgia as a whole is not.
Speaker 3 These organizations, a lot of them are state organizations that can do something about this.
Speaker 5 The Glenn Beck program.
Speaker 2 Let me tell you about our sponsor this half hour. It's Cabrini.
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Speaker 2 It's a new day, a time to rise.
Speaker 2 Welcome Welcome to the fusion
Speaker 2 of entertainment and enlightenment.
Speaker 2 This is the Glen Beck Program.
Speaker 2
Welcome to the Glenbeck program. It is Friday.
I'd like to have a few laughs. Bridget Fettesey is here.
Speaker 2 We're going to talk about the news of the day and try to find some answers and maybe some bright side other than, huh, it'll be interesting to see how America works this one out too.
Speaker 2 But we'll start there, I guess. My pillow is our sponsor.
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Speaker 2 I am a sheet snob, I will admit.
Speaker 2 You know, I could stay at, you know, a Super 8
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I'm sorry, I'm a sheet snob.
Speaker 3 Give yourself credit. You're a snob on so many different things, Glenn.
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Speaker 2
Thank you, Stu. I appreciate it.
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Speaker 2 Oh, Bridget, I'm so glad you're here today.
Speaker 8 I'm glad.
Speaker 8 I was worried.
Speaker 2 Yeah, you were probably sitting in the makeup room listening, going, oh my gosh, I have to go in there. And I was like, uh-oh.
Speaker 8 Can I ask you a question? When you are in these places and it feels unjust and
Speaker 8 you're frustrated,
Speaker 8 how do you
Speaker 8 regain some semblance of
Speaker 8 faith or sanity?
Speaker 2
My faith has temples, and I am going to the temple right after the show today. Okay.
So that is the only thing that will help me regain anything.
Speaker 2
And then I'm going to the ranch. And I may not ever come back.
It may not ever come back. It happens that often.
Today, I kind of believe it.
Speaker 8 I mean, it would be hard if you didn't have to do this for, let's say, money reasons to not want to just check out.
Speaker 3 Yeah, I don't.
Speaker 2 I don't.
Speaker 2 The only thing that is putting me in this seat is my religious conviction. But today is the very first day that I have ever seriously thought of George Washington over and over again in my mind.
Speaker 2
George Washington, you know, he he didn't want, he did not want to be the general. Yeah.
He didn't. He, he, when they, when they suggested him, he said, look, guys, wait, wait, wait.
Speaker 2
Before you vote, I know there are people in this room that really don't think I should be general. So I'm going to walk out.
So feel free to express all of that. Okay.
He didn't want to. He was.
Speaker 2 He became the general. It was horrible.
Speaker 2
You know, he was president. And when the Articles of Confederation, all he wanted to do is go back to his ranch, his farm, and farm.
That's all he wanted to do.
Speaker 2 And they came to his door at three o'clock in the morning in a rainstorm because the Articles of Confederation were falling apart. And they said, General, the country is falling apart.
Speaker 2
You're the only one that can, you know, hold everybody together. And that was true in his case.
Right. And he looked at him and said, Have I not yet done enough for my country?
Speaker 2 And I keep, I've thought of that. You know, have I not?
Speaker 2 I think I've done my job.
Speaker 3 I think I've done my job.
Speaker 2 I think I've done my job.
Speaker 2
And that's the first time that I've ever felt that way because I'm not George Washington. Right.
You know, I mean,
Speaker 2 he really, he was critical to the, to the Republic surviving. Right.
Speaker 8 But do you, do you think that people would feel isolated and like they were going crazy if they didn't have somebody expressing the same frustration that you feel.
Speaker 2 I think there's a lot of people that are doing that, though, now. I mean, we didn't have that before.
Speaker 2 And honestly, Bridget,
Speaker 2 what bothers me so much is
Speaker 2 as all of this is going on, I have people in my own life, my own friends and stuff that are looking at me as I've, and I've always been respectful and reasonable and everything else.
Speaker 2 And they're looking at me like,
Speaker 2 you think it's really bad, huh? Oh, you think this is good? We're on the verge of class. And I just, I, I'm like, how could I possibly convince anyone of anything
Speaker 2
if people in my own life don't believe it? People in my own life look at me askance. They know who I am.
They know I'm a logical thinker, but they're just so scooped into
Speaker 2 the
Speaker 2 little teeny slice of information that they have.
Speaker 8 But I also think most people can't comprehend it. And what are they going to do? You know, I don't, I don't think people feel, even if it's something they considered,
Speaker 8 I don't know how they would comprehend it on a on a like play the tape forward level. Like, how are you going to take care of your family? What are you going to do? What does this mean?
Speaker 8 What does this look like? What?
Speaker 8 Even if they say, you know, people, we joked about this last time I was here, like America's too fat for a civil war.
Speaker 8 How do you, when people are talking about this, it's like play the tape forward step by step. I know someone like you can
Speaker 8 and probably often does, but I don't think the average person who's trying to like pay their bills, raise their kids,
Speaker 8 deal with just food prices, child care, how are they going to, they don't have time to
Speaker 8 comprehend that reality.
Speaker 2 So, and those people do not want to listen to things like this because it's overwhelming for them.
Speaker 8 But I think that's where it's our job in some respect to give some kind of hope.
Speaker 2
Right. There is hope.
There is hope. But quite honestly,
Speaker 2 this is, I've been saying this all week. This is a straight,
Speaker 2
not spelled like a straight line. This is a straight and narrow path.
And
Speaker 2 we're threading
Speaker 2 a needle in a hurricane
Speaker 2 and a tornado at the same time. And
Speaker 2 the only thing that will help us do that is God.
Speaker 8 Yeah.
Speaker 8
Yeah, it's interesting. It reminds me of the first time I ever came on your podcast, which now seems like ages ago.
But the first time it was just the interview that we did.
Speaker 8 And I was like this little wide-eyed, you know, I didn't know. You were like Bambi.
Speaker 2 I didn't know. And the fire was coming.
Speaker 2 There's a a hunter on the hill and a fire. Mommy's gone.
Speaker 8 You're all alone now. Child in the wilderness.
Speaker 8
And I didn't, I mean, I didn't know anything. I knew conservative media existed, but I didn't know anything.
I really knew nothing.
Speaker 8 And I remember just being like, did you know the left has double standards clubs?
Speaker 8 I had no idea.
Speaker 8 But hearing you today as I was getting my makeup done, it was re I was flashing back to that. Like,
Speaker 8 you know, when we stood around and go, why, why? Well,
Speaker 8 I think we know why. And it is enraging.
Speaker 8 It makes me understand why people feel
Speaker 8 the way they feel, that rage that exists in terms of these are just two standards that are not applied evenly at all.
Speaker 8 And I'm never really sure what to do or what, you know, how to, it's like, I don't know how to make light of something like that because it's not funny. Yeah.
Speaker 8 And they want you to kind of laugh at it because,
Speaker 2
but that is the answer. Yeah.
It is to be able to
Speaker 2 laugh at it and
Speaker 2
bring joy. And you know what? I said to Stu before I started the show today, I said it's Friday.
Now then, I just let's be philosophical
Speaker 2
and let's have some fun. It's Friday.
And then the Fanny, the Fannie Willis thing happened.
Speaker 2 And I I about
Speaker 2 burst a gasket.
Speaker 8
Yeah. And it's always on Fridays that they do this.
I know. Because they know people are going into the weekends.
Speaker 2 And then they'll drink that away and they'll forget about it by Monday.
Speaker 8
Yeah. I mean, I was thinking too about you when you were talking about, you know, I don't, you don't want to do this.
And you actually gave me a lot of good advice very early on.
Speaker 8 And one of the things you said to do.
Speaker 2
Don't do this. I remember giving you that advice.
Don't do this.
Speaker 8 I'm somewhat, I didn't take that. You said,
Speaker 8 you said, make a file of things when people send you those nice emails that remind you why you're doing it, or that you see a comment that comes through that says, you saved me at a dark time.
Speaker 8 You talk a lot about mental
Speaker 8 health.
Speaker 8 In a space where I don't feel like it gets enough attention,
Speaker 8 you talk about addiction. You're not just talking about culture war stuff.
Speaker 8
You do help people. And you told me to keep a file of that.
And I hope you have a similar file that you can keep.
Speaker 2 So I don't take my own advice,
Speaker 2 but I did do this this weekend.
Speaker 2 A woman sent this. She made this for me.
Speaker 8 This is your like security blanket.
Speaker 2 Yeah, it is. It's a beautiful handmade blanket.
Speaker 8 It is beautiful.
Speaker 2 And so I've had it behind me all week
Speaker 2 because
Speaker 2
she wrote and said, you know, I just appreciate what you do, et cetera, et cetera. And I've had it on the chair all week.
Yeah. To remind me.
Speaker 8 Yeah. I mean, one of the things being,
Speaker 8 even though a lot of people think it's an act that my like little miss captain of the fence riding team, I know I'm not alone.
Speaker 8 I hear from people every day who feel frustrated with all, you know, a bipartisan frustration with all of it. And I don't,
Speaker 8 I don't sometimes know what I'm doing, but I do know it's like that famous Jack Kerouac quote, I have nothing to offer the world but my confusion.
Speaker 2 I mean, that's right. That's me, really.
Speaker 8
I don't have answers. I don't know that anybody does right now.
We're in
Speaker 8 unprecedented kind of times.
Speaker 2 The only thing,
Speaker 2 and they're both overlooked and dismissed,
Speaker 2 is
Speaker 2 restore the Declaration of Independence, the Bill of Rights, and the Constitution. Live by that.
Speaker 2 And
Speaker 2 find meaning by finding God.
Speaker 8
Yeah, I had a drunk aunt when I was freaking out like you. Well, she's still alive.
I have a drunk. She's not drunk right now.
Speaker 8 Anyway,
Speaker 8 I have an aunt. She was drunk when we were talking.
Speaker 2
Okay. All right.
And she was on your show.
Speaker 8
No, and she, I was kind of in a place like Glenn Beck is in right now. And I was in the darkness of America and freaking out.
And she was like,
Speaker 8
when I was a kid, we had a president assassinated. We had his brother was assassinated.
Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated.
There were riots in every major city.
Speaker 8 And she was like, and now we're fine.
Speaker 2 And so
Speaker 8
I was like, yeah, I mean, there's something to be said for that. There is.
We've been through a lot.
Speaker 2 Yeah, yeah.
Speaker 2 But the culture was generally good, where the culture, if you look at we're a boat on the ocean.
Speaker 2 This ocean is now eel infested, shark infested, and waiting to kill you all, where back then
Speaker 2 the culture, the sea that we were in was generally good. It had problems,
Speaker 2 but
Speaker 2 it was generally
Speaker 2 trying
Speaker 2 to be better.
Speaker 2 Now it seems like we're all just like,
Speaker 2
to hell with everybody else. I'm going to screw them.
I don't care if it's legal or illegal. I want it.
I'm going to do it.
Speaker 8 Yeah. I mean, this was my biggest issue with Trump, which I'm sure a lot of your audience is going to be stoked to hear.
Speaker 8 But my biggest issue with him was that he kind of gave people permission to be like the biggest, the worst version of themselves in some instances.
Speaker 8
In some. In some.
In others, he really inspired people to be more patriotic and fight for the country. And he was kind of their guy.
Speaker 8 But just his own sometimes, I find hilarious, but not always hilarious behavior.
Speaker 2 Yeah.
Speaker 8 Gave, it seemed like it be, and it's always been this, like race to the bottom.
Speaker 8 You know, I also wonder how much of it is just mediation, how much of it is the internet, how, how many of these other factors have led to the erosion of our kind of shared sense of being proud of this miracle that we live in.
Speaker 2
Right. How much of burning our cities down and our current vice president setting up a fund to bail everybody out.
I mean, I was like, okay, that's probably not a good idea.
Speaker 8 No, it's definitely
Speaker 8 there is like a two Americas, you know,
Speaker 8 but it feels deeply pessimistic all around.
Speaker 2 It does.
Speaker 2 We shouldn't be.
Speaker 8 We still have a lot. Yeah, I know.
Speaker 2 And we still have an election.
Speaker 2 I mean, I think the election, as long as it's fair,
Speaker 2 I think the election,
Speaker 2 and both sides are, no matter what happens, both sides are going to say what's up.
Speaker 8 This is what makes me unsettled and enraged. And only what, like something that happens today is what undermines the sense that this is fair.
Speaker 8 You know, that it we're trying to, because if you don't believe that the election is fair, you've already given up on democracy.
Speaker 8 If, if you, if you don't believe that your vote matters, if you think this is something, and this is something I've been saying to the left and now I feel like I have to say it to the right as well.
Speaker 8 If you think that this is not fair, it's already over. But if
Speaker 8 when something like this today with Fannie Willis happens and somebody who clearly it's impropriety and should have been
Speaker 2 It's
Speaker 2
perjury. The biggest thing is perjury.
You have the cell phone data. And if that doesn't matter, then why are you putting people in prison for murder or whatever else because of their cell phone data?
Speaker 8 Yeah. And
Speaker 8
so it undermines the sense that this is fair. Right.
And that we need a lot less of that.
Speaker 8 We should be applying all these things evenly. And when it's not, you start to, like, that's when this festers in people's minds.
Speaker 2 Because what kills me is O.J. Simpson,
Speaker 2
when they put the O.J. Simpson DNA stuff out, nobody knew what.
DNA. They had no idea what that meant.
I didn't. Nobody.
You're like, I don't know. Is that, that kind of sounds weird.
Speaker 2 Is that real or not? This is the cell phone data? This is like coming back now and saying, well, I don't know if you can really trust the DNA data.
Speaker 2 You know, you're like, no, no, we've trusted this for years. And now all of a sudden, well, I'm not sure if we can really tell where they were.
Speaker 2
All right. Back in just a second with more Bridget Fetasy.
Let me tell you about pre-born. Oh, I want to talk to you about what happened yesterday.
Oh, no. Yeah.
Well, you know what happened
Speaker 2
with our vice president. Maybe not.
Going to an abortion clinic. Oh, no.
I missed this.
Speaker 2 The first one to ever go to an abortion clinic. First vice president, president to ever go to an abortion clinic.
Speaker 3 I feel like Clinton maybe has showed up there a couple times
Speaker 2 off the record. Not as a client.
Speaker 2 As a client.
Speaker 2 Okay.
Speaker 2 Nearly 65 million innocent babies have been aborted since Roe versus Wade. And now that
Speaker 2 Roe versus Wade is gone, which I would just like to explain again,
Speaker 2
The Supreme Court did not say that you couldn't have abortion. It said that the court should not be the ones to decide that.
It should be you,
Speaker 2
the voter in each state. I don't know how that is somehow or another a threat to democracy by saying the people's voice should come over our voices when we're in robes.
But I digress.
Speaker 2 Anyway, the Ministry of Pre-Born is working on this every day, and I think they're doing it the right way.
Speaker 2 Instead of, you know, calling people baby killers and everything else, they realize that 65% of moms who have this,
Speaker 2
they mainly do it because they feel alone. They feel like they have no other option.
They don't have the money or the resources or the support.
Speaker 2 And they buy into the lie easily at that point of it's not really a baby. So the first thing they do is take that off the shelf by giving them a free ultrasound of the baby.
Speaker 2 When mom hears the heartbeat and sees the baby, doubles the chances that she's going to choose life. But then they step in and say, we care about you too.
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Speaker 2 I'm sorry.
Speaker 2 Oh, my gosh.
Speaker 2 Oh, yeah.
Speaker 2 I'm just sitting here.
Speaker 8 I feel like I can't wait to get to the ranch.
Speaker 2 Bridget looks at me. I've got a
Speaker 2 stack of silver. I brought them in the other stack of silver coins.
Speaker 2
And she said, is that silver? And I said, yeah. And she said, oh, you're ready.
You're going.
Speaker 2 The bunker calls.
Speaker 8 The bunker calls.
Speaker 2 Yeah. No, it's not.
Speaker 2 It's not, I feel, I don't feel like it's bunker time. I just feel like,
Speaker 2 I don't know. I'm just.
Speaker 3 Staircase to the bunker time? Staircase.
Speaker 2 Right. Just opening up the staircase.
Speaker 2
You could still order Uber Eats to be delivered. Can somebody sweep out all the spiders in this stairway? Because I'm afraid of spiders.
I don't like spiders. That's why I don't live in Australia.
Speaker 2 But that's a different story, too.
Speaker 2 So
Speaker 8 you were going to talk to me about something?
Speaker 2
Yeah. Okay.
About
Speaker 2 our vice president showing up at an abortion clinic and talking about the heroic
Speaker 2 women's health workers there.
Speaker 2 How do you feel about that, Bridget?
Speaker 8 Oh, geez.
Speaker 2 And now the music is starting.
Speaker 2 You've bought yourself a few more minutes to do.
Speaker 2 Think about that one.
Speaker 8 I can't hear anything.
Speaker 2
All right. Hang on just a second.
More with British Fettes here in just a minute.
Speaker 2 She is
Speaker 2
the contributing editor for The Spectator. She's a columnist there.
She's also the host of her own podcast,
Speaker 2 Weekly Dumpster Fire. And walk-ins, welcome.
Speaker 2 She's a lot of fun, and you should check her out if you haven't already. Back with more in just a minute.
Speaker 2 Glenn Beck. So let me talk to you about Car Shield.
Speaker 2 You know, Car Shield, there's two kinds of cars, ones that have warranties
Speaker 2
and ones that don't. And the ones that don't, there's two categories of those.
Those cars who have just broken down or those who are about to.
Speaker 2 And that's where it gets concerning for you and your wallet because everything on cars is so expensive now. You know, you have to replace a chip depending on which chip it is.
Speaker 2
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I replaced a chip. I shouldn't say that.
CarShield replaced a chip on my truck. And I think it was about $4,500.
Speaker 2 It's like that car, that truck would have been gone.
Speaker 2 And I would have been stuck paying, I don't know how much for a new used truck at the time.
Speaker 2 But they saved it because I had coverage and they cover about 5,000, in fact, over 5,000 critical parts on your car.
Speaker 2 Call now, get coverage with CarShield, 800-227-60100, 800-227-60100, carshield.com/slash back. Save 20% on your plan now.
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Speaker 2
Welcome to the Glen Beck program. We're glad you're here.
We have Bridget Fettesy with us today. Hello.
I mean, now
Speaker 2
I've dragged this out for like, you know, three breaks now. Yes.
Because we keep getting interrupted. But how do you feel about the vice president being the first to go to an abortion clinic?
Speaker 8 I really love that you were like, hey, let's lighten things up and then ask me about abortion.
Speaker 2 I was here to talk about pop culture.
Speaker 8 Dylan Mulvaney.
Speaker 3
Can we please? I can't say. It's been a rough day.
I just can't go.
Speaker 2
Yeah. Okay.
All right. So, Dylan
Speaker 2 Mulvaney.
Speaker 2 He's just released
Speaker 2 a new super, super classic, and here it is.
Speaker 3 Oh, no.
Speaker 3 I don't think I can take it. My ears are bleeding.
Speaker 2 Hey, why do I stop? Stop, stop. Why?
Speaker 3 I mean, outside of the obvious artistic merit of the song, how do you feel about Dylan Mulvaney? Because it's such a good song.
Speaker 2
You have to acknowledge that part. No? No.
No.
Speaker 2 I don't. That's all I've heard of the song.
Speaker 8
Nope. My ears are bleeding.
I can't hear anything anymore.
Speaker 8 I think that the whole thing is... I have a lot of thoughts about it.
Speaker 8 Did the team, Dylan's team, send this out to conservative media? It does feel like they're...
Speaker 2 It's his way of coming back into.
Speaker 8 Who's the audience, though? Is it just liberal women? dylan's audience
Speaker 2 do you think liberal women
Speaker 8 they're the ones who are like yes queen you know i i don't see i don't really see the gay community getting behind it i'm not sure
Speaker 8 i know that she's angered a lot of trans
Speaker 8 Dylan's angered a lot of trans activists and trans people and I know conservatives aren't exactly fans other than to just you know I mean I just I see that I don't really care what you do in your I really
Speaker 2 don't care for the love of Pete. But this whole,
Speaker 2 I'm a girl, I'm a girl thing is just, it's, it's, it's old and so is he.
Speaker 8 Well, that's, that's my biggest, one of my biggest issues is that you're trying to say this is about, um, oh, I'm just being a woman, but, but you're not. You're pretending to be a little girl.
Speaker 8
You're wearing socks that little girls wear. You're wearing outfits that little girls wear.
So, and you're saying girlhood. You're not saying womanhood.
Speaker 8 And so
Speaker 8 there's an element of that that's just creepy.
Speaker 2 No.
Speaker 2
No. And it's especially as Dylan grows older.
No, no, no creepiness at all.
Speaker 8 And I saw that there is a video and it's like, oh, people are getting mad because I'm not ashamed of being hyper-feminine, but you're not being hyper-feminine.
Speaker 8 We see all the like trad wives who are homesetting on Instagram and TikTok with their their flowery sundresses. This is a thing that's coming back, I actually think, as a reaction to a lot of the
Speaker 8
kind of being against femininity. So I don't think it's that.
It's like you're being hyper little girlish.
Speaker 2 It's like if
Speaker 2 people are reacting to...
Speaker 2 Women started saying that I'm just like a little boy and started dressing like little boys, you would have, you know, some radar would go up and go, you have a thing for a little boy?
Speaker 2 What is what's going on?
Speaker 8 Yeah. And it's also like a caricature.
Speaker 8 It always, I have a whole bit that I do about the patriarchy so crafty, where it's like, I, I, there seems to be a funny timeline where kind of mediocre dudes suddenly were
Speaker 8
on the attack by the culture. And I've joked like, okay, welcome to the thunderdome.
You've got to fight for things like the rest of us.
Speaker 8 And then they just started dressing up like women and they're like, I'm brave.
Speaker 2 I know.
Speaker 2 Where are my accolades?
Speaker 8 Winning awards, winning
Speaker 8 women of the year. And I was like, you know, I didn't believe in the patriarchy, but I suddenly do believe in the patriarchy.
Speaker 8
Maybe they were right. It is everywhere.
It does feel like you're mocking. Also, everything in this video, which if you have to watch it, I'll spare you.
Speaker 8 It's basically like, I get drunk and I have a walk of shame.
Speaker 8
I take pills. I have a mental breakdown in the bathtub.
It's like, you're just describing liberal women.
Speaker 8 He's making fun of liberal women. I would think conservatives would be all for this on some level.
Speaker 8 But it is very, it is very insulting. You know, I had somebody in my comments on Twitter saying today,
Speaker 8 it makes me like, I have no problem with Dylan, but it makes me, makes me say, okay, well, if this is what a woman is, I'm not that.
Speaker 2 Right.
Speaker 8 And a woman said this, but it's also just taking, I'm like, weren't we supposed to not be all these like sexist tropes? Weren't we,
Speaker 8 how is this okay? I was joking on Twitter, your culture is not my costume.
Speaker 2 I saw that. That is so great.
Speaker 2 So great.
Speaker 8 You're just going to take my culture and dress up and use it as your costume.
Speaker 8 I'm a crazy liberal.
Speaker 2 This is cultural appropriation
Speaker 2
at maximum level. Right? Absolutely purely.
Yeah.
Speaker 3
And we're told constantly that gender and all of these things are either the most important or the least important thing at the same time. Yeah.
Like it doesn't make any difference. It doesn't matter.
Speaker 3
There's no difference between men and women whatsoever. But also how you identify is incredibly crucial to your story.
And everyone should think of new pronouns to call you every day.
Speaker 3 These are not sensible things. You can't have both of those things.
Speaker 8
No, and it also relies on sexist tropes to even exist. So if a little boy is like, oh, Barbie's cool, when he's three or four, suddenly it's like, well, trans the child.
Right.
Speaker 8
But it's like, I thought we got away from that. Little girls can like trucks.
It doesn't mean that she wants to be a boy. And that was the
Speaker 8 90s I grew up in. And now it seems like
Speaker 2
you're back on the road doing comedy. I am.
How
Speaker 2 bizarre is it if they, if somebody saw you five, six, seven years ago and they see you today, they'd be like, oh, she's hysterical. Oh, my God.
Speaker 2 She's on the other side.
Speaker 8 Yeah, it's interesting because the show, I got like a residency from my friend Ariel Isaac.
Speaker 8
And she's brilliant, like a brilliant comedian, but her show is the gay enough show. And it's at the Esau Sling Comedy Club.
I'm there every every Tuesday. And because she's a lesbian.
Speaker 8
And so there's this like Texas flag with the rainbow on it. And she'll post videos.
And my audience, she's like, your audience is crazy.
Speaker 8
They'll be like, Bridget Fantasy would never be associated with this. This is a sign of evil.
I'm like, okay, calm down, guys.
Speaker 8 I live in a weird space where everyone's kind of always getting mad at me all the time, no matter what.
Speaker 8 But it's put me in front of an audience of mostly liberals, which I think is actually good for my comedy because I know how to make, I know how to make suburban normies laugh.
Speaker 8
Those are my people now, which is crazy. But I'm not sure what motivates young Gen Z liberals.
And I'm not actually even sure that they're sure.
Speaker 8 That's what's been strange about it.
Speaker 2 Do you think that there's this
Speaker 2 kind of fog that maybe is clearing that they just don't, they're just, they've been following and somehow or another, the, the train's on another track and they're kind of like, wait, wait, where are we going?
Speaker 8 Yeah, I think that the thing that's been the most,
Speaker 8 you know, we've talked a lot about self-censorship, you and I, just in general for years.
Speaker 8 And one of the, the striking things doing comedy, again, especially in front of liberal audiences, is they are censoring their laugh. You can see it.
Speaker 8
They're, they're, I can't, it's such a natural thing, a laugh. It's not something you can control unless you're faking a laugh.
It's spontaneous.
Speaker 8 And to actually have to suppress something like that, that is a level of,
Speaker 8 I feel bad for them. It's a level of self-censorship that is
Speaker 8
terrifying. Oh, yeah, because the room is very small.
And in a small room,
Speaker 8 you are even more self-conscious about being the one person who laughs when Bridget says, you know, the patriarchy is so crafty, they'll put on, like, they'll turn themselves into a man just to stay on top
Speaker 8 or into a woman just to stay on top.
Speaker 8 And you can see people, it's hyperlogical, you know, it's, and it's making fun of kind of all of the things going on in the culture, but you can, in a room that's small, you don't want to be the only person laughing at it.
Speaker 8 So you can see people kind of, it actually is an truly an act of bravery
Speaker 8 to laugh
Speaker 8 at something that makes you laugh in a time in this kind of climate that we're in.
Speaker 2 And it's better.
Speaker 3 This is why they keep it dark on the audiences, right? You can't. That's the appropriate comedy club.
Speaker 3 The comedians lit up and it's really dark in the audience, so they can't tell what you've laughed at.
Speaker 2 No one can tell if you're laughing at the wrong jokes.
Speaker 8
But in a small room, it's a good room, honestly. It's been good.
You're opening.
Speaker 2 It's just to be honest. You're opening where
Speaker 8
at hyena, at the Red Room. Red Room.
Yeah, but Hyena is for Dave Landau, who's here that does the normal world show, which is I was on last night.
Speaker 2 So funny. Really funny.
Speaker 8 Such a fun show.
Speaker 2 Really funny.
Speaker 8 Yeah, we're doing a sketch today. I'm going to be in.
Speaker 2 We're shooting a sketch. Yeah, yeah.
Speaker 8 And so, yeah, it's just been a fun, I mean, truly like living my dream, doing commentary, laughing.
Speaker 8 Normal world is amazing because it feels like a green room. For people who aren't in comedy, that show, if you're wondering what a green room is like for comedians, that's what it's like.
Speaker 8 You sit down, the topics go everywhere, you talk a bunch of smack, you random things come up, you all kind of pitch jokes on them, you make fun of one another. It's very, it has that very free,
Speaker 8
truly, like green rooms are very egalitarian and just hilarious. And that's why I love it.
It just has that vibe. And Dave is an
Speaker 8 outstanding comedian.
Speaker 2
He's just, he's really, he's really good. Really good.
And he's got one of those attitudes
Speaker 2 where
Speaker 2 you just, and he does. He cares deeply and he's thinking all the time, but he just, he's on stage and you're like, this guy just doesn't care.
Speaker 2 He just doesn't care.
Speaker 8
Yeah. And he's very, he's been doing it for so long.
He's so comfortable. The audience feels safe with him.
Yeah. You know, I think that's 90% of it.
Speaker 2 Safe is the right word.
Speaker 2 He's a little dark. Yeah.
Speaker 8
Well, no, I mean, I think you have to feel like the comedian's somewhat in control of the situation. Even if you're bombing, it's like, oh, whatever.
Maybe you're not my people.
Speaker 2 Bridget, it's always good to see you.
Speaker 8 It's always good to see you.
Speaker 2
Thank you for having me. Thank you.
God bless. All right.
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Speaker 5 You're listening to the Glenn Beck program.
Speaker 3 You know, going last weekend, I went on an RV trip.
Speaker 2 You did? Like, I drove the RV.
Speaker 3 I have never done anything like that. Really?
Speaker 3 I have been a very indoorsy guy,
Speaker 3 not outdoorsy at all.
Speaker 2 That's why I like RVs. You're driving your house.
Speaker 3 You're driving your house. And it was totally like, you know, one of these places that had everything set up.
Speaker 2 And it was like, not at all a real outdoor experience. Yeah, I like that.
Speaker 3
Did the whole thing. And I'm driving up there.
And of course, first time I'm driving this thing, it's 31 feet long.
Speaker 3 It's dark it's rainy 40 mile an hour wind gusts uh traffic everywhere and construction the whole way so there's no shoulders on the road and i am like you know 10 and two focus like i've never been focused before get all the way up there we have our my daughter had a gymnastics thing we do the whole weekend we come back and i'm like i get off the highway Like you made it.
Speaker 3
Like I made it. And then as I said, gosh, I can't believe we actually finally made this.
None of the kids, the kids are alive.
Speaker 2 Like, it's incredible.
Speaker 3
And then I realized it got like a mile and a half until I parked this thing. And I'm like, this would be typical.
I made it all the way here. And I had that mile and a half.
Speaker 3 And someone comes across an intersection and T-bones us and we all die. That's where we are in the show today for you.
Speaker 2 You've made it
Speaker 2 all the way into the last couple of minutes without blowing up your career. Yeah, three minutes into this show, I honestly thought I should not sit in this seat today.
Speaker 3 You said it not only on the air, but off the air, which is really scary.
Speaker 3 Like, I need to
Speaker 2 not be here.
Speaker 3 Yeah. And usually, when someone tells you that,
Speaker 3
you should stop me right now. Right.
It's like
Speaker 2 when the pilot, if the pilot says, hey, we know you have a choice for airlines, we thank you so much for flying.
Speaker 2 I just want everybody to know I should not be in this seat today, but we'll be flying at 42,000 feet.
Speaker 2
Like, no. I was telling you, right now, I want to crash this into a mountain.
I might not do it, but I want to do it.
Speaker 3
And so, congratulations. You're almost here.
You have, what, one story left to cover today.
Speaker 2
So just get a third. I'm not going to do it.
I don't think I'm going to do it. I don't.
You're not going to cover it. You're done.
Because that will set me off again. And we'll be T-boned at the end.
Speaker 2 Let me
Speaker 2
instad tell you about Abigail Schreier. I did a podcast with her.
She is fantastic. Just fantastic.
I've had her on a couple of times, and I just,
Speaker 2 I just like, she's a sister from another mom.
Speaker 2
She has written a new book about how, you know, what's wrong with our kids. It's therapy.
That's what's wrong with our kids. And I tell you, every mother, every father needs to listen to this podcast.
Speaker 2 It's available right now at blazetv.com slash Glenn. Use the promo code Glenn and save.
Speaker 2 But it is so good.
Speaker 2
How too much bad therapy hurt Gen Z. It's episode 213 of the Glenn Beck podcast.
It'll be available wherever you get your podcast tomorrow. But this one is, it's absolutely a must-listen to.
Speaker 2 You know, I come into these
Speaker 2 interviews with a whole bunch of questions. And the best interviews are ones that I really don't ever get to the actual questions that were written down.
Speaker 2 The conversation just flows. And
Speaker 2 she is absolutely right
Speaker 2 about what's wrong with our kids.
Speaker 2 100%
Speaker 2 gets it and has all of the data to back it up.
Speaker 2 And every parent that is struggling, every parent that is just like holding, you know, trying to hold your head above water, make sure you see this episode, episode 213, How Too Much Bad Therapy Hurt Gen Z with Abigail Schreier.
Speaker 2 Fantastic. And we'll see you Monday.
Speaker 5 The Glenn Beck Program.