Best of The Program | 8/5/20

34m
The woke movement is canceling “Kindergarten Cop” for allegedly encouraging the “school to prison pipeline.” The Left is redefining racism because the old definition doesn’t work for American society anymore. NYC Mayor Bill de Blasio admitted that the rules don’t apply to things he deems important, like his Black Lives Matter murals. The coronavirus pandemic has left the San Francisco Bay Area with just one Hooters as cities debate what counts as food.
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Transcript

Welcome to the podcast.

It's Patton Stew in for Glenn today.

He is out sick.

We wish him well, but you can vote for him in the Radio Hall of Fame.

Surely this wasn't a ploy for some sympathy vote.

Radiovote.com is the place to go.

Radiovote.com, just a couple days remain.

Radiovote.com.

On the podcast today, we talk about Biden and his vice presidential choice and this little issue that Biden had with you know eulogizing a KKK member.

He's had no criticism over it.

We get into that.

We give you the quotes and everything of the podcast today.

Also, Oprah is calling out

you, if you're white, for your white privilege.

Make sure that you realize how white you are and how much privilege you have.

We now have a new example for cancel culture, kindergarten cop.

Get into the details on that.

And how awful

Bill de Blasio and Andrew Cuomo are.

They are the worst

pretty much in the entire country.

We get into the details on that.

And a new spin on Hooters that I think you'll enjoy all on the podcast today.

Make sure to check out the host of Pat Gray Unleashed on his own program every single day.

You can go to Blazetv.com/slash Glenn.

Use the promo code Glenn to save you 10 bucks.

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You can also watch Stu Duz America,

the Glenn Beck program.

Steven Crowder's coming back soon as well.

All sorts of stuff on Blaze TV you can check out.

And you can get, I know our show, Pat Stew,

on YouTube as well as on podcasts.

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click on this podcast app and go search for Stu Does America or Pat Grandleashed.

And please subscribe, rate, and review.

Five stars is the appropriate amount of stars.

Here's the podcast.

You're listening to

the best of the Blend Beck program.

Remember the words?

It's not a tumor.

How offensive that was.

Remember?

Literally the only thing I can remember from that movie it's not a tuma it's not a tuma

uh the the movie kindergarten cop uh so despicable um has been removed now from the northwest film center they planned to kick off the cinema unbound summer drive-in movie series that they do every year with that particular movie but fortunately uh somebody with uh you know cooler heads prevailed smarter heads wiser heads prevailed.

I was going to say, because the fact that they wanted to air kindergarten cop at a drive-in movie theater made me hate everyone at the organization.

Right.

Because of their despicable, despicable actions and their obvious lack of caring of people of color

because of the strong messaging in kindergarten cop

against people of color.

Well, as it was put by this woman who objected to it,

national reckoning on over-policing is a weird time to revive kindergarten cop.

I know you were thinking the same thing a minute ago.

First of all, I got to say, is it reviving kindergarten cop just showing at a local drive-in festival?

I don't think it's reviving.

Reviving

spread

all over the country.

You teased that story.

I thought they were going to say they were remaking it or something.

No, no.

It's just being the old Arnold Schwarzenegger version just being shown locally.

Yes.

That was the big controversy.

Yes.

Some little small town in Oregon is showing this at a drive-in movie festival, and they do this every year.

But here's the thing.

We are trying to end the school-to-prison pipeline.

That's not what the movie's about.

Nor does it encourage the school-to-prison pipeline.

There's nothing entertaining, Stu, about the presence of police in schools, which feeds the school-to-prison pipeline in which African-American, Latinx, and other kids of color are criminalized rather than educated.

I don't remember this in the movie at all.

I got to be honest with you.

That's only because it's not there.

That's why.

That's why you don't remember it is because it's nowhere in the movie.

Well, and my white privilege, and your white privilege.

Right, those two things combine.

Now, you can completely take away your privilege.

You're still white.

And so.

Right, of course, obviously.

Obviously.

You didn't need to say that.

Obviously.

Five and six-year-olds are handcuffed and hauled off to jail routinely in this country, as you know.

Routinely.

As you know.

How many times has that happened?

I don't know.

It's routine.

Okay.

It happens all the time.

Maybe once a year or so, I hear a story like that where some kid has done something and

a police officer does something they shouldn't probably do and haul them off to jail.

I don't hear it.

Often I feel like I hear about it when it happens because it's usually a news story, right?

And then it doesn't happen again for a while.

Well, let me tell you something.

This criminalizing of children increases dramatically when cops are assigned to work in schools.

We all know that.

I think one of the best things we can do is

take down the defenses of our kids at school.

What we don't want is people who are there that could take out a mass shooter or something if, God forbid, one shows up.

You want to make sure that they're just completely unprotected and therefore they will not feel the wrath of something like a kindergarten cop.

Well, right, because the school-to-prison pipeline is much worse than what you're talking about.

Right.

Than mass shootings.

Oh, my gosh.

Yes.

Come on.

Wise up.

Yeah.

You know what?

Do I have to educate you in all this?

My wife privileges showing again, isn't it?

That's really, yes, it is.

It's flopped out once more.

Yes, it has.

It's so apparent.

It's achingly apparent.

It is.

It is.

What a weird.

Kindergarten cop.

He's there.

I haven't seen the movie probably since it came out, you know, 30 years ago.

Yeah, not a lot of rewatching.

Why?

The biggest question here is: why on earth would you pick kindergarten cop to show it your drive-in?

Because it was filmed in Oregon, I guess.

Okay.

At least part of it was in Oregon.

And so this festival involves movies about Oregon or filmed in Oregon.

So instead of doing kindergarten cop, they're instead going to play a second showing

of,

let's see.

You know,

it's the John Lewis story, the documentary about John Lewis.

They're going to show you.

Was that filmed in Oregon?

Yeah, I don't know.

If it was filmed in Oregon or

he went to Oregon once or a week.

So wait, there is an Oregon tie there is.

Anyway, I want to make sure I understand.

They are so terrified by this.

Yeah.

That not only are they canceling Kindergarten Cop, they didn't even pick another movie.

They just decided to run another one.

I think we're okay with the John Lewis thing.

It's the one thing I know we can show.

They're terrified.

That's probably figured into it.

I'll bet it did.

Yeah.

Just replay the one we already have then.

They can't protest that, and you'd think they can't protest that, but you know what?

But they will.

They can.

And they will.

The left is in the middle of an all-out, full frontal assault against the vision of Martin Luther King.

Oh, frustration.

Against it.

Martin Luther King statues will topple in this country within the next decade, probably faster.

Probably much faster.

Listen to the word

go to like the white fragility, this book that's become so popular and is so highly recommended.

It is not

the racist, the thing they're calling racism today is not what Martin Luther King called racism.

It is a totally different thing.

They've just redefined the word like they do with gender, right?

They've just taken the word and it now means something different.

We were doing on the fabulous Pat and Stew show back in the day.

I remember sitting there with you, and we're sitting there, we're watching a clip of Ellen.

And Ellen comes on, and she's talking about the transgendered situation.

And she says, you know, people don't understand, like, you know,

what gender, what transgender means is it's, it's not, it's not like what you used to think it was.

It's, it's a feeling that you have in your head.

And it's like, well, okay, let's just take this on its on its face for a second.

If what you're talking about is a feeling in your head, we are talking about two different topics.

It may be very interesting to discuss what feeling you have in your head.

That may be something really interesting to talk about.

It's got nothing to do with whether you're a boy or a girl, though.

It's not the same.

I'm talking about, are you a boy or a girl?

If a doctor comes in and they need to fix your ovaries, are you going to have any?

Right?

Right.

That's what we're talking about.

You might have another interesting topic to discuss, but there's already a word we were using for the boy-girl thing.

We were talking about gender.

Okay?

Right.

So why take the one we are, if you want to call it feeling in your head, then that might be a really interesting topic for your talk show.

But it's not gender.

It's not what it is.

Yeah.

And we've come to this place where racism is the same way.

Racism used to be, are you judging people by the color of their skin instead of the content of their character?

If you're doing that, you're an idiot.

Okay.

You're discriminating against people because it's based on the color of their skin.

That's racism.

Yes.

If you lose them just because of the color of their skin, that's racism.

That's racism.

The solution to that.

Judge people by the content of their character instead of the color of their skin.

That's not what they're looking for now.

It's what Martin Luther King said, and it's what Terry Cruz just said.

The same thing.

Terry Cruz was just articulating Martin Luther King's vision.

And he's bledge for a bledge for it.

And you look at white fragility.

We did a show on this on Stu does white fragility a couple weeks ago.

And I had to go through a bunch of the nonsense in the book.

And when you look at it, they are not describing racism as we know it.

They have a completely new definition

of racism that revolves around the idea that it's not something you can control.

It's not something to say.

It's not something to cure.

It's something inherent in you, which to me sounds a lot like the arguments racists make.

Hey,

you're dumb.

It's inherent in you because you're color of your skin that you're dumber than the color of my skin, right?

That is what racists say.

And what they are doing now with this white fragility argument and all of these other things is judging

people who have a certain color of skin by the color of their skin and not the content of character.

They've actually reversed Martin Luther King's vision.

Exactly reversed it.

And just reversed exactly the people who are being discriminated against.

Instead of blacks, it's now whites.

Okay, well, so I have to be labeled the white privileged person or white fragility just because I'm white.

Yeah.

And people will say, well, it's, come on, you think white people are having all that tough in America?

Well, no, I don't think that they do.

I think America, generally speaking, is filled with people who see Martin Luther King's vision of racism and see that as something that should be fought against.

But if the people who have authored and given you things like white fragility get in control and win this argument, then yes.

White people will be in certain directions just like black people were.

For sure, it's the direction we're headed.

Yeah, that's why, you know,

you have to push back against it.

And it's important that people like Terry Cruz do it too.

Yeah.

You know, I mean, he should be praised for that.

Because this is insanity.

You're taking human agency out of it.

You can't, you can never personally be a good person because of the color of their skin.

That is legitimately their argument.

If you're white, you can't not, you can't avoid racism.

You are automatically a racist, one of the worst accusations in our society for good reason, and you cannot escape it because of the color of your skin.

That is

a horrific way to view the world.

Horrific.

And

it's gotten so bad that they're actually changing

what this movie is about.

Kindergarten Cop wasn't about police arresting children or terrorizing children or traumatizing them in the kindergarten.

He was just undercover at the school.

He wasn't arresting children.

There was nothing in there about that.

No.

He was trying to protect the children, and there was a drug dealer in there or something, and he was trying to get the drug dealer.

And so it's mainly, you know, he falls in love, I think, with one of the teachers or something to that effect.

I don't know.

And she happens to have a kid, and then it's all beautiful, and great things happen.

But it's not about arresting five and six-year-olds and taking them off to prison or the prison, the school-to-prison pipeline.

Nothing to do with that.

And again, I wouldn't say I'm a huge fan, but we're going to destroy the legacy of an immigrant who came here with nothing, who built himself into a movie star and then a governor of California.

We're just going to destroy his legacy because I guess he had white privilege too.

He came over here and was so white, he was able to succeed in this way with nothing, building his entire life with zilch.

We're supposed to now degrade that memory, just like we degraded the woman who played Aunt Jemima, just like all of these examples.

And her family, too, because her family's pissed about it.

Oh, yeah.

I mean, think about this.

Your mom is a beloved figure.

Your mom is someone who not only

is beloved by everybody who remembers eating anchomima pancakes when you were a kid.

I mean, I still have them, by the way, in my cupboard.

I made sure to buy some right before they took them off the shelves.

But, like, you know, it's one of those things where it's a great memory from your childhood.

And as I've pointed out, consumer research indicates that African Americans are overwhelmingly the biggest consumers of Angelaima products.

Why?

Well, you could understand it, right?

When you go down the aisle and there's someone who looks like maybe your grandma smiling back at you, there's a reason why they probably connect with that product.

They don't look at it as negative.

They look at it as positive.

Like, that is a good thing.

Now they've ripped it off the market because white people told them they were supposed to be offended.

Like, how insulting is this?

And

it's completely widespread and barely questioned anymore, Pat.

Same with Mrs.

Butterworth, too.

Yeah, she's gone now, too, because because I have gone out now too.

I got her in the cupboard as well.

Do you?

I do.

And I have some Uncle Ben.

But the bottle is shaped like she would be or something, right?

Yeah, it looked like it doesn't.

So the bottle is like it's Mrs.

Butterworth herself.

Because I don't know.

I honestly don't know the color of Mrs.

Butterworth.

I've never known that.

Now, if she's transparent as she appears,

she's sort of syrupy color.

Yeah, I think.

But inside of her is syrup.

That doesn't mean the color of her skin is syrupy.

I don't think.

I mean, I've never put any thought thought into it.

Maybe.

And that is what the argument is, Pat.

They say if you haven't put thought into it, that shows you're a white supremacist.

It shows that

your white privilege is that you didn't have to put any thought into it.

Right.

It's like,

why have we picked skin color for these arguments?

Why didn't we pick eye color?

Why didn't we pick hair color?

None of these things mean anything.

None of them matter at all.

None of them matter.

And we've just picked random physical

characteristics and decided to divide our entire society based on them.

It makes no sense.

I thought we understood that, but apparently not.

No, I don't think we do.

This is the best of the Glenn Beck program.

This Build-A-Blasio thing is...

This is one of the more outrageous things because

they're so

unmasked, I guess.

They're just saying it now.

They don't care.

They're not trying to hide it.

It's like, no, I can do this, but you can't.

No, no,

I'm different than you.

They did this with the politician thing in Washington, where they said the politicians could do this.

Yeah, they can get together for a funeral because they're politicians.

They need to.

They're important.

They're important people.

You can't do this because you're little people.

They're actually

basically saying just that.

Yeah.

Well, John Lewis was an important person.

His funeral is important.

The people who attended it are important.

Now, your funeral is not important.

You're a zilch.

Who are you?

You so what?

You had a spouse for 50 years and you didn't get to say goodbye to him.

So what?

It's unbelievable.

You don't get a funeral.

Of course not.

That's ridiculous.

It's ridiculous for you to do it.

It's okay for us to do it.

Now, when Glenn predicted, and I believed the socialist thing, I thought, yeah, okay, I bet they will eventually just say it because they're proud of it.

They want to say it.

They've always wanted to say it.

They just know that America wasn't there.

And I think they believe, at least they're to the point where many Americans are, and they can just say it right now.

Yeah, we're socialists.

It's a better system.

You tried it the other way.

Now let's do it our way.

But this, I am better than you thing, and I know more than you, is just amazing because I'm elite

and you're a douchebag.

I mean, you shouldn't be able to do the things that I can do.

Listen to Bill de Blasio, who's talking about, you know, the Black Lives Matter.

They call it a mural.

It's just painting on a street, painting block letters on a street.

That's not a mural.

Okay.

That's a good point.

Not a mural.

A mural is like a painting.

That's a mural.

What he's doing wasn't a mural, but you're supposed to get a permit for it.

And he didn't.

And everybody else has to.

Here's what he had to say about that.

We haven't said no to people who said, if you want to apply, you can apply, but there's a process.

The fact is that what I decided to do with the Black Lives Matter murals, and this came out of a meeting at Gracie Mansion weeks ago with community leaders and activists who said this would be such an important thing for this city to declare officially.

That is something, again, transcends all normal realities because we are in history where this has to be said.

We're supposed to buy that it transcends all normal reality.

Wait.

No, it doesn't.

Well, isn't that in the transcendence clause?

No.

No?

No, it's not.

That's actually not a constitutional thing.

There isn't a transcendence clause.

But what if the mayor of a city really wants to do something?

They should be able to do it, right?

Then no.

Still there again.

But if they really like, but like they really want it.

Yeah, you know, because I think what you're saying is like people, like, and what if a mayor kind of wants it?

What I'm saying is that they really want it.

They really want it.

Like, then it transcends all of it.

I should add on to that.

It feels really good.

Like, what if it feels really good?

And somebody told you it's important?

Yeah.

Yeah, still, no, no, still, you got to go through channels.

But he didn't.

And he's admitting it.

And he's admitting it.

And he's saying, but you still have to.

Let's see the rest of this.

Unbelievable.

And that's a decision I made.

But how do you do that?

The normal process continues for anyone who wants to apply.

For you little people.

Okay, the normal process continues for you, but I don't have to do it because what we have transcends you little people.

You don't understand.

We're smarter than you.

We're wiser than you.

And we're just frankly better than you.

But you have to go through the normal process or you'll be put in jail.

That's a legitimately incredible clip.

Because

he can't even.

It shows you how this stuff happens.

He can't even manufacture a BS excuse as to why this is real.

And he's had weeks and weeks and weeks to come up with it.

You know what's happened?

No one.

has brought it up to him before.

This is the first time he's thinking about how all of this doesn't make any sense.

For the first time, someone has breached the topic with him and said, hey, guys, like,

I've noticed that you're holding everyone else in the city to a different standard because you like this cause.

How is that happening?

This transcends normal?

What?

Yeah.

What an explanation.

Wait a minute.

And we're just supposed to buy that bullcrap explanation.

This transcends all normal reality.

What?

And that is essentially their argument with why the rallies were okay in the first place.

Coronavirus doesn't spread there because this transcends all normal reality.

Which it does not.

Which it does not.

And that's why, in part, the virus is spreading again.

Yeah, it's why you're having all these issues, right?

At least part of it.

And it's an amazing thing to see.

I can't.

It's incredible to see the fact that he can't even muster an attempt at political BS there.

Right.

Yeah.

It's just straight out admit it.

We've broken the rules because we like this group, period.

Yeah.

We like, and of course, To Blasio not only likes the fact that Black Lives Should Matter, but he likes the underlying

marriage.

He's been a Marxist for a long time.

Yep.

Going back to the 80s.

But that's an incredible moment.

That's an incredible.

It's so revealing, Pat.

So revealing.

It is.

And frustrating and

irritating and agonizing all at once.

And

there's just not words in the English language anymore to express the outrage that I feel for some of this stuff.

Yeah, well, because he and he is, de Blasio's horrible.

I mean, the New York duo between de Blasio and Cuomo,

there's not a worse combination literally in the world.

I mean, tracking it back to the Wuhan Institute of Virology, there's no one who's handled this worse than those two.

Right.

And people are like, oh, how can you say that?

Andrew Cuomo has done such a good job.

For whatever reason, de Blasio.

Yeah, I know.

It's amazing.

It's incredible.

De Blasio, for some reason, they hated him so much going into this.

He hasn't had

this sheen of invincibility that Cuomo has received from the media because they just despised him anyway.

Like, he is one of those people who is incredibly liberal, but doesn't really get the benefit from the press because he's so horrible and they can't stand him.

So unlikable.

So unlikable.

Cuomo, to me, is there's no difference.

I mean, he's just as unlikable.

Though, I will say, in multiple incidents throughout this virus,

de Blasio and Cuomo butted heads.

And each time de Blasio was proven correct,

Cuomo lost those battles to the point of that Cuomo had to was forced to admit it.

Like, for example, when they're talking about that, now, you know, the shutdown, we can talk about as a country, and we all would agree there was a zillion mistakes made in that era.

However, Manhattan, you know, I think there probably was due a shutdown in March and April.

That was a real, utter, out-of-control disaster, as everyone at least used to admit.

And in that time, de Blasio came out and said, We're going to have to shut this down.

This is really ugly.

And that's right.

Cuomo called him out publicly and said, He doesn't know what he's talking about.

It would have to be my call.

We will not shut this down.

There is no shutdown coming.

He's wrong.

I think it was three days later, Cuomo called for a statewide shutdown.

Three days.

It took three days.

And that happened.

I can't remember.

We went through, there's a series of shows we did in Students America, the Cuomo timeline.

And we went through everything pretty much in March.

It took multiple shows just to get through March.

That's how many dumb things the guy did.

But we went through that whole thing, and there are multiple times in there where he disagreed.

I think schools shutting down was another one, where he said, we're not going to shut down schools.

I don't know what you're talking about.

We're not going to shut them down.

That's not happening.

I would have to be on that.

People are saying that's a conspiracy theory.

I would have to be the person who did that.

A couple of days later, shut schools down.

I mean, he is flailing around like an idiot for months.

He was.

Months.

I remember the one press conference where he said that one of his friends approached him, one of his business friends, big business buddy, who said, Hey, I'm hearing that everything's going to shut down.

I'm hearing that the businesses are going to be closed.

We're not closing businesses.

I'm the one who would do that, and I'm not doing that.

And like you said, either days or hours later, they were shut down.

Incredible.

And he gets no criticism for it whatsoever.

No.

He had the worst problem in the world.

In the world, in the world, including northern Italy, including Wuhan, including Brazil, including every other option on earth Cuomo was worse than.

Worse than everyone on earth.

The only one, honestly, the only comparison you can come up with that's moderately close would be New Jersey.

Now, of course, New Jersey

was connected to very closely New York because all the people who worked in New York came in and then, while all this is going on, brought it back to New Jersey.

So their rate is, last time I checked it, a tad higher, but their but overall deaths much worse in New York.

And remember, about 80% of the seeding of this virus around the country came from New York.

Yeah.

You know,

Cuomo came up with this cool little thing, he thought, because Trump was saying the China virus.

And to show how enlightened he was, he instead, Cuomo, started saying, oh, well, it's the European virus.

We got it from Europe because the genetic history of it looks like it came from Europe, the strain that infected New York largely.

That might be true, but first of all, where did Europe get it?

They just got it from China.

So there was another step on the way here, which makes absolutely no difference whatsoever.

And if you're going to blame the most recent place it came from, every other state in the union should be blaming Andrew Cuomo because it all came from New York.

So this is all his fault based on, you know, his logic, which is incredibly minimal.

There's not a lot going on up there.

The latest thing is, of course, he most famously, five governors in America decided it was a good idea to force nursing homes to import known

positive patients.

I can't begin to understand it.

It's seriously almost as if what their goal was was to kill old people.

They can't kill old people.

Like, how can we get rid of of them?

They're a strain on the economy.

In a movie, that's a good thing.

It's like, you know what, we need to do is kill old people and eat them.

Yeah.

And turn them into Soyl and Green.

And that is, I believe.

Because, of course,

it's people,

as you know.

Soil and green is made out of people.

Soil and green is people.

Seriously, a Charlton-hested movie.

Yeah.

You could get Andrew Cuomo to be played by.

Andre Cuomo was reliving it.

Yeah.

And so if you, like, let's twist it around this way.

You're governor of a state.

Your goal is to kill old people.

What would you do with nursing homes during a COVID-19 pandemic?

I'd move sick patients into them.

Yeah, and force them.

And when they said, no, we have vulnerable people here, you'd say, I don't care.

I don't care.

You have to do it or you're breaking the law.

Another thing you might add on.

Because four other governors did do that, which is embarrassing.

But the one thing you'd do, and it would be only you who would do it, a couple things here, Pat.

Number one, what you would do is you would say, hey, here's a patient coming into

your home.

You can't even test them to find out if they are COVID positive.

New York was the only state in the Union that would not allow tests of new nursing home residents as they came in.

Did they explain that?

Yes, they did, Pat.

Okay.

What they said.

You would like to hear it?

Oh, yeah, I would.

They didn't want to encourage discrimination on COVID-19 status.

That is legitimately their excuse for this policy.

Because people were discriminating against people who had an infectious disease coming into a nursing home.

The nerve of them, not wanting them in that nursing home.

Because you know what?

49 other states didn't want positive patients to be imported into a nursing home.

However, New York did, again, making it seem as if they were intentionally trying to kill these people.

And And then in addition to that, Pat, New York is the only state in the union that says, hey, grandma died.

She was at the nursing home.

She got COVID at the nursing home.

She got very sick in the nursing home.

And right before her death, we got her in an ambulance.

We brought her to the hospital and she died in the hospital.

Only in New York is that not a nursing home death.

They do not record that as a nursing home death.

They say that's somebody who died in the hospital.

Well, every other state in the union counts that as a nursing home death because obviously that's the point of the statistics.

The point is where it's transmitted, not where they actually finally took their last breath.

Every other state in the union recognizes that.

Not only does Cuomo intentionally not recognize it because they're trying to hide that number, which is obviously the number one, the biggest number in the United States, obviously.

He is now out bragging about how his rate is lower than other states because he's the only state recording it that way.

So he's like, oh, we're like 34th or 35th in the nation.

Go talk to those other, those red states who have higher rates than us.

This is beyond lying.

It is dancing on the graves of thousands of dead people.

He is the worst governor in the country.

This guy, the fact that

it's not even close, and he has been the worst manager of the coronavirus pandemic.

He let it burn through through his entire population.

And now, because he only has five, six, seven, eight times as many deaths as any other state,

now he is, because after it's burned through the population, he has a low rate for a few weeks.

He's now bragging about it.

And the media aids him in that.

It is despicable.

There's nobody worse than Cuomo.

Including even de Blasio.

Is it just me, or do you dislike him somewhat?

am I getting the right impression?

Let me summarize.

My misunderstanding.

Let me summarize it this way, Pat.

Okay.

AndrewCuomoisAwful.com.

Okay.

Just go to AndrewCuomoisAwful.com

and you can express this the same way.

All right.

You're listening to the best of the Glenn Beck program.

I got this in from a longtime listener, Pat,

an amazing part of our society today.

They run an Airbnb in Indiana.

And during the protests, the unit was rented by some protesters.

Now, while they're there, neighbors called the owner of the Airbnb and said the people were being rowdy at all hours of the night.

So the police were called.

They had to meet the police over at their unit.

He writes, when we got there, there was weed smoke coming from the home.

Apparently, people were smoking a little bit inside the home.

Not allowed, of course.

After they were removed, they complained, however, to Airbnb Corporate and accused the owner of the unit of racism.

They called the police because we were black or whatever.

They had no chance to respond to the accusations, and now Airbnb has

removed their unit from Airbnb.

Oh, man.

I think.

I mean, again, this is, you know, Airbnb is,

you know, I'm sure they have some side of the story on this as well.

Of course, that's the way our life works.

But you don't need it.

You see what companies do all the time.

I mean, companies react this way all the time.

Any accusation of something bad, whether they check it out or not, you just get dismissed.

You get thrown to the side.

And whether you built a business, whether you've built part of your life doing these types of things, it doesn't matter.

Whether it happened 37 years ago,

it doesn't matter.

It doesn't matter.

As Arnold Schwarzenegger found out with kindergarten cop,

he made a movie that was nice to police, so therefore it must be canceled.

That's incredible.

It really is incredible to watch this.

And I think this is one of those things where the average person doesn't feel this way.

Like the average person might very well think we should have a higher minimum wage, and they're going to get into an argument with us about the economics of it, and that's fine.

That's the way it's always been.

But the average person, I don't think, believes the television show cops should be canceled because some member of the profession of police officer did something wrong.

Like, that's just insane to most people.

I hope not.

I hope that's true.

Because

I don't know how you come back from that.

If we're there, where the average person believes that,

how do you overcome that?

Yeah, it's not become so stupid that you can't can't continue to exist as a society at that point.

I just hope we're not there.