Woke Olympic Insanity | Guests: Sen. Mike Lee & Ronald Pestritto | 8/2/21

2h 4m
Australia sent out the military to enforce lockdowns and mask mandates. Pat Gray joins to discuss Glenn’s art show and woke Olympians like Raven “The Hulk” Saunders. Rapper Da Baby is being canceled over “homophobic” comments, but Glenn and Stu review all that didn’t get him canceled. Stay-at-home mom Nicole Solas joins to discuss how her school board threatened to sue her for asking too many questions about critical race theory. Hillsdale College professor Ronald Pestritto joins to share his new book, “America Transformed,” and compare Biden’s progressive policies to Woodrow Wilson’s dream. Utah Sen. Mike Lee calls in to discuss the newest trillion-dollar spending bill in the Senate.
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Transcript

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 a 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.

It's Monday morning, back in the saddle.

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What you are about to hear is the fusion of entertainment and enlightenment.

This

is

the Glenback program.

Hello, America.

Are you wearing your mask?

Because I definitely am.

Aren't you, Stu?

If I was a very

bad citizen, I would wear a mask.

I'm wearing two masks.

Right, of course we are.

I mean, it's a good.

I wish we were on TV right now and not radio because you and make no comment: what you're seeing on Blaze TV is not real, it's a static picture.

Anyway,

we're wearing our masks because boy, oh boy, it's the responsible thing to do.

And if you don't do it, well,

hopefully, you don't live in New York.

We'll explain next.

The Glenn Beck program.

So if you find Hollywood just a little irritating,

because

you watch any of these TV shows or anything else, you're like, okay, all right.

Can't really watch that.

Nope.

Can't watch that one.

Why?

Because of language.

We've been watching Ted Lasso, and I don't want that language.

You know, when we're watching as a family, you're like, okay, okay, okay, okay.

And it's really a great show, really a great show.

If you have VidAngel, all you have to do is just

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Hello, Steve.

That's your real name.

Glenn, how are you?

I'm pretty good.

Good?

I'm pretty good.

Had a good weekend.

Oh, cool.

Well, so what's the news is out of control, buddy.

And we've got to dive into this.

I can't believe this.

This country is falling apart.

There's really urgent things to talk about today, and we've got to make sure we, we don't, I wish we had

a minute to screw around today, but really, it's too much.

It's too much.

You don't want to hear about this weekend.

I mean,

maybe when we're off the air, we're broadcasting out of millions of people.

I think we should probably just go.

I want to make sure I'm clear on that because it was a good, good weekend, and you said it wouldn't be.

Anyway, I don't know if you've noticed this, but

the military now has been deployed to enforce the lockdown in Australia.

It's a prison country again.

I can't imagine the military being dispatched on our shores to make sure that you remain inside.

Well, I was going to say, I don't think Americans would put up with it.

But yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, we would.

Yeah, we would.

Yeah, we would put up with it.

I mean, why not?

Why not?

What else could they do to us?

You know, here's the thing.

We have taught the the United States government and those weasels in Washington an awful lot.

We have taught them that you can spy on us.

You can collude with big tech.

You can break all of the warrant laws.

You can lock us up in our homes.

You can destroy our businesses.

You can tell us exactly what to do and what not to do, where to eat, where not to eat, when to eat, when we can open up, what we have to wear, what we have to put into our bodies.

They can tell us anything, and we'll take it.

We'll take it.

We'll just keep taking it.

I think they have learned a lot.

They have learned a lot.

They have learned a lot.

And hopefully there are going to be a few states that will stand up now and say, yeah, that was a mistake to teach you that.

That was a big mistake to teach you that.

Definitely does seem like that's true.

Australia is doing such a strange thing, too.

Look, if you're a continent that is an island,

you can theoretically lock down and really limit the virus spread, I guess.

So I was just there.

Sydney, the biggest Sydney, the biggest

city in Australia, is about the size of Pittsburgh.

And then

it's a different world.

Hours away of nothing to the next city.

Yeah, it's a different world, right?

Different, totally different.

And like, look, everybody in this audience thinks the lockdowns were a bad idea, almost everybody.

So I don't need to sell you on that idea.

But if you're looking at it in the most,

the most generous way possible, lockdowns should be viewed as basically a panic room, right?

Like if someone breaks into your home, you go into the panic room.

It's not a long-term choice.

It's not designed to be a long-term choice.

In the first few weeks, when we don't have any tests, we don't have any treatments, we don't know what the heck this virus is, you could at least make the argument, okay, maybe there's some reason for some of that correct.

But like, it's not supposed to be a long-term strategy.

What Australia has done is basically made it into a long-term strategy, but at the same time, not gone after vaccinations.

So they're like 12% vaccinated.

And so at some point,

they're going to have the same

sort of rise in cases that everyone else has faced.

They've just delayed it and destroyed their economy at the same time.

Well, the good thing is China will be there to help bail them out.

Oh, sure.

I'm sure they will be there.

By the way, New York is, of course, collapsing, and Cuomo knows it.

Can we have a little Cuomo music, please?

Hey,

let me tell you something here.

We got to get people back.

You know, we got to get people back in volume in the places like New York City, you know?

So, you know, if you were to see a 15% decline in people coming back to New York City, that'd be a devastating impact on the commercial market.

We need them coming back.

So say to your workforce, by Labor Day, everybody's back in the office.

Now, here's the problem.

He's saying, hey, everybody, come back.

It's so great.

Here is Bill DeBlasio.

this weekend talking about, oh, how dangerous things are because people people are going outside without masks and without being vaccinated.

Do you have the power to mandate vaccination in all restaurants, like a liquor license?

Like a restaurant can't sell liquor if they don't have a liquor license.

Could you do that, or the city council?

The health department, which in especially an emergency situation like this has very real powers,

can

put out a variety of rules.

Just as you said earlier, there was issues with smoking in the past.

Any kind of public health issue can be addressed.

And we're looking at all those options.

But listen, it comes down to something very human.

We want people to understand this is what saves our lives.

This is what saves the lives of their loved ones.

But we've tried incentives for months and months.

We've tried being communicative and open and compassionate, and all that was good.

But we need something also tough at this point.

Incentives, yes, $100 per person, great deal.

But we need mandates.

So, Bill De Blasio, you come to me today, the day of my daughter's wedding, in Labor Day, and you say, you want me to do you a favor?

He'll do it.

He'll do it.

He'll absolutely do it.

And they have no idea why people are moving out of...

I mean, did you see Goldman Sachs is

please don't do this, Goldman Sachs.

We don't want you here.

Goldman Sachs is now moving their headquarters or splitting their headquarters and moving to Dallas.

Goldman Sachs.

Wow.

Okay.

You lose Goldman Sachs and all of these places.

The brokers are like, you know, why don't we go down to Florida, you know?

Oh, okay.

The amount of people that are leaving these states like California, like New York, is incredible.

I mean, it is incredible.

I can't,

I mean, you can't function in these states.

You try to do business up there.

It was already a bad place to do business.

It was already a bad place to do business in California.

But when you lock down all of the employees and make their lives miserable every single day and continually threaten those businesses from even existing, I mean, people just run, they're literally fleeing.

Wouldn't you?

I would, yeah.

But business, small business, the most small business closures in the country is in New York City.

31%

went out of business.

Now, that is the backbone of an economy.

When you lose your small businesses, you lose everything.

And I know everybody's like,

let's help out GE.

You don't need to help out GE.

Just let the small businesses come back to work.

But now we, of course, have to wear masks.

And, you know,

they say that it's not confusing at all, you know, the mask thing.

I mean, they've been very, very, very clear about it.

Could we please play cut nine?

People should not be walking around with masks.

Let me just state for the record that masks are not theater.

Wearing a mask might make people feel a little bit better.

Masks are protective.

But it's not providing the perfect protection that people think that it is.

There has not been any indication that putting a mask on and wearing a mask for a considerable period of time has any deleterious effects, there are unintended consequences.

People keep fiddling with the mask and they keep touching their face.

And can you get some schmutz sort of staying inside there?

Of course.

You do not need to wear a mask indoors if, in fact, you've been vaccinated.

Good that you're vaccinated, but in a situation where you have people indoors, particularly crowded, you should wear a mask.

So even if you are vaccinated, you should wear a mask.

And if, in fact, you are vaccinated, fully vaccinated, you are protected, and you do not need to wear a mask outdoors or indoors when the children go out into the community you want them to continue to wear masks you know if you look at children outside particularly when they're with the family uh walking down the street playing a game or what have you don't have to wear a mask the the the the pediatric the academy of pediatric actually makes that recommendation that children should be wearing masks uh from two years old onward.

And you're asking now if your child is a member of your household, can you walk outdoors outdoors with your child without a mask?

According to that chart, the answer is yes.

But the child can't, not to beat it to death.

Yes, yes.

Because now the CDC says, I mean, I think I've got this right.

One mask is better than zero masks.

Two masks is better than one mask.

But you don't have to have double masks.

Is that right?

I mean.

You know, it became clear that cloth coverings that you didn't have to buy in a store, that you could make yourself, were adequate.

And then you want it to fit better.

So one of the ways you could do it, if you would like to, is put a cloth mask over, which actually

here and here and here, where you could get leakage in, is much better contained.

Are you a double masker, Dr.

Fauci?

It looks like you are.

Okay, so I think that's all very, very clear on exactly what we need to do and the science of masks.

It's all the science.

Yeah, exactly right.

Eddie lives in Seattle.

Wow.

Eddie.

Can we raise money for you?

Seriously.

Eddie lives in Seattle.

He writes in about his experience with Relief Factor.

He says, about a year ago, I was bent over like an old man.

I could barely stand up straight.

I had heavy, heavy back pain.

I dreaded even going to the mailbox.

Well, this went on for months and months.

And then I started taking Relief Factor.

Within a week, my back pain was completely gone.

No more pain.

Relief Factor worked for me.

Thank you so much for telling me about it.

I have to tell you, Eddie, that is, that's miraculous.

I'm glad it has worked for you.

It doesn't work for everybody, and it doesn't always work like that,

but Eddie, you're welcome.

You're welcome.

The same results

you might be able to find.

70% of the people who take Relief Factor go on to order more.

And they say, and I'm telling you now, if you don't find relief in the first 30 days, stop taking it.

You won't.

That's why they give you a three-week trial period.

At the end of three weeks, you'll know.

70% of the people who order it go on past the three weeks.

They order more month after month.

Relief Factor, it's not a drug, but developed by doctors.

If you want your life back, please just give it a try.

ReliefFactor.com.

ReliefFactor.com or call 800-500-8384.

It's Relief Factor 800-500-8384.

10 seconds, station ID.

Things are getting so bad in Australia, but it is good that we have people here in the United States that understand freedom of speech and understand how important it is to have diverse

voices.

Unfortunately, no one at YouTube or Google seems to be a part of that group.

YouTube said yesterday it was barring Sky News Australia.

That's like banning Fox News here.

They are no longer letting Sky News post anything because of COVID-19 misinformation.

It comes after a review of posts uploaded by the Rupert Murdoch-owned TV channel

says we have clear and established COVID-19 medical misinformation policies to prevent the spread of COVID-19 misinformation that could cause real-world harm.

That's according to YouTube.

With 1.86 million YouTube subscribers, the channel, which is owned by News Corp, has a conservative following well beyond Australia.

Its posts, including some questioning whether there is a pandemic and the efficacy of the the vaccines are widely shared on social media forums around the world that spread the virus and vaccine misinformation.

So now

they have been banned because they uploaded three days ago a host claiming that lockdowns have failed and are criticizing state authorities for extending their current stay-at-home orders.

They banned them, and Google

allowed it to happen.

Are you seeing what's happening in Cuba?

When

the tech giants pick a side

and they pick the side of the government, you will be able to oppress and silence those who disagree.

This is outrageous that this is happening with Google.

That's their policy.

That's fine.

But

Google is editing and silencing dissenting voices when, I'm sorry, the science isn't clear.

We didn't know anything a year and a half ago.

And so it was important to hear disparate voices.

But with this variant, we also don't know.

And

they're silencing voices on this.

Stu, have you heard the argument

about that the variant is possibly enhanced by the vaccines?

Yeah.

Yes, I've heard that argument.

And you don't buy it?

No,

I don't think that has anything to do with it.

Let me just, if you haven't heard this, this is Cut 15, Dr.

Robert Malone.

Listen to what he said.

What NBC News dropped yesterday was the statement sourced from an unnamed government official that the titers in the vaccinated are actually higher than in the unvaccinated.

What does this mean?

And why do you suddenly see this kind of frantic scramble?

This is precisely what one would see if antibody-dependent enhancement was happening.

What is antibody-dependent enhancement?

Briefly, it's that the vaccine causes the virus to become more infectious than

would happen in the absence of vaccination, would cause the virus to replicate at higher levels than in the absence of infection.

This is the vaccinologist works nightmare.

It has so why don't you buy that?

What has your research said about that?

I mean, I just don't think it's look, you know, Dr.

Malone has been on the program.

We like him.

He's a nice guy.

But I haven't seen this as we just saw this outbreak in the UK, for example,

where

it doesn't seem to have happened.

It doesn't seem to be happening here.

I mean, people are having far less.

He's talking about the people who would get the virus are having more virus to potentially spread to others.

However, they're getting it at one-tenth the rate.

So, I mean, even if you do get a, and again, this is just based on one study.

If you look at, I think, the entire experience of the UK going through the battle with the Delta variant just weeks ago, where we saw a massive drop-off in the rate of death, about 93%.

It's not to say that what he's saying has no, I mean, I'm not a virologist by any means.

I mean, and I know that Dr.

Malone, as he would say, is not agreeing with

lots of other virologists on this, right?

He, you know, as he's kind of taken that position of saying, hey, like, this is what I believe, and I think it's different than what everyone else believes.

This is why he's been an interesting figure through this, right?

But

I don't think I look, we'll see.

You get to this point at some point with some of this stuff is, let's just watch it happen.

Like, people are just going to do what they're going to do, and it's going to spread how it's going to spread.

And at the end of this, we can all come by, at the end, we can all kind of find our own little answer as to why it ended.

And that's kind of where this is going to come.

So, of the Delta variant in Massachusetts, in a study of Massachusetts, the people who got sick, 74% of the people infected with COVID were fully vaccinated with the variant.

Overwhelming amount of people are in the vaccinated group.

They're not equal groups.

So if you have 100 people, let's put it this way.

If you have 100 people, all of them are fully vaccinated.

What percentage of people are going to be in the hospital that are vaccinated?

100%.

They're all going to be vaccinated because all the people are vaccinated.

So the group of vaccinated people is much, much, much, much, much larger than in the group of unvaccinated people.

So that's going to be the rate, however, the rate, your chance of going to the hospital is much, much higher if you are unvaccinated.

Yeah, it's lower if you are vaccinated.

If you are vaccinated, correct, yeah.

Much lower.

All right.

Back in just a second.

This is the Glenbach program.

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This is the Glenn Beck program, and Mr.

Pat Bray joins us from Pat Gray Unleashed.

Yeah, so how'd the weekend in Park City go?

With the art show?

With the art show?

It was pretty good.

Yeah, I mean, honestly,

just for the audience, we really do need to get to the news of the day today.

There's a lot going on, Pat.

I mean, I was listening to your show today.

What a great show, Pat Gray Unleashed.

It's available on Blaze TV.

What if that were

lights?

Where do people download that?

Pretty much anywhere.

Anywhere.

Anywhere.

It's really interesting.

What I was wondering was how many paintings.

Friday, he said people would come in and spit on the painting.

really did?

I don't think I said that.

I noticed he did.

That was inaccurate.

Inaccurate.

Nobody spoke

on any painting?

No.

And he said, like, no one would show up.

I may have said people should spit on the paintings.

I don't know that I said that they would.

And it was all he could talk about last year.

That's all he could talk about.

Now, strangely, he doesn't want to hear it.

I'm sorry if the news is more important than your little art show from the weekend, Glenn.

I'm sorry.

You know, our country right now

is on the edge.

Yeah.

And you want to talk about your paintings?

Right.

Well, yeah, I don't know.

I mean, is it a big deal to talk about it for just real quick?

He's wasting much more time.

Inflation,

terrorism,

pandemic.

Let's spend some time on you drawing

your heightened level of

wide coloring book.

Yeah.

All of my proceeds going to Mercury One.

Wait, for what?

I don't.

For what?

Like, what are they, what are, is there any important issue that maybe we should talk about?

Like, I don't know, the slate with global sex slavery,

maybe the murdering of Christians around the globe.

But maybe we can spend some time on that instead of your stupid paintings.

Anyway, anyway, I don't have the final number, but it's about $250,000 raised this weekend.

Really?

Just Saturday.

That's fantastic.

Yeah, it was

a wild success.

I think we have a generous audience

to put that sort of money into this cause at the expense of also taking home your painting.

I mean, what an incredible honor.

It was very, it was, and it was wonderful.

It was packed all day.

Saturday?

Yes, Saturday.

And was taking

people about 30 to 50 at a time through the gallery

and

telling the stories behind each of the paintings.

And it was just great.

So many people came from, drove a long way,

and didn't even buy anything, which I was totally fine with.

And it was, it was great.

And we should, I've had a lot of questions

from the people who have purchased your paintings.

And the answer is yes.

You just have to put it up when Glenn comes over.

You don't have to have it up all the time, right?

Just put it up.

If Glenn's coming over your house, put up the painting.

Be kind.

All right.

So, Pat,

did you watch the Olympics at all?

I have watched about two minutes of coverage.

Really?

Maybe.

Yeah.

Yeah.

I haven't watched

a darn second of it.

I do know that the women's soccer team lost

to Canada.

Gosh, gosh.

It's torn apart by that.

Torn apart.

They seem like such a lovely team.

Don't they?

Don't they, though?

They do.

So patriotic and wonderful and loving and dedicated

to their sport.

They do.

Wonderful.

I hope they got equal pay for that loss.

I actually, I would have liked them to have won.

They would not have.

They're from the U.S.

Oh, I really, I'm past that.

Are you really?

Yeah, I'm past that.

I have always been past it with soccer because soccer, I want them to lose.

Because the more U.S.

soccer teams win, the more I have to watch highlights on ESPN or wherever I'm watching sports.

They treat it like it's a real sport.

Well, then you should be against Ted Lasso.

Ted Lasso's doing that, isn't he?

Yeah, yeah.

He's normalizing soccer.

Normalizing soccer.

Normalizing soccer.

You're right.

I need a new stance in my life.

Anti-Ted Lasso seems like the right thing.

It does.

Don't normalize soccer.

Don't do it.

Did you see the what was her name?

Oh, you mean the beautiful trans woman?

The Victoria Secret woman?

Yeah, she's so beautiful.

She's lovely.

She's lovely.

She's a Victoria.

Wait a minute.

Hold it.

Are we talking about the same woman?

Well, she's not.

She's the shot putter.

The shot putter.

Oh, the shot putter.

No, that's not the trans person.

Oh, okay.

The weightlifter is the trans person.

Okay.

Stunning development.

No, she crashed out.

Oh, darn it.

Stunning development, though, that a trans weightlifter would excel

enough to get to the Olympics.

It seems like such a

sports, it seems like a single one.

It was expected to medal.

And so happy.

Who would go figure though?

So happy.

A person who used to be a man might have a leg up in that competition.

And again, no reason to change my stance of I'm glad to see the U.S.

lose.

Because when they win, that's when you see

people like Raven Saunders.

She was sporting a neon green and purple buzz cut, and she made an X sign with her wrists, with her wrists up at the podium.

She just crossed her arms and made a...

And she said, later, because everybody said, what the hell does that even mean?

And she said, I'm glad you asked.

It's the intersection of where all people who are oppressed meet.

That is right at her wrists.

Right at her.

Right at weird.

Stand on her wrist.

That seems like too many people for one set of wrists.

And then, and then after she decided to twerk.

And it was sexy.

That's

what I can imagine.

I wanted to meet on her wrists after that.

I did.

I was like, I think I was oppressed by that.

I don't know how to go on.

She said,

I just wanted to be me, not to apologize, to show younger people that no matter how many boxes they try to fit you in, you can be all you can and you can accept it.

People tried to tell me not to do tattoos and piercings and all that, but look at me now.

Look at her now.

I'm poppin'.

I'm poppin'.

She said she, you know, she's been, she's had a lot of things weighing on her for 22 years and she was finally able to process it.

And she was finally able to separate Raven from the Hulk, which was really

good.

That's so raven.

That is so raven.

Exactly the type of behavior you'd expect from raven.

She's a delight.

She's a delight.

You know, I have to tell you, Simone Biles, and, you know, I'm not going to tear her apart because she's gone through a lot, et cetera, et cetera.

But, you know, as I was doing these tours about the painting, one of the paintings that I did was Jesse Owens.

And I painted him so

his eyes would follow you in the room.

And I have him at the starting line at the 1936 Berlin Olympics.

And don't talk to me about, you know, oh, I've got so many things I'm oppressed.

He was oppressed.

He was oppressed.

He was living in America at a time where he had to use a separate water fountain if he wanted to drink.

So half of the population in the United States loved him.

The other half didn't love him.

When Hitler

invited him and the U.S.

to come over for the Berlin Olympics, half of the black community said, you can't do it.

You can't go because you can't support the Hitler government and you can't support the United States government.

The other half said, you have to go.

You have to go because you have to show the black man is

human over in Germany because he says you're subhuman.

So you have to go.

FDR didn't want to meet with Jesse Owens didn't want to support Jesse Owens Hitler he's in the stadium with Hitler staring at him you want to talk about pressure shut up talk to Jesse Owens and what did he do he won the gold and then he stood there proudly as the national anthem played and he came back that's why he's a hero he twerked afterward though he did of course he twerked

there was twerk wouldn't have been any good if he had yeah yeah of course there was ceremony let me tell you let me tell you the same the same story with jesse owens do you know why he won the gold because he was faster fast as time yeah

he crossed the finish line before the others yeah

yeah so that's what happens when you turn your mics off and turn your headphones on you're not allowed to listen anymore let me just share this with you okay um here's the reason why i won in the long jump uh is because the guy who he was competing against

noticed that Jesse Owens was jumping too soon.

And he kind of sneaks over to Jesse's side and he's standing there and he says, hey,

listen,

you're jumping too soon.

And Jesse said,

what are you talking about?

He's like, don't look at me.

Hitler's looking at me.

Don't look at me.

You're jumping too soon.

So

I'm going to saunter over to the pit and

I'm just going to drop my towel where you should jump.

And so he does.

And this is a German competitor, I believe.

Wasn't it?

Oh, yeah.

Oh, yeah.

And he puts his towel down right where Jesse Owens should jump.

Jesse Owens jumps and wins the gold.

It didn't take long for that guy to be sent to the Russian front.

That guy was sent to the Russian front because he lost to Jesse Owens and he helped Jesse Owens.

Jesse Owens and he became friends.

He was sent to the Russian front and the last thing he said to Jesse Owens was, please, one thing I ask, please tell my children when this madness is all over, I was not one of them.

So don't tell me about your oppression,

Hulk Raven.

Don't tell me about your oppression.

Well, there was a tantu thing they had to deal with.

Well, yeah, and she was told

not to pierce, you know, and I'm sure that there's a lot of people who are oppressed that were really sad to hear that that kind of oppression was going on on her.

People don't look at this anymore, but the Nazis were very anti-piercing.

Very.

That was one of the things that people don't even discuss.

It wasn't that horrid.

It was that horrid?

Yeah, he rose to power based on the non-white piercing views.

Yeah, he did.

Gosh.

Oh, we're such crybabies.

Thank you, Pat.

Pat Gray unleashed wherever you get your podcasts.

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The Glenn Beck program.

Stu, you know,

I had a busy weekend, but I did,

I did see Joe Biden in a meeting.

Somebody handed him a note that says, sir, there's something on your chin.

Could we play this video?

I'm going to make a brief statement here, and then we'll get to ask the vice president to say a few words, get some questions, and we'll get down to business.

If that's okay, we can.

Okay, now he's about to be handed out.

You know, one month ago, we convened the first of what will be a regular presidential briefing on wildfire preparedness.

And expand your capacity is through the partnership that we have

with the state government.

It says on it, sir, there is something on your chin.

This issue is ongoing

each year as we have decided to

worse.

No.

It affects real people.

No, no.

It's harder than normal.

We've had two and a half times more acreage burned in the last decade than the previous.

Here's

the obvious concerns and everything you need to fight a fire, we could use your help on.

And I think you've been totally on top of this.

Yeah, because I was going to ask, how did you know it was on the note?

But he, of course, holds it up backward to the camera so you can read it.

Yeah.

Sir, there's something on your chin.

And then he eats it.

He doesn't just take it off, then he looks at it and he's like, ooh, yummy, and eats it.

That was really a repulsive moment.

I mean,

I gotta say, that was legit.

That is really just gross.

Do you remember in Fahrenheit 9-11, I guess, the Michael Moore.

I didn't see it, thank goodness.

Really?

I thought we talked about it at the time.

I thought we did.

I maybe have blocked it.

I think you may have blocked it because we did, I think, go to see it so we could talk about it on the air.

But there's one moment where I think it's Paul Wolfowitz.

And they were, you know, of course trying to make all the Bush people to be these terrible people.

And I, if I remember right, he did something like he combed his hair and then like, I think he licked, he licked his hand or something and like put it through the, his hair and then licked his hand again.

It was like one of these like set up before an interview.

And it was like a really kind of gross moment.

Like he was trying to make his hair look good.

And they

I think all of our mothers have done that though.

I mean, look, it's people do gross things.

I mean, you know, look.

Yeah, but you don't take something off your face, look at it, and then eat it.

I don't, I mean, I've done a lot of gross things.

Don't think I've ever done that one.

No.

I don't think so.

I can't think of it.

I mean, I have tried to, you know, I've dropped spaghetti on my shirt and then tried to suck the sauce out of the

same category.

Right.

But, like, if you had something on like the corner.

If you had something on like the corner of your mouth.

Yeah.

Right.

And you kind of, you maybe feel it.

You could, you could go a couple different directions.

You could kind of brush it off or you could kind of brush it in.

Brush it in.

Like if it was an M ⁇ M crumb.

I'd brush it off.

If it's an M ⁇ M crumb, you just had ice cream, M ⁇ M toppings, little chunk of M ⁇ M, corner of your mouth.

I think the timeline is different too.

Like, if it's 40 minutes later, you're brushing it off.

If it's two minutes later, you're just eating it.

Yeah, if you're still sitting there with the ice cream and somebody's like, Glenn, you got some ice cream.

Yeah, you're brushing it into your mouth.

You're brushing it into your mouth.

Now, this guy's done an entire briefing on fires across the country.

And he's walked to the, I mean, it does, he's not there quickly, I don't think.

He's in the middle of a conference and it and if you see the close-up of it it looks like either pudding or egg or something

so ugly so ugly that's another line solid versus liquid is a big line i think there like if you have a liquidy egg

you you can't be putting that in your mouth now if it's a no if it's a cracker crumb it's a it's better than an egg an egg yolk

are you i just try to

do you have a list of i do have the acceptable things and when it's acceptable to put it in your mouth?

I've got 25 minutes on Studos and Red Jobs tonight, and I want people to check it out.

It's sort of the continuum of risk when it comes to what food is on your mouth.

What comes in, what goes out?

I read the headline of this, and I was like, whatever.

And then I later saw the video, and I'm like, oh,

man.

That is.

It's one of these days where it's better to be listening to the radio.

I mean, I'm going to go ahead and get 25 minutes evoked after that.

Please, please.

And as I said, there's just too much important news stuff to talk about today.

We can't talk about your patients from this weekend.

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What you are about to hear is the fusion of entertainment and enlightenment.

This

is

the Glenback Program.

Oh, Oh, we've got a couple of hero stories for you.

The liberal Washington, D.C.

woman disguised herself as a MAGA supporter on Bumble

to catch a Capitol rioter.

Wow.

It's an electric story.

This has so much more coming up in 60 seconds.

You ready to cover Da news, Stu?

You ready?

You're going to be ready?

I'm ready for DA news.

Okay, coming up in just a second.

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Hello, Mr.

and Mrs.

America and ships across the sea.

It's time for Danuz.

This is, there's a lot going on, a lot going on.

And

we thought, you know, knowing our audience, they will want to know

Da News on Da Baby.

I'm very concerned about what's going on with Da Baby right now.

Now, let's pretend you don't know anything about Da Baby.

Da Baby?

Yeah.

Da Baby is one of the premier hip-hop artists out there.

I know.

Da Talk to me.

I know you know it.

Yeah.

Come talk to me.

Talk to the audience.

There are some.

This is going to be incredible to believe, but there are some in the audience who might not even know who Da Baby is.

Now, for those who don't, is Da a first name, Baby a last name?

That's correct, yes.

Okay, so it's not like Da Baby Erickson, where they're leaving off his middle name.

No, first name was Da.

Okay.

And then the second name name is Baby.

Okay.

And it's interesting when you go through his current situation, people,

it's hard to talk about Da Baby because of Da Baby being his name.

It sounds like you're saying

Mr.

Baby.

Mr.

Baby.

Or I call him Da.

Let's call him Da.

Okay.

I think I feel most comfortable calling him Da Baby.

Okay.

Because he, just in a formal sense, I think it's the right thing to do.

And what is the, I mean, you are a journalist.

I've done done some hardcore research on this.

Okay, all right.

So give me the headline that's coming out now, shockingly, about Da Baby.

So Da Baby apparently is getting canceled.

Canceled.

He is a victim of cancel culture.

So in other words, no more, his television or YouTube show or something is no longer.

Which television or YouTube show are we talking about?

No, Da Baby.

Oh, you mean canceled as in the cancel culture?

Yes.

Yeah.

Da Baby.

And now some would say the cancel culture doesn't exist, but Da Baby's a victim of it, Glenn.

Oh my gosh.

Da Baby had some commentary

on

some

people called his comments homophobic.

Oh boy.

Okay.

He

can you even say what he said?

I think I can say it.

Here we go.

This is a quote from Da Baby on stage.

He said, quote, if you didn't show up today with HIV, AIDS, or any of them deadly sexually transmitted diseases that will make you die in two to three weeks, then put your cell phone lighter up.

Now, the next part I can't say exactly.

Okay.

But

in fact, I will say I don't even understand.

You don't even understand.

You don't even know who he's looking for in this next statement.

But you can't.

He's looking for a particular kind of

lady

with a particular.

doubt that it is a lady.

Right.

I don't know.

And again, what do these terms even mean?

It all means how you identify.

And he says, fella, again,

I can't say he's associating

same-sex relations is what I try to do.

Please don't try to

interpret daw baby.

Let his words speak for himself.

Just don't say them.

Just don't say them.

That's a good point.

All right.

Because I'll do both of those things.

And I'll let it speak for itself without saying it.

But people interpreted this as homophobic, which it

does seem to be.

Okay.

So

Da Baby

is now getting all of his...

He was going to be at Lollapalooza, which apparently, Glenn, still exists.

What year is this?

It's 2021.

Da Baby at La La Lapalooza.

Now, Lalapalooza, I feel like, started when I was in high school.

Yeah, I think it did.

But it's still going on, apparently.

And now they have Da Baby there.

Okay.

Now, Da Baby, I find this to be very interesting because Mr.

Baby is getting canceled for these comments where he's been critical and flippant about the LGBTQIA 2 plus community.

Don't do it.

And you don't do that.

That gets you canceled.

Of course.

And I thought to myself, wait a minute, I kind of remember Da Baby having previous issues that to me, in my memory.

No, not Da Baby.

He's clean.

He's clean.

That's one of the things.

He's like an altar boy.

See, I thought maybe he had significant issues in his past that maybe would actually

warrant cancellation more than a bad sentence or two about the LGBTQ.

No, Daw Baby.

What did you find on Daw Baby in his past?

Look, a couple things.

2013.

How old were you then?

Well,

I was a good eight years younger than I am now, and so was he.

But

he was busted on pot and weapons.

Okay.

Come on, that's nothing.

Nothing.

Nothing.

So he's got an illegal gun.

His government doesn't even care about any of that stuff.

And we should point out that from 2013, when that first charge happened, he was absolutely clean until later in 2013 when he was again arrested for pot.

Okay.

Then, again, he was arrested for felony pot possession.

No, felony pot possession.

So he had more pot on him.

Okay.

Then, I mean, like from 2014 to 2016,

things went pretty well.

No, not all the way through 2016 because he was busted on firearms charges.

But then in 2018, he learned his lesson.

Right.

He learned his lesson.

He learned his lesson, and then he forgot the lesson.

In 2017, because in 2018,

he was charged with having a stolen firearm.

Okay.

Well, he couldn't buy one.

You know, the system worked there.

Right.

He couldn't.

Felony.

He couldn't buy one.

He buy one.

He had to steal it.

So he had to steal.

You bet.

You bet.

David.

He forced him to steal.

Thank you.

Thank you.

Now, in 2018, he did kill someone inside of a Walmart.

And some people would say, hey, when you kill someone inside a Walmart, maybe that's a cancelable sort of offense.

But

nobody saw it.

Nobody was there.

It happened

right when everyone was there shopping.

He did.

Yeah, but it was in an aisle, I'm sure, where nobody

could.

It was between some clothes racks, clothes racks, I believe.

So you don't know for sure that it was him.

And I will say this, in his defense on this one,

he was charged with that it was, he did have gun charges against him because he, again, shouldn't have had the gun.

But it's only the fourth time.

This is,

what's that?

Da Babebe is trying.

He is trying very hard.

And it was a ruled self-defense.

It looked like someone else was trying to kill him.

He killed them.

And that happens, generally speaking, in most Walmart trips.

People are, you're going to wind up killing someone occasionally in a Walmart.

This happens to people all the time.

all the time happened to me three times last week alone.

You know what it is?

Da Baby is black?

Yes, I believe he is.

Okay, so Da Baby is black, and that's why this happened.

Yes, he was shopping at Walmart while black, and he was, but the guy who was trying to kill him was a white supremacist, also happened to be black, but he was a white supremacist.

Sure, he notes that.

Sure, he was.

2019, he had another pot charge against him and resisting arrest.

That's only third time.

Now, this is where I kind of joined the Da Baby story,

Because I, you know, was, this is going to surprise the audience.

Was not on Da Baby and his

Da Baby musical train

early.

I was not on

all of his hits.

Well, here's the thing.

I do know one of his hits.

Okay.

And it was a song that, of course, he did with Ms.

Lipa.

Oh, I love Ms.

Lip.

Dua Lipa.

Dua, Dua.

Dua.

First name Dua, last name Lipa.

I love Dua Lipa.

Called Levitating, which was a gigantic song last year, I think.

Last year or earlier this year.

I don't know.

Last year.

I don't know.

Can you play it?

Can you play just a little of it?

Just play just a little bit.

Da Baby, I believe, speaks right at the beginning.

Yeah, it would be really, really good.

And he's very, very talented.

Yeah.

Would I recognize this song?

It was a huge, huge, huge huge

by Da Baby.

Da Baby.

Okay.

All right.

Let me know when you have it, Sarah.

Okay.

All right.

So then he had, and this is what I thought was interesting because I remember when this song came out thinking to myself, myself, didn't he have like some major legal issues recently?

Like, is he out there still making popular music after this occurred?

And because I remember he was at the Super Bowl.

This is the post,

or right before the pre-COVID Super Bowl.

Okay, that's enough.

Yeah, I remember that song.

Thank you.

You got it from just that?

I just got it from that.

Yeah, I rough that song.

You are a huge fan.

Yeah.

Thank you for just play it again, just a little bit of it.

He's right at the beginning.

Go ahead.

Yep, that's it.

I remember it.

It was so good.

It was so good.

Super, super classic.

I remember him.

My memory was, didn't he hit a lady

from on stage during a concert?

And Da Baby did, in fact, slap one of his fans, a female fan.

in the crowd during a concert on camera.

And I thought, well, that was performance.

Wouldn't that prevent you?

Wouldn't that be the cancelable thing?

No,

slapping a woman?

And to be fair,

he was responding because someone took a picture with a camera flash too close to his face.

Oh my gosh.

And like, if you're not going to belch a lady for that, I don't know what you do.

What's the.

She's lucky to be alive.

She would have done that to me.

Holy cow.

And by the way, he had a legitimate defense, which was he was actually aiming for a different woman, which I thought was a good

fault he hit that woman.

He was trying to hit another woman.

At least let him go right away.

Yeah.

I don't think he even got charged for that.

He just did it on camera.

Wow.

Now, I believe he was being sued for that.

And of course, he also, by the way, was charged in 2020 with robbery and punched a promoter.

So he made it through all of that.

Let's not skip by that real quick.

I heard what?

He punched one of his promoters and was charged with robbery.

But he wasn't killed.

But this is way back in 2020.

I should point this out.

Do you remember?

How old were you in 2020?

I don't even remember.

I don't even.

De Baby was

all distracted with this fake election thing.

You know what I mean?

That there was really even an election.

We were so distracted by that.

You always have to watch the other hand.

What is the baby doing?

Debaby always knows what's going on.

So DaBaby now, after all of those things, was able to create...

Do we have that song, this huge hit song that he

that one?

Yeah.

And then he made it through all of that, and everyone embraced him.

And they gave him this gigantic song.

He's a big role on one of the biggest songs of the year.

And then he went on and he said two sentences about the LGBTQQIA2 plus community, and now he's canceled.

Thank God.

So he literally slapped a woman on camera and killed someone in Walmart.

And it was like, ah, put him on the next record.

But, you know, here.

That the thing from the stage where he alluded to people with with diseases well as we talked about

as we talked about uh you know the green-haired u.s shot putter uh that uh won the silver

um you know she she wanted to let everybody know how oppressed she was uh so she got up after winning the silver uh she twerked of course

you're gonna twerk after silver

and then she stood up on the uh the stand uh as they were giving her the medal and the national anthem was praying and playing and she crossed her arms and to show intersectionality

and her support there because she was oppressed.

And I just want to quote her because I don't want to make these things up because

I don't even, I hope this isn't true.

But she said to me, not to apologize, to show younger people that no matter how many boxes they trolly true to fit you in, that you can be you and you can accept it.

I mean, people tried me, tried to tell me not to do tattoos and piercings, but look at me now.

They try to say same thing to Da Baby.

And I'm a poppin'.

And she is a poppin'.

She is a poppin'.

And that's the thing about the Olympics.

It's always been this way.

It's about you as an individual.

Definitely not about you.

Even though, I mean, you know, we used to see people, you know, from Kenya or the bob sledding team from Jamaica, you know, that didn't even have snow.

She had people say, don't don't get your ears pierced.

And how she can continue to go on

is remarkable.

So many people tell women not to pierce their ears in this country.

It's so common.

I'm sure it occurred.

I want to make sure I'm not questioning that story at all.

That definitely occurred.

I want to be clear.

Now, she also had mental illness.

She did.

Yeah.

She's completely clean of it now.

Oh, that's good.

But

she had some mental illness.

Glad she got past that.

Yeah, she's past it.

Is that So Raven?

Is that who that is?

That is So Raven.

So Raven.

So very Raven.

So very Raven.

So very consistent with the behavior.

She said that she now has contained the Hulk.

That's why her hair was only half green, green on one half of her shaved head and red on the other.

How does one have colored hair on a shaved head?

You'll have to see it for yourself.

It's beautiful.

It is beautiful.

And I will say, she's also wearing those beautiful earrings that people tried to stop her from going.

Brave.

So brave.

By the way, this is totally unrelated.

Ratings for the Olympics are way down.

Shut up.

Yeah.

No, they probably haven't gotten all of them yet.

No, they've everyone they have are down.

Really?

Yeah.

Yeah.

People not that interested in the Olympics this year.

That's really weird.

It's almost as if it's yet

another institution that has just so defiled itself

that we all look at it like they're just a bunch of whores and we don't need to see that.

You feel that way?

You know, like the NFL, they've just whored themselves out, you know, to make money in China or whatever it is.

And so

they just tell us things that you know

most of the people in the office just don't believe.

It's basically impossible to watch the National Basketball Association at this point.

It is a,

if you want to watch the DNC with occasional dribbling, then you watch the NBA because it's basically just an arm of the Democratic Party operating as a

selection of sports franchises.

Well, I will tell you this, and I've taken a hard stand on this.

I will not rest until DeBaby can play in the NBA with Pierce Tears.

And I mean it.

I will not rest until that's happening.

That

does need to happen.

Rough Greens.

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Rough greens, 10 seconds, station ID.

Welcome to the Glen Back program.

I wanted to share again a story because people are asking, What can we do?

What can we do?

What can we do about all the things that are going on?

Not about the baby, shockingly, but about all the things that are going on.

First of all, you have to encourage your state and your local legislatures and your local

mayor and city council to stay in touch with the people and do what the people are saying.

Duh people?

Duh people.

Duh people.

Our local communities have been taken over.

And I talked about this in Agenda 21 and of course called a conspiracy theorist for saying that the government wanted to take

even more land than they already had.

Of course, that was crazy, even though that is what now the Biden administration is doing.

And our own communities, if you see anything about sustainable development on your community's website, you see

the Agenda 2030 plan, they already are part of the problem.

And you need to be aware of that.

But there's another thing that you can do, and that is let your voice be heard.

And let your voice be heard by

these companies that are selling out.

What happened with Ben and Jerry's, if it spreads elsewhere,

it will be very, very effective.

The franchisees now are saying, we can't take your

anti-Israel stance that's killing our business as a franchisee.

Keep the pressure up.

And gee, aren't they independent bottlers of Coca-Cola as well?

Yeah, I think they are.

This is the Glenback program.

Maybe you should look for those guys in your local neighborhoods.

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This is the Glenn Beck program.

Nicole Solas is a a stay-at-home mom in South Kingstown, Rhode Island.

She enrolled her five-year-old daughter in kindergarten in the South Kingstown School District and then said, you know, I want some information because she had heard that the teachers were starting to teach critical race theory.

And so she said,

I need some information from the school.

Now, she is.

It's perfectly legal for her to request.

In fact, they have it on their own website.

If you want information, blah, blah, blah, you can do it.

Well, she requested the information.

Then she figured I should probably pull my daughter out of school after

they threatened to sue her because of her public record request about critical race theory and gender theory, which the district told her to submit.

She's now being represented by the Goldwater Institute, and she is on the phone with us now.

Hi, Nicole.

How are you?

Hi, Glenn.

I'm good.

Thanks so much for having me.

So not only did they threaten to sue you, they told you you had to pay $74,000 to find out if the school district is teaching CRT.

Right.

And this isn't the first time that they have given me these very high estimates to get public information, which frankly, we already pay for with our taxes.

First, they had given me a $9,000 fee to get information when I first started submitting my public records request.

Other information was $2,000, $3,000.

The Goldwater Institute resubmitted a public records request on my behalf with much more specific terms that were more likely to turn up information, and that was now $74,000,

which is insane because this is public information and it shouldn't be a government secret.

It's information that really the public has a right to access, and a public records request is just the way to get that information.

In my town, 80% of the budget goes to the school, and it costs $27,000 per student to educate.

Wow.

And now I have to pay $74,000 to know how they're being educated.

It just seems like this is not the way it's supposed to work.

So you asked for lesson plans and course materials used or assigned at any school within South Kingston School Department in the 2021 school year that include any of the following terms, 1619 project, Zinn Education Project, or Howard Zinn, equitable math, gender theory, white privilege or whiteness, systematic racism, CRT or critical race theory, Ibram Kendi or Kendi, Robin DiAngelo or just D'Angelo.

They said that

they could do that, but it would take them eight hours to retrieve.

Yeah, I think it was a lot more hours.

I think it was like 693 hours or something like that.

And that's, you know, they have, under the statute, they can charge $15 an hour to compile and retrieve all this information, but it still has to be a reasonable fee.

And when you're asking for lesson materials and instructional materials, that shouldn't have to be requested under the APRA, the Access to Public Records Act.

These are not just public documents.

These are lesson materials.

They, at any point, can just email this to me of their own volition.

They can just respond to my questions that I asked in an email without having to charge me money because this is really just a conversation about what our kids are learning.

So they're the ones that constrain me to this public record request process.

And I believe they're doing that to evade my questions and not answer them.

Now, what did you hear?

The teachers were incorporating all this stuff in?

Well, the principal from the elementary school where my daughter would go, I've since pulled her out and placed her in private school, said that they integrate values of gender identity in every grade.

And she said that they have a certain line of thinking about history that they teach children in every grade.

And she told me this after I said, do you teach anything with anti-racism?

And as we all know, anti-racism really just means racism or critical race theory.

It's all the same thing.

So the principal told me that they do, in fact, teach these values.

And when I asked, well, how exactly do you do it in every grade?

They said that they have these common practices that they use.

And when I asked, well, you know, when did this common practice start?

It was all non-answers, either I don't know, or let me get back to you.

And then finally, it was submit a public records request.

So I know they're absolutely doing it.

And I have tons of evidence that I've uncovered through these public records requests and with my own research showing that the school district believes that all white people are racist.

I just found a document saying that, and that part of their goal is to have implicit bias trainings with students and teachers.

And they're 100% committed to this, but they're not telling me exactly how.

And so I want them to be completely transparent so that people can decide if they want to enroll their kids in this district or opt out of certain lesson plans.

And we can finally engage in a robust public debate about the values of, you know, critical race theory or anti-racism or whatever you want to call it.

I tell you, you can file for a Freedom of Information Act, and you don't have to pay for it.

I mean, it's, again, on our time, on our dime.

And you ask for all records of communications, including email communication to or from any South Kingston School Department official, principal, teacher, teaching assistant, counselor, or any other person from January 1, 2020 to the date of this request, which includes any of the following terms, 1619 Project, Zinn Education, Howard Zinn, Equitable Match, Gender Theory, blah, blah, blah, all of these things.

That is public record.

I know that

here in Texas, when we finally did get the Freedom of Information Act from a school district called Southlake, it showed that they were mocking the parents and saying, we're just going to do it anyway.

And

one of them said, let's keep this information away from the parents.

And two of the people went to jail over it.

And nobody had to pay for that information because it came from a government source.

Yeah.

So this Freedom of Information Act is different from the Access to Public Records Act, which is a Rhode Island statute.

And that Rhode Island statute carves out this $15 an hour fee that a public entity can charge you for.

They can also charge you 15 cents per hard copy.

But you're right that this information should not have to cost taxpayers money.

They're already paying for the information just you know, by having the public entity do their job.

So

I think that that's going to be a point of contention that it's not reasonable to have a $74,000 fee.

And it's certainly not equitable for all of this talk that schools have about equity and everyone having equal access.

I don't know how you justify that kind of fee just to know what your kid is learning because that sounds like they're saying that only the extremely wealthy are privy to information about what their kids are learning.

So what did the Goldwater people say?

And what are you doing about this now?

Right now we're determining what our next step is.

We're still talking about that, and I'm sure we'll make a decision soon on whether we want to go to court or if we want to take some other legal action.

How is the community responding to you?

The people in the school?

Are they with you or against you, or is it split?

I only have overwhelming support.

I have parents and even teachers emailing me and thanking me for putting myself out there.

I also get lots of tips from parents about what is being taught in school here.

And it's sometimes hard to get verification.

So if they say, oh, my kid had to do something with Black Lives Matter in class, and I'm telling you, I'm hoping you can do something with it, but they're scared to actually tell me the name of the class, the name of the teacher, the actual assignment, because they don't want to be retaliated against in the way that I was retaliated against.

But, you know, you can't just go out there and say something is happening and have, you know, no proof.

So

people are still scared, but they are extremely supportive.

Well,

stay brave.

This will only get harder if people like you don't stand up now.

It's only going to get harder, and you most likely won't win in the future if we don't stand up now.

I wish you all the best of luck.

Is there anything that our audience can do to help you?

I just want to reiterate what you said, that more parents need to start standing up to their school boards and just to remember that school boards are made up of ordinary people.

They live next door to us.

They're our family members and our friends.

These people are not working behind the iron curtain of the Kremlin yet.

So we need to stand up to them now and let them know that we're not going to tolerate this indoctrination of kids in our school.

Were you ever, I mean, are you an activist?

Would you ever see yourself doing stuff like this?

No,

I've never been politically involved.

This only happened because I enrolled my daughter in school and then they publicly threatened to sue me.

So I had to respond publicly because they were trying to destroy my reputation publicly.

They are getting so bold.

So bold.

Yeah.

Thank you so much.

I appreciate it.

God bless.

Thank you so much.

You bet.

Thank you.

I have to tell you, you know, I said that they would take their masks off, which is strange because

they're being told to put their masks back on.

But I told you at a time that the Marxists would find it, because they were dying to tell you who they really really were.

They were dying to tell you how wrong you were, how evil you were.

And that has turned out.

They all have their masks off now.

And yet,

it seems as though

most of America doesn't really care.

I mean, did you see that the spending package passed the Senate?

This AM?

Yeah, we went over it on Friday,

the whole bill and all the crap that's in it.

You know, all sorts of just wasteful nonsense.

And remember, it's not like we have the money to have a bill like this.

Oh, I know.

This is just all made-up fake money that we're printing essentially to do this with the promise that if we leave something out of the bill, they're going to throw it in the next one that they're going to pass without Republican support.

Why Republicans are involved in this, I don't think I'll ever understand.

In the Senate, only one stood against it, and it was Mike Lee.

Well, he's not the only no vote.

There's a bipartisan infrastructure bill.

Yeah, yeah.

I mean, Rand Paul didn't vote for that.

I don't know.

Maybe he was on in committee.

That was the possibly.

That might have been what you're talking about.

Because it

we'll ask Mike.

Mike is coming up in just a few minutes, and I know that

he was standing there talking to an empty Senate.

Nobody sat around and listened to him, but you should hear him

because he makes really good points.

We're having the highest surge in inflation

in a very long time, very, very long time.

And this is only going to make this worse.

As the government is buying up all kinds of stuff to improve infrastructure, the prices to you are going to go up.

What does that mean?

Why are we doing that at this moment?

Seems like a bad time to spend another $5 trillion.

Is that what you're saying?

Yeah, it does.

It always is really bad to spend another $5 trillion, but maybe it's just me.

We'll find out what's in the bill and talk to Mike Lee coming up in just a minute.

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You are listening to the Glenn Beck program.

Can I talk about somebody really brave, Stu?

I mean, really brave.

Really, really brave.

So brave.

Of course.

So brave.

Betto O'Rourke.

Oh.

So brave.

So brave.

So brave.

What did he do this time?

Well, he went on a four-day walk, a four-day walk to

walk for rights that people already have.

And it was so brave.

Now, he walked 30 miles in those four days.

So it was a slow walk.

Very slow.

Very slow walk.

Because I could probably do 30 miles.

I'm guessing just kind of strolling,

you know, and maybe probably five hours.

Me, me, I could probably do that.

But it took him four days because he's that brave.

That's a brave walk.

Yeah, and he did it so people in Texas can do what they're already doing.

Vote.

That seems like a pointless reason to walk.

Seem, but brave.

Very brave.

To be that pointless, that takes a lot of guts.

A lot of guts.

What if he were to continue to walk until he actually crossed the border of Texas and left the state forever?

That would be even braver.

Because the bravery of the other Texas Democrats leaving has been really tough on me.

Yeah.

And I'm so glad they're brave and not hopefully coming back at all.

And maybe Betto could join them.

What if Betto went to Washington, D.C.

forever?

And didn't come back?

Well, he's tried.

He's tried.

He's tried to do that.

He's tried to do that.

And the people said, no.

No.

No, we don't want you there.

That's the problem with Betto.

You can't get him to leave because no one else wants him.

Right.

I don't think at this point New York would want him.

No.

Cuomo is begging for people to move back to New York.

You know, along with a threat that we're going to close your business down

any moment.

Any moment this thing could go sideways, but bring your businesses back.

And so that's quite the incentive.

But maybe,

maybe they can throw in a sprinkle on top, and Betto O'Rourke will be here.

I don't think that's going to work.

I have a sneaking suspicion that's not going to work.

By the way, New York is not doing all that well when it comes to the COVID situation right now.

Cases up 159%

in the last two weeks.

Can you not give me the percentage?

Can you give me the actual cases?

Probably if you give me one.

It's definitely not as bad as it was.

We should probably stop talking percentages because it went way down.

It did go way down.

Like, we're seeing, for example, if you look at Florida, there's a high percentage increase.

But I will say the hospitalizations is relatively worrisome.

I mean,

it's almost as high as the peak of hospitalizations.

But again, which didn't overwhelm the system.

No.

But, you know, have you seen that?

Don't allow people to die.

I know.

I'm not saying that.

I'm just saying

let's not panic everybody.

No,

I don't think that this show panics people on this particular topic.

I don't think that's that.

A lot of New Yorkers are like, wait a minute, wait a minute.

Did he say Betto O'Rourke is moving here?

I'm sorry for that.

That's just a rumor.

This is the Glenn Bach program.

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Hello, America, and welcome to the Glen Bed program.

There are two people, if you listen to my program,

There are two people that I have to apologize to my mother and say, no, mom, no, no, I know this makes you unhappy, but I don't just dislike the things they do.

I

hate them.

And

one is whom?

Who's somebody that I just

hate?

Woodrow Wilson.

The other one

is Edison.

I know, I know, I'm not going to bore you with Edison.

You'll chew your arm off to get away from me.

But I start talking about Edison, please, dear God, it went on for hours.

But I'm just going to get an update on Woodrow Wilson.

Ronald R.J.

Prestrito, he is a professor of politics at Hillsdale College.

He is the guy that changed my life, really, changed my understanding of American politics with his book,

Woodrow Wilson and the Roots of Modern Liberalism.

When I read that, I understood what was going on.

Well,

I want to get an update because we are doing almost exactly what Woodrow Wilson wanted to do so i want to talk about modern liberalism modern progressivism and where we are on woodrow wilson's uh dream country we do that in 60 seconds

i don't know if you've heard the good news or not but uh democrats have just passed in the senate another five trillion dollar reconciliation social reform bill and it is great because there's nothing that that we could do that will help us more than spend another $5 trillion

on, you know, things that really don't, you don't care about, really, honestly, things that we don't have the money for.

But that $5 trillion is going to make your value of your dollar go down.

And so you'll have to worry about how much money you have in the bank all the time because you won't really have any or it won't be of a value.

So it'll be really good for the American people.

We have Mike Leake talking about that here in just a few minutes.

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RJ Pestrito is with us.

Hey, RJ, how are you?

Hi, Glenn.

How are you doing?

It's been a long time.

It has been a lot, but I still think of you

fondly for everything that you have done.

I don't know if you've seen the latest polls on Woodrow Wilson, but he does not pull well anymore.

He used to always be in the top five with all of these professors, professors, and he's now towards the bottom.

Well, I think you might have had something to do with that back during the Obama presidency, as I recall.

Well, I got a lot of the information from you,

and I wanted to talk to you about

the comparisons between Joe Biden's administration and

Woodrow Wilson's administration.

I mean,

just the idea that he segregated the military again, and in the the opposite way,

in some ways,

Joe Biden is doing the same thing with the federal government.

He's splitting whites against blacks.

He's not saying

you have to work in separate places or be segregated, but he is dividing us.

And I wanted to talk to you about the comparisons, if you saw any between the two.

Well, I think the comparison that a lot of people would think of quite correctly is in Biden, you're dealing with a president who I think any fair person has to say has greatly diminished cognitive capacity.

And it's not clear who's actually calling the shots in the Biden administration.

And I think it's fair to see it as a kind of extension of the Obama presidency and an extension in power of those who

who were there in control during the Obama presidency.

And

Woodrow Wilson, of course, was disabled at the end of his time in office.

And it was unclear.

Historians still debate it who exactly was running things.

But it was,

from what I understood, it was really his wife that was kind of running the show.

And even his own party was against that when they couldn't meet with him.

They came and, you know, she put together a meeting and she really orchestrated that well.

But when they really found out that he was trying to run again and he was not in control, even his own party turned on him, didn't they?

That's correct, yes.

And, you know, it was a situation that

I think many hoped not to repeat, but the circumstances of the recent electoral cycles here in our country have been so...

you know, so hard to imagine that, yeah, I think

we're looking at that kind of situation again here.

Believable.

You know, I read, I don't know if you've ever read it,

I'm sure you have, but

Philip Drew, Administrator, one of Woodrow Wilson's favorite books,

while he was in office, I think he read it three times.

And he and he, in it,

Colonel House talks about

how

the country just needs to be done by these new scientific administrators.

And everything coming out of this administration is no longer going through Congress.

It's no longer

even debatable now.

It's all, let's listen to the experts.

This is science, science, science, and we just have to do it.

Are we an administrative state now?

Well, we absolutely are.

And I think that you have in the pandemic that we've seen over the last year and a half, the greatest possible proof, if more could be needed, that we are in the throes of an administrative state.

And

we know going back to the original progressives, their idea was kind of coming out of the 19th century that science had kind of triumphed and that was the future.

And it was the Darwinian revolution in the 19th century.

And so

they really thought that the time had come for the limits on government to be relaxed.

Historical progress made it such that we were capable of so much more, we knew so much more.

And so

the idea was to put power in the hands of those who were educated, those who came up in the universities, those who got the advanced degrees.

I think you mentioned in your intro, you know, Woodrow Wilson was a professor, he's a Ph.D.

in political science, God help us,

you know, coming into power.

And so I think you're exactly right.

What's the rhetoric that we have seen out of this administration?

It's always deference to science.

We have the

CDC

imposing moratoria on evictions, making policy that it

allows it to make.

We have the president's spokespeople unable to justify various measures and mandates that they're taking, and they're just saying, well, this is what the experts tell us to do.

So I think it's a very timely question.

And

what did Wilson do?

I mean, it's so fascinating that

at least I think they're very, very similar.

And they're going through the same thing.

And, you know, 1917, 1918, we have the Spanish flu here in America, which is the last time we had a pandemic.

What did Wilson do?

Well, they are, Glenn.

You know, Wilson was basically the father of the modern administrative state.

He was the scholar, and of course, he was an

important academic and thinker in the country for decades before he became a big public official.

And it was a vision that he had for university-educated people to populate

a large bureaucratic apparatus.

He greatly admired

the system in Germany and under Bismarck in Prussia.

And he wrote a very famous essay about how we could take the Prussian bureaucratic system and take all of its expertise and append it onto our constitution.

And

he started a lot of that in his administration.

Much of it had to wait for later circumstances and later waves.

People like Franklin Roosevelt, for example, who referred back to Woodrow Wilson in building

the apparatus

that implemented the New Deal.

But that originated with Wilson, and public administration scholars in our country look to Wilson as one of the founders of their discipline, in fact.

Did he do shutdowns

for the Spanish flu?

Did

it unprecedented?

This is unprecedented, what we have in our time, because you have a vision for it in the original progressive era,

but we have never

in the entire history of our country, even with very

whether it's progressive administration, any kind of administration, any kind of threat far greater than COVID-19, never have we seen any restriction like this on our liberties before.

It was something the original progressives, I think, even themselves couldn't have fathomed.

The other thing I found striking is that

we have now Facebook, which is the public square, limiting, shaming,

listening in on, gathering information.

That is just the electronic version of, and I can't remember what they were, they were like the Minutemen or something, and he actually had 120 badge-wearing Americans.

snooping on their neighbors.

Well,

World War I

was

an occasion that the Wilson administration certainly took advantage of.

It was one of the ways in which many of the

administrative entities

kind of got justified, although, quite honestly, he had started quite a bit of that before even the circumstances of war were upon the country.

I mean, in the early Wilson administration, as you know, we have the establishment of the income tax, of the Federal Trade Commission, of the Federal Reserve Board.

So

a lot of it even starts

before those more extreme work-time measures that you mentioned.

Let me ask you,

you have a new book out called America Transform, the Rise and Legacy of the American Progressivism.

I said maybe

I don't know, maybe about a year ago or so, that I think

we are out of the progressive phase and we are now into the

revolutionary phase with what you're seeing on the streets.

Would you agree with that?

I think we're in unprecedented times.

I think that

for a lot of years, right, if you go back 100 years to when the progressives got started, this was a project that has taken time.

It's come over us in a series of waves over the 20th and now 21st century.

And for a a long time, we've had an uneasy coexistence between our original constitutional regime, which has been there all along, it's still there, and then a progressive mindset, an increasingly progressive mindset, and a left wing that's been pushing that now for over 100 years.

But something ultimately had to give.

And that's sort of the story I try to tell in the book.

It's the book you told me to write 10 years ago, by the way.

I really am.

And I finally, you know, it's coming to a head.

And so we're at a point now where you have citizens, the way I try to put it in the book is you have citizens that are really of two different regimes, two different countries, two different sets of principles that happen to occupy the same space.

And that the time has come for this major problem

to be resolved.

Because they're

directly opposed principles, the progressive ideas of the limitless state and the founders' principles of limited government for the sake of securing our natural God-given rights.

Unfortunately, progressivism has taken over really almost every university except a few places like Hillsdale, where you teach.

And there's nobody to defend.

When progressivism, when Woodrow Wilson went too far, people saw that and they were really taken aback.

And it took the Great Depression and war to have those ideas come back.

But

they went too far and they knew it, that they had to kind of hide it and go into the universities and start to teach it

because the American people knew who George Washington was.

They knew who Thomas Jefferson was.

They knew the writings.

They knew the reasoning and they knew the Constitution and the Bill of Rights.

We don't now.

How does it work out for us, do you think, this time?

Well, I think it's very worrisome for the reason that you suggest because higher ed is a complete mess.

There are a few islands of sanity.

I'm very grateful to teach it one at Hillsdale, of course.

But by and large, higher education is a mess.

And

this was where progressivism started.

That's, I think,

it's an important point to understand.

They invaded the universities first.

They knew that they had to go to the places where ideas percolate.

and that that would slowly, this is something that the great political philosopher Aristotle teaches us, you know, that these ideas, they percolate at the top and they filter down.

And so

it's taken time.

But the revolution was in the universities.

A lot of our university or college professors started going over to Europe to get their higher degrees.

The thing that you were supposed to do if you wanted to be a trendy educational institution in the second half of the 19th century, a lot of Orthodox institutions got transformed right under

the noses of good trustees this way.

And so by the time you get to 1900, higher ed in America is already sort of

there's already this poison that's been put into the system and it's been taking root and

you have now you take a look at higher education and it's essentially an enemy of the country.

That's what you're taught in higher ed is to hate this country, to hate everything it stands for.

And a few of us are sitting there sticking our fingers

in the wall trying to hold it back, but

it's not easy.

Yeah.

I thank you for everything that you've done, R.J.

R.J.

Pastrito.

He's a professor of politics at Hillsdale College, author of the new book, America Transformed, the Rise and Legacy of American Progressivism.

Love to have you back after I have a chance to read the book.

I didn't know until this morning that it was actually out.

So thank you so much for writing.

I'm going to ask me to write.

Long time ago, and I'm happy to be on.

Well, I can't wait to read it.

America Transformed, R.J.

Pastrito.

Thank you for being on the program.

And let me tell you about our sponsor.

You're signing books, and you don't even know when they come out.

I mean, you told the guy to write a book.

We haven't talked for a while.

He didn't write to me.

He didn't.

I mean, it seems like maybe you keep tabs on the guy.

You tell the guy to write a book.

I mean, he writes the book.

Maybe you should keep in contour.

You are such a jerk.

You are such a jerk all day.

I know.

I live to torture these.

I'm sorry.

And you haven't asked about the art show.

You got a commercial to do.

What's the commercial, sir?

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10 seconds station ID.

So I think it was at this time on Friday where you said people would be spitting on my artwork.

And several people came by and asked me if anyone had spat on the artwork.

Did they really?

And I said, no.

And one lady said, you know, I used to not like Stu at all.

That's interesting.

You're not alone.

Yeah.

And she said, he's growing on me.

And I said, like mold.

And she said, something a little worse than that, but yeah.

I have been told I am growing.

Yeah.

So that's something.

You're a growing boy.

So

the event went really, really well.

And as much as I torture you, we should point out, looks like you've raised a quarter of a million dollars.

Yeah, don't have the final numbers, but it should be, you know, it should be in that area for

Mercury One.

And yet yet again, our audience steps up in moments like this.

They always do.

They always do.

We've raised millions and millions of dollars for charity, and they've done a great job, especially in this circumstance, which it's not only that you have to donate, but you've got to lug home this thing.

This painting.

And then you got to figure out what to do with it.

Probably your trash guy won't even take it.

Sure.

A lot of times they won't.

They won't even take it.

Yeah, I got to call for a bulk delivery.

You know what's big hooking?

You know what's really weird is I don't think anybody, because I said, you know, you take, you'll take the tax write-off.

You don't have to pay me my share.

You just

send it to Mercury One yourself.

And I don't think anybody did.

I think they all just

paid for

the, so I get a big tax write-off, which is really nice.

That's something

exactly.

You might want to talk to an accountant.

You should talk to an accountant on that.

Yeah, probably.

They watch those things, huh?

They do.

Not if you're Hunter Biden.

They don't watch it if you're Hunter Biden.

That's totally okay.

You can raise millions and millions of dollars, not for charity.

Right.

And from crack.

And from China.

China and crack.

Yeah, all right.

And of course, there's lots of bills that need to be paid for particular visits to Alabama,

strip clubs down in that general vicinity.

That must be hard for his accountant to put that all together for the IRS.

Anyway, thank you so much if you came.

Thank you, thank you, thank you so much.

It really was

an amazing, amazing time on Saturday.

And luckily, money doesn't mean anything anymore.

We can just spend it

anywhere we want.

Anywhere you want.

As we're going to talk to Mike Lee about here coming up in just a minute.

Yeah, because the government will be taking some of that money,

in fact, a lot of it to spend.

And Mike will tell us on what next.

The Glenbach program.

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I'll tell you who wasn't at my art show this weekend was Mike Lee.

Oh, jeez.

I mean, he's got this infrastructure, government spending bill.

He couldn't put a little padding in there for the art.

Yeah, put a padding in for a private jet flight flight to your art show and then back.

That's all.

Yeah, and maybe a couple of paintings along with him.

But oh, no, I'm too serious.

I've got work to do.

People don't want us spending money.

Mike?

Blank, you're leaving out the real reason I didn't come, Glenn, which is that I'm still offended that you didn't include any of my art.

I mean, I know stick figures get a bad rap in American art culture these days, but it's pretty good.

It's not going to come from me.

Yeah, no, that's good stuff, Mike.

Mike Lee, the senator from Utah, you were were up late last night working on this bipartisan government spending bill.

How many of you guys voted against this thing?

There were

about

40 of us who voted against it, maybe 35 who voted against it at the earlier stages.

Here's the weird thing, though, Glenn.

We voted on this a couple times last week.

The bill didn't yet exist at the time.

The bill didn't exist until last night, late last night.

I finally received it as I was sitting on the Senate floor with a bunch of my colleagues who were getting ready to give speeches in favor of it.

And all of a sudden, I got it electronically.

It's 2,702 pages long.

Yeah, well, that's an easy read.

It's kind of strange that they voted to proceed to it without knowing what it was first.

Well, let me ask you this.

Isn't this kind of just like

weren't really last week just saying, hey, how much do you want to spend?

We'll fill it in later.

How much do you want to spend?

Isn't that what it was?

Yeah, that's

kind of what they were doing.

Deciding overall threshold amounts and deciding

in general terms what the agreement would consist of.

But normally, that's not how we vote on actual pieces of legislation.

But in any event, we've got it now.

It's 2,702 pages long.

How much does it spend?

How much is it spending on this one?

It spends $1.2 trillion.

I'll love that.

And of that $1.2 trillion,

$50 of it is new federal spending.

It's above and beyond what we were expected to spend this year, which strikes me as curious, given that it's a terrible time to be spending more money at a time when, due to deliberate, reckless overspending by the federal government, poor middle-class Americans are finding that everything they purchase is more expensive.

From chicken breast to gasoline to cars to housing.

everything is more expensive because we're spending too much money in Washington.

Oh, my gosh, Stu, how can we listen to this old-timey guy, blah, blah, blah, inflation.

Don't you know that inflation is not a problem?

It's not going to be a problem.

Because they're digitizing.

They're not actually printing.

They're digitizing, Mike.

And that is totally different.

It's transitory.

And that, of course, makes those dollars spent very differently and inflation-proof, doesn't it?

more difficult.

You know, you brought up, when you were on the floor of the Senate, I watched some of the highlights, and you made a great point about inflation.

You were like,

even just the act of spending all of this money when you're talking about infrastructure will drive the cost of the things that are already expensive up because now the private sector has to compete with the government.

That's exactly right.

So everything that goes into these projects, from cement to the aggregate materials you use to make concrete, to steel, to labor, and everything else, all those things are more expensive right now.

And so look, I'm not

a fan of stimulus-style spending.

But even to those who might be,

they might be able to make a slightly less bad case for this in a time when demand for these products is low and industries are shutting down.

I still wouldn't like to see government doing that, but whatever.

You can make a case for it in that circumstance, not one that I agree with,

but you can't make a good case for doing it right now where everything is inflated, where every federal dollar we put into this is going to go less far because it's a federal dollar and it comes with lots of strings attached, and it will go even less far because of the fact that all of these things are in short supply and can be procured only at a premium.

We will get less from this as a result of the fact that it's federal and as a result of the fact that we're doing it right now.

So why are they saying this is a good deal?

Why are the Republicans even thinking we have to do any of this stuff?

Well, look,

I'm always reluctant to speak for those who are not present.

I'm not a good spokesman for them because I disagree fundamentally with what they're doing.

I suspect if one of them were on the phone with us, they'd say, okay, well, first of all, we need infrastructure.

Secondly, if we do this, then what the Democrats do on their bill, the bill that they intend to pass with a simple majority, majority, either later this week or later this month,

they will spend less than they would otherwise spend if we didn't do this.

Now, if we were in court and someone testified to that effect, I'd stand up and say,

objection assumes facts not in evidence.

I don't know how they can possibly know that they will spend less if we pass this bill.

And in any event, that doesn't mean

we don't have to put our names on something that we think is bad and harmful to the American people if we don't agree with it.

Look, Glenn, there are sort of three different groups of people in America, one of which will benefit from this bill, one of which might not notice much of a difference, and the others will be hurt by it.

The first group, consisting of those who might benefit from it, tend to be wealthy, well-connected individuals and business interests in this country who might actually get rich off of it.

The next group consists of well-off Americans who have enough money that they won't notice a big hit to their cost of their their lifestyle

but almost everyone else the vast overwhelming majority of Americans fits into the third category of people who have

limited paychecks they're in many cases living paycheck to paycheck every dollar will buy less as a result of spending like this one those people will be hurt so in some ways we're exchanging

One thing for another.

In some ways, we're taking money away from poor middle-class Americans and giving it to the wealthy and well-connected.

I can't justify that.

This is the opposite of Robin Hood.

This is the opposite of Robinhood.

The opposite of Robin Hood.

Exactly.

Senator Lee, there's some argument that

passing something bipartisan gives Senator Mansion, Senator Sinema,

some talking point to go back to Democrats and say we shouldn't drop the filibuster.

Do you think there's anything to that at all?

Yeah, look, I don't want them to drop the filibuster.

They shouldn't drop the filibuster.

We have no guarantee that if we didn't do this, they would drop the filibuster, or that by doing this, they won't.

No guarantee whatsoever.

What we have to vote on is the legislation before us.

Now, the legislation before us, 2,702 pages long, which we received late last night,

has been hammered out over a period of four months by 10 very smart, very hard-working senators, senators with whom I happen to disagree on this issue,

but they worked hard on it.

They've had four months to come up with 2,702 pages.

It is beyond folly to suggest that the entire Senate should now get up to speed on that and be expected to process it, amend it, vote on it, and pass it within a period of a few days.

We need, arguably, at least as much time as they did.

At a minimum, we need at least a few weeks to work on this.

We have no business spending this amount of money and passing this size of a bill that we saw for the first time last night within a few days.

Remember, it was Barack Obama who said he was going to have the transparency that had never happened before, and he would post every bill for at least a couple of weeks before it was ever voted on.

They never did that.

Nobody ever has an intention of doing this.

And all of these things

are banged out.

And really a lot in the house is just put together by the the heads of the party and then everybody else is just told vote for it

yes no that's exactly right and and it reflects one of the sad biases that you see in this place you know senators get

praise when they pass big spending bills they get criticized when they vote against them they assume that passing legislation is a good thing in the abstract I'm reminded of something that Calvin Coolidge once said.

He said, as a lawmaker, it's important to both pass good bills and stop bad ones.

They're both important, but as between the two, it's the second that's more important.

It's more important to stop the bad bills because a good bill that doesn't pass today can always be passed later.

A bad bill, once it passes, it's nearly impossible to unwind.

You can't ever get rid of it.

And that's why we've got to focus on this.

Look, a handful of senators will get praised if this thing passes.

But that praise and that adulation, that political notoriety for a few days will have long-term consequences for

America's poor and middle class.

And that concerns me greatly.

Can you tell us what infrastructure even means now, Mike?

Well,

look, it means a lot of things.

In this bill, they're talking about all sorts of things from

highways

to bridges to roads.

Hang on just a second.

We have every time there's a big bill, it's an infrastructure bill.

When and how much was it going to take to actually fix the roads and the bridges, the federal roads and bridges?

Because I'm tired of hearing about infrastructure fixing the roads and bridges because nobody ever shows us any progress on that and says, okay, we're a lot closer.

Just an endless...

infrastructure bill.

Fix the roads and bridges.

Right.

And look, you can always identify things that that have been fixed.

And that's why things like this can be very tempting, because people can point to good things that will happen to good people and good communities that are well deserving of improvements.

The question I raise is: does it have to be this much?

Does it have to be right now?

And does it have to be through this government?

I'm still going through this bill because it takes a while to do.

It doesn't read like a fast-paced novel.

But Glenn,

I will be shocked if there isn't a whole lot of infrastructure in here that isn't federal in nature, that is not or should not be federal.

Now, if it's part of an interstate highway, then

perhaps it should be federal.

Or some other project with an appropriate federal nexus that's close, maybe so.

I'm willing to bet that a large portion of this is going to go to

surface streets that start and stop in the same state and things that are otherwise not necessarily appropriate for the federal government.

And that's not just an esoteric problem.

It creates real financial problems.

Correct.

The minute you add a dollar of federal spending to an infrastructure project, in many states like mine, it can add 30%, sometimes more, to the cost of the project because you have to comply with this Byzantine labyrinth of federal regulations and mandates.

And so you're buying less with more money when you make it federal.

We shouldn't do that.

There is also a $3.5 trillion human infrastructure bill coming our way.

Yes.

Yes.

That is a bill that the Senate Democrats are working on that they believe that they can pass with a mere 51 votes.

And I'm calling it the inflation bomb because that would truly be it.

They've learned over time that bills can be more palatable if you call them something most Americans understand and resonate with.

Patriot Act.

Yeah, if you call it about the troops or about national security generally, or if you talk about infrastructure, perhaps they'll accept it more easily.

But this is this inflation bomb that they want to pass with a simple majority is a whole lot of stuff that has nothing to do with infrastructure.

It's just big government spending.

And to put that in perspective, three and a half trillion dollars, many of us expect it will be more like four or five trillion dollars, by the way.

That's

roughly on par

with what we spend in a particular year, out of the entire federal government, in a non-COVID year.

So if they expect that we can roughly double that amount

and have no consequences, they're crazy.

They're just not looking at the facts.

Look, 37% of all U.S.

dollars that have ever come into existence have been printed in the last 18 months.

You don't do that without making a whole lot of poor poor middle-class Americans poorer.

Hey, one last thing I'd like to ask you, because I know that they're working on airports here,

but the Green New Deal would like to get rid of all airplanes

by 2030.

Why would we be building new airports if we have to dramatically cut our air travel?

I'd just like you to ask somebody there and see if you can find an answer.

Mike Lee, thank you so much for being

on with us, and thank you for standing and fighting the good fight.

I certainly appreciate it.

It's Senator Mike Lee from Utah on the latest infrastructure bill that they put together in the Senate.

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The Associated Press is a real news organization, yeah?

So why am I reading this headline?

Olympic surfing exposes whitewashed native Hawaiian roots.

Yeah, the Olympics added surfing this year.

Good.

Surfers deserve to be recognized as athletes.

I'm sorry.

What I meant to say is, no, that's cultural appropriation.

The AP says that for Hawaiians, probably all two of them, including surfing in the Olympics is an extension of the racial indignity seared into the history of the game and their homeland when white outsiders took over their spiritual art form.

Or just people having fun in the ocean.

Incredible.

Incredible.

We now have a situation where we're surfing is cultural appropriation.

It never ends.

This is the Glenn Beck Program.