No One Will Ever Be Woke Enough | 7/7/20

2h 4m
Pat & Stu fill in for Glenn with the latest rundown of the crazy news cycle. The once-woke Broadway musical "Hamilton" is under fire for depicting the Founding Fathers, and actors are canceling themselves for playing characters that are different from them. We don’t need white woke liberals explaining what "black lives matter" means. New Saint Andrews College says ALL black lives matter – including unborn lives. Activists don’t even know the facts about police shootings. Most Native Americans are proud of the Washington Redskins’ name, but the media really wishes they weren’t. ESPN is making a Colin Kaepernick docuseries, and quarterback Patrick Mahomes scored a huge contract. Stu is convinced that the media hasn’t read John Bolton’s book.
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Hey, it's Pat and Stu for

Pat for Glenn.

Stu's always here for himself.

Thank you.

Except when he's not.

And then sometimes I fill in for him.

But welcome to the Glenn Peck program.

We got a full, full, wonderful show of just all good news today.

Just really wonderful things.

Like, for instance, not everybody in the country has been killed.

And further than that, not everybody in the country has Rona, the Rona, the COVID-19 Rona situation.

A couple survivors.

There are a couple.

So I'm just going to accentuate the positive today, and we will get to that in about 60 seconds.

This is the Glenn Beck program.

You know, life is complicated and tricky enough to navigate during normal times when you're feeling fine.

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Glenn is sick today.

I guess.

Does he have the Rona?

We don't know.

We do not have a Rona report from Glenn yet.

I kind of just assume he does.

Yeah.

Because that's going to add to the drama of the show.

You know, right now, it looks like the mayor of Atlanta has the Rona.

Oh, yeah.

She's got it.

It looks like

the Bolisaro, the guy from Brazil.

Oh, he's sick, too.

Yeah, he looks sick.

He does not look great there.

He's one of these guys who's been from the beginning, like, this is nothing.

And like going around hugging people in the streets.

And like,

he's basically said it's not a big deal.

He's been a little reckless.

He's been a little reckless, not only with himself, but with the country in general.

And Brazil is much, much worse than the United States.

I mean, it's by far the worst place on earth right now for coronavirus.

And they are, are, all the experts think that they've completely underestimated the amount of deaths, and they're still leading the world

in recent weeks by a large margin.

You know, this is not exactly surprising.

It's one thing for this stuff to hit a developed economy and healthcare system like ours, which is, it's still difficult to deal with.

When it goes to places like Brazil, where there's all sorts of, you know, systemic problems going on anyway, it gets ugly.

And now he apparently, they don't know for sure that he has it.

However, he has a lot of the symptoms and uh

that the the weird blood oxygen level situation that is hitting a lot of people with this uh that is apparently hitting him as well so they don't know what's going on with that um but that's another possibility does he have a fever i think he does have a fever yeah uh oh yeah it sounds bad sounds like it's uh sounds like it's covet right it does they do think it's covet but he hasn't he's finally decided all right i'll get a test does he have a dandruff because that's another new sign new uh dandruff yeah dandruff.

It's one of the signs that you have it.

It's one of your symptoms.

Oh, you're having a dandruff.

Yeah.

I didn't know.

Combination skin?

Another one.

That's another one.

So if you've got either dandruff or combination skin, you probably have COVID-19.

What about a cough that keeps you awake?

No, that doesn't.

It doesn't have anything to do with it.

No.

By the way, I was listening to, I think it was the New York Times this

week, and they're talking about coronavirus.

I'm like, there's four new things we know about coronavirus, and they're going through them.

And then

they start building it up, and they're like, well, let's start with something that we're pretty pretty uh pretty sure on um this one is uh it's not a upper respiratory disease

what i'm like wait what it's not

a respiratory disease it's not a respiratory disease and i'm like wait wait

apparently they believe it's now um in the blood vessels Which is, I think, what you were kind of mocking there about everything seems to be a coronavirus symptom.

Yes.

That's why they think this is happening.

Because what you're saying is real.

Like they, they're like, why is it causing all these weird problems?

They think now it gets into your body in the respiratory system, which is what they believe from the beginning, but it winds up getting into your blood vessels so it can spread anywhere your blood spreads.

So that makes it a really fun thing to deal with.

Wow.

And the fact that they're out there going like, yeah, you know, we pretty much at this point think it's not a respiratory illness.

Wait a minute.

Wait, wait a minute.

What?

Now they think it's, that doesn't mean it spreads differently.

But again, there's a new thing out from

a bunch of doctors and experts around the world are trying to get the World Health Organization to take back their belief that

it can't be airborne.

There's an idea of like a droplet where you would spread it, right?

The sort of yucky, I have to picture someone sneezing in someone else's face type of thing, which is always fun, especially maybe if you just had a meal.

They are now saying that they think it can be.

Yeah, they air.

Didn't they say aerosol?

Yeah, which is a big idea.

It just hangs in the air.

Yeah.

So it does.

You can spread it through the air.

That one I would say there's a disagreement on, is where they are right now.

And that's one of the things that's hard on this.

And I think it's mostly the media's fault, although scientists definitely have a part in this as well, which is acting too sure about things they're not sure about.

You know, when they come out and there's like, well,

look, 100% chance it's stupid for you to buy a mask.

What kind of moron would buy a mask?

It doesn't protect you at all.

It doesn't protect you at all.

it's basically it is like a magnet for the virus it pulls it in through the mask

the virus particles look for masks around the room and they fire at the masks and it infects you and then a couple weeks later they're like oh yeah by the way we were totally totally wrong on that you if you don't wear a mask you're basically it's a death sentence for you yeah and others around you around you're killing everyone so what are what are what are normal people supposed to take from that that you don't know what you're talking about that's what they get yeah you know instead of just being honest and saying like look here's the situation Masks work in some of these situations.

Might be a good idea to wear them, but we have.

Doesn't they help?

Yeah.

They don't prevent it.

No, definitely not.

It's not 100%, but it lessens the chance, I think.

And everyone knows this.

This has become some political issue, right?

We all

internally are aware that if you sneeze and you have a mask on, it's going to be gross for you, but less gross for other people.

Here's what we do.

A way to illustrate this completely.

Every time your kid is about to sneeze, what do you say?

Blush you.

Well, that's what you say afterwards.

But what do you say before?

Oh, see you coming?

Cover your mouth.

Cover your mouth.

Right?

Why do you cover your mouth?

That's just a mask.

It's a temporary mask when a sneeze is occurring.

That's why you cover your mouth or you put your arm, you know, your, and now you're supposed to do it into your, like, into your, into your arm instead of covering your mouth with your hand, whatever.

The reason why you do that is because you don't want to spread droplets.

So if you're wearing a mask, yes, it's going to be less likely.

If you're talking loudly, they've done tons of experiments on this.

You're going to block.

I mean, this is obvious.

If you put a t-shirt in front of your face, it's going to hit the t-shirt, right?

Right.

That does not stop all viral particles because they're a lot smaller than that, but it will help from a droplet spread situation.

Which is why they're telling people at church not to sing.

Yeah, which is like,

it's so weird because it is weird.

Again, when you come out and you say it's okay to

chant at full volume

black lives matter, when that's okay.

Well, that had nothing to do with anything.

Why did you even bring that up?

What a racist.

Exactly.

When you're a racist for even bringing that up.

And by the way,

Hillary on the Four Minute Buzz was just talking about a story where now they do think there was a rise in cases

from the protests.

From the protests,

which is shocking.

But they've been denying that too, Pat.

I know.

They said,

and like, what are the big when you actually looked at the reports?

The best part was that you're like, okay, well, let's look at the stats.

There's been no spikes in these cities.

And people are like, well, there's been spikes in the age groups of the people who were 20 to 29?

That's gone up a ton.

What's going on?

And then you read the report in more depth and you realize what they're saying is.

The protests were basically so out of control that

losers in the suburbs, like myself, stayed the hell inside no matter what on those weekends.

So there were a lot less overall people out.

So, the spread maybe wasn't a huge explosion.

It may have spiked in those communities that were out protesting, but everyone else was like, I'm going to cower in my house

because they're lighting all the buildings I like on fire.

I'm going to stay inside for a while.

And that may have been what didn't cause massive outbreaks in those areas on those weekends.

But there were still spikes in these age groups, and you know, that's a big difference.

It does not make protesting okay.

And the fact that medical doctors and experts were coming out publicly and saying, you know what?

Racism is an even bigger deal than this pandemic.

And it's okay to protest it.

No, it's not.

It's not a bigger deal.

There is, we did this at the time.

There are, if you take all the shootings that police officers,

all fatal shootings from police officers, black or white,

guilty or innocent,

justified or not, you know, someone charging at you with a gun or a knife or not, every police shooting and combine it together, you get about a thousand per year.

We've lost 133,000 people to coronavirus in two months, three months.

So that's only 133 years worth of police shootings.

Police shootings in three months.

So, yes, there is absolutely no justification to go and protest

in the way that they were doing it.

Now, look, you know, people on the conservative side did protest too.

And again, I don't think in either circumstance, you should be banning them.

We have a constitutional right to do it.

So, to ban a constitutional right, you have to have

the hurdle.

I can't even.

There's not even a hurdle, really, to do this.

However, is it a good idea to go out and protest in small groups, especially if you're close together and you might go indoors?

No, it's not a good idea right now.

It's not.

It would be, it's better to, you can always protest in a few months.

The right to protest should stick around.

It's up to you, I think, if you want to go do these things.

I don't think government should be stopping them.

But still, you have to acknowledge when you're a medical expert.

You know, it's how the same way churches lose credibility, Pat, where they will come out and say, well, in this particular case, it's obviously okay for X, Y, and Z behavior that's explicitly banned in the Bible.

When you start doing that sort of crap,

it ruins your reputation among the people who are coming to you because they're coming to you for a foundational truth.

You have no credibility.

None.

They're coming to you for, in a, when I am having a tough time personally, where do I go?

I go to a place that does not change their principles, right?

And so that's just become so trendy these days.

Everybody changes their principle for every reason.

And it's inexcusable.

It's one of the most inexcusable things that's happened in the pandemic for medical professionals to encourage protests at all during this.

Now, I will say,

Being outdoors, you probably have a much lower, I think, I'm of the belief that most things outdoors are pretty much fine.

If you could take basic precautions outside,

you're probably going to be fine.

And I think that's shown to be true.

There's multiple studies that show that from around the world.

But you certainly shouldn't be encouraging extra behavior where people gather in groups of 30,000 shoulder to shoulder.

That's not a good idea.

Like on that street in Los Angeles

where they showed that crowd.

That was an unbelievable crowd.

I don't know how many people, nobody ever said how many people were there that I ever saw.

No, but you you know what they did say they said what you said it was unbelievable and you know why they said it that way look at the showing yes look at the incredible support for black lives matter right it had nothing to do with nothing to do with holy crap where these people are all gonna be sick in two weeks and what's happened and they are in los angeles california is one of the biggest areas of outbreak yep and we we we don't i mean it's it's never it's not one of the things you're never going to come to the answer and say okay well it looks like it all all the virus came from this area it's not the way it works people are are transmitting it before they even know they have symptoms.

Some are transmitting it when they never have symptoms.

So you're never going to know who you got it from unless your wife has it and you realize you caught it person to person that way.

These group things are going to be impossible to trace overall.

But it's common sense that at the very least, you shouldn't be encouraging this behavior.

Right.

You shouldn't be saying, hey, let's everyone gather together in the tightest group possible.

That's insane.

And forget the fact that we all are aware that that a protest, one and any individual protest, is not going to overturn racism.

It's not even going to work.

Like, what are you going to do?

Yes, will you get

Aunt Jemima taken off the shelves?

I guess.

You got the pancakes off the shelves?

That probably does improve people's health.

I don't know.

Maybe it does more than coronavirus because they are delicious pancakes.

And

the fact that they're gone, by the way, taken away from the group most favorable to Aunt Jemima, African Americans, who buy them at a rate of like four times as much as any other group, which you guys weren't offended enough.

We have to rip it off the shelves.

This is insane behavior.

And it's understandable that people don't want to listen to any of these mandates or any of these recommendations because every two days they change.

Right.

You know, and that's the credibility.

Yeah.

You've lost all credibility.

And then you wonder, well, why won't people listen to us about the masks?

Why?

Why won't they listen?

That's why you have no credibility anymore.

Yeah.

And it's not just like, it's not just saying, okay, here's the, here's the news of the day, here's the science of the day, follow it.

It's you're a terrible person if you don't.

So when you say you're a terrible person if you buy a mask, and then two weeks later, you're saying, please buy masks,

you have to understand that people are not going to deal with that well.

It's your job to give clear information that you don't change every two days.

And if you're going, if you're worried about changing it, you have to express the uncertainty.

And say, look, we think masks will help.

We're not 100% sure that we're going through this with you guys.

We're trying to to figure it out as we go.

This is our recommendation right now.

It may change.

In two weeks, we may tell you the opposite.

I don't know.

But we're going to do our best to try to protect each other.

That's an adult way to approach it.

And they won't do it that way.

No.

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And you know, part of the problem too on the COVID situation and the masks and wearing the mask is

are the policies of the places that are enforcing the mask wearing.

First of all, I think it's mandated by government pretty much everywhere now, right?

That you have to a lot of places, yeah.

I know.

Most cities in Texas now say you got to wear a mask if you want to come in.

The state of Texas now has

that for most activities.

Almost everywhere you go.

And we went, like, I went to a restaurant the other day and you can't get in without without a mask.

And I said, well, okay,

how do you eat with a mask on?

Oh, well, you can take it off when you get to your table.

Yeah.

And so I'm only wearing the mask from the door to my table.

Right.

Okay, so I go in with the mask, sit down, look around.

Not a single person, you know, wants inside because they're going to eat.

Not a single person has a mask on.

They get up, they walk around the restaurant going to the bathroom or, you know trying to find their waitress or waiter or whatever but they're walking mingling all over the restaurant now without a mask on

it's so stupid so just walking from the door to the table saved everybody but now i'm walking all around the restaurant without a mask on these it's just so bizarre it doesn't make any sense no you're not doing anything with that policy no they we were looking at some of the policies for school coming up because they're talking about you know how they're going to open up schools yeah and they believe that there's going to be a mask mandate for the teachers in public areas.

So, like, you know, when you're walking through the halls, you have the mask on, but when you get to the classroom, you can take it off.

And it's like, well, there's much more likely transmission of you sitting in the room with someone for hours on end than there is in a passing situation in a hallway.

And talking loud enough for everybody in the room to hear you.

Right.

It's the exact opposite of what you'd think would be the case.

But this is why it's never a good idea to try to do these things through the government.

That's the problem here.

Like, I think if you communicate to people, look, we think masks work if you can wear them in certain situations.

Do it when you can,

especially if you're indoors.

Everyone realizes if you're eating at a restaurant, you're not going to be able to wear a mask.

So making them wear it from the door to their table is just dumb.

It makes people not want to participate in your stupid program.

Instead, if you give people clear information that you don't change every few days and let people make up their own minds, you're much more likely to have people actually go along with it.

People who are

pissed off and

they're not at each other's throats.

Yeah, because they're going to revolt.

They're going to say, look, you're telling me these things, and we can all understand how dumb they are.

So therefore, I'm not going to participate.

And that becomes kind of a big issue because when no one participates, you do have to-you get your backup and you say,

I'm not doing this because the government is telling me to.

We believe in our rights as Americans and don't believe the government should be forcing us to do certain things.

And that's one of them.

Yeah.

So instead of banning people going to church, maybe you communicate with the pastors of these churches and say, hey, guys, just so you know, this is what we think is the big risk activity.

How about taking it outside?

That would be a great solution to this.

Have people come up in their cars.

Instead, they're going after people in their cars.

They're finding them.

And it makes people revolt and not listen to your stupid advice because it doesn't make any sense.

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He's sick today.

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In a world where nothing makes any sense whatsoever, a guy who is absolutely celebrated for the last five years for his play on Broadway, Hamilton, Lynn Manuel Miranda.

Oh, this is a good story.

What a hero the guy is.

Oh, yeah.

Because he took white people and made them black.

If you tried the reverse of that, if you had a bunch of black people that you decided, eh, I'm going to put white actors in there.

Can you imagine?

They'd tear down the theater.

Oh, yeah.

And we've seen it.

I mean, they've canceled all of these people.

They have to come crying and begging for your forgiveness for accepting a job they were offered.

But okay, they made all the founding fathers black.

And

Lynn Manuel Miranda, I think, is Hispanic, and he was playing Hamilton.

So

it was celebrated by every person on the left.

Bill and Hillary Clinton loved it.

The Obamas adored it.

And when Mike Pence went to go see it, like, he got booed in the audience.

Remember?

Right.

That's how woke they were.

Oh, so woke.

Mike Pence can't

see our play.

Right.

Because it's woke and wonderful, and he doesn't deserve it.

He doesn't deserve it.

Well, now, all of a sudden.

Ooh, that's really problematic.

They say good things about the Founding Fathers.

And you know, the Founding Fathers were actually white people, and they were slave owners.

And that's the only thing we can remember about them.

And can we talk about how problematic it is that you're taking black culture with the music and just taking it away from black people and putting it, foisting it upon the audience through a Hispanic man and

white historical slave owners?

All of which is problematic.

All of it's problematic.

All of a sudden.

Yeah.

That's problematic.

Huh.

It's so amazing.

By the way,

did we...

Does anybody know the Founding Fathers didn't actually rap?

Did people know that?

Pardon me?

Yeah, they didn't.

The first rap song was like

1979, I think.

Something like that.

The Rapper's Delight by the Sugar Hill Gang.

That's right.

Yeah.

Yeah,

that was post-Founding Fathers.

Interestingly, that song started in 1979, still going

today.

It's the longest song.

I don't know.

All I remember them talking about dinner.

One of them was talking about having dinner over someone's house.

Oh, that's right.

That's all I remember about that song.

It's like, look, that's an interesting thing.

Not a lot of people do it.

Not a lot of people sing and perform about having dinner over someone's house.

The only part I remember about that song is Wham, Bam, Ho Jam, Holiday Inn.

And that meant a lot to me.

It meant a lot to me.

Oh, you have a bumper stick on your head.

Wham, bam, ho, jam, holiday inn.

Yeah, I was wondering, I wonder why he has that.

Now I know.

If your girlfriend diss you, then you take her friend, I think is how it goes.

Something like that.

Hey.

Yeah.

I want to make sure that everyone knows that we are not not being critical in any way of

high-level lyrics.

No, I love them.

I'm very critical of the Constitution and our founding documents, but

that's trash delight.

But it is interesting because they have turned on this now completely.

They are saying that it is a big problem, that

this,

you know, one of the things.

All of a sudden, now it's a big problem.

Right.

And what's interesting about the Hamilton thing in particular, because there's so many of these stories, but the Hamilton one is interesting in particular because the only reason to like Hamilton is if you respect the story of the founders.

Like, if you love our country and love how it was founded, and you want a different way to essentially get history, right?

Which is obviously a BS history, but still, like, it's an entertaining presentation of history.

But you have to like the history.

You have to think, oh, God, these guys did something great in our world because they actually do admit that in the play.

Right.

You can't do that now.

No, you can't.

That's a big problem.

Yeah.

It's so ridiculous.

All of these things that were designed to be woke, essentially, are now not woke enough.

And that's the lesson.

You're never going to be woke enough.

There's never going to be a time where you're woke enough.

Hallie Berry yesterday.

Hallie Berry,

as you may know, an African-American actress.

Wasn't she the first African-American actress to be nominated for best actress?

I don't remember which one it was.

She was in, she, she,

I can't think of the name of the movie.

It was sort of a dark movie she was in, um, but it was very well received.

Monster's Ball.

Monster's Ball.

Yeah, Monster's Ball.

Yeah.

Yeah.

And so she, she now is in

retreat mode because she had the audacity to accept a job acting in a role as a transgendered person.

Now, she herself.

She's not trans.

She is female.

One of the 900

female.

Biological female.

And I think identifies as such.

I think I'm mistaken.

I believe so.

And she now had to, you know, I kid, I should not have taken this role.

I'm so sorry.

She's apologizing to everybody.

And what's funny about it is like, this used to be the sign of a woke actress, right?

Right.

A beautiful woman who would take the role as, I mean, we saw it

with a Charlotte

in Monster.

All uglied up.

Was that Monster's Ball or was was that?

Monster's Ball and Monster are two different people.

Monsters are both very dark.

That was Monster.

Monster was the female serial killer.

I like that.

I mean, she was celebrated.

She had no makeup on and she didn't comb her hair.

Yeah.

So she really took a risk there.

There was like a kind of a comedian's trope over the years where it would be like you'd make fun of the actress who took the role as a handicapped person or

the very straight actress who would take a job as a gay person to show that they understood those communities.

And that used to be the thing that would get you woke and get you an Oscar.

So now the thing is, you can't ugly yourself up.

You actually have to get an ugly actress to play that part.

Yes!

That's actually a beautiful woman.

She can't play an ugly part.

Yeah.

What about ugly actresses?

How do they get gigs?

What about...

I want to see that happen.

I do too.

I want to see that happen now.

It can't be far away.

It can't be.

What about taking...

What if there was someone who was not believable in their life and you're replacing them with an actress who's a good actress?

I think you should have to have a crappy actress play the role of someone who can't act.

Definitely.

I mean, it sounds ridiculous.

Charlie Stern had a similar incident lately, right, with the transgender.

I think it was a transgender.

I think it was her, yeah.

This one I was fascinated by was Kristen Bell.

You may remember, she's married to Dax Shepard.

She's in a bunch of commercials.

She's been in very good jobs.

They're doing good commercials together.

Yeah, they're good.

She and her husband.

They're kind of a nice little couple, I think.

Yeah.

And so she took a role on a cartoon that

I think is on Netflix.

And she plays

character called Molly on a show named Central Central Park.

I've never seen the show, but this is her statement.

She came out now that she's a voice of a child who is mixed race.

Plus, she's not a child, right?

She's not a child, right?

Right.

What?

She's not a child, and she's not mixed race.

And she was playing this role on this cartoon.

This is what she said.

This is her

statement about her stepping down as the voice of a freaking cartoon character.

This is a time to acknowledge our acts of complicity.

Here is one of mine.

Playing the character of Molly on Central Park shows a lack of awareness of my pervasive privilege.

Casting a mixed race character with a white actress undermines the specificity of the mixed race and black American experience.

Okay, first off.

It's mixed race, so you can't have a black person do it, right?

Because it's the specificity of the mixed race experience is that you have to find someone

who's mixed race.

And like,

look, you're not, she acts as if she was like an accountant for the SS.

Like, you didn't even, like, you play.

You were the voice.

You're not complicit.

You played the voice of a cartoon character.

Relax, first of all.

And, and, you know, the.

Was anybody calling for her to step down from that role?

I don't think so.

I think you always get one or two activists that say this.

You know, it's the same thing that started like years ago when they were like, you know what, Apu on the Simpsons.

Simpsons is a bad, is a problematic.

And at first, everyone's like, what?

Like, you know, first of all, he's seemingly a very good guy on the show, one of the only people on the show who's a good person.

And, you know, he's one of the most prominent roles.

And like, yeah, it's voiced by, you know, Ancazaria, but, you know,

he's just a silly person.

He used to be okay.

He used to be okay.

Now, not okay.

Now Opu is gone.

Now, you might say to yourself, well, they could just get a mixed race character, right, to go along.

Yeah.

No, you can't do that either.

Oh, you can't.

No, because

Jenny Slade,

Jenny Slate is another comedic actress who, of course, you remember from all of her works.

All the Jenny Slates

things that she does.

And does so well.

Yeah, the entire spectrum.

We're fans of all of her.

Yeah, I mean,

all multi-format

media empire or entertainment empire.

I just ordered her eight-track collection.

Did you really?

Yes, and it just came in.

It's incredible.

So she stepped down as well as the voice of a frigging cartoon because she is also white and playing the role of a mixed race.

Now, I don't know why this is so widespread in Hollywood.

I don't know why they're just realizing it now.

Here's her quote.

Now, again, she is a white person, but she's also Jewish.

Okay.

So again, you're Jewish.

You could say religion, race, all sorts of different things people say about that.

But she says this, at the start of the show, I reasoned with myself that it was permissible for me to play Missy, which is a freaking cartoon character, by the way, because her mom is Jewish and white, as am I.

But Missy is also black, and black characters on an animated show should be played by black people.

Now,

what about the white part?

The white part, right?

She is a literal match, white and Jewish, of the mom of this character.

And even that's not specific enough.

She had to abandon her job.

And I don't know her.

Does she have a lot of this stuff going on?

Does she have offers of this level coming in like crazy?

I mean, she's, you know, Kristen Bell, her husband, hosts one of the most popular podcasts in the country, is also an actor.

They make plenty of money.

They've got a $4 million house.

They're doing okay.

I don't know.

Is Jenny Slate doing okay?

She might be.

I don't know anything about her other than the 8-track collection that I just bought, so I don't know.

But like, this is what she says.

She says, engaging,

playing Missy, she's engaging in an act of erasure of black people.

Ending my portrayal of Missy is one step in a lifelong process of

uncovering the racism in my actions.

First of all, in this particular case, you are literally not erasing a black person.

You're drawing one.

It's the exact opposite of black erasure.

You're actually drawing a black person.

Okay?

That's number one.

Number two,

I know, Pat, we're supposed to understand

the stories of these women, and they own their own truth.

I hope you know that.

They own their own truth.

Right, that's beautiful.

So, who are we to disagree

when they acknowledge their own racism?

When they say they're a racist, I guess they're racists.

I don't want to take that away from them.

I would say it doesn't sound very racist, but you know what?

They're saying it's racist, and I don't want to take their truth away from them.

Well, it's your white privilege saying that it's not racist.

It is racist, it is racist.

It's their big, fat, dirty racist.

Yes, they are basically David Duke in a cocktail dress.

Thank you.

And I'm glad they have admitted that and expressed their truth.

I wouldn't have necessarily seen it that way, but they've told us that they're racist, so we must accept their racism.

Who are we?

Who are we?

I'm not a racist.

If I was doing a character like Missy,

I would say, why am I a man doing it?

And they would say, how dare you?

What if it's a trans child?

And then I would say, well, I'm not a child.

They'd say,

well, I guess if you are identifying as a child, then you are.

This is the thing.

You just need need to get out ahead of these things.

Before you accept the role, you need to identify in the nine different ways that define the character, which, by the way, we are talking about a job.

The only requirement of this job is pretending to be something that you're not.

It is acting.

It's legitimately, fundamentally the only thing you have to do in this job is pretending you're someone that you're not.

And they still can't get this through their heads.

You're never going to have, unless you get the person, you're going to have to do every movie's going to have to be like private parts with Howard Stern, where they all play themselves.

Because it's the only person you're allowed to play.

I can be specific as

Howard Stern, I can play Howard Stern.

As Robin Quivers, I can play Robin Quivers.

Outside of that, how can you even have this industry anymore?

This is all nonsensical.

And there's no limiting principle here, Pat.

You know, there's no reason why what I'm saying

as Howard Stern can only play Howard Stern is untrue.

There's no part of their reasoning that makes it so that wouldn't be the case.

There's no

limiting principle on this.

Quite the opposite.

Yeah.

Yeah.

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Tomorrow night, the pandemic.

It's quite disturbing.

We're setting records practically every day.

The protests.

Protest has turned violent a California.

Is it all just a deep state distraction?

Glenn reveals why the case against General Flynn exposes everything and why the conspiracy to take down President Trump is still not over.

Who will pay for the crimes against our democracy?

Tomorrow night, 9 p.m.

Eastern, only at BlazeTV.com/slash Glenn.

This is the Glenbeck program.

Triple 8727 Beck is the phone number.

It's Pat and Stu.

And for Glenn, who's out sick, we assume only the worst, as we always do every time he takes a day off.

We assume

COVID-19.

COVID-19 combined with leprosy.

Yeah.

That's the only thing.

That's what I think until he tells me differently.

I think his left arm fell off last night.

Really?

Yeah.

Oh, gosh.

You don't want that to happen.

Yeah.

You don't want that to happen.

You don't.

No.

You don't.

And I will say that the only good thing about it is that he could, in the future, play someone with leprosy in a movie.

And a one-armed one-armed person.

And a one-armed person.

Because that's great.

Now, I will say this, if he had to play the role of someone whose right arm fell off, he could not play that one.

He couldn't.

No, he couldn't.

No.

Because he has his right arm.

He has his right arm.

To this point, we don't know.

We don't know how long that lasts.

No, we don't.

No.

If they both fall off, he could not play the role of a one-armed person.

And certainly not a two-armed person.

Can you go the other way?

If you amputate both legs, could you play, let's say, a quadriplegic?

Could you where you lose both arms and both legs?

So you intentionally

amputate your legs.

Can you get the part?

Or do you already have to have been a no-limbed person in order to play the part?

We'll have to ask Gary Sinice.

Okay.

Because he, I mean, he was Lieutenant Dan, but they used to lead the computer.

I mean, that's wrong.

They have to physically amputate those limbs now for him to play that role.

Just shows how much do you want it, Gary?

How much do you want it, Gary?

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Well, you dare not say anything negative about Black Lives Matter.

It's become like

a sacred organization that you just may not speak ill of.

It's amazing.

We'll tell you about somebody who did, well, actually didn't even say anything bad about it.

And yet she was fired from her job as dean of a college.

I will get to that and much more in about 60 seconds.

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727BECK.

You're just an Orwellian feel right now.

There's

a fascist feel.

For such fascism going on, this would be, you would think, where a group like, I don't know, somebody fought against fascism, like anti-fascists, like something, maybe if you abbreviated that, antifa,

maybe they would fight against what's going on.

No, no, actually, they do quite the opposite.

But is it not fascist when you fire people for their writings, for their thoughts, for their feelings?

Is it not, is there not something wrong with this when you a University of Massachusetts Lowell dean, it's a nursing school, it's a University of UMass's nursing school.

The dean of that school was

just fired

because

she had the nerve to send an email out that said,

everyone's life matters.

Now, before she said everyone's life, she said, yes, Black Lives Matter, but everyone's life matters.

And that got her fired.

Jeez.

So you just, if you say Black Lives Matter, you must just leave it at that.

Just Black Lives Matter, period.

Because

no lives matter until Black Lives Matter.

We all know that, right?

And then, so that's just the end of the statement.

Like a lot of people right now are saying, well, I know violence isn't right, but,

but when it comes to Black Lives Matter, there is no but.

You just say Black Lives Matter and you leave it at that.

It's interesting.

The qualifiers work in some cases and not others.

Not in this one.

Right.

I don't understand.

I was seeing, you know, they have these,

there's so much just condescending nonsense online where you get people activists.

Let me explain to white people what Black Lives Matter really means.

Right.

Like, I hate

it.

I don't need your explanations.

I get what you're going for here.

Do you get what we're going for when we say all lives matter?

And it's like, it doesn't mean that like Black Lives Matter any less.

No, or that they don't matter.

Nobody.

I don't know a a single person in the world who believes that.

Does anybody?

Have you ever?

I mean, maybe there's some racists somewhere that David Duke probably made a fan of Black Lives.

Right.

But I think most normal people,

the vast majority of people on this earth, six out of the seven billion,

at least believe that Black Lives Matter.

Yes, of course.

And

there was some graphic.

They always do this, like try to like, the activists are like, here's a graphic so you understand what we're saying.

And it was like,

what people think when they hear Black Lives Matter.

And it was like a bunch of hands kind of raised and then the black life raised above all the other fists.

So basically to show that what people think is that Black Lives Matter more than everyone else.

And here's what it really means.

And like all the colors fists were all raised at the same level, like they're all equal.

It's like, who's expressing that better?

All lives matter expresses what you're saying better than Black Lives Matter.

Do you understand?

Like these things,

the noises you make with your mouth, they're called words.

They mean things.

They mean things.

When you say dog, that means a little four-legged furry thing that's going around and panting at your leg.

That's what it is.

It's a dog.

You can't just say dog lives matter and what you really mean are, you know, Indian Americans.

Right?

Like it is dog lives matter mean dogs black lives matter mean black people.

We got it.

They do matter.

How about saying all lives matter so we can all show everybody's life, everybody's life matters equally?

That's a really easy way to understand that.

One group is not prioritized over another.

And yet, completely unacceptable.

Completely unacceptable.

Because again,

how many times do I have to tell you no life matters until black lives matter?

I don't.

There's never going to be a time in in which

that test is satisfied.

They're never going to say it matters enough.

You're never woke enough.

And the idea that you can come out and say,

yes, black lives matter, but all lives matter,

that is going a step beyond what any person who knows the English language should need to go, right?

Like if you're, if

you're already all lives matter includes black lives.

You should not need to see.

By definition, kind of, yeah.

You should not need it.

Now, I would say that maybe all Lives Matter does need to be explained because there's millions of lives that get aborted every year that no one seems to care about.

And no one seems to bring up that on that side of the aisle.

Although, I guess occasionally it does happen, even in college.

There's a new video out.

This is from St.

Andrews College.

And I'm pretty sure you're supposed to get canceled for this, Pat.

You're not allowed to make it through a speech like this.

Right.

You can't express these ideas in any way, shape, or form.

Here it is.

This is from St.

Andrew's College.

You know, black lives do matter.

Listen.

Hey, wokey McWokeface.

Quick question.

This black life mattered.

But doesn't this one?

We know this black life matters.

But why doesn't this one?

Fetus.

We believe that all these black lives matter.

And tens of millions of others, too.

Murdered in the most dangerous place in this country for any black life.

A womb.

Murdered and dissected and sold.

We believe that each and every human life matters because every human life, regardless of culture or color, is crafted in the sacred image of Almighty God, which is the only possible reason why any life could matter at all.

We believe that secular progressive white supremacists have been running a vile and genocidal population control campaign against blacks in America that has straddled centuries, trying to keep them from life, from adulthood, from power, from stable families and communities.

And that matters.

We believe that the organization Black Lives Matter, registered trademark, is a Marxist front that doesn't care about black lives even half as much as an average white pro-life flyover Trump voting evangelical.

Every single black life matters, from conception to the grave and beyond into eternity.

That is God's truth.

And it's a hell of a lot more than BLM can say.

This shouldn't be hard, but clear thinking is rare these days, especially on college campuses.

All lives matter.

All black lives matter.

All.

Behind a badge.

What?

On the street.

In the womb.

Oh, my God.

Oh, no.

Philosophy matters.

Theology matters.

History matters.

Oh, come on, man.

Thinking matters.

No, it does not.

Learn to think in unthinking times.

New St.

Andrews College.

Clear thinking, clear teaching.

In person this fall.

Wow.

Is that great?

In person this fall, too.

A little snap there, maybe.

And they're actually going to be in their classrooms rather than online, which is pretty cool.

I guess it's in Idaho.

I had not heard of it until they did this.

And it's a great way to be introduced to the school because that was powerful it was really good we hear so much about racism and how white people don't care about black lives i can tell you this if let's just say a fantasy world exists fantasy baseball drafts coming up next week you have that little fantasy like uh fantasy sports where you manage these teams and try to figure out how things would go if you were just the manager let's say let's do a fantasy league here where All conservative policies get passed and all liberal policies get passed in in two different worlds.

How many black people are alive in the conservative policy world?

A lot more.

14 million more.

14 million more.

Yeah.

You might say, well, what about in your world, police might shoot 10 people per year instead of nine?

Yeah, it's still 14, well, 13,999,900 and

well, not quite.

It's as nice.

Conservatives.

I'm not good at math

while I'm on the air.

But conservatives seem to be incredibly terrible at at this whole racism thing.

Yeah.

Where what we're demanding

millions of black people to be born and have a chance at life to be able to achieve whatever they want.

Because their lives matter to us.

Because they matter.

Yeah.

You know, I know if we implemented the liberal world, there'd be a lot more access to abortion.

Right.

So there'd be probably a lot less white lives, but also a lot less black lives.

And what is a statistic about Planned Parenthood

operations that they set up almost exclusively in black neighborhoods, in minority neighborhoods.

So weird.

80%

was the statistic I heard recently.

80% of Planned Parenthood outlets are in minority neighborhoods.

I wonder why that is.

Weird.

Wonder why that is weird.

Isn't that because of the fundamental roots of the entire organization are based in this behavior of taking out undesirables?

Nothing to do with that.

But that's, you're just getting that from the founder of Planned Parenthood, Margaret Sanger.

That's fair.

Why would you go there with that?

It's a good criticism.

Yeah.

There.

It is, it's inexplicable that

this is the way this gets translated.

You know, look, we, of course, when there are these cases, and this is the problem.

These are individual cases.

And we have a country of 330 million.

You're going to get some people who are

who basically, to broaden it, everything happens too,

right?

Like, I watched a video this weekend of a woman trying to jump off a roof into a pool, and she got nervous halfway on the approach, jumped, didn't make it halfway, landed on the roof below, and then tumbled into the pool and was miraculously okay.

It's called alcohol.

And that happened to someone this weekend on video.

There is no way in a country of 330 million people that you can eliminate what looks like last year about five incidents where a white officer did something to a black

person who was being arrested that was unarmed in a way that was not justified.

It's almost impossible.

Out of the nine that happened, five of them you think can be.

I'm being generous there.

I mean, like, one of the, again, one of the shootings,

this is real.

One of the shootings that we count when we say nine unarmed black people were killed last year.

One of these shootings was a man.

who had previously been in a shootout with police.

Now, he had already done that, a real shootout where he was shooting guns at police officers.

Then he was in another altercation with police.

He told police officers that he had a gun and was going to start killing them.

Oh, and they believed him.

And they believed him

shot him, and he didn't actually have the gun.

So that's

one of the nine that we're talking about.

Another one is like the person got shot.

They had a weapon, but they didn't have it in their hands.

It was in the car.

There's a lot of these types of incidents.

You know,

you're making split decisions, and sometimes it's bad police work.

It's true.

Sometimes police make mistakes.

Often, though, it's just very justified.

So it's something like four or five of the nine looked suspicious, and sometimes there have been charges filed and those things, but you can't eliminate it.

Think about this.

We know the violence, you're 18 and a half times as likely to be murdered by a black person as a police officer than the other way around when it comes to an unarmed person being in the George Floyd situation.

You're much more likely to feel it the other way.

All of these statistics align with the idea that while there are cases that are wrong and need to be stopped, this is not a systemic problem.

I compare it to when you have like some of these true crime shows and they'll feature this beautiful white blonde college co-ed that gets

somehow abducted and taken away from her college, disappears on the news every single night.

And people make the, you know, the observation, like not, you know, kind of in a

critical way, hey, it's not just young white college

co-heads that get abducted.

And if you look at the stats, you'd realize that's true, right?

Like that's actually a really rare circumstance.

It doesn't happen very often, but it's the one always highlighted by the news.

Same situation here.

This is the same situation.

It is not all that common for a police officer to just kill some some random citizen for no reason.

It's just not a systemic problem in our country at this time.

And we should be thankful for that instead of saying, well, only highlighting these situations.

Every once in a while, when you have one of these situations like a George Floyd,

people will just say, wait a minute.

Yeah, that looks really bad.

But here's five other circumstances where the same thing happened to a white person and no one knows their names.

No one knows.

We all know Trayvon Martin's name, but we don't know lots of other people who the same types of things have happened and sometimes much more unjustifiable circumstances because we have this weird media generation machine that takes certain cases and highlights them over others.

Like, why,

why on earth do we know George Floyd's name so well, but not the police officer who was at one of the protests and was just murdered in the street for no reason?

There's a dude walking in Brooklyn just yesterday or two days ago who was walking his eight-year-old daughter across the street hand in hand, and a guy pulled up a car next to him and shot him dead while they were holding hands.

And you see the kid run away.

Why don't we know that person's name?

Like, these are just

Black Lives Matter should be a copyrighted organization.

It should be a trademarked organization because that's what it is.

It's basically a corporation.

There are people who support it who are not like that.

But Black Lives Matter is a Marxist organization that is out for things other than justice for black lives.

Period.

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10 seconds.

Station ID.

Triple 8 727 BECK, it's Pat and Stufer Glenn today.

You know, if you look at the overall numbers of police shootings in the last like three years, 2017, 18, 19,

and this year so far,

you see that every single year, more whites are killed by police overall.

Just whether they're armed or whether it was justified or whatever the case may be, it was 457 whites in 2017 to 223 blacks, 179 Hispanics, and

44 other, 84 unknown.

So

every year more whites are killed, but I, you know, but again,

those aren't even mentioned.

That would be absolutely shocking to at least half the country.

I think so, too.

I mean, there was someone who did, you know, those, like, those, you go to campus and you ask random college students, you know, questions and they look like idiots when they get get them wrong.

That genre, which I like.

I mean, I'm a fan of it.

I can admit it.

I can admit liking to, every once in a while, see a millennial or someone younger fall on their face.

It's fun.

One of these people who do these videos did one of those where they went and they asked

how many people who were black and unarmed are killed by cops every year.

And they were guessing in the thousands.

Tens of thousands?

Tens of thousands.

Tens of thousands.

And like,

wow.

Why wouldn't you, if it's justifiable to go protest this in the middle of a pandemic that has killed 133,000 people so far in this country,

how would it possibly be only nine people?

I can understand them not believing them.

I can understand them guessing tens of thousands.

If you just judge by the context of the media coverage, you'd think, yeah, of course.

If it's justifiable to risk a pandemic outbreak, it must be hundreds of thousands of people.

And it's not.

In fact, you know, the idea that more white people get killed than black people would be shocking.

In fact, in Minnesota, it's four to one in Minnesota where George Floyd was killed.

A four to one ratio white people killed over black people by

part because there's a lot more white people than black people.

But in Minnesota, not the tone of the conference.

You can talk about rates all you want.

However, when you're trying to claim genocide, you don't need to use the argument for a rate.

Like, they were never like, well, you know, the Nazis are, yes, they're killing more white people and Aryans than they are Jews.

But the rate rate is higher for Jews.

You didn't need to make that argument.

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It's Pat and Stu for Glenn on the Glen Back Program.

Stu was just talking about this video where

a young woman asks other young people

about the statistics of how many unarmed black people were killed by police last year.

And so the guesses are wide-ranging,

I would say.

But the answer, of course, well, they get into the answer.

I think we've said it enough times.

It was actually

nine unarmed black.

Was it 18 for whites?

Was it 18 unarmed whites last year?

Something to that.

I think it was about double.

But

here were some of the guesses.

So, of course, police brutality has been a very big subject lately.

How many unarmed black men do you think were killed by police over the past year?

Over the past year,

I think blacks get killed by the police unarmed way more than white people.

But have you seen any numbers or statistics?

Like do you know if it's a couple hundred or a couple thousand by chance?

I don't know the exact statistics offhand.

Thousands, thousands.

Right now, I believe I saw a post that said that right now 493 have been killed just this year.

I can't put a number on that because I genuinely do not know.

I honestly don't know the answer.

The number

of times we're killed.

And, you know, as you're out there protesting, shouldn't you know something like that?

Shouldn't you have done a little research on this and know what you're talking about, know what you're protesting?

Yeah, the order of events is important.

Learn, then protest.

Exactly.

Understand the issue you're talking about, then go march.

That would be nice.

Yeah.

It would make a lot of sense.

A thousand.

A thousand.

At least.

At least.

More members of the black community compared to members of the white community as a whole are.

I love this one because

he realizes he doesn't understand.

He doesn't know the number.

Yeah.

And then he decides to back off to something he's sure is true.

Right?

More members of the black community than the white community, for sure.

Which is not true.

Which is not true.

And he realizes that about halfway through his sentence, too.

Because he's not sure of that.

He doesn't have any stats on any of it, but he tries to fake his way through it.

In general,

I think that that might not be true, but

it isn't.

Where in how big of a region?

That's in all of America.

Yeah, in America.

That would be so hard for me to say.

Trillions.

It would be hard for me to even guess that.

I would imagine, you know, probably in the dozens of thousands at least.

In the dozens of thousands, at least.

Could be hundreds of thousands.

It could be millions.

It could be billions or trillions.

Like

Stu just guessed.

Trillions.

Is it?

I don't know.

Maybe.

Is it quadrillions?

I know it's at least trillions.

But it could be quadrillions.

Is it a bajillion?

I don't know.

I don't know.

Maybe.

Maybe.

What am I?

What am I?

I forget what I'm doing there.

It's

the gun guy.

What was it?

He was.

What am I?

That's sad that

we've forgotten so quickly only 10 years after that event.

Anyway, there were more guesses.

Thousands, probably.

Just in a week to, if you're talking about all America, yeah, monthly, probably thousands.

Monthly.

I wish I knew that number, but way too many than it should.

So,

do you think it's like a couple hundred, couple thousand?

Like, do you think you can get like a ballpark at all based off of like media reports, videos you've seen?

I would say

in the hundreds, near thousands.

I'm not sure.

Do you know?

So, I was actually reading a statistic in the Wall Street Journal because I was asking people this question, and I really wasn't sure either.

And the Wall Street Journal said that last year, um, nine unarmed black men were killed by police.

You know,

I think.

Wait, before we get to his answer, by the way, in the same sentence, it was nine unarmed black people, 19 unarmed white people.

So that's the stat from last year.

That's tough to hear.

And when people see that,

it just perpetuates their own bias.

Oh, sure.

Yeah.

Like I said, I'm sorry.

It's the truth.

It's reality.

It is a fact.

It doesn't perpetuate anybody's bias.

It just informs you as to what reality is.

It's not perpetuating a bias.

No, and you know, that is, that's a huge thing because

I love it's a he's obviously showing his own bias by immediately saying, dismissing the actual fact of the matter.

Only nine people were killed.

Right.

Uh, and saying, well, all that does is perpetuate bias.

But it's not just people, random people in colleges that do this.

There is a story in the Washington Post that came out this weekend about the Washington Redskins.

And, you know, the whole Redskins name controversy has been going on for many years.

And

one of the biggest talking points, and the reason it's kind of gone away for years and years, was the fact that multiple polls showed that 90%

of Native Americans were not bothered by the name.

This has happened over and over and over again.

Over and over and over again for multiple pollsters, multiple years.

It's sort of one of those things that shuts down the debate.

All right, why are we pissed off about it if 90%?

And so there was

a story in the Washington Post, which basically came out and apologized for their own poll, where they said, hey, you know, we're sorry the shutdown debate over this issue

because our poll was basically responsible for no one caring about this anymore.

And it's like, wait a minute, are you a news organization?

Why are you apologizing for reporting accurately the group you say should be offended that isn't?

Again, we're always doing this where we say, oh, as white people, we can tell you, Native American, African American, what you should be offended by.

And if you're not appropriately offended, the way you should be, we'll just take the thing off the market.

There will be no more Washington Redskins.

There will be no more Anne Jemima.

We'll just get rid of it.

So therefore, you can't be lured into this sense of not being offended over this thing you're not offended by.

I'm actually offended that you keep leaving off that list.

You You mentioned Aunt Jemima.

Where's Uncle Ben?

Why have you chosen

a black man who's smiling on the label?

What a stereotype.

That means that they think black people smile all the time.

I don't understand the Uncle Ben thing.

I really don't get it.

Ant Jemima.

I mean,

there was a time where Antemima was used in a way that was not fair.

Yeah, a long time ago.

A long time ago.

And Ant Jemima, you know, we brought this up.

African Americans buy Antemima at like four times the rate of any other group.

They are apparently not offended by the label.

Right.

Because they bring it into their home on a regular basis.

And how could you think about this for a second?

I'm trying to think of what the right product is.

You know, if you were an African-American and you go to buy a product, there's lots of products with white smiling faces on them.

Here's one that has a black smiling face on it.

A motherly figure who's taking care of breakfast for you because she makes very freaking pancakes.

Or pancakes.

Exactly.

Syrup and and pancakes.

Of course, you'd be drawn to that product as an African-American because you don't see this like some racist thing.

You see it as like, you know, hey, here's someone who's a friendly face that's familiar.

And it seems to have been targeted specifically at African Americans who buy it at gigantic rates.

Listen to this quote from Washington Post.

This is the headline of the story I'm talking about.

A survey explores how Native Americans feel about the name Washington Redskins.

No, it's not that survey.

This one is new.

Like, what?

It's your survey.

what why are you degrading your own work think about this the Washington Post in a time where media organizations are struggling

came up with a poll in 2016 that totally changed a debate to the factual arrangement in which minorities opinions were respected and they're apologizing for it They go on to say the post poll has been blamed for killing the debate.

The truth is, our collective response did, and that never should have happened.

The name is a dictionary-defined slur.

Whether or not 10% of Native Americans or 50% of your coworkers or your favorite aunt acknowledge it.

Like, you're totally dismissing the opinion of the group you say is offended as if they don't matter at all.

And that is like excusable

in this circumstance.

And by the way, they decided they got a new poll.

This one said only 70% of Native Americans didn't care about it.

So

now they're constant beating them over the head for multiple decades.

What do you want to bet?

It was a push-pull where they

totally was.

So they gave them 40 emotions because they wanted to get, okay, maybe that top line number isn't great.

But if we can get kind of fine, like some of them are offended, we can highlight that part.

This is what the, this is, they had to put this in their own article.

Quote, the reasons they gave for feeling for feeling that way

is that they weren't offended.

It's just a name.

It honors or represents their heritage, and people are overly sensitive.

That's what the Native Americans said.

The survey presented respondents.

They don't know any better than

we've got to help them be offended.

We got to help them.

The survey presented respondents with more than 40 emotions and asked them to indicate whether each represented how they felt about the team's name.

The word picked most was proud.

They're trying so hard to tell Native Americans they should hate this name.

And like, the story of the logo is amazing.

Like, it was, it used to just be an R.

That was the logo for the Redskins.

And a Native American came in, and they used a real Native American as a model because the Native Americans felt like it shouldn't, if it's Redskins, it shouldn't just be an R.

You should have us represented.

So they came up with this great logo that was designed by Native Americans using a real Native American model.

And that's offensive.

And they're going to get rid of the logo now, supposedly.

It's not 100% confirmed but ESPN is reporting that the name is going to change logo still up in the air

now we don't know the name is going to change did you see their statement I mean their statement was like I mean Dan Snyder is is he caving in now that's that's what they believe so the statement came out from the Redskins which was like in this time

we feel we need to look at the name and study whether it's okay for people like it was one of those for you know and it certainly read as if they were going to overturn it.

Yeah.

The reporting afterward has said they are going to do it within the next couple months.

They think before the 2020 season.

They will change the name of the Redskins before the 2020 season.

Reporting's been wrong before, but that is the current state of the reporting.

So we'll see.

He has been so...

Daniel Snyder, the owner, has been so steadfast on that.

Yeah.

He said, we'll never change it.

Pretty amazing how much he stood up to this nonsense.

As an Eagles fan, it's the only reason I like the Redskins.

It's the only thing I've ever done that that I've actually liked.

And again, like,

I don't have any affinity for the Redskins' name.

It's just unfolding for no reason when they have the funding

on their side.

It started, obviously, as a piece of

essentially propaganda to honor the Washington, to honor the Native Americans.

They were honoring the coach at the time, several players at the time.

You go back to the history of the word.

It was a Native American term used to describe themselves.

This is unquestioned in history.

Even people who oppose it and actually know the effects don't question that.

They say that at some point, some people use it in a derogatory way, although there's much more evidence that it was not used that way.

It's not that it's never been used that way, but again, I ask the audience and I ask you, Pat, have you ever, honestly, in your entire life, ever heard one person use that term in a derogatory way towards Native Americans?

No.

Ever.

No.

I have literally

never heard it.

The only time I've ever heard it, there's one quote from a Minnesota newspaper in 1863 that every one of these stories highlights, where they did use it in a derogatory way, but of course, was not around in 1863, did not get that.

But we know that it started as a good term.

We know that when the team named it, it was a good term.

It was meant to honor Native Americans.

But 160 years ago, somebody did use it in a derogatory way.

And it's like amazing.

Fundamentally, Pat.

Wow.

When you're naming your team, you don't name it after something you hate.

Right.

Right.

You name it after something you want to root for and honor.

You know, I wouldn't name my team the North Texas avocados because avocados are evil.

I hate them.

So I wouldn't name my team after that.

I'd name it the cheesy fries

because I like cheesy fries.

That makes sense.

It's tough, but doesn't sound menacing, but okay.

It doesn't have to be menacing.

It doesn't have to be.

I mean,

the New Orleans Pelicans don't seem all that menace.

No, it doesn't.

No, it really doesn't.

Driple 8727BECK.

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You're listening to Glenn Beck.

It's Patton Stewart for Glenn on the Glenn Beck program, 888727,

B-E-C-K.

Coming up, we've got to tell you about

the very latest from Colin Kaepernick.

There's also something, speaking of NFL quarterbacks,

Patrick Mahomes had a pretty good day yesterday.

Oh, my God.

Where he signed a fairly significant contract.

Well, a bit of an extension of a current one.

Yeah, he's got a two-year deal right now, and they extended it 10 more years.

So 12 years, 12 years, $477 million.

And it could go up to $503 million.

$503.

That's half a billion dollars.

Now, I I think the highest ever for a quarterback was like

what, 150, 160, something like that?

It's like three times as big as any other quarterback's contract in the answer.

His previous biggest sports contract was Mike Trout, I think, with the Angels, which was $425 or $430 over 10 years.

It's a little more common in baseball.

I mean, nobody gets that kind of contract.

And that was fully guaranteed completely.

He's got $430 million definitely coming to him.

Trout.

Trout.

Yes.

Not the case for Mahomes, but still, you know.

I think 140 is fully guaranteed, which is pretty, you know, that's not bad.

But again, that's more than like any other quarterback ever

for their entire contract.

Guaranteed, no matter what happens now, he could break a leg and never play again, like Theisman, which I certainly don't wish on anybody, but he'd make $140 million.

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Jesus.

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

This is the Glenn Beck Program.

Boy, Pat and Stu, Glenz, sick today, triple eight, 727BECK.

A few minutes ago, Stu said something about Colin Kaepernick hating America.

It's not about that,

Stu.

It's not about...

It's not?

No, it's not about the flag.

It's not about its hatred for America.

It's not about the military.

It's only

about

police brutality.

That's the only thing it's about.

Really?

That's it.

That's it.

Because I know LeBron James said that we didn't understand what it was about when we said it was about the country.

Right.

Or the flag.

And it's not.

In fact.

I saw, was it LeBron James?

I don't know, one of his defenders a week or two ago.

Not only said,

was it not about the flag or the country, but it was actually a tribute to the military, what he was doing.

Oh, really?

Yeah.

So not only is it not a bad thing, it's a really good thing that he's doing.

So interesting.

Anyway, we'll get into that coming up in 60 seconds.

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Just to prove how right LeBron James and the rest are, the defenders of Colin Kaepernick.

This is not about the flag.

Listen to what Colin Kaepernick has said in his own words.

I'll continue to sit.

I'm going to continue to stand with the people that are being oppressed.

When there's significant change and I feel like that flag

represents what it's supposed to represent, I'll stand.

I see.

49ers dual threat quarterback with the rocket arm and lightning quick feet, staying seated during the national anthem at Friday's preseason game, telling the NFL network, I'm not going to stand up and show pride in a flag for a country that oppresses black people and people of color.

So that's not about it's clearly not about the flag.

No.

And I will say it's a little bit of a...

It's only said it multiple times that it is about the flag.

It is a nuanced type of oppression that he suffers from.

Where he makes $20 million from a shoe company and then millions of dollars from the NFL.

Well, yeah, when he signed his seven-year $126 million contract, he then went out and finished 38th of 39 qualifying quarterbacks.

Now, it's interesting because that's good, right?

That's good.

He wasn't dead last.

He wasn't dead last.

Now, the guy who

was dead last, he did not protest the flag, although he's never played another NFL game either.

You know, who else actually- Was that Blaine Gabbard?

No, it was Mettenberger, Zach Mettenberger.

Oh, wow.

And there's one guy who finished four slots ahead of

Colin Kaepernick, who hasn't played a lot either.

He was known as a massive bust in every way possible.

Johnny Manzel finished significantly ahead of Colin Kaepernick.

Yeah, but also all the calls for him to get an NFL job.

Yeah.

Look at all the calls.

Not much.

Not much.

Blaine Gabbert, as you point out, was also known as a bust quarterback, outplayed Colin Kaepernick in every facet of the game.

Then he replaced him as a starter, I believe.

Before Colin Kaepernick took a knee.

Yeah.

He replaced.

So the clip that you just heard of him saying, oh, you know, this is about the country and the flag that's been bad to people of color.

That happened after he was benched for Blaine Gabbert.

He then lost his job again to Blaine Gabbert.

And then he lost it again

to Blaine Gabbert.

Oh, boy.

And he also did set a record, I will say.

People talk about it.

He's had some good moments.

It's true.

He set some records.

He actually set the record.

The only quarterback in NFL history to get sacked more times in a game than he threw four yards,

which is pretty good.

That's really good.

He did four yards and got sacked five times.

So that's pretty good.

But he threw for four yards.

Four full yards in the game, which is pretty good if you think about it, because it's certainly better than three yards.

It is.

By one.

By one yard, it's better than three yards.

He was sacked five times in the game.

I don't think I've heard that stuff.

He's my favorite style.

That's a great story.

I think you can legitimately say that this game was the worst game ever played by an NFL quarterback.

I think that is.

I know it's saying a lot, and you can go through.

If you're a Buffalo fan, you may have a couple of examples you want to compare with this.

But

he, here's, here's what.

Okay, here you go.

And look, the weather was a little nasty.

By the time the Niners

pulled Kaepernick out of the game, again for Blaine Gabbert, Kaepernick was one of five for four yards.

He was sacked five times for 25 yards, leaving the Niners with negative 21 net passing yards.

Wow.

Wow.

This is the third quarter, by the way.

They were down 24-6 at the time.

So

that is amazing.

In the process, Kaepernick became the first quarterback in NFL history to be sacked five times and throw for fewer than five yards in a game, according to ESPN stats and information.

That's impressive.

Yeah.

Nicely done.

Thank you.

Then

in his 4th of July message,

you know, we find out that this is not about the country.

Here's what he said.

He claimed the national holiday, marking our independence from Britain, is a celebration of white supremacy.

He claimed black people have been dehumanized, brutalized, criminalized, and terrorized by America for centuries and are expected to join your commemoration of independence while you enslaved our ancestors, we reject your celebration of white supremacy and look forward to liberation for all.

It's not about the country, Stu.

It's not about the flag.

It's about police brutality.

Right.

Except that it's not.

Except it's not.

And we've said that a million times.

Don't tell me that we don't know what we're talking about or we haven't looked into it.

We're the ones who have looked into it.

And that's why we know what it's about.

I just wish the LeBron Jameses of the world would look into it.

James, who came out

when Colin Kaepernick

was just talking about the kneeling and everything, I think it was when Drew Brees recently came out and Brees said, you know, I'm not going to dishonor the flag.

That's not what this is about.

And LeBron James was like, I can't believe you still think it's about the flag and the country.

It's the exact opposite of that.

It's like, well, he keeps saying it's a protest against the white supremacy of the nation.

Yeah.

Our independence.

Right.

Which is weird because we got our independence from other white people.

And that he's not going to celebrate it.

No, he's not going to celebrate it.

So that goes beyond the national anthem and your little kneeling thing.

Yeah, it is.

And like, you know, Drew Breeze got.

just absolutely hammered for those comments.

Yes.

To the point that not only did he apologize, his wife apologized.

I believe his children, his dog apologized at one point.

His ancestors.

Yes, his ancestors came back from the grave and they apologized.

Because everyone who's ever not only named Breeze, but felt a breeze, they had to apologize.

This is what, think about this.

If you actually were protesting police brutality and not the flag or the country, one easy way to do that is to do your protest at any other time in your life other than during the national anthem, including.

A place that would be even higher profile.

I mean, we know that the NFL broadcasts don't typically carry the national anthem.

The only time they do is to find out if Colin Kaepernick was kneeling.

So they don't normally cover that on the TV broadcast.

You could go out before the kickoff when everyone is there and take a knee on the field, and everyone would be like, wow,

they're doing it right then.

The first time you come out for the first play, and you have the play set in your brain already, you don't need to huddle up.

You already know where the play is.

It's your first set of downs.

Go out there and take a knee.

Now, it would be difficult for him to go out on the field and take a knee because he was benched so often, but in theory, he could have done it then.

Yes.

But this is what Drew Breeze said.

If it was about the flag, would this not be the perfect quote?

This is what he said back in 2016.

As a way to show respect to all, our Saints team will kneel in solidarity prior to the national anthem and stand together during the anthem.

That would be a way to actually make it about police brutality.

Instead, Breeze is not woken up.

And Colin Kaepernick, who is literally out in front of the nation saying they are all a bunch of white supremacists.

And he is getting embraced by, of course, Nike, which is nothing at this point other than a woke organization.

Do they even make shoes anymore?

I don't know.

But also, no, Disney.

Yeah.

In back-to-back posts, Colin Kaepernick is calling the nation a bunch of white supremacists and signing with Disney.

Disney.

Yeah.

And this Disney ESPN documentary is being done by Jameel Hill.

Oh, can you imagine how obnoxious it's it's going to be?

I didn't know that.

Awful.

Yeah.

Oh, it's going to be so bad.

I mean, think about Jamil Hill is a great one, too, where she's on Sports Center, and all she did was talk, she didn't want to talk about sports.

She just wanted to talk about racism.

Right.

So they took her off of Sports Center.

They're like, how about this?

We'll create a giant new company within our company called the Undefeated.

And we will basically just make it a website specifically designed to tell you there's racism in sports.

It's the only thing this website does.

So now they have all these reporters on there just as a function just to sit there and tell you how racist sports are.

She was so annoying, they fired her from there.

And then she had to go to the, she's now, I think, at the Atlantic, maybe?

I don't even know.

She is at the Atlantic.

So now she's back, though, I guess, at ESPN, too, which is an incredible, an incredible thing.

Wow.

I mean,

it's so...

It's so over the top.

It's like if you're constantly looking, you know,

this happened with LeBron James again when he was looking for racism with Bubba Wallace, and he tweeted like an idiot and fell flat on his face because he didn't wait for any of the facts to come out and just assumed it was racism.

And it's not just saying, like, this is really bad what happened to Bubba Wallace.

A lot of people said that, right?

Because they didn't know, and it seemed like that was the truth at the time.

It was, you are a hater if you criticize this in any way or question it in any way.

You know, it's always that attitude of, I know I'm right, so therefore, you know, bend on the knee to my views.

And look, I know I'm not doing that.

And I know you're not doing that.

And I know Glenn's not doing that.

And this is, it's a moment where it shows how important conservative media really is because it's one of the only places on earth, the only jobs on earth, where people are paid because they're willing to take stands that are against the grain.

Like we are paid.

I know coming in here, when I want to criticize Colin Kaepernick, there's, I mean, you know, there's no chance of me getting fired for it because people know, hey, that's your job to go out there and say something that is, uh, that is against the grain if you believe it's true.

You know, there's times that I'm, you know, I agree with the common analysis and sometimes you don't.

But that's what we get paid for, to not care.

We get paid to not care about the ramifications, to come in and be honest with you whether we think they're going to be ramifications or not.

And I'd like to think that, you know what, if I was in the world, if I was an executive at Nike, I'd be super brave and take those stands anyway.

I can tell you, it would be difficult.

I'm glad I'm in this industry because that is what we get paid for, to sit here and tell you the truth, whether, you know, damn the consequences.

And look how this guy is being rewarded for his stand against the flag, against the country.

He's getting this documentary, this Disney ESPN documentary.

He just announced a scripted series based on his life at Netflix.

He reportedly signed a $1 million book deal with Penguin Random House.

No book has come from that yet.

Good luck trying to get it out of him, by the way.

We'll see about that.

Let's see what you get accused of if you ask him for the book.

He got $20 million

from Nike, reportedly.

He got $20, maybe up to $20 million from the NFL because of the

so-called collusion thing.

Yeah.

Why won't he tell you how much he's making from Nike, by the way?

Why don't we know that number?

Why not?

Might be more than 20 million.

It might be 50 or 100 million.

I don't know.

It's hard to claim oppression when he got that much money.

It is.

And, you know, look, that's been the situation.

And look, Colin Kaepernick has two lines of business: throwing interceptions and extortion.

Those are his two lines of business.

He's given up the interception one because he knows if he goes back in place, he's going to be terrible because he was terrible throughout his career.

He's good on, he had one

iffy good year.

Plus, he'll take a greening his body.

I don't think he wants to anymore.

Oh, he has no interest.

I don't think he does.

Gifted him a tryout in front of all these teams.

And he passed it up.

And he passed it up.

It was something that had never been offered to any player in history.

And he passed it up.

Why?

Because he has no interest in playing the sport.

He's like a.

He reminds me of like.

I'm trying to think of who you'd put in this category.

I would say it was like Donald Trump in like 2000 when he kept saying he was going to run for president.

And he didn't seem to have any real,

no one really believed he wanted to run for president.

It was more of a publicity thing.

Now, eventually that turned into a real run, obviously.

But for a long time, that was the thing.

The same thing with Bloomberg for a long time.

He was never really going to run.

And then eventually he did jump in.

Kaepernick is like, he's not going to jump in.

You lose all relevance if you say you don't want to play anymore.

Like, so he has to keep this tension alive between like, oh, gosh, these guys are still keeping me out.

Do you believe this?

Even Stephen A.

Smith, who was a huge supporter at the beginning,

when he passed up that tryout, said, okay, come on, the guy doesn't want to play anymore.

Stop messing around here.

Of course not.

Triple 8727, B-E-C-K.

More patents, Stu for Glenn coming up in a minute.

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Hey, there, it's a little bit of common sense.

Nobody wants to talk about the fact that the protests had anything to do with the new spike in coronavirus.

Nobody wants to mention that at all.

Except for the Miami-Dade County mayor.

Oh, no.

Yeah,

he's stepped out.

How do we get him canceled, Pat?

I hope we can.

I hope we can get him canceled from his job right now because listen to this.

This is outrageous.

What he has to do.

I think obviously the protests had a lot to do with it.

We had thousands of young people together outside, a lot of them not wearing masks.

And we know that when you do that and you are talking and you are chanting, et cetera, that really spreads the virus.

So absolutely, the protests had something to do with it.

But also our people, our residents,

did not, I think they let the guard down and started to socialize.

And again, that also had to do with it.

So it's all the above.

I'm not saying it's just that, but it was a contributing factor.

No!

No way.

A contributing factor?

The fight against racism?

No, I'm sorry.

We were just fighting the bigger disease there.

Nobody's saying that.

Nobody's saying that.

I mean,

it's not like the, you know, thousands of young people gathering at bars doesn't also contribute.

It does.

But you just can't separate because you like the point behind the protests that

that activity is okay.

It's not.

You know, it is going to spread the virus.

And we are still at a very vulnerable position.

We're starting to develop some new treatments, and things are, you know, we're inching along.

Certain things are helping.

We've talked a lot about hydroxychloroquine.

There's been a couple of positive studies on that lately.

You have and they threw out the original one that said it was so bad, it's so deadly.

Yep, it was a very shoddy work.

Yeah, remdesivir is another one that Trump mentioned in his initial press conference that's showing a lot of promise.

There's a steroid now that is also showing some promise, and none of these things are curing it, but they're knocking off 5% here and 10% here of death totals.

And that's part of the reason why we we haven't had a big flare-up yet, although that could be coming around the corner.

We're just getting to that sort of point where it might be starting to turn up.

The point being, though, that like these are good developments.

We can't close the economy down no matter what happens at this point.

We can't just close it down.

You could do what you can to minimize the risk of spread and all those things.

But they act as if we just,

let's go back to the Amish days and that should work.

And it's like, well, that's not going to happen.

That's not a good idea.

You know,

it offenses any Amish people who happen to be listening to the radio.

After we just replaced, I don't think Amish people listen to the radio.

Oh, no, I'll guess.

I didn't have to separate that.

I don't think that,

I mean, we just replaced 5 million jobs almost last month.

And now they're starting to shut down certain aspects of in certain cities and certain states that they've already opened up.

And now they're kind of going back on that and shutting things down again.

That is the wrong way to go.

Yeah.

Look,

you have to leave it up to the people and try to give them the best information.

But see what happens when people have mandates.

What do they do?

I mean, you know what?

They had a mandate against fireworks in California.

How did that work out?

People don't listen to these things.

They're a very small part of this conversation and they're made as the entire conversation.

What will the governor do?

You think the governor, you think we wind up with

10,000

fines in the state of Texas for the mask?

I would say no.

Is it 5,000, 1,000?

Will they fine anybody $250 for not wearing a mask in this state?

My hope is no.

My hope is no, probably will be very few, is my guess.

This is the Glenn Beck program.

There's a disturbing new report from Goldman Sachs claiming that over 40% of businesses that have reopened have halted their reopening, placing a hold on it or reversing it entirely.

That's where the economy is right now with the COVID resurgence.

It's just in a tough place.

And it's just the latest event in a trend.

The U.S.

dollar is under attack.

Economists have been talking for a while now about how the dollar is in serious danger of losing its place as the world's reserve currency.

And of course, the Fed's answer to this is just buy more printer ink cartridges and just keep printing and printing and printing.

Need to call Goldline and talk to them about diversifying your portfolio.

We don't know how much time is left for the dollar, honestly, and you need to be prepared for whatever comes down the road.

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Don't miss Glenn's TV show where he'll show just how important the case against General Flynn is.

It's tomorrow night, 9 Eastern.

It's Pat and Stu for Glenn on the Glenn Beck program.

Hopefully, he'll be feeling better tomorrow.

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Also, tell you, Pat, my Friday show is my 100th episode of Stew Does America already.

Already?

Yep, most of them quarantine,

quarantinated.

But 100th episode.

So we're doing a hundred, you know, their normal episode for number 100.

And then afterwards, we're doing a YouTube-only special, Stew Does Power Hour,

and which we will attempt to do a political power hour panel where we all talk politics and try to be sensible and also drink one shot of of beer per minute like we're in college.

Oh, wow.

Okay.

It's going to be completely ridiculous.

I noticed I wasn't invited to.

No.

Well, we do.

I will say.

Interesting.

I would be interested in a future appearance on one of these because we do have a designated driver, Sarah Gonzalez, who's pregnant, not going to be doing a lot of drinking herself.

That's probably a good idea.

Right, so she's going to be our designated driver.

We have Chad Prayther on, many others.

It's going to be a really fun show and a bunch of nonsense.

So you've got to subscribe to the YouTube channel.

Easiest way to do it, go to YouTube, search for Stu, S-T-U.

I'll be the first one there.

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And subscribe and click the little bell.

They'll give you the notifications as to when everything is happening.

Did you see that Melania Trump's former confidant and aide, her

right-hand woman, really,

is doing a tell-all book coming out September 1st.

So this is hot on the heels of Donald Trump's niece,

which happened right after the John Bolton thing.

I mean, is Barron coming out with a tell-all next?

They're just getting hit every which way.

Yeah.

Well, look, there's a lot of money to be made here.

A lot.

And people are like, well, why didn't John Bolton come out and talk about this during the impeachment hearing?

Because he made $2 million immediately from it.

And he sold 780,000 books in the first week, which nobody does anymore.

No, and I will say that means he's getting more than $2 million.

He had a $2 million

advance, which he's already sold here enough copies to pass that, I'm sure.

You know, the thing with,

you know, and I think he's right, honestly, that if he came out and said the things he says in his book, it would not have changed the impeachment at all.

I read the book.

He does not say, in fact, he specifically says Trump was exonerated on Russia in the book.

Wow.

Which is not being reported.

Oh, if he had only said these things a year ago, why we'd have an impeached and convicted president.

No, the Republicans are not going to vote him out of office.

I mean, in fact, if you read the book, which I actually did, and I'm convinced 90% of the media did not, what you realize in there is that they agree often.

Trump is actually given credit by Bolton often in the book for being right on these issues.

Basically, as you'd expect, Bolton is aggressive in almost all these foreign policy circumstances.

So sometimes Trump is aggressive and sometimes he's not.

So sometimes they agree and sometimes they don't.

Bolton is definitely critical over Trump about, you know, process stuff.

You know, like, look, we all know that Trump is not running a normal White House.

So, you know, he doesn't go through the normal.

He's talking to some guy, he's talking to

some random guy he knows, and he changes his mind over something.

That pisses off somebody like Bolton, who's done a giant report on it and presented it and already had a confirmation, right?

Right.

Those things.

And I would agree that that's not the best way to run a White House.

Sometimes it really gets you some good results.

Sometimes it gets you some bad ones.

And Bolton talks a lot about that.

But he a lot of times agrees with Trump, and Trump is

overriding some of his more passive aides and advisors to Bolton's benefit multiple times in the book.

It happens over and over again.

The one thing that does not happen, there's never a point in which John Bolton says something nice about Nikki Haley.

That is Nikki Haley, really?

Not part of the book.

He hates Nikki Haley.

You want to talk about Tim hating Trump?

I mean, he's critical of Trump, but also at times complimentary of Trump.

That is not the case with Nikki Haley.

He does not like her.

There's no praise of her.

No, not at all.

I mean, I don't know what happens.

Did you say why he doesn't like her?

There's a lot of talk about.

Now, remember, you know, Bolton used to have that same job.

So he knows that job and that world very well.

She got a lot of praise.

That may have pissed him off.

May have pissed him off.

I don't know.

I mean, and we're just reading into it.

He praised him quite a bit when he was UN

ambassador, frankly.

And I will say, he did a lot of good things, I think, while he was in office with Trump as well.

I mean, he goes through a lot of them, and many of them, this audience, was completely agree with his stance on, and Trump agreed with his stance on.

So it wasn't, it wasn't a constantly adversarial situation.

But with Haley, it was a lot of stuff about her wanting to get in front of the cameras, her thinking about a future run for president, you know, her.

And, you know, he goes through many of the high-profile events.

He just, you could just tell he's critical of a lot of people in the book.

I don't think John Bolton gets along

with anybody, frankly.

There's very few people in the book.

He's a caustic guy.

Yeah.

There's very few people he's consistently complimentary of.

He seemed to have a halfway decent relationship with Pompeo, I would say.

But I mean,

there's not a lot of people he likes.

That doesn't surprise me at all.

It doesn't.

But he really doesn't like Nikki Haley.

I would say if there's anyone in the book, Mattis and Haley get the hardest treatment from Mattis.

From Bolton.

Yeah.

I mean, he makes the case often that Mattis would continually slow play events to Trump to basically talk Trump out of doing things.

He mentioned specifically in Syria where

Mattis was in charge of coming up with response packages to one of their chemical attacks.

And Mattis basically, ah, we don't have those ready yet.

You know, a lot of that sort of stuff going on.

And then when they would present them, they'd all be very weak.

So

there'd be no tough

treatment for him to choose from because Mattis had presented only weak options.

And whatever one was tougher, they go, ah, that one's not quite ready yet.

He claims a lot of that is just bureaucracy.

But I mean, it was, look,

if you're the type of person who is just looking for a book about nonstop Trump praise, you're not going to like it, right?

Like if you want a book from, you know, I don't know,

you know, some, you know, some media personality that's just going to say constant great things about Trump, this definitely is not the book.

But it is an interesting insight about some of these big...

big moments in the federal in the international policy.

You go through the Kim Jong-un meetings one by one.

They go through the Syria response.

The polling.

Did he agree with Trump's stance on North Korea or not?

He was, you know, Trump has had multiple stances on North Korea.

At times

when he wanted to be tough on North Korea, he agreed with him.

When he wanted to be like meeting with him generally, he was a good idea.

He wouldn't have called him a good leader or whatever.

I think one of the things he was most critical of Trump on specifically was his propensity to try to have personal relationships with these dictators and win them over in like private conversations.

He didn't like that approach.

And you wouldn't expect that from John Bolton.

He didn't like that approach.

The one specific incident he was most critical of was pulling out of Syria at

kind of Turkey's behest.

Did not like that one at all.

He was also critical of the response.

It might have been the, what was the one where he stopped it at the last second?

You remember the story?

Where we were going, I think it may have been one of the chemical attacks on Syria or something, and we were going to respond, and we had the,

you know, we're an hour away from the troops ready to go.

Oh, no, it was Iran.

Pardon me, it was Iran, when they shot down one of our drones.

And we were going to respond to that.

And Bolton, if you remember, Trump came out and said, he actually tweeted this and said,

I was an hour before we were going to leave, and someone told me 150

Iranians were going to die.

And that was not an equal cost for life for a drone, so he decided not to do it.

He basically says there was just like one rogue general that was like trying to get them out of it and brought him this number with no evidence.

And Trump was like, Well, I don't want 150 people, so they just canceled the whole thing.

And he said that he basically called that one really irresponsible.

But again, if you look at it in the context of the entire Trump believed it wasn't proportional, right?

I think Bolton's point was, and it seemed like every, at least to Bolton's word, everyone else was kind of in agreement on this, in that they didn't have any evidence it wasn't proportional.

Like it was, it was sort of a random number that wound up not being accurate.

It was more of a a scare tactic from one particular guy who wanted to stop it.

That being said, though, look at the, it's typical media treatment of one of these things.

Yes, there is criticism of Trump in there, and I can understand why that leads the news, but there's so much more in here, and so many times they, he, you know, Bolton is highly critical of the way the media handles these stories.

Bolton is criticizing the media constantly with the way they're misleading the American people.

And many times, in agreement with Trump, you haven't heard heard word one about that from the actual media.

They don't highlight those passages at all.

And, you know, I think they've done a disservice on the book, but what else is new?

It seems like it might be sort of like the Michael Schellenberger book, who's

great.

He believes in climate change.

And so you might disagree with some of what's in the book.

But the facts that he presents in that book,

which the book is called Apocalypse Never.

And

this this guy has been a climate change activist for, I don't know, 30 years,

especially over the last 20, but definitely 30 years.

He's been doing all kinds of things.

He's won awards for climate change.

He's been Times Environmentalist of the Year or something like that in 2009.

He's a fan of the Sandinistas and went down to Manawa Ni Arawa to

watch the revolution, the socialist revolution happen because he was a teenager for it.

This is the guy who is saying, look, none of what they're saying about the apocalypse is true there is no such thing as the climate apocalypse it's not going to happen it's not going to happen now it's not going to happen in 10 years or 12 or 100 yeah and the ipcc is not even saying it is

what's amazing is he's debunking all of these uh alarmists

with the scientists that they're quoting which is amazing yeah so i've really i i haven't read the entire book yet but i've really enjoyed what i've read even though the guy is a climate change activist.

Yeah, and you're going to agree with him for it.

You might not agree with everything in the book, but you need to, I always feel like when someone is willing to take on their own side and say something critical,

call them, it's you appreciate that.

Yeah, it's a, it's like, it's a, there's a big difference from, you know,

I don't know, Anthony Scaramucci, right?

He's in the, in, inside the, uh, inside the administration and leaves and is fighting publicly with Trump all the time.

Like, I don't, whatever he says, he says.

When it's someone who, like, you, you, you've looked at over a long period of time and recognized their work is legitimate, and they, you know, when they come out and they, like, they have something to say, I think that's interesting.

Um, it's one of the reasons why I argued for Bolton to testify at the impeachment hearings because now the administration is having to go through this twice.

If they had done it in the impeachment hearing, it would have been voted down anyway.

The same result would have been.

That's what we were saying at the time.

And we would have said, you know, look, if this is all news, we've already talked about this.

Now they have to deal with this twice, which is not helpful.

But the Schellenberger book is one, you know, I'm glad to see how well it's selling.

I know he was in the top,

it was like whatever five or six on Amazon.

Oh, good.

It went way up there.

I don't know how high it is now.

But, you know, selling a book on the environment and with, you know, with lots of statistics and stuff, not exactly a path.

It's not sexy.

Yeah, to sexy book sales.

But the fact that he's willing to stand up and say, look, my side, the one I've been fighting for, is lying to you about this, this, this, and this.

And I think they're right about this and this.

That has real value, especially today.

So many people are so terrified

to say anything against their own side.

Why he wrote the book, really.

It's why he wrote the book, and it's why.

People are in a panic over what they're being told, and they shouldn't be.

It's why you've seen all these networks fold with their shows, canceling cops and live PD, and

all of this is just fear.

Like they're afraid to say, yeah, you know what?

The Black Lives Matter website has a bunch of kooky stuff on it.

I know there's a lot of people who don't believe it, but like we need to point out that that stuff's wrong.

They can't even do that because they're terrified.

You know, when you have someone who actually has the bravery to stand up and say something like Michael Schellenberger, it's important to support him.

And I'm really glad to see how well his book is doing.

Yeah, me too.

Triple 8, 727 back.

Patton Stuper Glenn.

Let me tell you something that I never really expected before getting, you know,

engaged with RekTech Grills.

Glenn has been bragging about it.

It's really irritating.

He has a Rec Tech Grill, and he's now talking about baking things things in a Rectech Grill, which I didn't even know you could do.

RekTech Grill has this smart grilling technology, state-of-the-art.

So basically, you'd have to try pretty hard to get things wrong.

It is just a really well-designed grill, and it is one of the things, you know, I think a lot of people have gotten into this when it comes to

quarantine time.

You're spending more time cooking.

You're spending more time at home with your family.

It's a great way to enjoy that time and have really great food as well.

When you get a Rectec, you're not just getting a grill, you're also joining a family of people online who've also discovered how great it is to cook on a RekTech.

It's going to be the last grill you're ever going to want to own.

Follow Rech Tech on all social media and sign up for their newsletter.

Visit rechtechgrills.com.

R-E-C-T-E-C grills.com.

RekTech Grill, you got to have one.

You've got to try one of these things.

I mean, we're talking to the point where they have like an app.

You can see the exact temperature inside your grill.

You want to cook and really improve your grilling technique.

You want to impress people at the backyard picnic?

This is what you got to do.

RekTechGrills.com.

Tomorrow night, the pandemic.

It's quite disturbing.

We're setting records practically every day.

The protests.

Protest has gotten violent at California, but.

The riots.

Is it all just a deep state distraction?

Glenn reveals why the case against General Flynn exposes everything and why the conspiracy to take down President Trump is still not over.

Who will pay for the crimes against our democracy?

Tomorrow night, 9 p.m.

Eastern, only at Blazetv.com/slash Glenn.

You're listening to Glenn Beck.

It's Pat and Stew for Glenn on the Glenn Beck program.

A little under the weather today.

Hopefully be back tomorrow.

By the way, you can hear my show immediately preceding this show on the Blaze Radio and TV network.

Pat Gray unleashed 7 to 9 Eastern every weekday or anytime at your leisure, anytime you want on podcast, wherever you get your podcasts.

And also on YouTube.

Yeah.

Youtube.com slash Pat Gray.

I will say too,

I was listening to the show.

I don't hear enough about scrumptiouscookie.com on your show.

I'm a little nervous about why that has not been more of a focus because all I know is I want to eat the cookie.

It probably needs to be more of a focus.

Please bring them in next time you're here.

Yeah, if you're in need of a cookie, I mean, this is the best cookie on the planet.

I will agree with that.

Scrumptiouscookie.com.

Yeah.

If you'd like a really delicious cookie.

And there's, you know, I don't, I was telling my wife this yesterday.

I haven't met a single person in my lifetime who doesn't like her cookies.

I mean, you meet people who don't like the show.

Yeah.

You meet people who don't like you.

I've never met the person who doesn't like her cookies.

It's just objectively great.

That's why it really is.

Legitimately great.

And that's the only reason I really keep in touch with you.

I just know that eventually you're going going to bring in cookies.

I don't really.

Yeah, it makes sense.

I mean, you seem like a fine guy or whatever, but I'm really not.

It's really about the cookie.

I'm not that good a person.

No.

Yeah, you know, I mean, it is about the cookie.

It's hard.

It's hard.

You know?

I'm just hoping these cookies don't get canceled.

Because

did you know the husband of the owner is a right-wing lunatic on the radio?

Oh, my God.

Oh, my gosh.

He is.

He's like, no,

he's not even in support of Black Lives Matter.

Oh, my God.

Yeah.

You know, he apparently thinks all lives matter.

What?

Yeah.

Yeah.

Cancel this guy.

What a racist.

That means those M ⁇ M cookies are racist.

This is the Glenn Beck program.