Gorilla Glue Is NOT for Hair | Guests: Wenyuan Wu & Lori Meyers | 2/9/21

2h 2m
Digital health passports may soon become a reality, but will this seep into other areas? Stu returns from the Super Bowl. Californians for Equal Rights executive director Wenyuan Wu joins to talk about an anti-Asian discrimination case just dropped under the Biden administration and California’s proposal to teach a critical race theory-based ethnic studies curriculum to K-12 students. Educator Lori Meyers continues the conversation from a teacher’s perspective. A new study shows Facebook was used more than Parler to plan the riot at the Capitol. A woman who used Gorilla Glue in her hair is now looking to sue the company. Glenn and Stu discuss the future of Bitcoin after Tesla invested over a billion into it.
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Transcript

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

This

is

the Glenback Program.

Hello, America, and welcome to the program.

It is Tuesday.

I want to give you a glimpse into the future.

A glimpse into something that

is going to change everything

and something you need to be very well aware of so you don't go down this path.

We begin in 60 seconds.

The Glenn Beck program.

Welcome back, Stu.

Thank you very much.

You're looking good.

You smell like beer, but you're looking healthy.

You're in sunshine with Tampa.

Yeah, well, the beer is in the Super Bowl.

It's this morning.

Had a little step off the gate.

Good.

All right.

Good.

Well, I wanted to make sure I got back.

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I will say, if you have a Valentine's Day present, your wife, your mom, whoever is going to love it.

So get it for them.

I generally don't give my mom while she's dead, but thanks for bringing that out.

I didn't even.

I,

man, I can't even concentrate now.

I'm just so weepy over thank you.

Geez, I don't usually give my mom, if she were alive, Stu,

you know, a Valentine.

I don't give her undies or anything.

I mean, that is weird.

So many directions to go here, and I'm going to avoid all of them.

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The Seattle Times is reporting today,

in the near future, travel may require a digital documentation showing that you have been vaccinated or tested for the coronavirus.

Among governments and those in the travel industry, a new term has entered the vocabulary, a vaccine passport.

One of Joe Biden's executive orders aimed at curbing the pandemic asked government agencies to assess the feasibility of linking coronavirus vaccine certificates with other vaccination documents and producing a digital passport.

Denmark's government said that in the next three or four months, it's going to roll out its digital passport that'll be able to show people that have been vaccinated.

It isn't just governments that are suggesting vaccine passports.

In a few weeks, Eod Airlines and Emirates will start using digital travel passes.

The International Transportation Association is backing this as well.

So

here's what they're saying.

They want to give you a digital passport, whether that'll be a stick or

something you scan or whatever that just says, I've had all my vaccines.

It seems like it's going to be one of these things in your wallet on your iPhone where you can, like when you board a plane, it's your boarding pass.

If you have an iPhone,

think of this to me is white privilege.

Think of how many people don't have an iPhone around the world.

Think about how many people don't have access to the vaccine.

Think about that.

So there's a two-tiered society.

It is a two-tiered society, and America is getting it first.

I say on this one, we wait until everyone else on the planet has a digital passport.

And then you give it to us.

That's so nice of you.

Well, I'm just trying to get, I'm trying to embrace my white privilege here.

Let's see.

It's all about trying to

digitize a process that happens now and make it into something that allows for more harmony and more ease.

Now, here sounds good.

Yeah.

Harmony and ease.

Here's a, doesn't it?

Yeah.

Here's a

disturbing paragraph.

IBM has been developing its own digital health pass.

IBM as IBM?

Yeah, IBM's

got a long record of

helping sort people out.

I think that's fantastic.

You know, a completely unrelated story,

a New York Times bestseller, Edwin Black, wrote a book about IBM and the Holocaust.

But that's completely different.

This is a digital health pass from IBM, and it would enable individuals to

present proof of vaccination or a negative test to gain access to public locations such as a sports stadium, airplane, university, workplaces, the mall, stores.

The pass, built on IBM's blockchain technology, can utilize multiple data types, including temperature checks, virus exposure notifications, test results, and vaccine status.

Not only is IBM looking into this,

the World Economic Forum and the Commons Project Foundation, a Swiss non-profit group,

have begun testing a digital health pass called Common Pass, which would allow travelers to travel all over the world with all of their information.

The pass would generate a QR code that could be shown to authorities.

Oh man, now I can't think of what could possibly go wrong here.

One person

who

kind of works in

the digital world

said,

it took us 50 years

to develop a global passport system for people.

Because there's a lot of security that goes along with that.

Maybe we shouldn't rush to one that has access to people's information.

You can see the risk there a little bit.

I am a little tired.

Don't you want to get back to normal?

Yes.

I mean, I know you're saying that sarcastically, but yes, I do.

And I will say,

you're not not going to be for a government system like this.

I'm not going to say I want requirements of these things.

I will say, however, it is incredibly frustrating that we live in a country that 30% of the people have had the virus and an additional 10% of the people have been vaccinated.

So we're talking about 40% of the population now,

estimated, that should be able to do.

Pretty much whatever they want.

But because of largely the left and

this idea of a two-tiered society where we can't allow people to go out and go to restaurants and bars and sporting events because

people who haven't had the virus won't be able to do that.

The people who haven't been vaccinated won't be able to do that.

And therefore,

you know, that's unfair.

And it's like, well, I don't know, to the bar owner, do they think it's unfair?

Do they really, you know what, I want to make sure we don't have a two-tier society.

Therefore, I'm going to let my business collapse completely.

Like, it would be nice for our economy to allow people who don't have to think about these things at this point,

overwhelmingly, to be able to do them.

Well,

of course, you would say that.

I would, because I'm on the right side of it.

Somebody who was at the Super Bowl and has been tested several times and just doesn't seem to have a problem with it.

Oh, the next virus that is coming out of COVID-19?

COVID-20.

You didn't have to have COVID-19 to understand 20.

Oh, really?

No.

You can just get 20 and it'll kill you.

Dead.

Dead.

Dead.

Like 95% of the population dead.

Really?

Because of the...

It's coming.

It's coming, Stu.

It's coming.

Now, in,

again, a completely unrelated article, let's put those digital passports to the side, okay?

Because that's convenient for you.

you said harmony and ease was your summary harmony and ease harmony and ease it's okay it's harmonious uh and it's uh it's easy okay it's like i don't know why people don't give the the tsa their retina scan

oy that that sounds harmonious and

easy you just go in and just scan your eyes the retina is just gives absolutely every bit of information about you but don't worry about it Don't worry about it.

Get on the plane faster.

In

a new post from the International Monetary Fund, what's really new in FinTech, financial tech?

What's really new?

Well, the authors suggest that rapid technological change is coming in the financial industry.

And

in lieu of this change, they're looking at it and saying, well, you know what?

What should we be thinking about in the financial industry?

So

there's, according to the IMF and the

European Central Bank, I love the central banks like the Fed, they're fantastic.

They've been doing some research.

And they say there's a couple of financial innovations that the world should get on board with.

First,

information.

There are new tools out there to collect and analyze data on customers.

That way they can really determine your credit worthiness.

And another is communications, a way that

we can communicate with the bank and the bank can communicate with us.

So they're looking at, I mean, the first thing they want to do is determine credit worthiness.

And they say the most

innovative

information

piece is the new type of data that comes from the digital footprint of customers' various online activities.

This will help

the banks

decide if you're credit worthy for a loan.

Credit scoring, they say in the old days, was on income, employment time, assets, and debts.

But that really doesn't give us a snapshot on who people really are.

So how do we get really good information?

For instance, a lot of kids, they can't get loans for, you know, $400,000 house because they just got out of college.

Not fair.

And that's not fair.

How do they establish credit?

I mean, we've all said that, right, when we were young.

If you won't give me credit, how could I establish credit, right?

Right?

Well, that's what the IB,

that's what the IMF is all about, to make sure that kids can get credit.

So what they're going to do is they're looking at

different information on certain kinds of people, like entrepreneurs, innovators, informal workers.

Maybe there's just not enough information available.

So what do we do?

Well, they've resolved the dilemma by tapping into various non-financial data, the type of browser and hardware used to access the internet, the history of online searches and purchases.

Now,

why would my bank need to know what I've been searching online for?

Why?

Recent research documents that once powered by artificial intelligence and machine learning, these alternative data sources are often superior to traditional credit assessment methods and can advance financial inclusion.

So, the type of browser used could potentially indicate a different ranking for browsers that heavily track users like Chrome.

But if you use Brave, that emphasizes privacy.

So,

I don't know if you are really credit worthy.

So the IMF seems to be suggesting that the banking network is going to begin using a history of online searches and purchases to determine your credit worthiness.

So if I read CNN

and I buy sports magazines, I'm good.

If I listen to Fox

or I my news from the Blaze or Daily Wire,

have you bought food preparation stuff?

Have you even been looking at that kind of stuff?

Because that makes me a little worried that you might not be able to make a car loan.

So I'm not sure we can give you that loan.

Wait a minute.

Hold on just a second.

I just saw another piece of data.

Apparently,

he's been against digital passports, too.

I don't know if we can even have him as a bank customer.

He's that kind of crazy.

Yeah.

Okay,

let me tell you about Timeshare Termination Team.

Timeshare Termination Team.

Boy, don't you wish you had some data on the people that were trying to sell you that, huh?

The little smarmy guy that comes out and is like, hey, listen, have another drink, okay?

I tell you, all the drinks are free, and the

contract and all that stuff.

We'll talk about that later.

Have a couple more drinks, will you?

My pen's not working right now.

Otherwise, I'd give you that contract.

I'll wait a couple of hours, maybe six or seven drinks into it, all free.

And now you're sitting there with a timeshare that you can't use, you can't afford, and you just want out.

Well, no more maintenance fees, no more hassle, no more disappointment, no more pain in the butt.

You're wise enough now to make sure you're not scammed again.

Listen, I tell you what, I can get you out of this.

But here, have a couple of free drinks.

There are no free drinks.

There's no, you know, hotel meetings.

There's no free or half-price anything with Timeshare Termination Team.

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So visit them online, timeshare termination team.com, and have the peace of mind that it's gonna be over soon.

Learn more online at timeshare termination team.com.

Isn't it necessary that all of us review our own attitude and say, yes, it is possible for men and women of goodwill to differ?

10-second station ID.

The average American can do very little.

They must depend upon those of us whom they send down here to man the watchtowers of the nation.

And if you see anybody within that cabinet, in a restaurant, in a department store, we're at a gasoline station, you tell them they're not welcome.

Once again, we honor that oath of office.

We're performing a public duty to protect and defend the Constitution.

A public trust.

I am pursuing this investigation.

I've seen firsthand Donald Trump's disrespect for facts.

In order to develop the facts.

It's really bizarre, isn't it, when you think about how AWOL so many of these members of Congress have gotten.

If we, unless we make sure that there is no infiltration of our government...

Donald Trump is a clear and present danger to our country.

Then just as certain as you sit there, in the period of our lives, you will see a red world.

What I'm concerned about is the Republican leadership in the House of Representatives.

The enemy is within the House of Representatives.

What is the exact number of Trump supporters, Mars and Verse here?

And the question is, how are we going to really almost deprogram these people who have signed up for the cult of Trump?

By cutting off their social media.

First, Google and Apple delisted Parlor from their app stores.

Then Amazon cut the servers.

Now House Democrats are trying to blame the free speech platform Parlor.

This stuff related to big tech censorship is the issue of our time.

Will Smith appearing to call for the country to purge itself of Donald Trump supporters.

We get to know who people are and now we get to cleanse it out of our country.

There's a proposal to have a commission to investigate Republican colleagues.

Democrat senators have filed ethics complaints against two of their Republican colleagues.

The left is trying to push these businesses to shame them and threaten them into shunning and silencing Trump supporters and conservatives.

They're pushing them to fire people even.

Council culture is a wildfire that you cannot contain.

If you pour gasoline onto it, don't be surprised when it finally reaches you and you get burned.

Every business needs to stand up for every American.

Otherwise, eventually they'll come for you too.

For you two.

Welcome to the Glenbeck program.

Yesterday I told you about the cowboys

for Trump, the guy who started Cowboys for Trump.

Let me just remind you that he's still in jail because he's too much of a danger.

He's a flight risk.

Because, well, he won't accept.

This is the judge.

He won't accept that Donald Trump lost fair and square.

And I think we can't post a bail for him.

This is from the judge.

We can't.

He can't post bail because he's a flight risk.

He's crazy enough to believe that.

He might believe I'm part of the conspiracy.

Oh my gosh.

Wait until you hear what the judge just ruled on the left-wing activist.

This is the Glenback program.

Nancy lives in Texas.

She's always liked riding horses.

She had to slow down as she started to feel real pain in her joints, head to toe.

It was just overwhelming for her.

She heard about Relief Factor from my program and decided she'd give it a try.

Nancy lives in Texas.

She rides horses.

I'm sure she's a huge fan of Bruce Springsteen and that commercial where he wore a cowboy hat.

That was so uniting.

Anyway, here's the thing.

She decided that she would give it a try.

It didn't work overnight for Nancy, but she didn't give up hope.

She kept up with it.

She said after a few weeks, she did begin to notice a difference in the pain levels.

After a month, her pain was nearly gone.

Nowadays, she's on her horse, and she feels young again, ready to go.

She's got her life back, and so can you.

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And head over to Blazetv.com/slash Glenn.

The promo code is Glenn for $30 off your subscription to Blaze TV.

Hello, and welcome to the Glenn Beck program.

It's Tuesday.

Stu is back from the Super Bowl.

How was it?

It was great.

You know, I mean, the Super Bowls, I love it.

It was very strange.

Because you've gone for 10 years?

Gone.

I've been to 16 Super Bowls.

16 Super Bowls.

Tom Brady has played in eight of them.

That's amazing.

Played in half of each of them.

And I have to tell you, we talked about it yesterday.

I mean, this is just proof positive.

He is the greatest quarterback of all time.

You disagree?

No, I unfortunately have to agree.

I mean, this is quite clear.

It's quite clear.

When you go to Tampa, a team that was struggling, and you turn that team around and you win the Super Bowl your first year there, I mean, that's really saying something.

True, they have a lot of talent.

It's a good football team.

Good football team.

He's actually won Super Bowls with worse teams than the Tampa, but still, it was an amazing, it's an amazing guy.

He's an old man.

Of course, he's younger than me, but he's an old man.

And he looks, he pisses me off.

He pisses me off.

Too many good things have happened to him.

Yes.

You know how you're like, oh, gosh, 2020 and 2021, they suck so far.

That's because Tom Brady is taking all the good things.

He's selfishly acquired all positive things.

Why?

Privilege.

Yeah.

It's a little sad.

So was it weird?

Because it seemed, and I don't know if the roar of the crowd was artificially generated or what.

No, yeah.

It It was just

25,000 people.

But 25,000 people could be pretty loud.

And

it seemed really loud in the stadium.

It was oddly, and I'm sure they covered this, but they had all the cardboard people everywhere.

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

They didn't really talk about it.

They just showed it.

They showed it.

And it felt even in the stadium like it was full.

With the exception, of course, you could see the back of cardboard people in front of you.

But when you looked across the field, it just felt normal.

I mean, it was loud.

It was, with the exception of like in between plays, it would get a little quieter than I think was normal.

That was a little strange.

I will say as well, a lot of healthcare heroes there.

We love our healthcare heroes.

They're all wearing the little healthcare heroes badge.

I will also say, some of the healthcare heroes, judging by the amount they were drinking,

may have needed their own healthcare heroes later in the day.

Really?

Yes.

I will say, I don't know if it was the.

If anyone deserves a great party, it's our healthcare heroes.

Yeah,

the guys who went in, the women and men who went in at the very beginning when we were like,

this could be like a combination of Ebola, leprosy, and the common cold.

Right.

You know,

face that, you know, you might want to have a drink or two.

Yeah, and they took advantage of that.

Yeah.

I feel like whatever money they were going to spend on a Super Bowl ticket, they spent on Budweiser.

Did you see that the average, the worst state for drinking in the last year has been is Michigan?

The average person took 17 hard liquor drinks a week in Michigan.

That's a lot.

17 and average of 17 into 17.

An average.

That can't be true.

I mean, otherwise, don't buy a car built in Michigan.

I mean, that's a lot.

That's a lot.

That is a lot.

And you realize, too, like, I saw some of the shaming that was going on afterward.

It's like,

people are outside, generally speaking.

You know, they were gathering.

They were were celebrating a Super Bowl championship.

You're not going to stop that.

I mean, unless

you go back to Prohibition and you enforce it with the power of the Chinese government, you're not going to be able to stop it.

I know.

It seems like that's the road they want to go down.

It is.

It's not the world they want to go down.

It is the road we are going down.

Not necessarily the alcohol part of it, right?

No.

I don't know the alcohol part of it.

I'm just saying, like, you'd have to go back to Prohibition to stop these pictures.

They're always like, oh, gosh, look at these people.

They're gathering.

They're having a good time.

They're near each other.

Well, look, that is going to occur.

And especially when you start drinking.

I felt like it was the first thing that we did, the first normal thing America has gone through in a year was a Super Bowl.

Because

it at least appeared on television as everybody was together and it was normal.

I mean, it was definitely weird to be there, but generally speaking, you know, and I keep telling this to people that I know across the country, you don't understand

what it's like right now to live in Florida or Texas.

It's just pretty much normal.

It is.

Again, I understand that, like, yes, the mask thing gets people very pissed off around here.

Shut up.

You know, you get that.

On both sides.

Shut up.

I'm so sick of talking about masking.

I am too.

I'm so sick of it.

Mainly because my wife is like the number one anti-mask person in the universe.

So she's all she thinks about and talks about all the time.

But it's like, it's all everybody thinks about all the time.

The mask thing is like, it's still a factor here.

Whenever, but you know, Florida does not have a state mask mandate.

Every place you walk into, you still got to wear the mask the same way you do in every other state because that's just the way it is right now.

Until this, you know, we get past this thing.

I think we all are in a place where we understand that.

But like.

It's just like, with the exception of there's not as many people at, there's not as many sporting events.

There's not as many concerts, things like that.

But generally speaking, it's pretty normal.

You talk to someone who lives in California, they think that it's like they believe lockdown is still here because in many ways it is in these places.

New York and California, you know, if you're a liberal there, you think states like California, I mean, like Florida and Texas are insane.

Yeah.

Insane.

And you can't, people come from those environments.

They can't understand.

They feel out of place.

They don't know how to interact with people anymore.

That's weird.

And then you look at

the pictures from Florida where people are outdoors gathering, having a good time, maybe not taking the best precautions in this drug.

They're drunk.

They're drunk.

And so, what do you do when you're drunk?

You're losing your inhibitions, right?

So these things are.

Screw the masks.

That foul.

She is a piece of garbage.

So that happens.

Right.

And then all the people in New York and California are like, I can't believe these bastards,

they are the reason we're having all these problems.

And they shame and shame and shame.

You go back to their social media feeds from the day after the election and maybe the BLM riots.

They don't have the same opinion about people being close to each other without passing.

I mean, they don't understand.

Coronavirus, if you lick it off the breasts of a prostitute, it's not a problem.

Right.

And that's the solution.

But it's fascinating when all of this is known that Florida and Texas have better results than California and New York.

And it's like, well, I could understand if it was the reverse.

if California if California and New York had great results Florida Texas had terrible results you might look at like the difference here and say well those bastards are just being they're not being careful enough yeah I'd understand that I would it is the literal reverse and they still keep doing it for those of us who live in these states we wondered oh boy if this turns out the opposite especially in summer doomed yeah there was a chance yeah

and uh it didn't and look at us now What are you waiting for in California?

What are you waiting for?

I mean, I know the answer to this question.

Utopia.

Fauci came out and said, we're probably not going to be able to get rid of masks even this year.

I mean, maybe in fall.

Maybe in fall.

Yeah, I think Red State's.

I know.

I know.

I think you'll see that in New York and California, where they'll they'll keep this stuff on as long as possible.

They don't seem to be interested in opening things up.

You know, now all of a sudden,

you know, dumb Andrew Cuomo is out there and he's saying,

well, we're going to open up indoor restaurants at like 1%.

Because when they were open at 100%, as you know, Glenn, every one of them fails every three years.

Like 70% of restaurants fail every three years when it was 100% open.

Ah,

let me tell you something here.

Red C,

New York, I worked out the math,

and

it's a lot less expensive if they're hiring everybody to run the restaurant.

But they can only make 25%

of

what it takes to run the restaurant.

So I'm helping them out.

What's the problem?

Fumina guts.

Yeah, you better hope that your fattest 25% of customers show up.

Yeah, you're going to have a lot of problems.

Yeah.

It's like opening an all-you-can-eat buffet and only three fat customers show up.

It's a problem.

Okay.

It's a problem.

You're not, you're going to go out of business.

You make your money on the skinnies.

You know?

You make your money on table turnovers.

Right.

I mean, if you're not turning over a table three times a night, you're not going to make, you're not going to make it.

This is why I'm so passionate about not just opening up.

I'm passionate about getting this, getting rid of this freaking virus because we keep like as conservatives, we think, well, just open it up.

We'll go out, right?

And we'll go.

Just let us go.

Right.

And that's totally what conservatives would do.

However, restaurants also depend on annoying liberals.

And when 30, 40% of the population says, I'm not going out there with this virus, it doesn't matter if they open it up.

Yes, they'll do a little bit better, but they will still all collapse.

Then, all conservative restaurants should have some sort of a marking.

I don't know, maybe a little yellow star that we can all go to and go, okay, let's support these guys.

Liberals aren't going to do it.

I mean,

of course, I would argue for personal liberty and all of these circumstances anyway.

So, I mean, to me, it's- But I mean, you know, I'm sick and tired.

I am, you know, we're going to bail out New York,

Illinois,

California.

It's going to be the answer.

We are going to bail out.

And I have to tell you,

that is one of my lines.

That's one of my lines.

I don't know what I'm going to do.

What color is the line?

Only red lines are the ones that matter.

This is more of a mauve.

It looks nice on you.

It's very nice.

It's a mauve color.

So it's not red, but it's got a hint of it in there.

All right.

So

a mauve line.

A mauve line.

This is my mauve line.

That

if I'm, wait a minute.

You want me to pay for college when I couldn't afford to go to college, so I didn't go.

And I've been working to get my kids into college, which now my kids won't probably be into any colleges, any good colleges, because white privilege.

So I've worked hard so my kids could go to college, even though I didn't.

And yet the people who have taken out giant loans, this is, by the way, helping more of the wealthy.

You know, it's not the, it's not the poor people.

It's a lot of the wealthy people.

They took out these giant loans, went to Harvard, and now we're going to give them the money.

We're going to just forgive their loans?

No.

No.

I didn't live in California.

See, Californians, you at least got the beach.

Yeah.

And the beautiful weather.

I mean, you paid for it.

Yeah, you paid for it in hassle and taxes.

Right.

But I, wait a minute, wait a minute, wait a minute.

That's one reason why I didn't live there.

I've always wanted to live in California, but it's crazy.

It's just crazy what you guys have been doing.

So I haven't.

Okay, you can celebrate all you want, but now I have to pay for the mess you guys made?

I don't think so.

Huh.

Why would I get into that suicide pack with you?

You'd drag drag us all down.

No.

And it's not just there, right?

It's there.

It's New York.

It's Michigan.

It's Illinois.

It's all of these places.

Completely tanked their economy because of the COVID thing.

Completely tanked it.

And before that, they were all union states that had great control of the unions and great control

for the teachers' unions and for the fire unions and everybody else when the math didn't work.

I really feel bad for firemen and police officers who have been screwed by the system.

I mean, I got news for you.

You're going to get screwed.

There's not enough money.

But it's the unions' fault because they told you that these magic trees worked when all of us were standing around going, guys, the math doesn't work.

Right now, there's 20 of you paying for one retiree,

but in 2015,

there will be two of you for every 40 retirees.

Not going to work.

Yeah, it didn't work then.

And then after this year,

I mean, none of this stuff is going to work.

It's going to require constant money printing.

Like people are like, oh, like Elon Musk.

I mean, he's talked about Bitcoin, and now it's up to 46,000 per Bitcoin.

Well, yeah, that's part of it.

But I mean, the

the underarching sort of like overarching, I guess, way of talking about this is like everyone recognizes they're going to be printing money

at an impossible rate for eternity.

Yes.

So I don't know, the thing that has an absolute maximum limit of amount, Bitcoin with 21 million,

no wonder it's going to go up.

Bitcoin is going to be at 100 grand.

By the end of the year, Bitcoin will be at 100 grand.

And it's because Elon Musk just made a a big move.

And I've read that Apple is considering putting $5 billion.

Yeah.

Elon Musk did $1.5 billion through Tesla.

Apple is considering putting $5 billion.

Once Apple, if they make that move, look for the herd of financial buffalo that are going to roll into that thing.

All righty.

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This is the Glenn Beck program.

Yesterday, I told you about the

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didn't do any of it.

He's being held without bail.

But the left-wing activist who crawled through a window was saying, burn this down, this is ours, take it.

He doesn't pose any threat to society, and

he has been

released from jail.

He's fine.

Judge with the cowboy?

Nah, he won't accept the results of the election.

I mean, that's crazy.

This is the Glenn Bach program.

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All right, we continue with our two coming up in a second.

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

This

is

the Glenback program.

Well, the impeachment trial begins today without

Justice Thomas involved, which is weird because that's what the Constitution calls for.

But he said, I don't think this is really constitutional, so I'm not going to be there.

But don't worry, we have Fred from down the street, you know, at the bowling alley.

He's going to be looking over everything.

It's just like he's a Supreme Court justice.

You know what I'm saying?

So we have that going on.

Also, your kids.

Oh, the curriculum is changing.

You know, only to unite us and educate our kids.

California?

Holy cow.

Holy cow, California.

I mean, why don't you just...

Why don't you just get a divorce, really, from the rest of the United States?

Because you are,

you know, you keep talking about equal rights I don't think they mean what you think they mean you should see the curriculum we'll go over it because it's coming your way in 60 seconds

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So there is something going on in California that

is quite disturbing, quite disturbing.

We have taken critical race theory and we're putting it into K through 12.

And it is going to divide us in little groups.

I mean, look at how we already are so divided.

And it's all coming under the equal rights.

Hey, let's all,

let's all end racism.

No, this is going to further it.

This is really dangerous stuff that's happening in California.

And

Wen Yin Wu is the executive director of Californians for Equal Rights.

Dr.

Wu is also

one of the people that

brought the lawsuit, I think it was against Harvard or was it Yale, that Biden just dismissed about how they were just dismissing Asians because we have too many Asians here.

Too many Asians.

And it's okay to apparently do that to Asians.

Yeah.

Certain groups, it's okay to discriminate against, as Ibram Kendi has told us.

So, Dr.

Wu, welcome to the program.

How are you?

I am good.

Good morning.

Thank you for having me today.

And please stay when you are.

Thank you.

Can you just, let's just get a quick comment on the dismissal of your case in the Ivy League schools by the government

this week.

Right, right.

So, in 2016, May 2016, my home group, Asian American Coalition for Education, brought a federal civil rights complaint against Yale on its alleged anti-Asian discrimination in admissions.

And after a two-year investigation by the Trump administration's Department of Justice, they concluded that Yale, in fact, discriminated against Asian American applicants with quotas, high standards, and stereotypes, all these good stuff.

And last year, last August, DOJ launched a federal lawsuit against Yale as a result of our civil rights complaint.

So we were very happy

to see that

that result

and that lawsuit, but

it's kind of expected that the Biden administration would roll back, would dismiss this lawsuit.

Wow, just eight days after the administration signed an executive order combating anti-Asian xenophobia and racism.

So you see the glaring irony here, right?

So are they really for equal rights?

Or they're just about

ideological racial spoils and identity politics.

Trevor Burrus, Jr.: So let me switch now to California because the same kind of thing is happening in California on a mass scale with the ethnics studies,

the curriculum that has been released.

We have seen the first draft.

I know they're up on the third draft now.

But some of these things

are really disturbing.

First of all, it seems to be the motive to put everybody into a little category, a little box, and make sure you understand your divisions.

There is

in the curriculum a historic U.S.

social movement, Black Lives Matter, Me Too, criminal justice reform, but it also includes boycott divestment and sanctions movement for Palestine,

described as a global social movement that currently aims to establish freedom for Palestinians living under apartheid conditions.

Holy cow.

It also teaches that the 1948 1948 Israel War of Independence, they refer to that as Nakba, which if you know anything about the Arab world, that is what they call the day of independence.

In Arabic, it means catastrophe.

John Lewis, Martin Luther King, Justice Thurgold Marshall were not in the

influential people section.

However, Pol Pot

was in.

That's right.

Capitalism classified as a form of power and oppression, although classism, homophobia, Islamophobia, and transphobia were listed as forms of oppression, anti-Semitism was not.

What?

What is this?

This is science fiction becoming reality.

So before we delve into the

the technical details of this very divisive and problematic third draft, third and final draft of ethnic studies model curriculum.

I would like to just talk a little bit about my background and also how I got involved in a bigger context.

So currently, as you introduced, I am with Californians for Equal Rights, a nonpartisan and nonprofit organization with a mission to promote the principles of equality and merit.

And

between fighting for equal education rights of Asian American students from my home group and defending California's constitutional principle of equal rights and pushing back this ideological invasion of critical ethnic studies in California's K-12 education.

Okay, but

when you in

I think that in the old days,

people would have thought, well, then, you know, Glenn Beck and Wenyu and Wu have, you know, they're on different sides of the aisle.

No, I think we both define equal rights

in an opposite way than what is now being pushed in California.

You're saying, let's understand that

everybody has the same access and the same rights.

That's not what's being taught now.

No, not at all, not at all.

And this is very, very dangerous.

So the movement in California regarding this ethnic studies model curriculum, in my opinion, must be understood in relation to the systematic assaults on equal treatment and merit in the Golden State and beyond.

In 2020, I had the honor to be part of the heroic non-16 campaign, which successfully defeated a racial preference ballot measure, Proposition 16, on the state ballot with an impressive margin of 57% versus 43%.

Even though our campus,

if people don't know, that was the vote to reverse the discrimination laws, that you could discriminate for social justice, right?

Okay.

Right, right, exactly.

So that ballot measure would have brought, would have reversed a very important principle in the California Constitution, which clearly states that the state shall not discriminate against or grant preferential treatment to any individual or group on the basis of race, sex, color, ethnicity, or national origin in the operation of public employment, public education, or public contracting.

But the California state legislature is perennially obsessed with race and is even currently considering a list of bills that would have reinstated racial preferences in a number of public policy areas.

And these race-obsessed lawmakers also have powerful allies such as the University of California teachers' unions and even the California Chamber of Commerce, which all endorsed racial preferences last year.

And in the meantime, it's crazy.

And in the meantime, you know, our quality of K-12 education in California continues to decline with low-income and minority students being heard the most.

So for example, over 60% of California students, grades 3 to 11 cannot do math.

proficiently and only 50% can read proficiently.

Oh my gosh.

And there is a persistent racial achievement gap, of course.

But instead of legislating or promoting policies that address root causes behind the gaps and the dismal state of public education, these politicians and civil servants, I call them ideologues, they want to perpetuate the problem, first with racial preferences, then with dumbing down the standards, and now with political indoctrination in this very divisive ethnic studies model model curriculum.

And I would like to, you know, go into talking about this critical ethnic studies

curriculum.

All right, so hang on.

We're talking to Dr.

Wu, Executive Director of California's for Equal Rights, about the new curriculum.

This is important to you because it will be coming to your state.

In some form or another, this is being introduced into your schools.

And you need to be on the gates of your education and make sure that this does not pass those gates.

We'll have more in just a second.

Let me take a one-minute break

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10 seconds, station ID.

So we're

with Dr.

Wenyuin Wu,

and we're talking about this new curriculum on ethnic studies that is coming to K through 12 in California and will be coming coming your way.

We have about eight minutes here to go through the curriculum and I really want to talk to you about some of the people behind this curriculum that are really quite disturbing.

So give us the highlights of what is going to be taught

to our kids in California.

Sure.

So I would like to start briefly with an example of how this the case of critical ethnic studies was brought to my attention.

So last late last last year, a group of scholars, educators, and nonprofit organizations, including my organization, Californians for Equal Rights, put together a task force to connect people concerned about ethnic studies and the incursion of critical race theory in California and to raise public awareness on this important issue.

And on December 9th, 2020, our group received an anonymous tip from a Cupertino parent with some disturbing instructional materials on social identities, power, privilege, and white racism.

And these materials were intended for a third grade math class at Maya Holtz Elementary in an upscale community in Cupertino.

So that

raised

my attention, my alarm.

And

I started to dig deeper into this this critical ethnic studies model curriculum, which will also be used, operated as a national blueprint for how ethnic studies should be taught in K-12 education.

So this is not just an ethnic problem.

It's not a Jewish problem nearly or Asian problem.

It's a fundamental issue against our commonly held beliefs.

And I after my investigation and my partnership with several other groups fighting against this in California, we found out that the invasion of critical race theory into ethnic studies is a result of a multi-year campaign to produce a statewide ethnic studies model curriculum administratively and to mandate ethnic studies as a college and high school graduation requirement legislatively.

In other words, the radicalization of ethnic studies and social studies in general in California toward intersectionality, neo-Marxism, and

did not happen in a vacuum.

A group of far-left activists, activist scholars,

progressive lawmakers, and bureaucratic ideologues have conspired to make critical race theory or critical ethnic studies a mainstream pedagogy.

And this started in 2016 when then California Governor Jerry Brown signed AB 2016 into law.

AB 2016 requires ethnic studies to be taught in public high schools, including charter schools, and mandates the state to adopt a model curriculum.

The current deadline for adopting the ethnic studies model curriculum is March 31st this year.

So between 2016 and now, three versions have been introduced for public comments and each has met fierce opposition.

The first draft got 21,000 public comments with the Jewish American community being the most vocal opponent.

The second one received 35,000 comments and led Governor Newsom to veto AB 331 last year, which would have mandated ethnic studies based on that divisive model curriculum as a high school graduation requirement.

The third and final draft was released last December and contains some window dressing revisions to address criticisms on some glaring neo-Marxist and anti-Semitic elements.

But it is very controversial and rooted.

It has to be.

It's my understanding that when you started looking into the evolution of this thing, you found a group, Union Del Barrio.

And I just want to

quote from their Facebook page.

Union Del Barrio is a political group comprised of individuals that are committed to the organizational discipline in order to develop the science, strategy, and structures needed to overturn our oppression as Mexicans and Latin Americans Americans within the current borders of the United States.

We struggle for the self-defense and ultimate liberation of La Raza, translation the race, while we're also seeking to integrate our movement with the continental

liberation process that is taking place throughout America.

We are working tirelessly to unify the collective power of Raza workers, women, and men, blah, blah, blah, indigenous communities, prisoners, in order to unite as a strong and sustainable social and political movement for self-determination and socialism.

I don't know.

That's right.

Doesn't sound like a good group to have right in this thing.

Right, but they have been,

the Union Devaro has been instrumental in sort of radicalizing

the contents.

and the guiding principles of California's ethnic studies model curriculum.

According to credible sources from inside whistleblowers and researchers, we have unearthed evidence of this strange radical group of activists based in Southern California as the leader for this sweeping ideological reform in education.

So as a result, this movement led by Union del Barro has hijacked genuine cultural and ethnic studies and turned it into a political battleground of un-American worldviews.

And this story started in 2013 with the People's Campaign by this group Union Del Barro.

Okay.

As you described, an independent political organization working towards political revolution.

Dr.

Wen Yun Wu, Executive Director, Californians for Equal Rights.

I'd love to have you.

I'd love to do a TV show on this.

You can find her at Californians4Equal Rights.org.

Californiansfore Equal Rights.org.

We're going to get into this from the teacher perspective

in just a few minutes.

Stand by.

This is the Glenback program.

I mean, when a California educator has the guts to come on this program and say there's a problem, maybe there's a problem, and we all need to listen.

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This is the Glenn Beck program.

We were just talking to Dr.

Wenyin Wu

about what's happening with ethnic studies

in California.

And this is something that is coming to your state and

your schools.

We have to be aware of this, and we have to, quite honestly, stop it.

If you believe in equal rights as articulated by Martin Luther King, I'm in.

But if you think Martin Luther King meant that

we have to crush white people,

that was Malcolm X.

Malcolm X was teaching, at least at the beginning, he was teaching hatred and division.

That's not American.

We are all created equal and all given rights, and we have to fight for those equal rights.

But this is a perversion of those.

Now, Lori Myers, she is a co-founder for Educators for Excellence in Ethnic Studies.

She's a California educator, I think a first grade teacher.

And she wants to talk about the ethnic studies model curriculum that is awaiting passage now

in California.

Welcome, Lori.

How are you?

I'm great.

Thanks for having me on the show, Glenn.

I really appreciate your taking the time to talk about this super important issue that we're facing in California right now.

And I totally agree with you.

It is going nationwide.

I am so concerned.

This changes the future for generations.

If we don't, if we start teaching this poison,

we're done.

As a people, I don't even, not even as an America, but as a people, we start to look at everything

differently.

I completely agree with you.

And as teachers, we consider ourselves to be pretty much on the front lines of this, but the real people on the front lines of this are our students.

And that's why our group was formed.

We are a grassroots group of hundreds of educators from across the country.

who want to make sure that we have ethnic studies curricula that achieve really important goals, confronting racism, developing civic responsibility, building the 21st century skills that our students need, like critical thinking, communication, creativity, but that don't devolve into critical race theory, which not only won't accomplish those goals, but will do quite the opposite.

Exactly.

I mean, I, Lori, I don't know how you feel about any of this, and so you don't have to comment on it.

But I have to tell you, in looking at critical race theory, and I've tried to swear off this word, in looking at what it teaches and how it teaches, the only word I can come up with to describe it is evil.

It is intentionally destroying people, their communication with each other.

It's dividing everybody.

It makes you feel horrible about yourself.

I mean, it's so defeating.

So what I really appreciate about what you just said is that critical race theory in the classroom, and in particular, our group right now is focused on the ethnic studies model curriculum, but there are a couple of other different front lines on critical race theory in California.

But that we're not just concerned about what critical race theory teaches, that's the framework, we're concerned about how it teaches, and that's the pedagogy.

And both are concerning,

but in some ways, the pedagogy piece of it, how educators bring it into their classrooms is more concerning.

Laurie, let's just pretend we don't know what pedagogy means.

I know.

I've been told that many times.

I'm sorry I'm down in the weeds.

That's all right.

Pedagogy is

how teachers teach.

For example,

if I'm teaching math,

I might be teaching content, which would be addition, subtraction, multiplication, division.

But the methodology I'm using to teach it, the pedagogy, would be Singapore math or

University of Chicago Singapore.

The way I teach it.

So there is a, I'm trying to find it in one of the things

where the pedagogy would be to,

and it didn't say inflict trauma, but

make students feel vulnerable, sad, helpless,

and teachers need to be familiar with trauma-informed practices.

That sounds like a bad pedagogy.

Am I using that correctly?

And can you explain what this is?

Right.

So that's actually

one of the reasons that we are so deeply concerned about critical race theory as a pedagogy.

It's been out in the classroom in a number of different ways, and I'm happy to share examples.

But the end result is that we're concerned about how it will cause trauma.

And as teachers, parents are trusting us every day when they can't send their children to school to keep their children safe and secure.

In fact, I've looked up the code of ethical conduct for a number of school districts, which say that student safety and welfare is teachers' highest priority.

And every teacher knows that unless we have that foundation in the classroom, learning just isn't going to happen.

Yet, the ethnic studies model curriculum itself acknowledges that topics like like oppression, which by the way is mentioned in the model curriculum over 200 times, words like oppressed, oppression, oppressed, can make students feel, and I'm quoting, vulnerable, sad,

guilty, and helpless.

And then the model curriculum itself states that teachers need to be attentive to quote trauma-informed education practices.

And I've said this before and I'll say it again.

A school curriculum should not need a trauma warning.

Okay, so but wait, but isn't that saying trauma-informed practices,

doesn't that mean that you kind of want to inflict a little trauma because that helps inform and it helps shape them?

So that's a really interesting point.

And as educators, we agree that there are going to be be difficult topics that are taught in school

as long as they are grade level appropriate.

For example, students learning about the killing fields, students learning about Rwanda, students learning about the Holocaust.

Those are going to be difficult topics, but a well-trained, good teacher teaching them with a well-developed curriculum will be able to teach them and maybe cause students to feel some deep emotions, but not trauma.

And the other important difference is that with the critical race theory pedagogy, these traumas are caused because students are made to internalize feelings around impression.

It's not just the content that they're learning.

It's the pedagogy that's having them internalize these feelings and feel personal responsibility either for inflicting oppression on somebody else or feeling like students in your class are responsible for inflicting oppression on you.

And that's where the pedagogy piece is important.

I'm sorry.

No, no, no, no.

And it goes the other way as well.

They're in Berkeley, in the Unified School District there.

There was a lawsuit.

Are you aware of this, and can you tell the story?

So I'm not aware of a lawsuit in Berkeley, but what I am aware of, and I actually spoke with the former school board member whose student was in this class when this happened.

Various, so the school board member told me that in their ethnic studies class, which at that point was a high school graduation requirement, quote, various groups were denounced.

Boys, Caucasians, privileged students, high-achieving AP students of all races, of all races

were made to feel bad and another quote white kids were made to feel bad and the problems were so rampant in the district that the district was forced to drop ethnic studies as a graduation research.

What were the problems that this was causing?

The problems were that students were starting to denounce each other and target each other.

And that's one of our concerns with critical race theory in the classroom.

So first, what critical race theory does is it has students identify as part of a group based only on race, based only on skin color, and it assigns a judgment to them based on that racial identity.

The second piece is that it asserts that one group is the oppressor over the other.

And that sets up an oppositional relationship between the groups.

It literally pits students against each other.

And that's where I come back to the goals of ethnic studies.

and how this approach, a critical race theory pedagogy, is not going to help bridge the cultural divide.

It's not going to build cultural understanding.

It's not going to have students develop respect for inclusion.

And these are all the goals of the original bill that mandated

development of the ethnic studies model curriculum.

And that's why I keep coming back to we all, I hope we all share these important goals,

but critical race theory pedagogy is not the right way to get there.

I don't know if we still agree on the same goals.

There are people that are taking, I mean, I know that Martin Luther King has been put back in on the third draft, but if your instinct is to

talk nice about Pol Pot

and delete Martin Luther King, I don't think you get it.

I mean, Martin Luther King articulated what American ⁇ he didn't tear down America.

He said, America, live up to your own founding words.

He challenged us to be better, and he challenged us to all live in a world where race doesn't matter.

I'm not sure that everybody agrees with that anymore.

Well, I agree with what you just said, but what you just said is absolutely consistent with the bill that mandated the development of the ethnic studies model curriculum.

It says that one of the goals is for students to

promote collect self- and collective empowerment, to promote critical thinking, to develop a more complex understanding of the human experience from the California social studies framework.

It's the standards that we all need to track to.

Ethnic studies should help students develop respect for cultural diversity and see the advantages of inclusion.

Those are all consistent with Martin Luther King.

My concern is that the model curriculum in its current incarnation and in fact its incarnation since its genesis back in 2016

has been based on a critical race theory foundation that is inconsistent with the original goals approved by the state.

If we had a curriculum that tracked to those original goals, that tracked to California standards approved by the state Board of Education, then we wouldn't be having that problem.

So I do think that you and I agree on the goals and the state of California agrees on the goals.

The curriculum is what isn't agreeing with those goals and that's why it has to change.

Lori, I'd love to have you back.

I'd love to to actually do a TV show with you

because I don't think there's anything more important than what's happening in our schools.

And, you know, teachers have got to stand up, and parents have to stand up.

I really appreciate it.

If you would like to reach out to Lori, you can follow her on Twitter at teachermyers, that's M-E-Y-E-R-S,

or her website, EducatorsForexcellence.

That's the number four, educatorsfore excellence.

Weebly.com.

Lori, thank you so very much.

Thank you so much, Glenn.

You bet.

By the way, a few things you can do.

Get the word out.

Share this.

These things are...

are going to get very bad if you're not standing guard right now.

If your kids are being taught on Zoom school, look at the assignments, meet with your school board members, talk about this curriculum for ethnic studies,

follow your kids' school board minutes, ask for a public review if anything is being introduced in ethnic studies.

You've got to stand guard and speak up.

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Tomorrow night on Glenn TV.

And the question is, how are we going to really almost deprogram these people who have signed up for the cult of Trump?

Blacklists, purges, investigations, and arrests.

Is this the new red scare?

Unless we make sure that there is no infiltration, you will see a red world.

Glenn exposes the dangers and next steps of this anti-conservative movement.

Are you on the list?

Tomorrow night, 9 p.m.

Eastern at Blazetv.com/slash Glenn.

So Tulsi Gabbard, who is going to be a guest on my podcast in coming weeks, is going to be, or was on Stephen Crowder last night, talking about how do we fix what's happening with high-tech.

Listen to what she said.

It seems like everyone in positions of power right now in the Democrat Party support stifling opinions they don't like on big tech platforms.

Aaron Ross Powell,

yeah.

And this is what's dangerous is as they're looking at so-called reform, they're not really looking in the right places.

You know, when people go and actually look at section 230, the fact that the fix is actually quite simple,

where you just change the line where it says essentially big tech has the authority to remove objectionable content.

How much more vague can you get than that?

Objectionable to who or for what reason?

But then the thing that comes after that is the most troubling part.

It says whether it is constitutional or not.

You can see all of this interview with Tulsi Gabbard with Steven Crowder.

You find him at Laze TV.

This is the Glenn Back program.

So this is going to come as a surprise.

Coordinated deplatforming of Parlor

has come under question

as arrest numbers highlight Facebook's role in the Capitol Hill riot.

Hmm.

We begin there in 60 seconds.

The Glenn Beck program.

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Brace yourself because this is going to come as a complete shock to you.

Facebook was the social media network most used to organize the January 6th Capitol riot.

Now, this is, according to an analysis of the Department of Justice charging documents,

the Program on Extremism at George Washington University has collected the indictments of 223 people.

Now, these were people charged in participating in the Capitol riot.

That's weird.

It's what's weird about this is that Facebook was used by 73 of the people charged with crimes.

That's more than all of the other social media sites combined.

So,

how come Parlor

was

banned?

So it was such a strange target to me, right?

Like,

I mean, Parlor has its good points, but it was never a dominant social network.

You know, I mean, it was.

Well, it was with those crazies.

I guess that was the idea, right?

Like, the people we already banned off of Twitter keep going there.

Yeah.

So.

No, they actually were at Facebook.

More than any other, more than all of the other social networks combined.

That should say something.

So why was Parler banned?

And why was Parler banned from using Amazon's online infrastructure?

I mean, look at what happened to them.

It was only used by eight of the people charged.

Out of 220, only eight were on Parlar.

Google.

Apple removed parlor.

This is collusion.

This is, honestly, this is Detroit, the big three auto manufacturers, putting Auburn out of business, putting the Dusenberg company out of business.

That's what it is.

They know what's good for them,

and they got to get rid of any of the competitors.

And so they will collude to destroy their competitors, anybody who's coming up.

You know, and I,

again, no knock on Parlor.

I like Parlor, and a lot of, I know some of the people behind it are real free speech believers.

Like, this is why they started this.

Right.

So, but it's like, I think it's bigger than just knocking out their competition.

I don't think Twitter or Facebook or Apple see Parlor as competition.

They were an upstart network.

They were doing what they could do to get going.

I think what they see is they want a threat to conservative speech in a very public way.

You know, throwing off X or Y person off of Twitter sends some level of message.

But just banning, you can't even go to a secondary platform and say conservative things.

That says a lot more.

I mean, it exists.

Conservatives don't even try to get on these platforms.

It ran a deep chill through everyone who does what we do.

It's message setting.

Because

it wasn't just that they banned

Parlor and deleted the apps.

It wasn't just that.

No.

It was you can't use any of the infrastructure of the internet.

It's amazing these people who pushed for net neutrality because God forbid Comcast might slow your Netflix.

All these years they complained about that.

And when places like Amazon Web Services are removing an entire app because they say too many conservative things.

Again, that's my summary of that situation, not theirs.

But that is totally fine with the same people.

Oh, gosh, you might not be able to watch your, you know, your Hulu at high enough quality.

That's a real danger here.

So Facebook had 73 of the people that were charged said they were on Facebook and they were organizing through Facebook.

Eight used Parlor.

But listen to this.

This is from

Cheryl Sandberg.

She said this on January 11th in the Washington Post.

She's, by the way, a chief operating officer at Facebook.

She said, I think these events were largely organized on platforms that don't have our abilities to stop hate and don't have our standards and don't have our transparency.

Cheryl, looks like you were wrong.

Looks like you were wrong.

All of your highfalutin hate speech filters didn't apparently catch it.

Huh.

What's up with that?

Let me give you, let me show you where we are headed.

You think you have the First Amendment.

This story would be in the old days, you know,

back in December,

you would have looked at a story like this and went, well, that's why I live in America.

And if you didn't understand that America was completely different

than every other country in the world,

you'd say, well,

where's our freedom of speech?

This story comes

from

Great Britain, Scotland.

A man has been arrested and charged in Scotland, quote, in connection with an offensive social media tweet about Captain Sir Tom Moore.

Now, do you know who he was?

Sir Tom Moore, he's that old guy.

He was like 100 years old.

He was a World War II veteran.

He was one of the, I think he was the first to get the COVID vaccine.

Well, he died in the hospital treated with pneumonia and then there you know, so yeah, COVID-19.

So

apparently the

apparently the whole COVID vaccination didn't really help him out very much.

But he was he was knighted by Queen Elizabeth.

I mean, he was a big, big

celebrity over there and seemed like a really sweet guy.

So

a 34-year-old man has been arrested and charged in connection with communication offenses and is due to appear at Lanark Sheriff Court Wednesday, 17th of February.

According to the Daily Mail, the 35-year-old Joseph Kelly is due to appear at the court and accused of these communication offenses triggering outrage from free speech campaigners.

The communication offense in question relates to a tweet that Kelly wrote shortly after Captain Sir Tom Moore's death, which read,

trigger alert.

I just, please, you've never heard things like this or seen anything like this on social media.

So please, you are, remove all children.

And when I say children, I mean, of course, up to 26.

So if they're up to 26 years, if you are 26 years, you know what?

Let's make it easy.

If you're under 50, please just go back into the crib and pull the covers over your face because you're not going to be able to handle this.

He tweeted, the only good Brit soldier is a deed one, D-E-E-D.

I think that's because that's the way they say it in a sky.

Deed.

Burn, old fella, burn.

Now, normally what I would do is go, you're an idiot.

And and I'd move on with my life.

But that's because we live in this wilderness called America.

According to the police in Scotland, the tweet was reported three days after it sat there on the internet.

Three days it's sat there.

Oh my gosh.

And it comes as the SNP continues efforts to introduce a new hate crime bill that will criminalize stirring up hatred.

Now,

that doesn't sound vague at all.

But Section 127 of the United Kingdom's Communication Act, signed into law under Tony Blair's government, states a person is guilty of an offense if he sends by means of public electronic communication network a message or other matter that is grossly offensive or an indecent, obscene, or menacing character.

And he will be liable, according to Section 127,

on summary summary conviction to imprisonment for a term not exceeding six months or a fine not exceeding level five on the standard scale.

Level five.

If you don't think that's coming your way, they're already doing it.

And you know how they're getting away around the free speech thing?

Well, first, they're indoctrinating anybody under 30 to think that free speech isn't really free.

You don't have the right to say something crazy about the government.

You don't have a right to hurt people's feelings.

What kind of speech needs to be protected?

I mean, you can't just say that religious stuff anywhere.

What, really?

So

you want the cat in the hat to be protected?

What?

I mean, nobody's really saying, well, I mean, they will be soon.

How dare you put that cat in a hat?

Cats don't wear hats.

Why would you put a hat on a cat?

You know, cats are people too.

Mm-hmm.

So I'm using this as an example.

What time is it?

I'm using this as an example for today only because this may seem like, oh, listen to that fuddy duddy, next week when cat in the hat is suddenly really offensive.

What kind of speech needs protecting other than the speech that really pisses you off?

How are you misunderstanding this?

We should point out here so that our speech is not silenced immediately by all social networks and all across America that Sir Tom Moore did not get the coronavirus vaccine.

He was, he was.

Oh, there's a different guy?

He wanted to get it.

Oh, he was the guy who raised the money.

He raised the money.

He raised $45 million for health workers.

He was very famous around Britain.

He would have had the vaccine.

However, he was on pneumonia medicine already and made him ineligible for it.

So just so good, good, good.

Just so we

because I like the other guy, but I like this guy too.

I mean, I think both of them were great, but I should be banned.

You should be banned.

I should be banned.

This is what you should do.

I should be banned.

We interrupt this never-ending dumpster fire for

something less flammable.

So let's go to America

where we don't have any dumbass here.

And I'd like to talk to you a little before I start this story about Darwin

and his theory of the survival of the fittest.

Now,

lefties who buy into Darwin say that this is the way a worm became a man.

Because the dumb worms that didn't have any hands,

those worms died out.

even though we still have those worms.

But they died out and suddenly, boom,

he's doing the Glenn Beck program.

Isn't that weird?

Now, how did that happen?

Well, the ones that couldn't defend themselves, the ones that were too stupid or just defective in some way, what a great progressive word, defective,

they were eliminated.

Thus, we had the idea of eugenics.

Let's speed the process up by getting rid of all of our defectives.

So it was great, and I've never been for it.

Now listen to this story.

A Louisiana woman who went viral after struggling to remove gorilla glue from her hair claims that the hospital, nor the company's advice, helped remove the hardened adhesive.

She's now considering a lawsuit.

Tessica Brown, hired an attorney, is weighing litigation against Gorilla Glue because while the products label warns against using gorilla glue in your eyes,

your skin,

or your clothing,

it doesn't mention hair.

That's a really good point.

That's a really good.

I mean, if I was reading that, I was like, don't put it on your skin.

Don't put it in your eyes.

And don't even get it on your clothing.

I would think,

they didn't mention hair.

During Brown's weekend trip to the ER, healthcare workers put acetone on the back of her head, but instead of getting to the root of the problem,

it burned her scalp and only made the glue gooey before hardening back up because it's gorilla glue.

Gorilla glue is today aware of the dilemma and tweeted a statement reading and that does that shows compassion doesn't it I mean that shows you're really taking this seriously when you tweet

we are very sorry to hear about the unfortunate incident that Miss Brown experienced using our spray adhesive on her hair

We're glad to see in a recent video that Miss Brown has received medical treatment from her local medical facility and we wish her the best.

The company goes on to reiterate that its product is not indicated for use in or on hair as it is considered permanent.

Huh.

Now I don't know about you.

But I think we could lose a monkey tail or two.

I think we could lose, you know, I don't know, the beak that isn't shaped right

because some people, I'm sorry, some birds can't gather food.

And so maybe the beak needs to be shaped differently, and Darwin would come in.

There are some people that,

you know,

don't use lawnmower on roof to remove snow.

I say let them get chopped up.

As they're falling down, let them, as they're rolling off the roof and the lawnmower is still running, but it's now in front of them and flipped upside down.

I think that's good.

So the lawnmower lands, you land in the bottom part of the lawnmower with the moving blades.

I'm okay with that.

I'm okay with that.

If you're that stupid,

your hair should stick together forever.

And we should know.

We should know who we're dealing with.

When she comes in, is like, hey, we should be able to go, oh, yeah, you're there.

We now return to the American dumpster fire.

Already in progress.

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10 seconds, station ID.

This is a really disturbing story, too.

I've got another disturbing story.

A photographer has alleged, sit down, America.

sit down.

Don't put the glue in your hair and sit down for a second.

A photographer has alleged that Marilyn Manson forced female fans

to strip.

What?

Yes.

Manson, his real name, apparently not Marilyn.

also plied fans with alcohol before ordering them to take off their tops.

Speaking to the mirror,

von Stein said that she was picked from a crowd of fans by man's minders and escorted to his tour bus what an honor then

allegedly uh she hid at the back of the group as a musician pointed to the group of other women and instructed instructed them to strip she said he wanted to see who had the biggest uh and the best

everyone was a bit surprised because he made it feel normalized like it was fun now when i met him what yeah he made that sound like it was fun.

Yeah.

Bastard.

When my daughter would go to a Marilyn Manson

concert, which didn't happen.

But if she would go,

she would have been the first on the bus.

She would have been at the bottom of the bus.

Nothing could happen after with a rocker.

It's good advice for young parents.

They don't understand this.

If you're at a concert and the band members want you to go in their bus, you just let them go.

Let your kids go right away.

Right away.

Only good things can happen.

Apparently,

he was surrounded by older people, and he was dominating.

And nobody felt that they could say no to him because the older people were there.

Seems like such a good guy.

And then he would do something like this.

He looks like one of those crazy dogs with the blue eye and the brown eye.

What could go wrong?

On a tour bus?

Can't hunt on anything anymore.

Monkey Tails.

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Bitcoin is up to what $46,500.

I think $46,597.

That's it.

That's insane.

I mean, it was $3,800 in March.

So

$3,800?

You could have jumped in at $3,800 in March of last year.

Now, a lot of things fell right in March.

So if you bought right at the bottom, a coronavirus, but even, I mean, if you bought it before that, you could less than $10,000 very easily.

It's been incredible.

I mean, it really has to be.

The herd is coming.

The herd is coming.

Because of Elon Musk yesterday, he invested $1.5 billion, Tesla did, into Bitcoin.

You know, they're coming after him now?

They're like, you know, he's been hyping this up.

What?

Yeah, he says, I like Bitcoin.

So do I.

I mean, you don't have a right to say that.

That's somehow or another manipulating the market.

Well, because they were saying he bought it in December.

So, and he was tweeting about it after December as well.

So

he was supposed to stop believing in it.

And it was just his, you know, again, his company bought it.

He was saying good things about it.

Yeah.

I don't know that you, I think pretty much if you look at any company, the things they invest in, they're going to say good things about.

That's kind of a normal thing that companies do.

Boy, I tell you one thing I don't like.

We just bought 1.5 billion.

Paid billion.

Bitcoin.

That's over.

What?

Are you insane?

I mean, what's incredible is if you remember, if you were listening to this show, if you were listening to this show and you listened early, you're very wealthy right now.

But if you happened to...

Not us, because we didn't take our own advice.

Yeah, well, you know, we did a little bit.

I mean, it was certainly.

I think I was told, what was it, $30 or 30 cents?

No, yours was really ridiculous because you met with one of the like.

Leaders of Mark Dreason.

Mark Andreessen, who's like the guy who is

basically Coinbase, right?

He's a bunch of different companies, was a huge believer in Bitcoin super, super early.

And if Glenn had listened to his advice,

and some on the left might be happy with this, you would not be hearing him talk right now because he'd be on an island somewhere.

I think it was 30 cents when he told me

30 cents.

And I was like, I don't know.

There's nothing to this.

Computer money?

What are you talking about?

Computer money.

How do you put the computer in your wallet?

That's ridiculous.

But even later, I mean, we were talking about it, you know, three, two, three, four, five, six hundred.

Yeah.

And all the way up to, in the beginning of 2017, it was at 1,000.

And even that seemed like it was high at the time.

Then it had that big run-up, the quote-unquote bubble, right?

Yep.

And it went up to 19,000, like 900, or whatever it was, almost at 20,000.

And now when you look at the all-time graph of Bitcoin, it just looks like a little blip.

That 2017 looks like a little blip.

It's not even halfway up to the price.

And now this huge run-up.

And it's funny because one of the arguments at that time, after it collapsed, there's lots of haters who came in and said, this was nothing.

It never was anything.

People don't, well, we're not going to print and spend money.

It's not a, what, is inflation going to be a big problem in the future?

No, of course not.

Bitcoin makes no sense.

And what people who were pro Bitcoin

argued was that this is going to look more like the internet, where you had that first quote-unquote internet bubble in 2000.

Everyone's like, oh, gosh, what a joke.

Pets.com.

And now it's just running our entire economy.

Right.

And so you had that early one, that little bump.

It came down.

I mean, there's been several bubbles over the years with Bitcoin, but it's raged back to huge, huge improvements year, you know, year after year.

I think because what's happened was all the little people got destroyed.

And then the big money sat there and they were like, okay, are we ready?

Can we invest?

Can we do this?

And so all of the hedge funds, all of the big businesses,

you know, Goldman Sachs, et cetera, et cetera, they put in

in systems that could invest in Bitcoin, watched it, and now the herd is coming.

I mean,

I've heard that Apple is talking about investing $5 billion.

It would be stupid.

It would be huge, but it would be stupid to release that information before you buy it.

Right.

You wouldn't

trust that.

Yeah.

You know, Elon Musk is still quirky enough that people will look at that and say, oh, well, it's Elon Musk and he does all sorts of wild things.

Once a big company gets into it.

Apple does it?

Yeah.

That is a total grip.

I think this is the difference between my generation understands gold.

The young generation, this is digital gold.

That's the way they view it.

It's digital gold.

And I view gold as gold.

And I like both Bitcoin and gold.

But I think they're both being driven by the same thing.

The money thing is going to be over soon.

It's going to be over.

And if you don't, when you look at the price of Bitcoin, don't think you have to buy a Bitcoin.

You don't.

You could put $100 into it and still make money.

If you don't have, I've been saying this for five years.

Can you imagine when I first started saying this?

If you would have put money into it,

if you don't have $100 in Bitcoin, I used to say when it was a dollar, if you don't have $100 in Bitcoin,

you're a fool because this is life-changing money.

If you don't have, you know, $500 in Bitcoin now, you're still a fool because it's not done doubling.

It's not.

Again,

we don't know where the price of Bitcoin is going.

But

long term, it's hard not to be optimistic about that.

I still think that the central banks could come in at any time and crush it.

It should always be money you're willing to lose.

Right.

But

it is some, but I mean, it's some level of gambling.

But I mean,

even as late as October, Glenn, it was still at 10,000.

Shut up.

In October.

Shut up.

It's up five times since then.

I know.

Now, I don't know if it's going to hold on to this stuff.

I mean, the Elon Musk stuff, in some ways, makes me nervous because people get so hyped up about whatever he says.

So he's going to say something else next week.

And I assume all the people

who jumped in for Elon Musk are going to go run to Dogecoin or whatever he's talking about next time.

Dogecoin is a meme.

It was built as a joke initially, but it's been around for a long time now.

And it's hit all-time highs because he's been talking about it a lot.

Which is like eight cents.

It is like eight cents.

But still, I mean, you know, you can.

If you don't have eight cents in Dogecoin right now,

how long have you been saying that?

If you don't have eight cents in Dogecoin, you're nuts.

Loya, think of that.

You could have bought it at a penny.

Eight times your money right now.

You'd have eight cents.

Right.

I didn't even have a mathematician to get you too deep into the calculus.

You have eight cents.

Think of what

would you be show up at work

if you had eight cents?

No offense, Glenn, but we'd never speak again.

I mean, no, I'm with you.

I'm with you.

You know, I personally, if I had five cents, I'd never speak to you again.

But hey, you know, we all have our own standards.

And if you don't have five cents at Dogecoin right now, you are an idiot.

All right.

American financing.

Ever since the start of the coronavirus pandemic, the mortgage and real estate industries have been among the few economic bright spots.

Home equity is up.

The mortgage rates are

way down.

Now, I have been reading lately that they are starting to come up.

What was the company?

One financial house was saying that they were going to start raising interest rates.

I don't know what you're doing there, Sarah.

She's just playing.

I got it.

In London, however, they're saying in the next 60 days, mortgage rates will go to below zero.

So they will start paying you to take the money.

Another reason why they have Bitcoin or gold.

Anyway,

right now, if you have a mortgage that is more than 3 or 4%,

you need to refinance it.

Need to refinance.

Navigating home loans can be tricky.

The banks, God only knows what they're, listen to the first hour of this show today.

If you want to know what the banks are up to, oh my gosh, this article from the IMF about how we're going to start determining who's qualified for a loan is terrifying.

Get your loan right now.

American Financing, 800-906-2440, 800-906-2440, AmericanFinancing.net.

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Play it, Sarah.

Play it.

Hey, a couple of really good news items that I want to pass on.

Pass on to you.

The Biden administration is seeking to include the minimum wage hike in its coronavirus relief package.

You'll start making, if you're making minimum wage, $15 an hour.

Now,

when pressed on this,

the

spokesperson for the president said he's still pushing on.

He's still willing to

push this through, even though the CBO estimated that it would cost 1.4 million jobs.

But hey, he believes in things like the end of the pipeline.

You know, why talk to workers?

Why?

I mean, you know, why?

You don't need to.

It's the right thing to do.

He can either learn to code or

green job or something.

Welcome to the

2000s.

Learn to code.

And these 1.4 million jobs.

I mean, we're going to have a lot of people learning how to code, you know, what I'm saying here.

He's firmly committed to raising the minimum wage to $15.

Oh, by the way, I also forgot to tell you that

in addition to the jobs lost,

the wage hike, according to the CBO, would cause a corresponding rise in the price of general goods and services.

So because minimum wage is now $15,

people will have more money to buy things, and so they can buy things

at a higher price.

And so the costs will go up as your wage goes up, which is weird because that never happens.

Inflation with more money out there?

Never happens.

Never.

Never.

No.

Never.

Also, some really good news.

Now, that is the problem, but here's the cure.

Washington state is now proposing a 1% levy on wealth of more than a billion dollars.

Well, I mean, really.

I mean, Roseanne Barr said it really should be $100 million and then execution after that.

And she was serious.

But

Washington State is a little more reasonable.

You can have a billion dollars, but then you get a wealth tax of

1%.

So this is really going to help the economy.

I mean, think about how much money.

Jeff Bezos,

he's from Seattle, and he's got, what, $200, $200 billion?

Something like that.

He's going to owe $2 billion every year.

And he won't even know.

Oh, I have bad news for you.

He no longer lives there.

Oh, he no longer lives there.

I mean, he does now, but the second you pass this bill, he will no longer live there.

Oh.

And so you will get $0 from Jeff Bezos.

Well, you still have Bill Gates.

Okay, yeah, that's true.

What happened?

Bill Gates's bill.

He's going to pay about a billion dollars.

Oh, I have terrible news.

Really?

He doesn't live there anymore.

Really?

Wow.

That's just unfortunate.

How could you project this stuff?

You wouldn't know.

It's not like, how would you know these guys have resources to buy new homes in other places?

Well, wait a minute, just a second.

I mean,

according to

the people who are proposing this, 97% of the revenue from this tax is going to fall on four people.

Oh, I have terrible news.

These four people no longer live there.

Really?

Yeah.

Wow.

That's a weird news.

Can we have really rich person that lives in the state?

Well, they no longer live there.

How about they never

will visit?

Really?

Yeah.

Wow.

It's terrible.

I know.

I know.

It's so sad.

That is weird.

And it's just totally unforeseen.

How could you possibly know that these billionaires would move out of the state when you pass a tax like this?

I know, I know, you know, because $2 billion.

That's chump change.

Yeah.

Who even needs it?

Who even needs $2 billion?

Not me.

And

if I had $200, you know, and

the government has already made a bunch of money on me because I've been paying taxes to make that money.

And then they say, oh, you have too much now, so I'm going to take, you know, $2 billion from you.

I would think to myself, what could $2 billion do?

I mean, I used to be able to buy gum.

Remember when you could go into a store and buy some bubble gum and you'd get the little cartoon inside the gum and everything?

You'd get the little comic strip?

It used to be less than $2 billion.

It used to be less than $2 billion.

Now, what can I do with $2 billion?

It's like, you know, it's like a dollar.

You have $200, you lose $1, you lose $2.

Okay, big deal.

That's the way Bezos thinks about $2 billion.

He does.

And he gets to do that every year.

And what will happen is Bezos and Gates and all these other guys will move out of the state

because they'll say, you know what, we just were, we just needed warmer weather.

We agree with the wealth tax.

We think it's the right thing to do.

We do.

But we no longer, you know what?

It's so rainy.

rainy there oh my gosh

if you're raining but if you're there and it's raining take comfort in the fact that just living there for two years will cost you four billion dollars

i mean who doesn't say yes to that i don't know it's a it's a deal i don't know how you could turn it down i don't know and then you know what happens of course when you have the elizabeth warrens of the world who want to do this

because they'll make this point the same point that i'm making which is as soon as you implement this tax they'll people will leave the state that's why you need to do it federal that's why you need to to do it federally.

That's right.

And when I say, hey, they're just going to move out of the country, that's why we need to punish them for leaving in the country and take their money before they leave.

Well, they've already done that.

They've already passed that law.

You ain't getting out with it.

You're not leaving this country.

Remember when I said that, what, 15 years ago?

I found that little article in the Wall Street Journal.

Yes.

And it was about, I don't remember, Charlie Wrangell or somebody that was passing.

And I looked at you and I said, what do they know that we don't know?

They're now penalizing you for the very first time if you want to move away from America and take your money with you.

That's why, and I can't recommend this highly enough.

If you happen to have $2 billion,

put it all in Dogecoin now.

And then if you don't have $8 billion in Dogecoin, you're an idiot.

You're an idiot.

Moron.

How do you not have $8 billion in Dogecoin?

Do you imagine if you would have invested $8 billion in Dogecoin when it was only a penny?

Now you'd have $64 billion

in Dogecoin.

Think of that.

Which I think if you started selling your $64 billion in Dogecoin, the Dogecoin price might drop.

You'd have a hard time selling it.

Yeah.

Perhaps.

Maybe.

But that's why whenever you have Dogecoin, Glenn, you just hang on to it forever until it turns into the world's only currency.

That's just what, six months away?

In six months, everyone will only have Dogecoin.

And then you'll come back to the show and you'll say, wow, I wish I've listened to Stu when he was saying Dogecoin at eight cents.

You know what I think?

The US dollar is going to be a lot like Dogecoin.

Each one's worth eight cents.

Yeah, if you don't have a dollar in eight cents

right now, you're an idiot.

You're an idiot.

By the way, the co-founder and CEO of Tanium

has said the state of Washington might lose its competitiveness if it raises

taxes on the wealthy.

Oh, what a hater.

What an idiaster.

What a moron.

Hello.

This is the Glenn Beck program.