Best of the Program | 4/14/23
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Rules and restrictions apply.
I mean, with an exception of the
apparent god-gun-loving spy that has
released the worst information on the United States since the Civil War in a gamer forum.
Other than that, other than that, the story, this is the first hour of the podcast.
The first thing we take on is that story.
And there's something wrong.
And we have a guy who was in that role for a while.
And he tells you how complex it is.
There's something that is dramatic that is missing from this story.
We have that and we kind of go into a Good News Friday.
I'm giving you all kinds of stories where the good guys win,
we're making progress, and I think one of the
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You're listening to
the best of the Blend Beck program.
Jason joins us.
Jason is the head of research for the broadcasts that I do and
also the
guy who watches over
global problems that have anything to do with the military.
And the guy who has the most illegal search history in the entire country.
And that includes Jeffy.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You know, it's really scary when you say, you know, you research something and then you go by his office and he's sitting there.
dark room.
You're like, are you okay?
And he's like, on the dark web.
Think I'm finding some really good stuff.
that's probably not the right words good stuff on the dark web anyway jason is here because uh yesterday the fbi arrests the national guardsmen linked to the pentagon classified documents leak now
i saw the pictures from the sky
Can we let's see if they match what I saw because it didn't look like the FBI.
That looked a lot like
Army people.
Oh, yeah.
The vehicles certainly.
The vehicles are.
Now, when they were walking out, they had like four rifles.
They were all in the camo.
Is that how our FBI dresses now?
Do we just not
are all norms gone?
Now, I have to hand it to our FBI because
This is this could have been anybody,
anybody in the world, and they found him, okay?
They found him this quickly.
Congratulations.
Now, they still don't know who leaked the Dobbs decision, and there's only 12 suspects there,
but I'm sure they're working on it.
I'm sure they're working on it.
Now,
I brought Jason in because Jason, you were in, and I hate to say it, military intelligence.
That's correct.
And you were in military intelligence, so you know this stuff.
Yeah.
Okay.
So tell us what he is accused of doing.
So that according to the New York Times.
So there was that, you know, batch of classified documents that ended up on a Discord server, which gamers use to talk to each other while they play games.
But it was on this Discord server, and somehow it went from the Discord server to eventually getting leaked out onto Telegram, places like that.
But these are, my first thought was when I saw this break yesterday, I'm like, he's 21 years old.
He's a National Guardsman, and he has access to these kinds of top-secret documents.
How's that possible?
So these kinds is very important to this story because when you look at the classified documents, and yes, I do have a copy of the classified documents.
There's a, I mean, I don't have a copy of this, but
it was him.
There's a, at the top of it, it'll be a little bit different.
Somewhere Merrick Garland is laughing right now.
Finally.
Go, go, go.
On these classified documents says top secret at the top, you know, and it also has like their special access program, SAP, or sensitive compartmentalized information.
So what that means is there's top secret, and then above that, if you get cleared, there's SCI or SAP, which means you're read into certain things.
Okay.
So just because you have a top secret clearance, you can't just be like, hey, I want to know who really shot Jonathan.
It's got to be in there somewhere.
You can't go searching for that type of stuff.
Okay, so wait a minute, wait a minute.
He had access to this computer link.
Yeah, so the computer, and this was, this came out on the New York Times yesterday.
It's been slow drip, which is very odd also from our mainstream media.
But last night, the New York Times said that he pulled this information off of something called JWIX.
That stands for Joint Worldwide Intelligence Communication System.
Okay.
So basically what that is, is that's like an internet service provider.
That's like if you have your internet through Verizon or Comcast or something like that.
So it's a secure line.
Exactly.
Okay.
It's not a machine or anything.
You plug your computer into a secure line.
Exactly.
You can call on it.
You can send texts on it.
You can send email on it.
Now, saying that he pulled it off of JWIX is like, Glenn, if you have Verizon at your house and they said, well, Glenn got this information off of Verizon Wireless.
Okay, can I have a little more context there?
Was it a text?
Was it an email?
Was he surfing for it on the internet?
What?
So JWIX is just a system.
Okay, so if you got onto that system, though, does it have like a Google page at the front?
You're like,
Kennedy assassination.
And it pops up the information,
classified details in Ukraine.
No.
And it popped.
No.
No, no, no.
And I'm going to try and tell this with some context that I don't get arrested by an FBI SWAT team.
Oh, they're already here.
They're probably
going to flick out there.
So on that.
It's just a parkout front.
So they're just kind of there all the time.
It's kind of a fast vehicle.
I'm going to use it if I have to.
Here's the thing.
This is the honest truth.
So you know when they come and haul them away, I'm on record saying this.
I have nothing to do with this.
No.
Jason has worked for me for years and has never,
ever diverged.
Not that you have a bunch of stuff, but you've never diverged or
divulged any kind of classified information in any aspect of anybody's life.
And also, the system is designed so that I really can't.
The system is designed so that a 20-year-old enlisted kid can't get his hands on everything and anything.
It's designed that way.
But what you're just describing, like, you know, go to a Google page, whatever, there is something on the JWX called Intel Link.
So Intel Link is basically, that's like the internet, right?
Or that's basically like the computers that are all linked together.
I guess it's more better to describe it as like an intranet.
You know, there's a place where you can click on and there's like a group of things here, I mean, like that.
Is there like a Wikipedia for sure?
There is.
There is a Wikipedia.
It's called Intellipedia.
That's for top secret nerds to like say, basically they build like Wikipedia style pages.
Okay, so wait.
Would this National Guardsman, he is with the 102nd Intelligence Wing,
he's 21 years old, would he have access to
Intellipedia?
Yes.
I think, yes, he would be able to access Intellipedia.
I had a top secret SCI clearance, which is as high as it gets in the military.
I would be able to go into the SCIF, the facility where this stuff is at, and
I could get onto one of these terminals that's hooked up to JWIX, and I could go to Intellipedia if I wanted to.
But the information is a lot more broad there.
So it's basically just a bunch of nerds being like, this is what we're seeing in Ukraine.
This is what we think should happen.
It's not like.
It's not these documents.
No, no.
It's not, here are the locations of every single Western Special Forces team.
That would be SCI or SAP, meaning you have to be read into that.
You have to have a special login to send that information to and from terminals on the JWX.
Let's just say
that,
I don't know, the Capitol Police were searching for something and they just happened to walk out of the room and it was there on the screen.
Just any way to get it on the screen.
Could he print it?
Or take a picture of it?
He could take a picture of it.
He could take a picture of it on the computer, but that's not what happened.
He printed it off and then took a picture of it.
So how could he, you couldn't have printed it off in the skiff?
There would be a, you could, but there would be a record that someone printed that off in the skiff, in the skiff.
One of the ways they were, you know, one of the many ways they were able to identify this guy, supposedly, was that he printed them off, brought them home, put them on his counter, and then you could see it was the exact same counter that he had in other photos of the counter in his kitchen.
Yeah, and there was a
screen.
And there was a reflection of the room and things like that.
Again, can't find the secretary of one of the 12 justices that leaked that.
That's impossible.
They found out because they had a reflection of his furniture in his room.
Right.
See, this is the way the system worked back when I was in.
I heard that they were trying to modernize the JWIC system
as I think it started like last year, a couple of years ago.
Okay, so it's like Biden was involved.
So modernize it means chuck layman open.
Right.
Well, I was thinking from what they were saying, they were trying to make it even more restrictive than when I was in.
Like, it was all going to be cloud-based and a lot more like two-factor authentication, all these different things.
What really irritated me about the New York Times piece last night was they didn't ask any of these questions.
They were just given an acronym and even what the acronym means.
And they said, yeah, just pull off Jay Wix.
Okay.
Okay.
All right, so hang on just a second.
Why would the New York Times
feel the need to ask the government any questions?
Especially when they were probably giving it to you.
Veevil asked the
you know, trusted their government sources for everything
and been burned every time as we find out it's false.
Why would an editor say, did you ask them these questions?
Yeah, I mean, it's, it's almost like they were just given a piece of paper and said, print this.
That's the way it felt to me.
If you, if I'm at the New York Times and I'm actually curious about getting to the bottom of this, because I don't think we're getting the true full story here at all.
But I personally would have been like, okay, he got it off JWIX.
How did he get it off of JWIX?
Where was it at in JWIX?
Was it in an email, something that's called ice mail and top secret email in JWIX?
Was he reading someone's email?
Did someone send him an ice mail and this information was on it?
Not definitely not an FBI agent.
What is the full, definitely not an FBI agent?
Definitely not an FBI agent.
Whatever I say, not an FBI agent.
Justice Department had nothing to do with this.
I will say that FBI does have access to JWIX.
So I'll just put that out there.
So does the DOJ.
Oh my gosh.
I'm not implying anything.
They just put it out there.
This is the best of the Glenbeck program.
Ready, Stu?
I'm ready.
This is a good one.
You're going to love this.
A church in North Carolina has again unburdened thousands of families who were struggling.
Trinity Morovian Church, I guess it is, in Winston-Salem,
bought up and canceled nearly $3.3 million in medical debt belonging to 3,355 families.
Wow.
According to the dispatch, this is the second year the members of the church have taken part in the Debt Jubilee Project, which assumes past due medical bills of residence in the area.
Through the project, congregants previously purchased 1.65 million of debt, liberating 1,300 people from the Forsyth and Davison counties.
When an individual fails to pay their outstanding medical bill, the medical company that is owned hires a debt collection agency.
When the agency can't get the money in its collection efforts, the debt is sold to third-party collection agencies, and these are the sharks.
sharks.
These are the ones that will hunt you down, and they pay pennies on the dollar just to help recoup any loss.
The dispatch indicated that these third-party agencies have a legal right to either collect or forgive the debts.
In partnership with RIP Medical Debt in New York, the Debt Jubilee Project exercised its right to do the latter.
Reverend John Jackman, the pastor of the church, said most of these families were making a go of it until somebody had to go to the hospital for a few days or to the doctor for some serious medical condition.
We can't fix the system, so this is the best we can do.
The Jubilee project raised $15,000 and with that we were able to go in and bid and buy $3,295,863.64 in medical debt in Davis County.
On March 26,
the church held a ceremony.
Some of the poorer folks that we deal with get medical bills of $1,000 or $3,000, and it might as well be $10 million.
I think it's time we say that's forgiven.
I think it's time for relief.
You got to eat.
You got to take care of your children.
You got to do what you have to do just to live.
So they got together in the church.
They had a service.
Then they took all of that debt and burned it in Jubilee.
And then let everyone know,
don't worry about that anymore.
I think that's one of the greatest things I've ever heard.
For
what was it?
$15,000?
$15,000.
Wow.
For $15,000, they were able to buy
debt.
$3 million worth of debt.
Oh, my gosh.
Okay, so
I'm going to put up the first $15 million or $15,000.
Who will join me?
Who will join me today?
That's great.
Because I've heard that
you could buy debt cheaper.
And I've heard some organizations doing this type of thing, but $15,000 will buy you millions of dollars in debt.
$3 million in debt.
This is like the last of the last.
So this is given to the guys who are like, go get them.
Right.
You know what I mean?
The people that harass you and say,
they're just the worst of the worst.
And if you've ever had debt,
you know, I've had debt, you know, when I was young that had to be collected on, and then I had debt that wasn't mine that these guys wouldn't leave me alone.
That's the kind of people that you're dealing with here.
You're getting, you're giving them freedom from that.
And, you know, this isn't deadbeat debt.
This is medical debt.
Right, and it has to be debt that they have they
they know about they know about
ever collecting right to get that sort of price.
So these people are really at the end of the ropes, and you're taking this away from them.
That's I mean, that's incredible.
What a great, what a great idea, right?
Now, this, of course, will be criticized by the left.
This happened, you know, even Mr.
Beast had to get got criticized for this type of thing because this just shows that our system is so bad and it shows how evil our system is.
Why don't we just have everyone have no debt?
You know,
that is what they all say.
Somebody has to pay.
And when we can, I think this is a great thing for churches.
When you can pay that,
let's pay it.
You know, let's help each other.
We've, this, again, this is the kind of stuff that I've been looking for.
Who's going the extra mile in a unique way just to help people in meaningful ways?
These are the people who are probably the poorest of the poor.
I mean, you have $1,000 of medical debt and you can't find a way to pay it off.
You're the poorest of the poor.
And you're hassled and you're afraid to pick up the phone.
And I mean, this is great.
This is great.
Hats off to this church.
Hats off.
I think this is wonderful.
Now, I went to RIP Medical Debt,
and
I haven't had my researchers look into it yet to see.
You know, I want to make sure
you guarantee a charitable donation, you may want to
make sure.
No knock on these people or anything.
I think it sounds like a great idea, but you never know.
Sounds great.
Sounds absolutely great.
But I want to make sure that they are,
you know, this isn't some woke front or, you know, something like that.
I want to make sure this money is actually going and what's happening is actually
happening.
Uh, so join me.
Yeah, join me.
Let's do that before you give any charitable donation, by the way.
Always, always.
Even the ones that we recommend, even mine, yeah, Mercury One, check it out.
Make sure that it has, you know, the right ratings and,
you know, that it's, it's using your money to the
best.
Here's what a guy, he was a president of goldman sachs at one point before goldman sachs was bad or at least we knew where they were bad um
he said to me i said i don't know how to be charitable i grew up in a poor family i i
don't know how to do it and i just don't want to just you know just slosh money around i want to make sure it's going to the right things and um he said i look at um
charitable funds as investments, but you're investing in people.
So
what are the people you want to affect?
Are you trying to get them an education?
You're trying to help feed them?
What is it that you want to support?
And then find the organizations that deliver the most amount of that dollar to the actual end recipient.
Look at it as an investment.
And I have.
And that's what you should do when you're looking for uh charities who can get it to the person that's one of the nice things about like give send go
is it's it's going right to the people because it the people set it up um but I think this is fantastic and I would oh my gosh can you imagine you imagine how many
how many people that are struggling under under debt that this audience could relieve
how cool would it be to just be able to call these people and just say, hey, forget about your debt?
Imagine that.
That would be great.
That would be great.
It's unbelievable.
And if that, I wonder, you know, what market forces
would be applied if you tried to do this on a mass scale, right?
Like $15,000, maybe you can get the cheapest of the cheap.
It's got to get more, the debt gets more expensive the more likely they are to collect it, right?
So you'd wonder if you put, if you try to buy a million dollars, would that have the same ratios?
Probably not, but still, it would do a lot of good for a lot of people.
I have a feeling it
would.
This organization, again, I don't know enough about it, but this organization, you know,
they have things like for here, Dallas-Fort Worth, they have an $80,000 goal.
82% of it is raised for Dallas debt.
Western Michigan, Athens, Clark County, Georgia.
You can find the regions that you want to give to.
And they have done millions and millions and millions of dollars.
I think this is great if
they are indeed who they say they are.
I'm sure there's some organization doing this well and right.
Maybe this will be a good thing.
Maybe if this is the right one, have somebody on about it to talk about it.
I think it would be interesting to, I think a lot of people want to do good for people without,
you know, all the nonsense.
You know, I think a lot of these, these causes that are out there, it scares people away from giving their charitable dollars because they see how many of these things they've given to in the past that turn out to be doing things that, you know, you don't want
you don't want to be associated with.
Right.
So hopefully.
Hopefully this is clean.
Yeah.
Hopefully this is clean.
Yeah.
But we'll see because once we call them and say, hey, our audience wants to help, we don't want anything to do with you.
It's always a good indication.
We don't want your money.
We'll know right away.
But again, this North Carolina church, fantastic.
Absolutely fantastic.
This is the best of the Glenn Beck program.
All right, you sick twisted freak.
Let's get right to some good news.
Dr.
Jeffrey Barrows is with us.
He is an amazing guy.
He serves as the senior vice president of bioethics and public policy for Christian Medical and Dental Associations.
He is an obstetrician gynecologist.
He is a guy who
left
daily practice to
work with MEI, which is Medical Educational International for Christian Medical and Dental Association.
He was the director there for forever.
He founded later Gracehaven, Haven, an organization assisting victims of domestic minor sex trafficking in Ohio.
He served as the member of the technical working group on health and human trafficking under the Department of Health and Human Services.
He's an amazing guy and he's ethical.
And so when his state said, you have to do, I don't care if you're Christian or not, you have to assist people in suicide,
he said no.
And he and another doctor, I believe it was Dr.
Lacey,
took them to court.
And by their side is somebody else who's going to be on the phone with us.
It's Chris Shandavelle.
He is the Alliance Defending Freedom Senior Counsel.
They won the case.
You need to hear about it.
Doctor and Chris, welcome to the program.
Well, good morning, Glenn.
Thank you for having me on.
It's great to be with you this morning.
Thank you.
So, so,
Doctor, tell me
what you would have been or people like you would have been forced to do had this not been turned over.
Well, I first need to slightly correct you in that New Mexico is not my state.
I actually live in Ohio, but I was part of CMDA, and we have many members, including Dr.
Lacey, in New Mexico.
And if this law had taken place and we had not filed the lawsuit with the help of ADF, our members would have been, first of all, required to tell their patients who they considered as being terminal, maybe having six months or less left to live, about the option of assisted suicide.
And then, even if they personally disagreed with it, they were required to make an effective referral if that patient did request assisted suicide.
So we're very thankful that the lawsuit was successful in encouraging and getting the New Mexico legislature to change the law and the governor signed it into law.
And
it's, as you said, a very big win for our members there in New Mexico.
I have to tell you,
I mean, I don't understand why doctors can't have their own belief and say, no, you know what?
I can't do that.
I'm really sorry.
But if you
want to do that, you'll have to go to another doctor and you can find them.
They're out there.
Why you're required to
name another doctor that they can go to when you so strongly, religiously believe that it is wrong.
And if I'm not mistaken, and I forgive me if I am, but I understand that
you have a terminal illness that you've been battling.
Is that true?
Yes.
Yes.
A little over a year ago, I was given the diagnosis of stage four non-Hodgkins lymphoma.
and I have made the point that if I lived in New Mexico my doctor would have been required to tell me about assisted suicide at the same time of giving me that same diagnosis and I can tell you being in the patient's position that would have been devastating to me I mean it's hard enough to hear the diagnosis of stage four cancer and and you're wondering all kinds of things are going through your mind how long am I going to live
am I going to be able to beat this and then to have the doctor go on and say by the way here is an option for you you can go ahead and we'll help you kill yourself that is that is totally the wrong thing to tell a patient at that time much less make a physician or health care professional say that to a patient so it's not just though about the the the medical profession is becoming to me extraordinarily frightening because I'm you know a student of history.
I look back at what we're repeating and through eugenics and all of the things that happen here in America and in Germany, once you start to devalue life, once you start to say, hey, maybe we can kill the young and the elderly because they don't have a life worth living, it goes awry quickly.
And so it's...
It is not just about that one patient that you don't have to help kill,
but it is also, I hope,
drawing a line in the sand that says physicians first do no harm.
Exactly.
You're exactly right, Glenn, because we have lost the overall purpose of medicine, which for millennia has been to heal the patient.
Not to kill the patient, but to heal the patient.
And if they suffer from a terminal disease, to help them as much as possible to limit the suffering, to come alongside them, to support them.
But never, ever should we be hastening that death.
And this is exactly where medicine is going, unfortunately, across many areas of the country.
So we're very thankful again for the help of ADF and for the New Mexico legislature listening to this lawsuit and recognizing the importance of
looking and accepting the conscientious rights of health care professionals.
Chris Shandevel is senior counsel for ADF.
That's Alliance Defending Freedom.
You are fighting a battle just like this now in California, aren't you?
We are.
We are, Glenn.
Thanks so much for having me on.
So what we saw in New Mexico is actually
very unique.
You know, oftentimes when these laws are passed legalizing assisted suicide, what we've seen in state after state is that the so-called safeguards that are supposed to be put in place
and even protections for conscience beliefs, number one, they don't last and they don't work.
And so California is a really good example of that.
So when they first passed their law, they did put in so-called protections for medical professionals like Dr.
Barrows.
But it wasn't too long after that that they amended their law to take away those protections, thus prompting our lawsuit.
So, we're really thrilled and excited by what we saw happen in New Mexico.
Probably one of the first, maybe the first times that we've seen a law like this get amended in a positive direction.
So, we're really hopeful that not only are we going to start stemming the tide of this wave of legislation across the country, but that we might even be able to start turning that tide as people learn more about what's actually at stake with these laws.
Doesn't this also kind of bleed over into the push now to
all doctors, no matter what their religious belief, they've got to participate in some way or another in abortions?
Absolutely.
I think it's a part of this broader push to really weaponize the medical profession to advance a
radical political agenda, whether that's with end-of-life issues as we're discussing today, whether that's at the beginning of life with forced participation in abortion, whether that's with sex change surgeries and all of the procedures that go along with that that doctors are being now told that they have to participate in as the price of practicing medicine.
And what Dr.
Barrows and the other doctors that we represent are standing up and saying is that the medical profession is supposed to be about helping and healing people.
It's not supposed to be about hurting and killing people as this radical agenda proposes.
And again, we're just thrilled that we're already starting to see victories on the ground like we saw in New Mexico.
And we're very optimistic that as more people learn that
these laws are going to drive good, excellent doctors like Dr.
Barrows out of the medical profession, that people are going to stand up and say, you know, we're not going to allow that to happen here in America.
So, Dr.
Barrows, let me ask you: I'm so concerned about what's happening in Canada because they're just ahead of us, and they're already having physicians assist suicide for depressed teenagers.
It's crazy what's going on up there.
But it's not just the law
that is doing it.
There is this push in medicine, especially at the
school level.
Our universities that are teaching our next doctors are discriminating on, you know,
gender care.
If you disagree with any of this woke stuff, you're going to have a harder time getting in.
So we're spoiling the next group of doctors that are going to replace you.
Is there any battle, real significant battle and pushback to this stuff in education?
Well, Glenn,
you're again hitting a very important point.
Not only has Canada crossed into the provision of assisted suicide to younger people, but they've also crossed the threshold into euthanasia, which is what we want to avoid here in the United States at all costs.
But especially in regards to what you were talking about with Chris and training in OBGYN or for medical students, it's one thing for a practicing physician who has established themselves and they've got a practice to be able to refuse to engage in either assisted suicide or an abortion.
It's quite another when you are a senior medical student or a first-year resident in obstetrics and gynecology, where you're being put in a position where you're told you have to assist in an abortion.
And what student has the ability to understand, my whole education could be threatened if I refuse?
And this is what we're seeing happening more and more across the country in all kinds of medical education scenarios.
And frankly, we're quite worried for our students and residents and trying to look for ways to be able to protect them.
Yeah.
Anything we can do to help you, let us know.
Dr.
Barrows, thank you for everything you've done and thanks for helping stand up.
Congratulations, and thanks to Dr.
Lacey as well.
And if you would like to help in this fight, adflegal.org, they could always use donations, adflegal.org.
Find the thing that you're passionate about and go in deep.
Help them stand against this real evil that is going to last a generation already.
If we don't stop it,
it's just dark stuff ahead.
Sorry, ADF leak.
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