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Charlie Sheen is an icon of decadence.
I lit the fuse and my life turns into everything it wasn't supposed to be.
He's going the distance.
He was the highest paid TV star of all time.
When it started to change, it was quick.
He kept saying, no, no, no, I'm in the hospital now, but next week I'll be ready for the show.
Now, Charlie's sober.
He's gonna tell you the truth.
How do I present this with any class?
I think we're past that, Charlie.
We're past that, yeah.
Somebody call action.
Yeah, aka Charlie Sheen, only on Netflix, September 10th.
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Stand upside and hold the life.
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What you're about to hear is the fusion of entertainment and enlightenment.
This is
the Glenn Beck Program.
And today, featuring Pat and Stew for Glenn, a really
weird and sad incident over the weekend involving a plane that was unresponsive and jets that were scrambled to intercept it.
We'll get into that and lots, lots more, lots to talk about today.
Coming up in one minute.
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Patton Stu for Glenn on the Glenn Beck program.
Over the weekend, there was a plane that entered restricted airspace in D.C.
And so four F-16 fighter jets were scrambled to see what was going on and escort the plane or shoot it down or whatever was necessary.
Obviously, I mean, they say, the government says they had nothing to do with it crashing.
And if the government says it, it's so.
If the government doesn't say it, it didn't happen.
Well, that's the way it it works.
Yeah, that's the way it works.
So you know it's true.
They did not do anything to this plane.
Weird, though, a weird flight path.
I don't know if it was on autopilot,
but it made a U-turn,
and
then it just went into, I think, the side of a hill or a mountain in Virginia.
And so there were no survivors.
Really sad.
There was NRA executives family on board, which, you know, is going to contribute to all kinds of thoughts, I think.
Thoughts, thoughts, all kinds of thoughts and theories.
That's an interesting way to put that, Pat.
Yeah, there's going to be some thoughts about that.
Thoughts could occur.
I'm guessing thoughts have already been shared on a place called the
internet.
And so,
yeah.
Do you have any thoughts on what happened?
I, I mean, I just, I don't know if there was a golfer, Payne
Stewart.
Yeah, I remember that.
His plane flew clear across the country on autopilot.
Yeah.
They had lost cabin pressure or something, and I think they froze to death.
They either suffocated or froze to death, so they were dead as they flew across the country.
And I think jets were scrambled in that case.
Yes,
this stuff does happen from time to time.
Yeah, so it does.
As far as I know, no necessarily, no real information that
indicates
some conspiracy of any sort.
And yet, I'll bet people are having thoughts about it.
There will be thoughts.
Yes.
There are always thoughts.
That's the one thing we've learned about society since the internet came around.
Everyone has thoughts.
Everybody has thoughts.
Maybe some of those thoughts should remain inside of your head.
Right.
Yes.
Keep that on your inside voice.
Right.
And your inside thoughts.
Yeah.
Don't share that with anybody.
Yeah.
Have you noticed that?
Really has the internet has done a lot of work in
lowering
like our
collective IQ.
perhaps
I was going to go for but yes you're 100% right yeah I was gonna say lowering the stature of a lot of people who we had you know we were thinking about building statues of you know what I mean like you're like oh that person they're so amazing especially celebrities you know you think of these people as being these like really smart people and I think for a long time society thought of them as as uh
you know people with incredible reputations and they were all buttoned up and everything and then you you saw them talking to people on the internet and like their own voice.
And that's perhaps not what you expected.
The freedom to type.
Yeah.
And wow, a lot of them are really stupid.
Yes.
And mean.
And mean?
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, Alec Baldwin is a good example of that.
Yeah.
Like, but Alec Baldwin.
We found out some interesting things about Alec.
We sure have.
But Alec Baldwin used to be the exception.
Yeah.
Right.
Like, Alec Baldwin would come out and there'd be some story about him like yelling at his little daughter in terrible terms or beating up a reporter.
And everyone would be like, oh my gosh, can you believe this guy?
Because he was the one guy who couldn't control himself.
Right.
He was the one guy who actually got in front of like a New York Post reporter and acted like a jerk because he couldn't control himself and he just did it and it got out in the press.
Now everyone is like this.
Like, you know, people are responding to, you know, regular citizens who might have been their fans and calling them names, telling them they should kill themselves.
themselves.
Who's the lady that's married to,
gosh, I can't remember.
She was a, she's like a, thank you.
That's literally all I said was that.
And one of her preachers is, Chrissy Teigen.
Yes, that's exactly what I was thinking of.
It was Chrissy Teigen.
She's married to John Legend.
Yeah.
And she was like a big left-wing celebrity for a while there.
And
then they started looking at, people started saying, hey, just, you know, she's talking a lot about all these things.
I just want to make sure you're aware.
She's a massive, you know, celebrity with all this money and influence.
And I'm, you know, 17 years old and she told me to kill myself multiple times.
And you're like, oh,
these people are just as horrible as you'd imagine they are.
Right.
It really is true.
It is.
It is.
So the internet is a wondrous thing.
And social media is fantastic.
And we get to find out all kinds of wonderful, wonderful things.
But this seems to be, to me,
just what it appears to be on the surface.
I think they died in flight or they were
or something happened there to the people in the plane.
And that's why they didn't respond to anybody.
Yeah.
And the big, the reason it was a big story is that the sonic boom over a major city freaked a lot of people out, right?
Yeah.
I used to hear sonic booms all the time.
But then,
and I don't know what year this was.
In Montana, we had sonic booms, gosh, like daily, probably.
Really?
Yeah.
It seems, and now I guess there's civil aviation rules against going the speed of sound.
Now, military jets, I guess, can still violate that.
But you don't, they don't do that that often.
And especially not over urban areas like they did yesterday.
But I guess they were trying to catch up to the plane, right?
And so they kind of kicked it into overdrive.
Yeah.
Deal with the fallout of that later.
Yeah.
I will say it does seem like that's one of the parts of technology we've kind of just given up on.
Like, yeah, we're like, hey, you know, at the Concorde, we're going to go really, really fast to places.
Everyone's going to be able to fly places in like two or three hours.
And then we're just like, ah, nah, nah, let's not try that anymore.
Let's not do that.
The one time we tried it, it didn't work out financially.
So let's just give up.
You know, I mean, they were losing money on those
flights.
So
let's never try again.
They lose money on those flights.
They cost, what, $8,000 a seat or something?
It was very expensive.
Very expensive.
I mean, but if you wanted to get from New York to Paris in, what, an hour and a half or two hours or whatever, it was kind of worth it.
If you had to get there really fast and your business is paying for the flight or you're super rich, then you just get on Concord and go.
And, but not now, because we just decided that's, I guess that's too much.
Or, you know, they folded too.
But there's, there have been attempts to resurrect Concord and or come up with something different that's kind of like it.
Like there was a,
you remember the story about an airline that was going to produce these super fast jets jets that would go, I don't know, 2,000 or 3,000 miles an hour and fly at 70,000 feet.
And that never comes to fruition, though.
It's like the flying car.
We never get that, and we never get the high-speed, you know, the super high-speed jets anymore.
I'm not sure why that is.
I think we got to go bank tube at this point.
We just bank tubes across the water.
We'll do the Elon Musk bank tube thing, right?
If you can do it, I think that would be great.
It'd be a long distance for the bank tube idea.
It would, but you go 700 miles an hour.
Yeah, right?
Yeah, you can, yeah.
That's pretty impressive technology.
It is.
But again, we have planes.
I always get amazed.
People are always fascinated by this idea of traveling
on the earth fast.
And again, yeah, sure.
High-speed trains, they're great.
I know China, I mean, India certainly had an experience with their trains this weekend.
You know, China loves the high-speed trains.
We're always like, oh, gosh, why don't we do that?
So we can travel like a third of the speed of the planes that we already have.
At double the price.
Double or triple the price and tens of billions of dollars of funding every single time we attempt it.
It doesn't make any sense to me.
I understand some people don't like to fly.
Then maybe you need to go slower.
Like, I don't know what to tell you.
We're not going to set up a railroad infrastructure.
for 250 miles.
And by the way, they never go that fast anyway.
Every time we build these things or we attempt to build them, they never do this.
We've been on the Acela.
You go like 14 miles an an hour on the Acela through these cities.
Even though it can go 200 or whatever.
It's going to be able to do.
No.
Except in like little stretches in the middle of nowhere that no one wants to travel.
Yeah.
I mean, in Japan, where they go 300 miles an hour, are they allowed to do that through city streets, through city rail, I guess?
Imagine no.
I don't think so.
Yeah, because that's too fast for when you're coming up to the railroad crossing.
And my understanding is Japan has planes.
Is that your reason?
My understanding is, yeah.
Now, I've never been there, I will will admit.
So maybe I.
Then where are you getting that?
The internet, right?
Kirsty Teigen's Instagram is where I heard it.
All right.
We'll have to see.
I don't know if it's true or not.
There's a lot that went on this weekend.
It's some huge political stuff.
We've got 46 new candidates getting into the race this week.
There was only 46.
I counted 53.
Oh, I may have missed some announcements to us.
We should go over this at some point.
as to how many you think over under we're going to get to as far as candidates go because i there was this hope that you're like, okay, everyone kind of sees this as a two-person race right now.
Maybe we'll just have two people that will talk about stuff and we'll be able to decipher between the two which one is the best.
But no, we're going to have 85 people, people literally I've never even heard of, are getting in the race.
Now, I do this for a living.
I'm here every day working with Glenn.
Pat Gray and Leash, Studos America, air every day.
We talk about national political figures every day.
There's people getting in that I didn't even know existed.
Like Asa Hutchinson.
He's kind of on that line.
He's right on the line.
Very close to not ever being aware of him at all.
Yeah.
But yes,
there's those candidates.
Then there are the U.S.
senators who,
you know, like Tim Scott, who
I think is a decent candidate, but doesn't have a chance.
Right.
Mike Pence, decent, you know, because he's been in high-profile positions before, but he doesn't have a chance.
I mean, do you not realize that through your exploratory committee?
That haven't they explored enough to know you don't have a chance?
Yeah.
And the exploratory committee always finds something.
You know, when they're exploring, they are the best explorers.
They're all Columbus, these guys.
Every time they start an exploratory committee, man, they find the right thing.
So do I have a path?
Yes, you do.
Yep.
As I said that as a consultant about to get paid seven figures.
You sure do have a path, Doug Bergham of North Dakota.
Sure you do.
Wait, Doug Bergham?
He's getting in.
Yeah.
Oh, there's one I missed.
That must be 54 there.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, I missed one.
Imagine the Doug Bergham.
Bergamentum.
Bergamentum.
Bergamentum.
That's about to start.
The governor of North Dakota.
We'll get into this here in a second.
Let's take a quick 60-second break.
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10 Second Station ID.
Patton Stuford Glenn on the Glenn Beck program.
All right.
Lots of new candidates to choose from in the GOP primary.
And among them,
Doug Bergament.
Bergamentum.
Bergamentum is kicking into gear.
Doug Bergam going to get in this week.
He is, of course, as everyone knows, and I'm not trying to insult anyone's intelligence here because I understand you're well aware of Doug.
But, you know, if you've just been in a cave in Afghanistan for the last two years,
he's, of course, the
I don't want to cut you off.
It's fortunate that I heard you previously.
Yes, that's the only reason you know.
Governor of South Dakota.
No.
No, North Dakota.
North Dakota.
That's right.
South Dakota.
You know that.
Someone who, if they jumped into the race, would be
know her.
Right.
Like she got a lot of attention through COVID.
She was once a darling of the right.
I don't know where she stands at the moment,
but she's someone I think a lot of people are considering as a possible candidate here in 2024.
Doug Bergham was not one I had on my radar for that position.
No, no, no.
Now, North Dakota's had a good economic run.
There's things to say about North Dakota.
Okay.
However, I don't.
I mean, it would be if you were super high profile and everything was going really well, I don't know that the North Dakota governor role is the direct path to the White House.
Some seem to think it is yeah uh but uh doug bergham will uh be getting into the race this week we also are getting wow uh chris so he hasn't officially announced he's just he's wetting our appetites am i getting people too overexcited here i think so for bergamentum
uh he is jumping in they believe this week also uh chris christie
Again, this was expected, but is poetic.
Why?
Again, why?
What are you doing?
I mean,
the path Christie has taken here from a guy who was probably one of the favorites in 2012 and didn't run.
Yeah, 2012 for sure.
Right?
He would have been
very possibly the nominee if he had run in 2012, because, of course, people didn't know him yet.
Then he has all the scandals and everything else.
2016, he decides to run.
And we find out who he really is.
Yeah, in that interim, we find out a lot about it.
But he's not that conservative, that he has all sorts of corruption problems.
He's not necessarily the guy you want.
Well, why?
Let me ask you this.
Why was traffic problems email sent?
Are you quoting Al Sharp from a show that almost nobody would remember unless they heard the audio?
But I will say this.
The audio is spectacular.
Yes, it is.
Maybe we'll have to play it later on in the program.
But that was about Chris Christie.
Yeah, what did he say?
What was the quote again?
Why was traffic problems email sent?
And I think it's a tough question to answer.
No one's answered it.
No one has ever answered it.
Right, because it's hard to answer, because it's hard to understand.
Yes.
You know, it's above all our heads.
It is.
So, Christie, and that's a good point.
2012, he has this.
He's going to run potentially.
He then decides not to, which is a huge mistake and one that Ron DeSantis learned from.
Yes.
When it's your moment, strike when the iron is go for it because there may not be another moment.
Right.
So he has all this stuff going down.
Remember, right before the Obama election, though, in 2012 was Hurricane Sandy.
And there was a famous situation with Christie where he came out of the beach with Obama.
Really assisted Obama in the closing moments of that campaign.
There are polls that show the difference between Obama and Romney was explained by people's overwhelmingly positive response to Obama's handling of Hurricane Sandy.
I don't know.
You can find a lot of stuff in polls if you look hard enough, and a lot of people create narratives, but there's an argument to be made that that that put him over the hump in a relatively close election.
And by the way, Hurricane Sandy was not a hurricane.
When it made landfall, right, it was not, but it was super storm.
Remember, they used to call it superstorm Sandy.
Yes, because it's not technically a hurricane, but of course, did a lot of damage.
And Christie was looking for government handouts at that time, understandably for his state, I suppose.
But he
really went overboard.
I mean, he went to the point it was ridiculous.
And this is a Chris Christie trend, by the way.
If you remember in 2016, when he was running for president, he attacked all the other candidates.
And when he realized Trump was going to be the guy, he immediately jumped shipped from major Trump critic to
full out embrace of Trump's campaign.
He was the first person in the race to endorse Trump in 2016.
Huge Trump supporter.
And of course, as we know with Chris Christie, I mean, really every decision is based on what is good for Chris Christie at any given moment.
So
he really wanted to get into the Trump administration with a high-profile cabinet position.
Unfortunately, he had put Jared Kushner's dad in prison, so it's not necessarily the best approach to get a good role in the Trump administration.
Did not get one.
And then when it became no longer beneficial to be a Trump supporter, he became a big Trump opponent again.
And then he went on MSNBC every day, and he got to criticize Trump all the time.
And so now he's getting back in here.
The rumor is that he wants to be a guy who's going to be be taking lots of shots at Trump because no one will stand up to him.
Everyone's afraid to say his name.
I'm going to be the guy that's going to be out there taking shots at Trump every day.
And I don't care.
I'm not afraid of that guy.
You might not be afraid of him, but no one wants you to be president.
So you got to understand, you got to balance those two things.
And one of them usually weighs out the other.
The big argument in favor of Chris Christie, of course, is he's got nothing else to do.
And so what else would you do if you're Chris Christie other than run for president?
There's no
eat.
Some might say, I wouldn't say he's been doing that for fatty years,
but eating is something that he's pretty good at, and he could continue that trend.
He's excellent at that, and he will continue it.
But you also need to remember, he can, he's a type of guy who can eat and run for president at the same time.
Oh, wow, very talented.
He's pretty talented.
Very talented.
But there's more people, right?
There are more.
There are more.
And we'll get into that coming up in just a few minutes
the glenn back program
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I'm not a big fan fan of the pain, debilitating pain that makes you feel nothing, like doing nothing other than just, you know, turning over and going back to sleep.
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Why was traffic problems email sent?
There it is.
There it
a tough, tough question.
One more type from Al Sharpton, please.
Why was traffic problems email sent?
Such a great question.
It is so difficult to answer, isn't it?
Christie couldn't answer it.
No, he could not.
And he still hasn't answered it to this day, to my knowledge.
But he's going to run for president anyway.
Christie has a lot of friends in mainstream media circles who
he's one of those candidates that
Morning Joe likes, right?
Well, yeah, because
he'll criticize all other Republicans, all the conservative Republicans, he'll bash.
Yeah.
Okay, well, yeah, you'll get on MSNBC that way.
Will you win the nomination of the GOP that way?
No.
No, you will not.
And it's funny because all of these media types will tell you Donald Trump is Hitler, right?
Trump is Satan.
He is uniquely terrible.
He will destroy the country, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
Yet, they will cheer on Chris Christie, who will go in there.
And if you remember, last time went in there and took out Marco Rubio, basically one of those debates.
Rubio had a terrible moment, and it was basically the end of his campaign.
I mean, Christie is pretty good at that debate format.
Yeah, he is.
He's pretty good as a communicator.
Yeah, that's the thing.
He's well-spoken.
Yeah.
He's fairly smart.
And
that's about it.
He's well-spoken.
He's fairly smart.
And that's it.
Right.
But he is so.
But he tricked us in the beginning because he was so good on certain things, like the teacher union.
He stood up to them really great.
And he is pretty, you know, he's pretty good on what he's doing.
He's really good.
He has some good things.
Of course, he seems to be potentially involved in some crimes from time to time.
That's a whole other issue.
But, you know, it is one of those things where he is, he's not visually TV friendly, but
as far as a
communicator goes.
What do you mean?
What do you mean by that?
That he's not visually TV friendly.
I don't know, a guy who suggested his entire campaign was going to be eating.
I'm not sure what I mean.
But he can go out there and
he can make a good Sunday talk show appearance.
He can go out there.
But what he did last time, and if it's anything that, you know, similar to what happened,
what happened in 2016 is he'll probably come out and be attacking DeSantis and other people who might beat Trump.
Now, you might, as a Trump fan, like that.
I think Christie might actually wind up being a benefit because no Trump supporter is going to change what their view of Trump is based on something Chris Christie says.
There's literally not one person on earth who's going to do that.
So likely what will happen is Christie will help define
on a negative sense people like Ron DeSantis and other challengers.
And probably it's good for Trump that Christie is getting in.
I think you can make the argument pretty much everybody additional getting in is good for Trump.
Yeah.
I think that's probably what the more
I mean, because he's so far ahead, and then the more you split the vote among, you know,
15 or 20 other guys, just like last time, then
the better chance I think Trump has.
Yeah, I mean, there's a new poll out that has Trump up by 20 in the GOP primary
in Florida.
Yeah.
In Florida.
That's amazing.
A state that over.
Now, what do you think of that guy's poll, though?
Did you see who did it?
It's
somebody I didn't recognize, but somebody told us he's not maybe as legit as you might think.
Echelon Insights.
Yeah, I mean,
I don't think that's the,
you know, they're a pollster that people do report on.
It's not like a, you know, it's not an online poll.
Like, I mean, actually, elements of it are online now as much of polls.
But if you remember the old school days of online polling where you could just spam, spam, spam, spam, spam the poll and win.
Oh, I was referring to Rich Barris's big data.
Okay.
I'm not sure about that one.
You haven't seen that one?
No.
Okay.
But
that has him up by 20 as well.
Okay.
In Florida.
The
bottom line, though, is that Trump is ahead in this race right now, and this is Trump's to lose.
And he's ahead by a lot.
If Donald Trump is not the nominee in 2024, it will be of his own doing.
I was talking about this with Glenn, I think it was last week.
and that if you were to go back over the entire time we've seen Donald Trump running for president,
go back to the escalator on, okay,
if you were to go back and pick one month of that, of all those months that he was the most buttoned up, ran the most efficient, best campaign,
really controlled, the message, really was, you know, disciplined, I think I would pick the last month of the 2016 campaign.
Because he had the Access Hollywood blow up.
Lots of people thought he was done.
People in the press were saying, just quit.
Let's switch candidates.
Republicans were coming out and telling the press this, right?
Like, I know it's last minute.
Let's just switch anyway.
Put pence in there.
Do something.
Because everyone thought he was going to lose by 30 points at that point.
Not everyone, but a lot of people did.
And that last month, he was super buttoned up.
He did not make mistakes.
He was not recklessly tweeting as much.
He was going on the shows, focusing on platform positions that were
popular.
He was attacking Hillary Clinton very, very well, very strongly.
And he won the presidency, right?
If that Donald Trump were to show up for the next year, I don't think anybody would have a chance.
I don't think anyone would have a chance to beat him in this primary.
He's got a massive lead.
He's got the power of being,
I would say arguably, the most famous person in the world.
I don't know that there's another person who, I don't know, the Pope?
I mean, Pope is really just a position, though, that's that popular.
Vladimir Putin, I don't know.
Who else would you even put in the category as famous?
Taylor Swift, probably.
Probably Taylor Swift.
I don't know if there's anybody else.
He's probably the most famous person in the world.
He controls the news cycle like no one else.
That I can ever remember.
And he's got all, you know, tons and tons of of people inside.
You know, he's the president of the United States.
And there are plot goes along with that.
That will not waver in their support for him, no matter what.
And that's the biggest thing.
No matter what.
What is his floor?
What?
35%?
What's his floor?
Probably a little higher than that.
38%, 40%.
So if everyone who doesn't like Donald Trump unites around one candidate, they can get to 60 to 65% of the vote, which would be really hard when you have 12, 14, 16 candidates in the race.
Of course, they're all going to pick off a few percent.
So structurally, going into this race, Donald Trump is the overwhelming favorite.
It is incredibly hard to knock off a former president in a primary.
I mean, it is
almost impossible to do in any circumstance.
And people need to understand, you know, a lot of, I talked to a lot of DeSantis supporters who are really optimistic.
And look, I think DeSantis is a really good candidate.
But it's hard to beat a former president of the United States.
There's a lot of unknown around the corner.
You know, all the who knows what's going to happen with all these investigations, and there's tons of unknown.
But like, fundamentally, if Donald Trump were running his best campaign and doing the best job that he possibly could, he would be almost impossible to beat.
It's just the truth.
So when you're looking at your Chris Christie, you're going into this, you know, what are you thinking?
I mean, he's got a puncher's chance to make an impact because he's a good communicator and he will probably have a moment or two in a debate that is good.
But I think he'll be a spoiler, as you've kind of pointed out already.
He's a spoiler for Trump.
He'll like spoil DeSantis or spoil Pence or, you know, anybody that starts to get any momentum, he'll probably be that guy that knocks him back a ways.
So it's pretty interesting that he's getting into this because this is a person who's been wrecked already by Donald Trump.
Oh, yeah.
I mean,
again, I think the idea is, number one, raise your profile if you're Chris Christie.
Yeah, that must be it.
Get a better gig.
Did you know you're not going to be the president?
No.
Right?
I mean, you're not stupid.
No.
And you've got people telling you, yeah, you don't have a path.
There's no path here.
And what can he say?
He's been on television for multiple years saying everything he knows about Donald Trump and saying how bad he is.
There's just like, what else is he going to bring to the table?
I don't know.
I can't see much.
Now, Pence is another interesting one because he's getting in the race this week as well.
And I think like the normal reaction to Pence is, obviously, Mike Pence is is not going to be president of the United States.
He's not going to win this race.
And I think that's correct.
Frankly, I think that's the correct analysis.
I don't think he has a, I mean, he doesn't have a 0% chance, but he, maybe it's a 0.2% chance.
You know what I mean?
It's something very, very small for him to win.
But there isn't, at least he has a somewhat rational argument to be in the race.
Well, he was vice president.
So vice president of the United States.
He is consistently third in the polls.
Yeah.
Right.
So if anyone else other than DeSantis and Trump have an argument to get in, you'd say probably it's Pence.
He is a guy who represents a very vocal part,
vocal but small part of what the Republican electorate says it wants, which is, I really like Trump's policies, but I really didn't like the sideshow.
Right.
Pence has a rational argument to bring that to the table, right?
Here's a guy who was in the administration, seemingly agreed with everything that Donald Trump did policy-wise.
And the only time they ever disagreed was right around January 6th and into January 20th when the whole transition of power thing went on.
And really, it's the only time
Trump and him had any outward problems.
I mean, they were, he was, the criticism of Pence before January 20th from the right and the left was basically he wasn't his own man.
You know, he was just subservient to Donald Trump.
No matter what happened, he would just go along with it.
Even if you kind of looked at his past policy positions and said, wait a minute, that's not who Mike Pence has been for the last 10 years.
He would just go along with it because he was the vice president.
He was doing his job and maybe trying to move policy behind the scenes or whatever.
But everyone kind of said, ah, this guy has never really made his name at all.
Obviously, the January 20th big disagreement between Pence and Trump happens, and
90% of Trump supporters turn on Pence and say, you know,
you're dead to us.
Yeah.
Right.
Yeah.
So I don't think there's a path for him to win, but you can see, again, he's got the same thing going on with Chris Christie.
What else are you going to do?
If you're Mike Pence,
what else are you going to do?
What else is there?
You might as well give this a shot.
At least it gives you, it puts you in the conversation.
And I will say, the other thing you can make the argument with Pence on is that he hasn't, hasn't quote-unquote revealed everything that he may or may not know about Trump behind the scenes.
He hasn't really talked.
If he's going to come out and talk about Trump, maybe he does know something or he thinks he knows something behind the scenes that would make a difference with the American people.
I don't believe that, but maybe that's what he believes.
Maybe that's his justification for getting it.
Possible.
All right.
There's more, right?
There's more candidates?
Probably.
Yeah, I can give you the ⁇ we can go through the whole list here.
We'll go through the list coming up in about a minute or two.
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Pat and Stew for Glenn today, triple H727BECK.
So
if you haven't decided yet on Donald Trump as
your candidate and you're kind of considering others, there's some really great ones to consider like Doug
Bergham.
Berghamson.
Just Doug Bergh.
Just Doug Bergham.
Doug Bergham.
Jensen.
He's the North Dakota governor.
The governor of North Dakota
leapt into the race.
And so we got that going for us.
You got your Asa Hutchinson?
Yeah.
Here, we want to go through all the people who are officially in.
Yeah.
Okay.
So Donald Trump is in.
Obviously.
Nikki Haley is in.
Vivek Ramaswamy is in.
And I would say for a guy
running
out of a
completely unknown position, right?
No, no position in government, not really a well-known figure.
He outdoes a lot of these other people, people, like Nikki Haley.
He's outperforming her, the polls.
He's up to 4% or something?
Yeah.
He's, you know, again, not making a big difference.
He's really early, but I like him.
Asa Hutchinson, for example, who was with governor of Arkansas,
he almost never shows up in a poll.
And Vivek Ramaswamy, every single poll will at least show up, which is something to say.
Larry Elder, which is officially in.
I know people haven't talked about him at all.
Obviously, he ran for the governor of California recently.
They didn't quite get there, but there were a couple of days he was very competitive in California.
And now, again, the same thing you might say about about Chris Christie with a slightly different profile, he's obviously a very talented communicator.
The guy's been a talk radio host forever.
He made an impact in California, and if he gets on a debate stage, it's probably going to stand out.
He's pretty good, obviously.
So, Larry Elder is in the race, though, whether he'll get that amount of attention to get to the debate stage is another story.
Tim Scott, of course, is in.
Tim Scott.
Ron DeSantis now officially in.
We mentioned the three getting in this week, Pence, Christie, and Bergham, all expected this week.
And then you have a bunch of other people who may or may not get in.
You know, what's his face from Virginia?
The governor of Virginia.
Why am I from?
Young, Glenn Young, thank you.
Yes.
Young, who initially said he was not getting in.
Rumors are now he's reconsidering that.
I think as the field grows larger,
you almost say, why not?
Right?
Like, Like,
that's what happened.
Like, if you wanted to have a two-to-three-person race, you're realizing it's not going to happen.
Everyone's going to be getting in there.
All the Asa Hutchinsons of the world are going to get their screen time.
Why don't I get my screen time?
I don't know if that's what Junkin's thinking.
Yunkin would be a much more serious competitor than Asa Hutchinson.
Got a lot of funding.
Higher profile.
Higher profile.
And one in a purple state.
You also have Chris Sununu maybe getting in.
The mayor of Miami Suarez is a guy who's rumored.
what yeah really I think he's trying to you know maybe try to do a mayor P situation okay make an impact in that in that way uh-huh I mean look Miami's done very very well over the past few years and he's a you know Republican mayor younger good-looking guy you think again maybe we could make make an impact in that
someone's gonna do something in third place right some third-place person's gonna come out and make some sort of impact in this race.
We just don't know who it is.
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This is the Glenn Back Program.
With Pat and Stew, today Glenn is on vacation, triple 8727, V E C K.
I'm going to tell you about gay days
at Disney World, which is fun.
And also, Stu left out some important names.
Conveniently, left out because of his unbelievable bias.
Some important names of people who have jumped into the race for the GOP nomination.
We'll take care of that coming up in one minute.
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All right, so Stuyo conveniently left out some heavyweights that have jumped into the race or are about to, but I think most of these have already declared.
Yeah, these are all official.
I will say, I was just trying to make you laugh off the air.
But I will tell you.
Now, people deserve to know that some of their favorite people are now candidates for president of the United States.
I'll give you some of the official ones we know about.
Ron DeSantis, Nikki Haley, Asa Hutchinson is in.
Vivek Ramaswamy is in.
Tim Scott is in.
Donald Trump is in.
Some considering, but not yet in.
Glenn Young, Chris Sununu.
Miami Mayor Francis Suarez is talking about this.
Certainly making noise behind the scenes.
And, you know, someone who might be considering
VP pick.
The Mayor Pete thing, I think, has inspired mayors across the country that can make an impact.
And who knows, someday you can be screwing up transportation just like Mayor Pete all across the country.
Mike Pence is going to get in this week.
Rick Perry is making noise about potentially jumping into the race again.
He's getting up there.
Yeah.
He's got to be early to mid-70s.
Is he trying third run?
I think so.
I think so.
Brian Kemp is another guy who's being talked about.
He would be a serious contender.
I mean, he said he's done a very good job in Georgia, even though I know there was time where people weren't on the right were not so in love with the guy, Georgia seems to really like him.
Former Congressman Will Hurd, considering getting into the race.
Chris Christie is supposed to get in this week.
Doug Bergum
from
North Dakota is going to get in this week.
Huge.
Some other names, just to throw these by you.
The first guy who got in, of course, we all remember,
Corey Stapleton,
ex-Secretary of State of Montana.
Oh, wow.
He's going to be in.
Wow.
He is in.
Okay, Dean.
ex-Secretary of State of Montana.
Yep.
He got
Stapleton.
Mike
or is in.
Don't miss it.
I saw the Stapleton 24 bumper sticker on your car, Pat.
I saw it.
I saw it when we came in.
Then you have
former Chester Mayor of Texas, Floyd Petrie.
Yeah.
He's in.
Chester, Texas Mayor.
power position up there.
You've got Mayor Steve Laffey, formerly of Cranston, Rhode Island, but now apparently in Colorado.
He's apparently in the race as well.
And then you have some well-known people like William Farms.
William Farms.
Yep, of Ohio.
Some people call him Bill.
Charunda Fox of Michigan.
He's awesome.
You're a big fan, I know.
Heath Gourney of Michigan.
Nah, man.
I was wondering if Heath was going to get in, and apparently it's now official.
David Hurz
of Connecticut.
David Hurz.
Yep.
You've got
Cody Hoover of New Jersey.
Eugene Hunt Jr.
of Michigan, obviously.
Obviously.
I know no word if Eugene Hunt Sr.
is getting in.
We don't know.
We don't know right now.
Okay.
Gerald Hennings, the second.
Again, is the first getting in or the third?
We don't know.
We don't know.
But the second is in in Colorado.
Jeremy Kinman.
Travis Lang of South Carolina.
Seriously, there's probably 150 names on this list of people that are in
already.
And this happens every time.
You'll never hear from a lot of these people.
Yeah.
But there are a lot of people who run for freaking president.
This is like when,
who was the guy in the 60s, late 60s, early 70s?
I think he was on Laugh In.
He ran every year.
I don't know, but some of these are just like almost joke candidates, right?
But they are in the Republican Party.
They are running for the nomination or are they independents or some other?
Those are Republicans.
There's tons of independents.
They're Republicans.
Wow.
There's also candidates from the American Solidarity Party.
Oh, okay.
Yeah.
The Constitution Party will have a nominee again.
The Green Party, the Independence Party, the Libertarian Party, of course, the Life and Liberty Party.
The Communist Party already has their candidate.
Of course, that's Joe Biden.
I will say that's happened here.
They usually endorsed him last time.
Yeah.
Now, there's multiple Communist Parties and Socialist Parties.
Party for Socialism and Liberation,
the Socialist Party USA, the Socialist Equality Party, the Socialist Workers' Party, all will probably have candidates at some point.
Also, the Prohibition Party, their ticket set.
Is it?
Yeah.
Who's running at the top of the prohibition ticket?
I mean, I know you know.
You were just asking that for the audience.
Yes, okay.
Yes, obviously.
Mike Wood.
Yeah, of course.
Of course, Mike.
And vice presidential choice John Petrowski.
Oh, okay.
Now, this is you think prohibition, like their main plank being alcohol should be
prohibited because it works so well the first time.
Let's do it again.
I believe they're America's oldest third party
that is active, and they have run a candidate every single time.
That's okay.
And they get like 300 votes nationwide.
It's fantastic.
I just love the story of the Prohibition Party.
All right.
But there you go.
So you've got lots of choices.
Lots of choices.
Don't let people lock you into Donald Trump, Ron DeSantis, or Joe Biden.
You don't have to do it.
No, you got hundreds of choices out there.
Everyone loves to run for president.
Are you in yet, Pat?
Not yet.
Not yet.
But I've got an exploratory committee looking into it.
So no one ever has the
Heraldo vault moment when they have an exploratory committee.
No, yeah.
They all find out that they're found out that I've got no path, and so I'm not running.
No path.
No, that doesn't happen.
No, we opened up the vault.
It was just completely empty.
It never happens.
Nope.
Nope.
Everyone always finds the thing they want to find in the exploratory committee.
Yeah.
Surprise.
They said, yes, I'm going to, I have a shot, so I'm going to run.
Uh-huh.
Uh-huh.
Okay.
Something else that you're going to enjoy.
It's gay days at Disney now.
It's Pride Month.
Pride Month and the annual Gay Days celebration has been going on for years at Disney.
And so people are heading down there.
People like Mark Stegall and Robert Motts, who said they knew they made the right decision to travel to Florida when they spotted a sea of people wearing red t-shirts emblazoned with the words say gay in front of Walt Disney World's Magic Kingdom.
You know that's you nailed DeSantis there.
You nailed him.
He said don't say gay.
That was his big law.
Except he didn't, but well, no, but and the law had nothing to do with that.
No, no, but
you got him.
You got him.
You got him.
You nailed him.
The partners from Galesburg, Illinois have been coming to the annual gay days celebration for years, and they ultimately decided they were going to let travel advisories, new state laws targeting the LGBT community, and a bitter public feud between DeSantis and the entertainment giant keep them away.
Stagal said, we're here because it's gay days.
It's that simple.
Disney welcomes everybody.
Maybe the governor of Florida doesn't, but Disney does.
So what I have to ask is, are there days during the calendar year?
Mm-hmm.
Where Disney says, you can't come here if you're gay.
Nope.
Sorry.
No, I wouldn't.
Today is not a gay day, so you are not welcome at Disney.
That does not happen.
I might be being a little broad here, but
is there a company in America that says you can't buy their product if they're gay?
I don't believe they're.
I think it's illegal.
They would frankly.
Yeah, they would point to whatever Masterpiece cake shop, I'm sure.
But he sold lots of products to gay people.
He just wouldn't sell a particular, he wouldn't celebrate a gay wedding.
Right.
So I guess that's controversial.
There's a few places that I suppose, I mean,
what do you say the percentages of bakeries that would sell gay wedding cakes are?
99.9%.
Would you say it's higher?
What do you got to do?
99.999%
of bakeries would do that.
But of course, they keep these, these gay couples just keep fighting their way back to Masterpiece Cake Shop.
They just love those cakes.
Surprise.
Yay, he wouldn't do it again.
What again?
Still, he still won't do it again.
This guy.
I had a pansexual wedding cake I wanted to get made, and this guy won't make it.
And he won't celebrate my transition day.
Right.
This guy.
You believe this?
This is like he, like, for some reason, this poor guy just has the ultimate flavor combination for transgendered people.
They just love it.
Nobody else can do it.
No one else can do it.
It's so ridiculous.
But I mean, basically, every
business in America would welcome gay people to come by.
People like money, right?
They do.
If you happen to be gay and you want to hand people money for products and services, most of the time they're going to take it.
Yeah.
You know, that's the way this works.
And I think any day of the year, it could be outside of Pride Month.
I thought gay people could only shop in Pride Month.
No,
that's not true.
That is not true.
It's a common misconception.
You can only shop during Pride Month.
No, yeah.
Yeah.
No, you can, like, if it's October, you could
buy
and you could go to Disney if you wanted to.
Now, what about
December?
Yeah, you can go to you can go to Disney.
Wow.
And you could shop as a gay person.
They will allow you.
They will allow you.
They don't check your gay card?
Not at all.
Nope.
What if they do?
They check your car for rainbow bumper stickers and say you can't pull them in this parking lot.
They do not.
No?
No.
That's interesting.
And I've always been fascinated by the Pride Month thing in that,
I don't think it's a normal thing historically to name months after one of the said seven deadly sins.
Like, typically, that would be something you'd want to.
Although I have a couple of options here for you, Pat.
Can I run this by you something?
So Pride, we know Pride is June.
Okay.
So
thinking of the other deadly sins, I think February would be Envy Month.
Okay.
It's the shortest month.
Yeah.
Jealous of the other months.
Yeah.
So we call February Envy Month.
All right.
April month, or April, I would go greed because that tax day.
Like the government's stealing all your money.
Yeah.
So greed month
is April.
Wrath month was a little hard, but I went with May because May Day, communism, they killed over 100 million people.
I feel like wrath is a good fit there.
Seems to be.
Wrath month is May.
August is coming up, and all I want to do in August in Texas is stay inside in the air conditioning and like lay on the couch.
So sloth month seemed like a good fit for August.
Yeah.
All right.
November, obviously gluttony month.
Obviously.
Right.
You got Thanksgiving.
You're going into the Christmas holidays.
You're going to be eating constantly.
So November is gluttony month.
Lust month was a little hard because, you know, we already have a month that's about where you put your genitals, which is pride month.
Yes.
Right.
You're supposed to be prideful about where your genitals go.
Right.
So I think we have to combine.
Lust month is also June.
Lust month and pride month are June.
And I think maybe you kind of combine them and just go with, call June thrust month.
Then you kind of get the best of both worlds, I feel like.
Yeah.
You know, you get the pride for where your genitals go and the lust for putting them there.
And you combine that into one wonderful picture of thrust month.
That is wonderful.
The month of June.
So welcome to Thrust Month.
Thank you, Pat.
Thank you.
Good to be here.
We can all celebrate Thrust Month together.
I like it.
Yeah.
It makes me comfortable.
I'll tell you that much.
Yeah, me too.
I will tell you that much.
So I don't know.
I think
it's an interesting time because my understanding of Disney was they allowed gay people in all the time.
I think that's the case.
And that's, you know, because when you ask, well, when is it heterosexual month?
It's always hetero month.
Every month is hetero month.
Well, can the same not be said about
gay month, like the bride month?
Because you can, there's never a time when you can't go.
It would be illegal.
It would be illegal to stop people from doing that.
And I will say, you know, a lot of people say, oh, what about hetero month?
I don't actually, like, that's a rhetorical point.
I don't want a heterosexual month.
I don't want my sexuality celebrated at Disney World at all.
Aren't you proud of that?
I would kind of like, I hope you're not proud.
It's fine.
You know, it's enjoyable.
All right.
It's a wonderful part of being a human being.
But I will say, I don't need it celebrated around a cartoon mouse.
That's just not.
It's got nothing to do with that.
You want to put hetero month in
a bar?
In a strip club?
Yeah.
I guess maybe it's an appropriate thing to do there, though.
I don't need it by any means.
I don't need all of my life choices celebrated by days of the week or months of the year.
I really don't.
Weird.
I know.
It's weird.
I don't need it at all.
Well, you're unusual.
I mean, most people
really do.
Yeah, most people do.
We'll get more coming up in about one minute.
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It's Pat and Stew for Glenn today.
Giselle Beretto Fetterman, who, of course, married to John Fetterman, former mayor,
lieutenant governor, now a U.S.
senator, John.
She regrets how mean
U.S., the U.S.
political scene has become.
And so, over the weekend, in an interview on MSNBC, she said, I still hate politics.
You don't want to hear that.
No,
you don't want that to be the case.
They hate it so much.
They couldn't find a path out.
They were there.
They were thinking, I'm in this race.
And I got to stay.
I've got to stay.
Even though he almost died and seems to be almost dying every time I see him on television.
And we need to keep rolling him out there on a daily basis.
I have to.
Well, you have to.
She said, I still hate politics.
I don't know how I ended up here.
I do.
Yeah, you filed.
You filed.
Yeah.
And you continually encouraged your husband to keep running, despite the fact that he nearly died, had a debilitating stroke, and you're like telling him, yep, you need to keep going.
Keep going.
And then it's fine.
The second he was sworn in, he was wheeled off to a hospital for multiple weeks and didn't do his job.
And you didn't think, say, hey, maybe we should bail out of this.
I mean, mean, look, there's a Democratic governor.
They were just going to pick another Democrat.
You wouldn't even lose anything in the Senate.
Right.
And they still said, no, we must stick through this.
We must keep going.
But she said, and I think it can be very different, of course, the politics in America.
And we need to elect the right people to change it.
But it's just so mean.
Now, she came to the U.S.
from Brazil when she was seven, traveling with her mom and her brother without documentation, which means illegally.
She came here
illegally.
How do they describe that again?
Without documentation.
Oh, so like they didn't have documentation of their legal status?
They were legally allowed to be here, but they forgot.
Like, when I drive my car and I forget my license at home, it's like that.
I'm an undocumented driver.
Yes, I'm allowed to be here, and of course, completely legal, but I had forgotten my documentation of the legality of that.
That's the way they make it sound.
It is.
That's not what they mean, though.
Nope.
After 15 years of living in the shadows.
Oh, my God.
yeah whose fault is that
giselle received her green card in 2004 became a u.s citizen in 2009 oh that's very she probably got the green card because she had been breaking the law for so long right well she's been here for 15 years if someone had just started breaking the law 15 minutes ago maybe you'd consider uh stopping them probably not but maybe you'd consider it but once once you've been breaking the law for a really long time a really long time then you get the benefits of ignoring the law so weird that's what they do with all other crimes so weird like if you're murdering someone year year after year after year, if you're like, oh, this person's been murdered, it's part of their life now.
Yeah, they've done it since
they were seven years old.
Yeah, they've been murdering and murdering and murdering.
Now, of course, as a child, maybe not their decision.
I understand there's a gray area there that sometimes gets debated and is a big hot topic.
But like
the idea that the longevity of time, like bizarre.
So bizarre.
That length of time being the discriminating, I don't understand, the determining factor in between whether you follow up on the law or not.
It's like, I don't know, if if you weren't paying your taxes for a really long period of time every year.
That doesn't make it better.
That doesn't make it better.
That makes it worse, right?
Every other crime is worse when you do it for a long time.
Right.
Not here.
Right.
Not here.
Amazing.
So
she talks about how the campaign quickly turned nasty.
Fetterman suffered a stroke.
After taking his seat in the Senate, he was hospitalized with depression.
And she's been there pushing him forward every step of the way.
But she described why she thinks that's the case that, you know, the right wing criticizes her.
It's because the right wing hates women.
Oh.
And particularly women immigrants.
That's why.
Wow.
Yeah, it has nothing to do with the fact that your...
husband is virtually incapacitated and can't function as a U.S.
senator, yet he's in the U.S.
Senate.
That's got nothing to do with it.
Don't even worry about it.
Agonizing.
Absolutely agonizing.
See, it seems like not that long ago when the third rail for conversation and business was the same as the dinner table, religion and politics.
If you were a smart business, you left that stuff alone and you just focused on making your customer happy.
I love Jennifer Say's framing of this.
Normie capitalism.
Remember good old normie normie capitalism?
Ah,
I long for the days of just people doing what they did.
That's gone.
That's gone now.
The rise of wokeness murdered that notion in our society, and we've been forced as a result to create a parallel economy for conservatives, for ourselves.
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It's Patton Stuffer Glenn on the Glenn Beck program.
Glenn's on vacation this week.
888-727-BECK.
Just a little bit of an update i don't know if you how much you've heard about the thwaites glacier it's called the doomsday glacier no because doomsday yeah that sounds really bad well
it's melting so quickly that they think it is going to raise the sea level by 10 feet
and by think i mean they thought they don't think that anymore
it's been updated
ever so slightly what is it 12 feet now i mean this is unbelievable these 15 or 20 feet.
Yeah.
Because some predictions predict that the sea level is going to rise by 20 feet by the year 2100.
Yeah.
The good predictions say that.
Yeah.
All the good predictions.
That's the best case scenario.
Right, right.
20 feet.
20 feet.
And so cities like Miami, New Orleans, New York City, gone.
I think.
They're gone.
Topeka, Kansas is going to be underwater at this rate.
At this rate, you're right.
You know, the whole, and I'm not talking about, you know, from local waterways.
I'm talking about from the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans coming together.
Well, look, when the Thwaites Glacier melts
and Greenland melts,
you're going to have these doomsday scenarios.
You really are.
And probably, yes, you're probably right.
Topeka, Kansas will be underwater from the ocean.
However,
you said it was updated.
There's an update.
Is it worse than that?
Is it already underwater?
Well, you be the judge.
Okay.
Okay.
I'll be the judge of whether it's worse than that.
You be the judge.
So they were supposed to rise by an equivalent of 10 feet.
10 feet.
Let me just write it to Earth.
Okay.
10 feet or 3,048 millimeters.
3,048 millimeters.
Okay.
Now, according to the study from Gudmundson that was done just this year, it was published online day before yesterday.
Scientists now think
it is going to increase sea levels
by not 10 feet,
but just under an inch.
Just under one inch.
One inch.
Or it goes from 3,048 millimeters to one to two.
One to two millimeters.
One to two millimeters.
Okay, I'm just doing the
math here real quick on the back of the envelope.
Yeah.
So, I mean, it's really close.
I should just warn people who are tuning in now.
This is, I've not run a full model on this.
Oh.
You know, this is just something.
This is back of the envelope stuff.
This is just a quick reading of the information I just received from Pat Gray.
So from 10 feet, what they used to think was 10 feet of water, sea level rise.
To 0.07 inches.
So not a full.
Not a fully.
Did you put an inch?
No.
You said one inch.
No, no, no.
I got to redo this.
Less than an inch.
Again, this is not a full model that you're
just preparing right now.
Okay, this is back of the envelope.
Stop.
Hold on a second.
Okay, I'm just working on that.
All right.
You've got a whole bunch of calculations going on there.
I mean, I just feel like I could be, this could, I'm just going to throw it out there.
This could be completely wrong.
We could be, this model I've just done.
Could be off by a tenth of a percent or more.
And I'm just, so I don't know.
More than a tenth of a percentage.
So two things in the middle.
Yeah.
I don't even know how to do this, but I just,
it seems to be less.
Uh-huh.
It seems to be less worrisome.
That's what the model is spitting out right now.
This initial rough model.
And it's less dangerous.
It seems way less dangerous than what's predicted.
Now, it's funny because every single time we hear about global warming, they say it's much, much worse than you thought.
Oh, it's worse than you thought.
It's way worse than you thought.
They told us we were all going to die
somehow worse than that.
Within 12 years.
And now we're down to, because it's been several years since they said that.
Now it's about seven years.
Yeah.
And by the way, they didn't say that.
No, they did not say that.
They didn't actually say it was going to be the world was going to be.
As Michael Schellenberger pointed out in his book, he went to the person who supposedly said it and he said, why did you say that?
And the person who supposedly said it said,
I'm glad you asked me that because I didn't say it.
Now, wait a minute.
What do you mean by that?
That means I didn't say it.
Okay.
All right.
That one didn't get as much press as the initial one.
It did not.
I noticed.
It didn't.
Like, there's a slight difference in the amount of attention the claim received and then the fact that the claim was completely made up.
That was different.
Well, it's a lot like this Gudmundson
study that showed that
the sea level rise is not going to be 10 feet because of this glacier.
It's going to be less than one inch.
That doesn't get a lot of play.
You're not going to hear that today on CNN, ABC, NBC, CBS,
but it is a fact, and they just found that out this year.
And you would think that would be somewhat good news to people.
I don't, that you'd want to mention.
Hey, by the way, remember when we talked about a doomsday glacier?
It's really not.
It's really not.
So don't worry about it.
I feel like you never get that.
Yeah, it's hard if you went back over the past couple hundred years and you were to talk about the most
society defining moment discovery.
You might say, you know, you might say something, anything from, you know, World War II, the creation of the internet.
I mean, I go through a lot of different possibilities.
I don't think you'd get to sea level rise for a long time.
Yeah, I don't think you would.
And, you know, sea level rise has gone up a lot over the past couple hundred years.
Nothing to do.
I mean, a lot of it had nothing to do with climate change at all.
right uh then maybe some of it has recently you could argue but uh i don't think really not really a notable part of the human experience over the past couple hundred years in comparison to so many other things
and yet what do we get and yet yeah we just get the doomsdaysayers the doomsayers get all the publicity and they they've been doing this since at least 1970 and probably before that And none of their predictions have been accurate.
None of them.
Like the West Side Freeway in
New York was supposed to be underwater by now.
Like, I think by the year 2000 or something.
And
there was quite a few people who drove on it today
that I think realized, hey, that didn't happen.
Or they have like those
landed sea vehicles.
No.
No.
No.
No, just a regular vehicle.
Is that what they're taking down this road?
Uh-uh.
Also, you might have noticed the island of Great Britain is not underwater either.
And that was going to happen by 2000.
And that, well, didn't happen.
So sure about that?
Yeah, I'm pretty sure.
I'm pretty sure.
You could call somebody in England just to check up on them, make sure they're still okay.
And they're not treading water right now, but I'm pretty sure they're okay.
There's a, when they ran these climate models years and years ago, one of them was called RCP 8.5, I think it was.
And it's the one that was the most disastrous.
Like it was the cataclysmic option of all of the things that could happen, right?
All the, they ran a bunch of scenarios.
Here are the outcomes we think could happen.
8.5 was the one that was like the worst case of mine.
This is going to be really, really bad.
Okay.
So they did that.
And
that was the one that got all the press, of course, right?
Like they didn't focus on like the
scenarios that would be, you know, not that.
troublesome.
They stuck only to the ones that would freak everybody out.
Now, in the interim, since that happened, we've had a lot of information that has filled in.
And all of those parts of that scenario are now way out of the realm of possibility.
Like, it's no longer possible we could get to those because it was about stuff like how much fossil fuels we would emit and how, you know,
would there be any restrictions?
And would coal, you know, quintuple and all these things.
It was a quote-unquote worst case scenario.
Well, now there's absolutely no possibility of us getting to that scenario.
Yet the media and scientists, by the way, still use this cataclysmic scenario that was created years ago to explain every one of their climate horror stories because it makes, you can point to it and say that was a real thing.
It was really in a UN report.
Right.
And you can make all of your catastrophic predictions.
seem even more catastrophic.
So they continue to use this scenario, even though it is completely completely out of the plausibility that it could actually occur.
We've already gone, we're many, many years into this, and there's no chance of us catching that number now.
But they still keep running it and still keep trotting it out there.
And when you base whatever climate study you're doing on that model, you get a catastrophic result every single time.
And when these guys who look at this stuff on a daily basis, scientists who are maybe more on the realist side, look at this and they say, hey,
let me look at it.
Oh, let me see.
Oh, gosh, what a surprise.
They're using RCP 8.5 yet again.
Still, this is amazing.
Amazing.
They don't care.
They don't care.
They want to just freak you out.
And of course, the media makes it worse, but some of the scientists are in on it too.
They know what they're doing with that.
The average person reads a headline, or maybe they read a first paragraph of a story.
They're not looking any deeper than that.
These people know what they're doing, they're manipulating you into fear constantly.
And again, in the world of unintended consequences, now they're starting to worry worry about solar panels.
Solar panels are going to become a problem, and they're going to become a problem really soon because they have a shelf life of at most 25 years, but really they start to lose their effectiveness and they become cost inefficient after 10 to 15 years.
So about the time you've paid for your solar panel, that's when it stops being efficient for you.
And then it doesn't save you any money.
But
because billions, maybe two and a half billion solar panels are about to go out of commission,
what are you going to do with them?
Where are you going to put them?
They're all going to be dumped into a massive mountain of solar panels?
Yeah, and then they're going to, I don't know, be harmful to the planet.
I love that.
Every single time they come up with one of these solutions, they create a bigger problem.
So
now the deputy director of the International Renewable Energy Agency is saying it's going to be a waste mountain by 2050 unless we get recycling chains going right now, which we don't have any of.
In the United States, there's nowhere that they recycle solar panels.
In fact, there's one place in the world that is starting, just beginning to recycle solar panels, and that's France.
So are we going to send it?
We can't even get the freaking regular recycling right.
I know.
It's all in the freaking ocean near China.
Right.
Where we just ship it over to China and they dump it in the seas or burn it.
Yep.
But they figure by
in just a few years, I think by 2030 to 2040, somewhere in that neighborhood, there's going to be 200 million tons of solar panels piled up that are just rotting somewhere.
You're saying, so not 300 million tons.
Not 300 million.
It's not going to be as big an issue as the plastic industry, which is 400 million tons.
But how long has plastic been piling up?
So in much less time, solar panels are going to become almost as big a problem.
Amazing.
Man,
they're just doing such a great job with this renewable energy thing.
It's going really well.
More coming up in just a minute.
You know, if you've been sitting in the studio with Glenn for a whole lot of years, there's a few things that you know Glenn loves.
God, his wife, family, our country.
But I think number four is probably his dog, which is why he's so happy he ran into naturopathic Dr.
Dennis Black, the founder and creator of Rough Greens.
Not a dog food, it's a dog supplement that can help bring your dog's food back to life because dog food is dead food.
We know how Rough Greens has basically seemingly brought Uno back to life, or at least will at least make him eat his food.
It's hard to live without food.
But Rough Greens, he absolutely loves and has brought him back to life.
He's running around like crazy.
He's a great dog.
And I know when you have a dog that you love, all you want to do is the best for him.
And you can do the best with rough greens.
If your dog is struggling with low energy like Uno was, achy joints, you know, like he wouldn't eat, like Uno wouldn't eat, maybe has bad breath and digestive issues, you need to take Dr.
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The Glenn Back Program.
Sign up for the free newsletter today at Glenback.com.
It's Patton Stu for Glenn on the Glenn Beck program.
This is a darn shame, and who could have seen this coming?
Portland is losing population.
They're apparently hemorrhaging people out of the city.
No.
Some say it's due to a massive crime surge.
What?
No.
Really?
People don't appreciate living in a crime-riddled city where they're officials, where the authorities aren't doing anything about it?
That's sad.
What are you?
So picky that you want to be safe in your town?
Jeez, that's disgusting.
That's what it is.
It's racist.
That's what it is.
It's exactly what it is.
Thank you.
Transphobic.
Thank you.
I'll tell you that much.
Thank you.
What about homophobic?
Bigoted.
Uh-huh.
Yeah.
Phobic, right?
Yes.
It's pho-phobic.
Exactly.
And hate-mongerish.
Just mongers who deal in hate.
This is the thing.
People don't want to be stabbed by people who don't look like them.
These white residents of Portugal
are fine being stabbed by a white person.
Right.
But they don't want it from another
race, ethnicity, or maybe another sexual orientation, Pat.
Wow.
Like, if they're getting
stabbed by a transgendered person, they become transphobic.
Like, they become
afraid afraid of that person stabbing them in some way.
As if a trans person would ever do anything wrong.
You know, that wouldn't happen though.
I mean, if someone's, if a transphobic or trans person stabs another person, then it is a justified situation.
Yes.
Because they were probably being phobed against.
Phobed at the time.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So it's completely understandable.
There's a guy I had on
recently who was writing a book about this claim that constantly is out there that people who are transgendered are much more likely to be murdered.
You know, you hear this all the time.
All the time.
All the time.
People are always like, oh gosh, this violence.
One of the reasons, the arguments for these like gender affirming care and everything is they won't commit, this will stop them from
committing suicide, which of course is not true.
But also
it creates a healing environment so that violence against trans people,
the rates are so high.
And we must, these are literal lies we're talking about.
He went through literally every single trans murder over the past like couple of decades.
And what he found was almost exclusively they were trans people who were murdered
by Johns who believed they were getting the other gender at a prostitution exchange.
Oh, wow.
Right?
Like
you go to get a prostitute or some sexual interaction.
You think you're getting one package down there.
You're getting the other one.
And that's where the overwhelming majority of the murders come from.
Incredible.
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We gotta stand together if we're gonna survive.
Stand upset and hold the life.
It's a new day, I'll tie to rise.
What you're about to hear is the fusion of entertainment and enlightenment.
This is
the Glenn Back Program.
Patents do for Glenn today.
Yes, we've got Old Man River in office right now.
We've got Mr.
Dementia in office right now.
But we got a guy who is, well, the oldest president in American history.
But it's fine.
It's fine.
Article in the New York Times tells us how fine it is.
We'll get into that and lots more in one minute.
I want to tell you about police officer Jeffrey Carson and his family from Franklin, Tennessee.
Officer Carson was a successful career country music singer, but he left all that behind to serve his community.
And he was on the Franklin Police Department for 14 years before sadly suffering a fatal heart attack in the line of duty last year.
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And yes, we have an 80-year-old president in office.
And yes, he'd be 82 by the time he was re-elected and 86
by the time his second term would end.
But that's, you know, it's complicated, really.
The reality of it all, of having an old, old president.
It's complicated.
Oh, it sure is.
At least that's what the Biden campaign is telling us via the New York Times, which is apparently an arm,
a direct arm of the actual Biden campaign.
This is something that, of course, every campaign tries to do with media.
They try to send a PR flack to a major media institution and explain to them what they should write and then have them listen and just write it word for word.
And, you know, hopefully that doesn't work on either side.
It shouldn't work, but it did.
It does often.
for the Democrats.
Now, if you remember, the last version of this was in 2020, in the lead up to 2020, when everyone was like, gosh, like, what is wrong with Biden?
He can't get through a sentence.
He's just off all the time.
He seems like he loses his train of thought.
You can't understand what he's talking about.
He seems lost all the time.
What is going on?
And then there was this big profile that came out about Joe Biden's stuttering problem.
Remember that?
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
It's like, actually,
he stuttered when he was a kid.
When he was doing this kind of stuff.
Putin's kleptocracy.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Kleptocracy.
The guys who are the kleptocracies.
That was just a stuttering issue.
Stuttering issue.
Now, he hasn't had that stuttering issue since he was a child, but don't let that come back.
It came back.
Actually, legitimately, that was in a story.
Like, hey, yeah, he had this.
He conquered it, is the way they framed it.
And then it is because he's a little older, it's come back.
It's not affecting his cognitive ability at all.
Okay.
He's as sharp as attack.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
How questionably.
In fact, it's so common that people say he's as sharp as a tack that
it's almost like a joke now because people are just like, oh, my God, he's a sharp as a tack.
Everybody says it.
It's like a catchphrase in the White House.
And you think a story like that would embarrass the media so much they wouldn't engage in it again.
And then the New York Times comes out this weekend with a story called Inside the Complicated Reality of Being America's Oldest President.
President Biden is asking voters to keep him in the White House until age 86,
renewing, I mean, just when he's just stating it that way is remarkable, renewing attention to an issue that polls show troubles most Americans.
It's a good idea.
But it shouldn't, right?
Because we're just, we're ageists
in this country.
Right, we sure are.
Let me give you a quick preview of the story.
And by the way, we're going to talk about this on Studos America tonight, go into depth and show you the depths that this goes to because, and how all this stuff works behind the scenes.
Because, you know, before I got into this business, Pat, I did not know this how it worked.
I did not know how the sausage was made.
I did not know this is how the news media worked.
I mean, I always thought, okay, they're liberal, maybe, you know?
Yeah.
But the behind the scenes of how this stuff actually gets to your computer, to the newspaper every single day, to cable news is fascinating.
And you need to know how it works because it tells you so much.
This is a four-person byline, okay?
For reporters, New York Times, this is how they're covering Joe Biden.
There was a time last winter when President Biden was awakened at 3 a.m.
while on a trip to Asia and told that a missile had struck Poland, touching off a panic that Russia might have expanded the war in Ukraine to a NATO ally.
Within hours, in the middle of the night, Mr.
Biden consulted his top advisors, called the President of Poland and the NATO Secretary General, and gathered fellow world leaders to deal with the crisis.
And then there was a time a few weeks ago when the president was hosting children for Take Your Child to Work Day and became mixed up as he tried to list his grandchildren.
What?
So let me see.
This is a quote.
So let me see.
I got one in New York, two in Philadelphia, or is it three?
No, three, because I got one granddaughter who is, I don't know, you're confusing me, end quote.
Okay.
He also drew a blank
when asked the last country he had visited and the name of a favorite movie.
The two Joe Bidens coexist in the same precedent.
It's well, it's complicated.
Sharp and wise at critical moments, the product of decades of seasoning, able to rise to the occasion, even in the dead of night, to confront a dangerous world.
Yet a little slower, a little softer, a little harder of hearing, a little more tentative in his walk, a little more prone to occasional lapses of memory in ways that feel familiar to anyone who has raised, reached their ninth decade, or as a parent who has.
Or anyone who is developing dementia.
Yeah.
And yes, for sure.
And when they go through this, basically what they're trying to sell to the American people, like, and this is, it's important to know that, like, if they came out and said, oh, he's totally sharp, you're missing everything.
And some people will try that, but like, that's not going to be effective on the American people.
People look at him and they see.
What this story is making the case of, they've gone as the stutter, though it's mentioned in here briefly.
Now,
the reality of this president is.
When you see him, sure,
he's incoherent.
He can't get through a sentence.
He's bumbling.
He's confused.
He forgets the name of his grandchildren.
Blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
But when you don't see him behind closed doors, he's perfect.
That's incredible.
He's only bad.
You can see him.
Maybe your eyes are the problem.
Have you ever thought of that, Pat?
And my ears.
Your eyes and ears are the thing that.
They are the problem.
Because when you hear him or you see him, sure, he's awful in every way.
Yeah.
But when behind closed doors with President of Poland.
Here's the thing.
These 20-year-old interns at the White House can't even keep up with him
mentally or physically, Stu.
This man is so sharp and so spry and so vigorous that the 20-year-olds at the White House can't keep.
He just, he runs circles around him.
Oh, my gosh.
It's incredible.
Mental accusation.
But not when the camera's on.
No, then he's terrible.
He's nervous.
In every way.
He's nervous.
He's awful.
He can't say anything.
He's pathetic.
But when he's behind closed doors, the second you have no evidence of what's going on.
Yeah, then he's great.
Oh my gosh.
He's the smartest.
He's the brightest.
He's the wittiest.
He's the best speaker.
He can communicate.
And he's smart and sharp.
Man, the guy is
brilliant.
Brilliant.
Off camera.
Would anyone accept this from any other job?
If it was Trump, too,
with this job, if it were Trump,
would the New York Times be?
I mean, when he walked gingerly down a ramp,
he was in trouble.
You remember that?
I mean, all hell broke loose when he walked down that ramp, sort of carefully.
He just joked about that at an appearance that he did.
And they made a big deal out of that.
Like, oh, my gosh, this guy.
Health concerns.
Yeah, big health concerns.
You know, Biden falling on his face on a stage.
No health concern.
No.
No, no.
No, it was just a sandbag.
Yeah.
It was a sandbag.
Sandbag.
What was it when he was walking up the steps of Air Force One?
What was it then?
Sandbag.
Multiple times.
Are there sandbags that are just out to get this guy?
Oh, my gosh.
Damn.
You can't see them.
Just like you can't see his good performance as president.
Just vote on what you can't see.
It's like, hey, why did you sign that first baseman to a 10-year, $250 million?
You should see how he kills it in the batting cages.
Now, when he's out on the field, he's hitting 107
with a.
The guy's at least a 450 hitter in the batting cages.
Now, look, even when he's hitting batting practice on the field when people show up early for the games, he's terrible.
But in the cages, when no one else is there with just the machine, this guy is rakes.
He's awesome.
Oh, my gosh.
It's incredible.
So that's why you just gave him a $50 million a year contract?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
You guys don't know.
That's the problem.
You guys don't know.
You don't see it.
You don't see it.
This guy's incredible when
none of it can be seen.
I would love it if
some baseball team.
See, and that's baseball.
It wouldn't be accepted.
No.
You would never accept that from your favorite baseball team.
Would you accept it from...
You know, you guys don't understand.
When we close down for the night, the quarter powders with cheese this guy makes are incredible.
Now, the ones he delivers to customers are gross.
They're awful.
They're awful.
He puts rat feces inside, and he just continually spits mistakenly
when he makes them for himself.
Oh my gosh.
Delicious.
Delicious.
No one would buy this analysis.
Nope.
But we are expected to swallow it for the leader of the free world.
That's supposed to happen.
They also did this same sort of thing.
The New York Times, when they were talking about the lies he tells about his past,
he was because he describes himself in like, okay,
he grew up in the black church.
He grew up with Puerto Ricans.
He grew up with Poles.
He's, you know, I mean, it's all of this stuff.
Maybe Irish, but I'm not stupid.
I married Dominic Giacoppa's daughter.
So, you know, I got an old Italian.
I mean, he's Italian.
For the Senate seat when I was 29 years old.
Because he started calling me Joe Bidenopoulos.
Okay, so he's Greek.
One thing to say.
He's a hit with the Hispanics because he listens to Hispanic music, right?
But everybody in town is either Polish or Italian.
Right.
I grew up feeling self-conscious.
My name didn't end in the SKI or anything.
It was around the Poles.
They loved them.
I was sort of raised in the Puerto Rican community at home.
Oh,
okay.
I got raised in the black church.
He's no, I'm not kidding.
I got my education
for real.
Yeah.
In the black church.
I see.
And that's not hyperbole.
It's a fact.
Of course not.
I probably
meant to show more than many of you.
He's Jewish.
Spent more time in a synagogue than actual Jews did.
And then Delaware, we know
you can't go into a 7-Eleven without speaking a little bit of Indian.
No, that's right.
Whatever that quote was from back in the day.
It was this.
We see it.
It was.
No, it was...
In Delaware,
the largest growth in population is Indian Americans moving from India.
You cannot go to a 7-Eleven or a Dunkin' Donuts unless you have a slight Indian accent.
Right.
I'm not joking.
He's not not joking.
He's not joking.
So don't pretend he's joking because he's not.
He's not joking.
No,
that was folksy, though, to the New York Times.
All of that was, they were not lies.
It was folksy.
Come on.
Gosh.
It's not a joke.
Not a joke.
Right.
Amazing.
Now, the New York Times goes on to note.
that his verbal miscues are nothing new.
And I think that's what you're talking about.
Some verbal miscues.
Verbal miscues.
Right.
That's right.
We're not going to sit here anymore.
Certainly the old reporter that used to work uh for uh
for cnn that would document every lie donald trump told he no longer came up with 10 000 or 14 000 or something ridiculous number and now and then as soon as president biden started they just stopped the project yeah like legitimately just stopped the project completely uh his verbal miscues are nothing new friends note he has struggled throughout his life with a stutter there's the mention and was a gaffe machine to use his own term so we're not going to be critical of him.
We're just going to use the one time he was a little self-deprecating
long before he entered his social security years.
But advisors said his judgment is as good as ever.
So many of them, Pat, use the phrase sharp as attack to describe him that it's become something of a mantra.
This guy, everybody around him is like, this guy's as sharp as attack.
He's sharp as attack.
Look at him on stage.
He's grumbling and he can't come up with any
series of three words in a row that are coherently tied to each other.
In private.
Not in private.
Sharp as attack.
When you can't see him, he's sharp as attack, which explains what a wonderful streak we're on as a country.
Everything's working so well.
All these decisions, Pat, are being made in the most efficient way possible.
All the right decisions made at the right time
and the right direction, and everything works out for the best.
And the fact that in actuality, his public persona seems to line up with his presidency quite well, right?
Like he's really, really bad on stage.
He's really, really bad at interviews.
He's really, really bad doing basic human tasks.
And he's really, really bad at being the president.
All those things line up really, really well.
But no, you're supposed to believe he's actually great at being president, but somehow Republicans with no power are the ones making all these bad things happen.
Well, it's complicated still.
It is complicated.
That is complicated.
All right, more coming up in one minute.
Good heavens.
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10-second station ID.
All right, Pat and Stew for Glenn on the Glenn program.
Please make sure you check out my show, Pat Gray Unleashed, immediately preceding this one live
or anytime you want on podcast or wherever you get them.
YouTube as well.
Get it there.
As well, Studios America.
Studios America is on YouTube.
Please go and subscribe.
Podcast as well.
Tonight, we've got Dave Rubin, and we're talking about this Biden story
going behind the scenes on it.
I love this, Pat.
In private,
some officials acknowledge that they make what they consider reasonable
accommodations not to physically tax an aging president.
Okay, so they're going to make some.
Is that also from the same
story?
New York Times story?
They're going to make some reasonable accommodations.
He's a little older.
Oh, my God.
So they're going to make some reasonable accommodations.
Like
such as.
Everything like such as.
Everything like such as.
His staff schedules most of his public appearances between noon and four.
Right.
Now, that's only a.
He clearly wears down as the day goes on.
And he gets less sharp at certain times of the day.
So they found between noon
and 4 p.m.
are his hours.
And they leave him alone on weekends as much as possible.
So
four hours a day,
five days a week is what we're talking about for the president of the United States.
Okay.
The toughest job in the world, really,
if you're doing it right.
Right.
And he's not doing it right.
Wow.
I mean, if it was a normal presidency, the guy would be up at, I don't know, five in the morning and be working until nine or 10 at night, right?
Wouldn't he at least nine or 10 at night, probably later than that.
And
they wouldn't make any accommodation for him.
Nobody around him would be making these accommodations if this was a normal presidency.
But it's not.
And they know they have to excuse this guy, and they know they have to cover for him.
And so they do.
And that's why they wrap things up sometimes at 9 o'clock in the morning.
Yeah.
They call a
lid.
A lid on the day.
They put a lid on it.
Yeah.
At 9.05.
Basically, this is a way of saying, hey, reporters.
I know you're working today.
You might think because it's 9 a.m., you might have more work to do today, but
You might have access to the president.
I'm not telling you anything.
No.
He's done.
It's over.
He's done.
Done for the day.
9 a.m.
We don't
have to be a favor to reporters to say, you know, you guys don't need to hang around here.
Yeah, because you're not getting anything from him.
He's already gone to bed.
It's 9.05 in the morning.
The president of the United States is in bed.
He's already said his prayers.
And he's gone to bed.
And, you know, I don't know.
Like, I keep coming back to this.
Donald Trump's not young.
Right?
No.
Donald Trump is in his late 70s.
I think he's 76 or 106 or mid-70s, I guess.
He'll be in his late 70s or into the 80s if he were to win.
But no one thinks of him as having these problems.
No, right?
I know.
They might not like him for other reasons, but no one says, oh, this guy's just out of it.
You know,
they can tell he's still able to operate at the same level he has for a very long time.
Yeah.
And that's just not the case with Joe Biden, quite clearly.
At all.
Embarrassing.
All right.
Embarrassing.
888-727-BECK.
More
Pat and Stu for Glenn coming up on the Glenn Beck program.
The Glenn Beck program.
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Pat and Stu for Glenn on the Glenn Beck program.
This is kind of interesting because
giant storms are raging at the top of Uranus.
And did you even know it?
I bet you didn't.
I bet you didn't know that there was a giant storm at the very top of Uranus.
But that's a fact.
Not a joke.
Not a joke.
Speak for yourself, Pat.
Not a joke.
And why do I read this story?
I don't know.
Because I'm four years old in my mind.
I'm about four.
A telescope on Earth has spotted huge storms brewing on the planet.
Uranus.
Some might pronounce that Uranus,
but then you still have urine in it.
So
it's funny either way, quite frankly.
Scientists using the Keck Observatory in Hawaii have recently seen a number of storms develop on the planet.
One image taken August 5th of last year shows a few bright spots in infrared photos taken of the planet.
I always find this space stuff really interesting.
Apparently there are massive storms bigger than the Earth raging on almost all the big planets.
Saturn, Jupiter, Uranus, Neptune.
They've all got these massive storms happening.
Why?
Global warming.
That's why.
Thank you.
Thank you, Scott.
It had to be.
I'm sure you're going to say it.
And I was worried that you might try to deny.
I might have, but you beat me to the punch, and so there's no denying it now.
It's global warming, climate change.
So climate change is killing us all, and I think we know that.
Political correctness and wokeness, also killing us fairly rapidly, too.
Look what happened over the weekend.
In the U.S.
Capitol building.
Okay,
this is an elite children's group that was given permission by three separate U.S.
congressmen,
one of which was the Speaker of the House, Kevin McCarthy.
Said, sure, you can come in here and perform in the lobby of the state capitol, of the national Capitol building.
So they did.
They came in and started singing the national anthem.
And here's what happened.
Okay, so there's the end of the first verse.
Yeah.
People seem to appreciate it.
They start into the second standard.
They're learning for the first time there is a second standard.
Yes.
Right.
And I think a third.
But
you see, kind of in the background,
Capitol Police officers starting to talk to other people in the area.
There seems to be a problem of some sort.
What's the problem?
It looks fine.
Well, the problem is they're singing singing this hateful song.
And the Capitol Police officer doesn't want them to.
I mean, they're really good, too.
The acoustics, obviously, excellent in a relationship.
Right?
Okay, they're consulting over a couple of adults consulting about this whole thing.
Now
somebody's going to go get someone and then they're stopped.
and then they're like, no, you go tell them right now.
They're running around in panic.
To stop.
So he comes over to the conductor of the children's choir
and he tells them, stop, you need to stop.
And so they do.
Now people start clapping, not knowing, okay, they were just.
Is that where that song ends?
I've never gotten that far into it.
It is not.
No.
They were ordered to stop singing because the national anthem of the United States of America might be offending people.
I mean, it's despicable.
Isn't it?
I mean, I'm so tired of this.
Why?
Seriously, if you're offended by the national anthem, what are you doing here?
Why are you here?
You shouldn't be.
If you're offended by the American national anthem,
what part of it is offending you?
And who cares if it's offending you, frankly?
Well, that's a good point, too.
Cares?
Yeah.
I'm sure maybe it does offend somebody.
Who cares?
So what?
If I went to Russia and I'm in the Kremlin and the Russian national anthem begins,
and I'm like, oh, well, man, this is...
This is a commie song.
Is it the same as the...
Is it the Soviet one back in the 2009?
Yeah, this is a Soviet.
I think they still have the same.
But this is the Soviet national anthem.
I just remember this from Ivan Drago.
But it's very loud, isn't it?
It's really quite loud.
It is a little loud.
Yeah.
His import, Durago's match with Rocky Balboa.
Oh, yeah.
In 1984, 85.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, about 85-ish.
Yeah.
Of course, but if I'm offended by it and I'm in the Kremlin, are they going to take that into consideration?
No.
Pat Gray's offended by this.
I think you need to stop.
Come on.
Stop playing.
No.
And they weren't like, you know what?
Rocky Balboa is an American.
He's offended by this national anthem that we have here.
We're not not going to play it.
That's not what happens.
That's not what happens.
No.
It's funny because the same people would be very, very upset if you oppose, in any way, Pride Month festivities.
Oh, my God.
Right.
Which is not, you know, like, look, you want to have Pride Month festivities among adults.
You can do that.
No one's stopping you.
In fact, just don't make me promote it, too.
Right.
That's all.
Yeah.
And honestly, and, you know, there's a line with children, obviously, that cannot be crossed.
Right.
However, like, honestly, like, pretty much every organization seems to be all in on Pride Month this month.
I mean,
I can't tell you how many emails I've received from companies that are like, hey, it's Pride Month.
You want to buy our crap?
No, I do not.
However, many of these stores, of course, are the alternative to places like Target, right?
Like that.
that are doing this.
And you just realize there's no real safe harbor at this point when you're, you know,
in almost every category.
That's true.
You have to really search.
I mean, we talked about Patriot Mobile earlier when we were
doing a commercial for them, but it's so true.
Like
the days of normie capitalism seem to be gone where companies just want to sell me stuff, and that's it.
They're not taking stances.
They're not going for ESG scores.
They're not looking for DEI requirements.
They're just trying to make a product that I want to buy because it's a good product and it helps me make my life a little bit better.
Gone are those days.
I don't know why.
I thought it worked well.
I really did.
I don't know.
Maybe I'm in the minority here, but I kind of thought the American experiment was going relatively well for a while there.
Yeah, I thought so too.
I don't know what this is.
Something else.
It is.
It's amazing what has happened here and that everybody must participate too.
Because if you don't, then you're a hater, you're a bigot, you're a homophobe, all of that.
And, you know, last year, there was an NHL hockey player who stood up and said,
no, I'm not going to wear the pride jersey.
I'm just not going to promote it.
Now, I don't, don't, you know, you can wear it if you want to, but I'm not going to.
And, you know, that created
a backlash against him.
I mean, he survived it, I think.
They didn't fire him for it.
They didn't get rid of him off the team.
But
it was as if...
How dare you not wear the Pride jersey?
Well, if you're not part of the LGBTQ community,
why would you have to?
You don't.
You don't have to promote it.
You don't have to, you know, and that's, it's because it's gone so far beyond tolerating now.
It's embracing.
And now it's promoting.
And pretty soon it's going to be, and we're about there.
You got to, it's becoming.
You got to become
part of the community.
I posted a sign on my Twitter page the other day.
This is a, by the way, twitter.com slash studosamerica.
If you'd like to follow along, it said, check your thinking, Pat, and I want you to do this.
Okay.
Can you check?
Do you mind doing a little internal audit?
I'd love to.
Sure.
Okay.
Check your thinking.
Same-sex attraction.
Okay.
You know what we're talking about here?
Yeah.
Same-sex attraction.
Transsexuality.
Yes.
Right.
Okay.
Is transphobic.
Wait.
Same-sex attraction.
So being gay is transphobic.
Is transphobic.
Check your thinking.
Phobic.
Have you checked your thinking yet?
I don't think you're checking your thinking.
I'm looking at you right now.
I don't see much checking going on, Pat.
I'm not sure I am.
I haven't checked it.
Check
your thinking.
Do it now.
Check it.
Check your thinking.
Same-sex attraction is
transphobic.
Phobic.
Now, take yourself out of this world where maybe you had logic and thought and reason pervade your life.
Okay.
And think about their world for a second.
Aren't they right?
If you say you are attracted to someone from the same sex, you have made a decision that gender is important, and you're excluding
millions, trillions of transgendered people who have transferred from one gender to the other.
Thank you for mentioning that there are trillions
of trans people now.
Almost all people.
Almost all people.
In fact, people who don't even exist on this planet.
Right.
Like I'm trans.
I know you, Pat.
Yeah.
Right.
You are a man.
Yeah.
And you were born born a boy a male right right yes somewhere in there you transitioned twice you went to female then back you just don't know it really everyone is transphobic i mean transgendered oh only okay white conservatives are transphobic but everyone else is just trans is transgendered although i will say the transphobic experience is expanding because now gay people are transphobic If you have a sexual preference at all, you are transphobic because you're eliminating.
Well, in that world, yes.
It does make sense that it makes sense.
Obviously, straight people are transphobic.
We know that already.
But now also gay people are transphobic.
If you're making a decision based on gender and your sexual attraction, then of course you're transphobic.
Well, and you cited a statistic earlier this morning
on the show
that there are trans people being killed, being murdered.
Oh, yeah.
But you said most of that is happening from someone who brings home a person thinking they're a member of the opposite sex, but they're actually the same sex.
And then so they pull down the pants and there's something there they didn't expect.
Right.
Like picture this scenario here for a second.
And it's difficult to do.
Jeffy's not with us on the show today.
He would be able to walk you through it exactly.
But you go to a bar,
you get a little inebriated.
Yeah.
You pick up somebody you think is the hottest girl in the bar.
Hey, wow.
Yeah, wow.
Look, check her out.
You get home.
She's got a new one.
And there's more to be bargained in
noodles that you weren't counting on.
Right.
Now, that experience
can be daunting to some.
Yeah, but that's transphobic.
You should just be accepting of that.
Oh, okay, well, great.
Let's go.
Right.
And especially if that person is telling you it's a woman.
Yeah.
That's on you
for not liking
the male genitalia that happened to you.
And yet you're taking it out on them.
Yeah, there's a big Twitter controversy this weekend where some
enlightened activists said, it's simple.
If a woman says she's a woman, then she's a woman.
It's like, oh.
I mean, that is simple.
I will say, in a way of like forest gump, I guess that is pretty simple.
In a really simple way that is simple.
Very simple thing.
It's like, if a person says they're a dog, they're a
dog.
Like, and I know we, like, those examples get thrown around and they seem, you know, like everyone rejects them, but it's like, what would prevent you from believing they're a dog then?
What is the, what's the limiting principle of what you're proposing here?
There isn't one.
What you're proposing is whatever someone says they are,
they are automatically.
Yeah.
So if someone says they're a Twizzler, then they are a Twizzler.
Yes.
Right?
Yes.
That is not real.
That's not real life.
And they keep asking us to participate in this lie.
Yeah.
Like, I,
there used to be, the way that we talked about this was you need to be empathetic.
Right.
People are going through a real mental health challenge here.
Empathetic and tolerant.
And
look, if they're going through something different and that you don't understand, you be empathetic to them.
You say, hey,
I'm sure I can't relate to what you're going through, but hey, man or woman,
you do that.
And like, I hope everything works out for you.
And now we're supposed to actually
mentally participate in this idea that actually they've transitioned from a man and now they actually are a woman.
And someone brought up to me this idea that, okay, well, you know, gay rights are,
you know,
gay rights.
Well, are you going to reverse gay rights?
And it's like, well, there's a fundamental difference here between,
you know, and of course, I agree with equal rights for all people, gay, trans,
that's never been a problem for conservatives to get their minds around.
But when you talk about
the agenda here, right?
What gay people are fundamentally asking me to do is
to talk about something that's true.
A man, like let's say you're a gay dude and you're a gay dude because you like to hook up with other dudes.
That's what makes you gay, right?
You're gay.
You like to have sex with other dudes.
You're gay.
We can all acknowledge that that is actually true.
You're actually having sex with dudes.
The trans thing is totally different than that.
The trans thing is you're telling me to, to a lie.
You're telling me you're a woman when you're a man.
Now, you might be going through a mental health crisis that makes you really believe that.
And that is something that doctors should be talking to you about.
But I don't have to go through the mental health crisis with you.
Is that what you're saying?
That's what I'm saying.
Is that the bigoted thing that you're trying to say now?
Well, all right.
Whatever, I just wanted to get the truth out.
Glenn Beck.
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It's Patton Stu for Glenn on the Glenn Beck program.
We will be back
Wednesday, I think, right?
Steve Days.
On tomorrow.
Yeah.
And then we're back Wednesday, Thursday, Friday.
And are you going on vacation too?
I am next week, yes.
So it's summer and I got some time away.
Glenn is away, I don't know where he's traveling, somewhere overseas.
So he will be back in a couple weeks, but you're going to be here next week as well.
Got lots of good shows planned for you.
Indeed.
Indeed.
And then tonight, Studos America, we've got more on the Biden plan to fool you into thinking his age doesn't matter.
We've got Dave Rubin on the show to talk about the
presidential primary as well as his recent trip to San Francisco, which apparently didn't go so well.
Really?
Apparently, not as nice as it used to be.
Weird.
Unless if you like human excrement.
Yeah, well then.
Yeah.
And, you know.
And homelessness.
Yeah, that's your thing.
And drug use,
then all those things are there for you.
They're there.
The Glenn Beck Program.