Best of The Program | Guests: Rep. Thomas Massie & Jade Powell | 3/18/20
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Listen and follow along
Transcript
Welcome to the podcast.
Another day in Apocalypse Land as we deal with the coronavirus.
Are you cash hoarding?
It's a big problem.
Are you taking your money out of your bank?
That could be limited, that could be labeled as cash hoarding
if you don't watch it.
And we're now having people across the country who are calling 911 because they're out of toilet paper.
Not really advisable, but
you may want to know about that story.
Also, Thomas Massey, the representative, is joining us, talking to us about not only what's going on with coronavirus, but also the FISA authorization and what happens after this.
Because if we have a big situation where we're giving up power and we're giving up power to the government, how does that play out later on?
And Daniel Horowis is watching all the money they're spending and all the new stimulus programs that we're about to get hit with.
It is a, it's one of those things where we're looking at a current crisis going on now and we're setting the ground for another crisis once this one is over.
We look at both sides of that.
You can also watch Glenn's special tonight.
It's on coronavirus.
What do you need to know?
Any question that you have, you can hashtag GBJFs.
Hashtag GBJustTheFacts to get
your question answered on their coronavirus special tonight.
That is at 9 p.m.
Eastern.
And an hour before that, you can get the show with me, Stew Does America, in which we're going to, we've got a little news on the New York Times that we've discovered.
We're going to get into that, which is an amazing piece of hypocrisy.
Go over and click on Sue Does America and search for that and click on subscribe on your podcast app now.
And here is the podcast:
you're listening to
the best of the benefit program.
Our daily stats come from Johns Hopkins, and they are as of 5.30 a.m.
Central Time.
Total confirmed cases worldwide, 202,000.
That's up from 185.
That's a big jump.
Total confirmed deaths worldwide, 8,000, up from 7,300 yesterday.
Total confirmed recovered, 82,000, up from 79,000 yesterday.
167 countries have confirmed cases, up from 162.
Four more have suspected cases.
How many countries are there?
There's 170, aren't there, Stu?
Do you know?
I mean, that number always fluctuates.
Yeah, I think it's 170.
190?
Yeah, you know, a lot of people.
So almost every...
Yeah, the countries without examples, though, just aren't...
They're not testing in Madagascar, I don't think.
Correct, correct.
And all continents have it now, I think, except for Antarctica, which, hey, I'm willing to carry eggs on my feet if that's what it takes to stay, you know, free and
virus-free.
Yeah, I'll do it.
6% of active cases are now considered serious, requiring hospitalization.
That's steady from 6% yesterday, but down from 19% just three weeks ago.
The U.S.
now has 6,524 confirmed cases and 116 deaths.
That's up from 4,700 cases just yesterday and 93 deaths just yesterday.
The U.S., now all 50 states plus Washington, D.C.
and four U.S.
territories have at least one confirmed case.
West Virginia was the lone holdout and they got a confirmed case yesterday.
Doctors are now urging younger patients.
COVID-19 causes permanent lung damage to all survivors.
Doctors in Belgium treated several younger victims here recently.
They took a CAT scan and realized they are suffering from severe lung damage.
This validates or seems to validate a report out of Hong Kong and Korea Korea that even the younger victims who recover from COVID-19 may have permanent lung damage due to the scarring of the lung tissue.
20% permanent loss in lung function.
That's huge, especially if you're in 20s.
And you're going to lose 20% lung function when you're 20.
That's not good.
These are younger people, they say, did not smoke.
They have no other conditions.
They had nothing.
They got it.
They survived.
Then they got a chest x-ray or
a
CAT scan, a CT scan.
And when they got the CT scan, they realized, holy cow, there's real serious damage.
Yesterday, the president pushed for $210 billion free dollars every month to U.S.
adults.
President pressed Secretary Steve
Mnuchin to give checks to $1,000 per person per month
to all Americans starting in two weeks.
And when I say all Americans, all Americans except millionaires.
The $1,000 per month stimulus would cost $210 billion every month.
There are 209 million American adults over the age of 18.
Millionaires do not receive this money.
If you're bored during the COVID-19 quarantine, Dr.
Oz came out and said, I have an idea.
Have sex.
Okay, thank you, Dr.
Oz.
U.S.
hospital ships
have been activated now.
Secretary of Defense Mark Esper confirmed that two hospital ships have been activated, will be anchored off the east and west coast of the U.S.
Stu, can I just ask you a question?
Did anybody think, I don't know,
cruise ships?
I'm getting that.
Kind of a bad idea.
I think what they're doing with that is they're putting the people who are in the hospitals for other reasons on the ships.
For other reasons.
So they can clear out the actual hospitals for the COVID patients.
It's a theory, but I don't think
it's going on.
Right.
Military doesn't have,
they're not prepared to deal with this.
They're, you know, trauma.
And so I think all the trauma is going on to those ships.
But once one person gets it on one of those ships, I mean.
They're going to be traveling around looking for a port to come in, you know,
without Stephen E.
D.
Gourmet doing the, you know, doing the entertainment.
Type A blood may be more likely to catch COVID-19.
People with type A blood, do you know what kind of blood you have?
Besides red?
No, no, I would say no.
I don't really know off the top of my head.
Those with type O also
are at risk, obviously, but type A.
significantly more likely to catch.
This according to China, a study in Wuhan, the epicenter of disease, also found with type blood A, type A blood, you're more likely to die from COVID-19 with no clear indication on why that may be true.
COVID-19 now may be cured by an existing antiviral drug cocktail doctors in Queensland Center for Clinical Research.
That's in Australia, pressing Australian authorities to grant him leave to begin human clinical trials by the end of the month.
Professor Patterson, who is an infectious disease physician at the Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital, said it's not a stretch to label the drugs a treatment or a cure.
He says it's potentially a very effective treatment.
The doctor did warn that even if the antiviral drugs prove to be effective, it may take months to get the studies through the human clinical trials.
We can test this in the first way.
Is anybody else thinking about all the tests that are going on and how we're rushing and then
think of
what is it?
I Am Legend?
Legend?
Wasn't that the Will Smith movie?
The Omega Man
thing?
Wasn't that a...
Wasn't that they were trying to fight a virus and then they came up with a vaccine and it was turning people into vampires or something like that.
I mean, I just don't want to be a vampire.
Stu.
Of all the things that you're doing.
I will promise to kill you if you turn into a zombie.
I'll shoot you in the head.
Will you shoot me in the head?
Will you be my friend and shoot me in the head?
Well, I didn't ask you.
You didn't promise me.
No, I'll do it.
I'll do it.
No, I don't need to do it.
I'm pretty sure
I'm going to look a little like a zombie right now.
I'm glad we're social discomfort.
Amazon right now.
Yeah, I know.
Amazon no longer shipping cheap clothes and knickknacks to warehouses.
Okay, I don't.
Can you define knickknacks?
I mean, because, I mean, who buys knickknacks?
Who's like on like, you know what?
I need a knick-knack.
Nobody goes out to buy a knick-knack.
I think knickknacks are just purchased, you know, it's an impulse thing.
Have you ever heard anybody go, you know what, I just got it.
I just moved into my house and what it needs is some knickknacks.
No, no one, no one goes out to buy knickknacks, but they do fill your house on every shop.
They do fill your house, but do you know that they're knickknacks?
I mean, Amazon might think that some things are knickknacks that I think are essential.
I can't think of any right now.
Well, I think they're just,
they blew up as like they're not, Amazon's not going to be shipping anything anymore to houses.
But I think it's just if you're a third-party seller, Amazon stores your things at their warehouses to send out, and they're not going to be doing that anymore.
So I think you can still order the knickknacks.
The knickknacks can still be purchased.
They're just coming to you a different way.
Good.
I mean, I don't want to panic on knickknacks.
I'm hoarding all these knickknacks.
First dog diagnosed with COVID-19 has died.
Now, when I first read that, I thought, Donald Trump has a dog?
Because he does not seem like a dog guy.
Oh my gosh.
If I had to attach an animal to him, I think I would attach a cat to him.
Don't you think?
He's more of a cat person, isn't he?
I think like an iguana on a leash.
Like just walking through like
a diamond leash.
A diamond leash.
Carried by someone else.
I can see it.
Yeah, I don't think he's really an animal person.
Maybe he is.
But no, it's not the first dog.
It's the first dog diagnosed with COVID-19.
Can you imagine going to the center and saying, I need my dog tested?
I need my dog tested.
I thought they were clear that you're not, you weren't allowed to, or the dogs didn't get it.
And now they're saying they do.
I feel like they change this every two days.
And I know it's difficult, but it's really hard to figure out what to do.
Like, masks don't, they don't mean anything.
You don't need a mask.
They're not effective at all.
What kind of moron would be wearing a mask?
And then yesterday they were like, oh, yeah, by the way, you should definitely be wearing masks if you go out in public.
It's like, well, could we just
could we just, could we just go through some of this here on the, because the whole mask thing really kind of pisses me off
because they do make a huge difference.
The masks, exactly what Stu said.
Here is, this is from the New York Times.
Oh yeah, this is the headline.
Oh yeah, masks really do work.
Oh, oh.
Okay, so now they've come out and what they've said is, we just want you to know that the mask thing, what we needed is we needed people to stop buying masks.
So we told everybody that masks didn't work.
I told you at the time, of course they work.
Why are they saying masks don't work?
And besides, we need them at the hospital to make our doctors feel better?
Doc,
this is a super secret special mask.
It makes you completely impervious to this virus.
Just put this on.
What?
Doctors wouldn't be wearing it if it didn't work.
Of course.
But they decided to go ahead and lie to us and tell us that these things didn't work so people would stop buying them.
It's so unbelievably irresponsible.
This is governments and media cannot do these things.
Yeah, they even admit it.
Just tell us.
They even admit it in the article.
I mean, in the story, they say, like, yeah, you know, it was good intentions and they just wanted to make sure that people were able to get them where they needed them.
They didn't want people to go out and rush and get them, so they just said they wouldn't work.
It's like, well,
good intentions.
It was good intentions, too, when we rounded up the Chinese.
Well, we're just trying to, or Japanese.
We're just trying to make sure that nobody, you know.
No, good intentions don't count.
Yeah, no, that's not.
They don't count.
Yeah, not a good idea.
Not a good idea at all.
Healthcare workers across New York City are bracing for a surge of COVID-19 patients who need hospital care.
Everything is being rationed sent one nurse in a Queen's hospital where the floor was just converted to the first COVID-19 floor.
She said
it was empty two days ago.
Now it's full with two dozen patients.
We went from donning and doffing gowns.
That's a quote.
We went from donning and doffing gowns.
I've heard donning, don your gown.
Doffing your gown?
Who is this?
Who is this?
Somebody who has way too much stupid, like literature kind of education.
Doffing, it's an actual word, should be used more often.
It's very different than donning a gown.
It's very prominent in gown culture.
Right.
What is, can you look it up?
Did you look it up?
D-O-F-F-I-N-G doffing.
Now it says, we went from donning and doffing gowns only in patient rooms to being told we can wear the same gown in two positive corona patient rooms.
Oh.
In other words, supplies are running short.
N95s are running short.
Those are being rationed.
Don't worry, those don't work, I hear.
Nurse said they may add many more beds to the ward as she works, and two or more floors in the hospital may be converted in the coming days.
This is why those hospital ships are going out.
You find donning?
Yeah, it's doffing.
It's to remove.
We could have just said removing.
Dawning.
Ah, so donning is putting it on.
Doffing is taking it off.
That's how you can remember it really easily.
Yeah, that's great.
So,
you know, if you, I hate to break it to,
you know,
Jane Austen here, but you could just put, you could just say we went from taking our gowns and putting them on and off.
You could do that instead of the donning and doffing, but I don't drink tea with my pinky out either, so what do I know?
You're listening to the best of the Glen Beck program.
Welcome to the program, Congressman Thomas Massey.
Thomas, Thomas, Thomas, Thomas, this is quite a statement.
I fear the actions taken by our government will make FDR's internment of the Japanese Americans look like a light touch.
You want to explain that?
Tell me how you've arrived at that.
Sure.
I'm really disturbed at how accepting people are of some of the things that the governors are doing, particularly my governor.
You know, they posted sheriff deputies outside of a man's home here in Kentucky because they said he tested positive and they wanted to make sure he didn't go anywhere.
What were they going to do if he came out and got in his car?
Were they going to shoot him?
I mean,
you know, this is what we're coming to, and it's very concerning to me.
You know, they've never done this if you have the flu or if you have AIDS.
Do they come to your house and put you under house arrest?
No.
So they need to have justification for this.
The man deserves at least due process, I think.
And it's just a harbinger of more things to come.
I'm used to seeing this in China, but I think we're going to see some of those disturbing videos of people being dragged, kicking, and screaming by people in hazmat suits.
I'm worried we're going to see that before this is over with.
So, Thomas, I am so with you.
So, now let's have an adult conversation where nobody's pointing fingers at each other and calling people names because I know you're more than capable of
having those kinds of conversations.
Here's the
crux of the problem:
we do live in a republic, so we should never expect that.
We should never allow that.
And
we shouldn't endorse it just even by ignoring it.
However, we have this pandemic.
And what do we do to make sure that people are taking it seriously?
You know, especially because I think of the media.
The media has done, has so discredited themselves that people who
believe in Donald Trump, they're not taking it as seriously because they think this is all just a media hoax.
How do we get people to comply without becoming China?
What do you suggest?
Yeah, we do need to take this very seriously.
And
I'm not saying that we shouldn't, so I'm glad you point that out.
Right.
At first blush, it would seem that dictatorships and communism, which its main feature is central planning, are at an advantage in an outbreak like like this, right?
They're not constrained by a constitution.
They just,
you know, they tell you to stay put if they want you to stay put, and you do what you're told.
And it would seem like they have an advantage.
And so that's why I fear some of the reaction here by elected officials in the United States is to go in that direction.
But don't give up the free market.
We have a tremendous advantage here that they don't have.
The economic incentive to solve this problem is immense.
And if we free up the markets to do that, we could have astounding results.
If you deepen
the people that come up with test kits, imagine if a test kit cost $5 and you could buy it now on Amazon.
And obviously you'd have to retest and test because one negative doesn't prove that you're never going to have it, right?
But then you could go on about your life that day.
Take the kit, show somebody that you've tested that day, maybe it's on your phone, and you could go about working in a restaurant.
And I know there are people who are asymptomatic who can spread the disease, spread the virus, but it's a fact that you have to have the virus to spread the virus, and a test should show that.
I also think we need another kind of test, Glenn, that isn't out there yet.
And I'd like to see the free free market work on it.
We need a test that shows whether you've had this virus and you've overcome it, you've recovered, whether you were symptomatic or asymptomatic, because those people are like super citizens right now, right?
There's no reason they should be stopped from going to work.
There's no reason they should be stopped for caring for the elderly.
And I know there's a question as to whether maybe you could get reinfected, but we're three or four months into this
this virus people we need to answer that question too but it seems highly unlikely compared to the general population that you could get reinfected if you've recovered from this so I think for instance if you go to a hospital and you get treated and you're recovered you should get some kind of government ID that says hey I'm virus-free don't stop me
You know, these are some of the things that we could do.
It's almost like you should get a birth certificate once you've been through this virus, if it is the case that you have a natural immunity.
But we need a test to show whether you have those antibodies in your system, because that's important to coming back out of this.
Here's my question to every government official that's turned something off, right?
Whether they turned off our whole restaurant industry like they did here in Kentucky.
The question is, what model were you using?
Like, what's your plan?
And when are you going to turn it back on?
Like, don't tell me
you just shut down the whole restaurant industry on a hunch.
Show me the model.
People need facts and data, not reassurances from politicians.
So I agree with you.
Thomas, I have been trying to find the tripwires that our governments are using because I'm in business and I'd like to know what their tripwires are.
You know,
how do you know when to take it to the next level?
How do you know what are the metrics on this?
And I can't get them from anyone.
It really is like everybody's just going on a hunch.
And it's good to, you know, it's better to sometimes
to overreact in your personal life if it means just prepare.
It doesn't, it's not a good thing when a government overreacts.
We need to find that balance.
And I don't know what those, I don't know what those trip lines are.
I can't make heads or tails of them.
Right.
What are the tripwires for shutting things down?
But more importantly.
And turning them on.
Yeah, turning them on.
When are you going to turn them on?
Now, I do think that
a lot of reaction from the public and a lot of reaction from the government is based on fear of the unknown.
But I also think it's wise to be prepared for the worst case.
So the only way
We start narrowing down our response is we start getting more data and more facts.
Some government official who's turned something off needs to come out in public and say, here's the worst case, guys.
Here's the worst case.
And here's what we're going to do to bound that worst case.
So, Thomas, here's the thing that, you know, they're talking about every bill that's going through right now is said, you know, until the end of this emergency.
Well, there are national emergencies declared by Jimmy Carter that are still in effect.
So when is the end of this so-called emergency?
And I do believe it's an emergency, but we are,
by our steps, we may be saving lives, but we also, by our steps, are destroying our economy.
And I think that thing's going to last for a very long time.
I think we're easily headed for a depression if we don't pull up and this doesn't end pretty soon.
So when we're looking at things, how hard will it be to get the Congress and the Senate and the the White House to think in the opposite direction?
Give money to those who have lost their jobs.
We already have that.
We don't need a new system.
Just open up the gates so anybody who doesn't have a job, they can go get that assistance so they don't lose their house or they can pay their rent and whatever.
But for everybody else,
I think we have to structure everything.
Instead of the government giving us stuff, the government has to stop taking things.
So in other words, let's say no taxes for the next eight months.
None.
No federal taxes at all.
And the only reason why I say this is if we say no taxes until the end of this emergency, oh my gosh, the people in Washington are going to be awfully eager to end this emergency.
But if they're giving us stuff, they have no incentive to end this emergency because it makes them popular with certain groups and people.
Right.
And most of the governors, you know, it's a free free transaction for them to shut stuff down right now.
And I was looking for that tripwire.
When do they turn things back on?
And at first I thought, well, when the state workers don't get paid and they show up at the capitals, at the state capitals, because the tax revenue isn't there from the restaurant workers or whatever businesses were shut down, I thought that's when they'll turn it back on.
But then I went back to D.C.
and I looked in the eyes.
of my colleagues and what I realized is that they're ready to bail out anything.
Airlines, state government,
individuals.
They're ready to bail it all out.
This may be the thing that breaks our monetary system.
And by the way, we can...
And breaks the capitalist system, breaks the entire capitalist system.
I think we're already operating on the modern monetary theory.
I think we're already doing it through the Fed.
Oh, everybody's a Keynesian now up in Washington, D.C.
And look, we could survive a 10% drop in GDP, but here's a question.
Could we survive a 10% drop in food production?
Because I've got local seed stores, a seed store, they sell fertilize and seed right now to the farmers that are planting their fields here in the next few weeks.
If they shut down, that's going to have a tremendous ripple effect, not just in the GDP, but in our ability to feed folks.
So the question that I think our politicians aren't answering and the epidemiologists, okay, they're doing a great job of modeling what could happen in which scenarios, but they're not modeling.
Their models don't take into account what if the trash doesn't get picked up and rats start roaming, you know, places in large numbers.
Well, I think
I just
read that trash collection is part of essential services.
There are some things that are not closed, and then most of them have to do with sanitary
and food production.
Yeah, well, look, when they shut down the restaurants here in Kentucky, guess what?
They also shut down about 70%
of the restrooms that the public uses.
I watched a guy with a service dog try to get into an Arby's,
and the door was locked.
And look, I've been to countries, large countries.
And I don't want to be called xenophobic, so I'm not going to tell you which countries, but I've seen humans defecate in the streets.
And diseases run rampant there.
And so, you know, I don't think our
governor intended to shut down all these restrooms, but he shut down restrooms.
I don't know what, where, I don't know where that individual who was trying to get into Arby's, by the way, he didn't go stand in line at the drive-thru.
He didn't want to order food.
It was pretty sure to me.
I don't know what he did.
And I don't know if he was homeless.
Did he have a home?
Anyways.
You know, and here's the other thing, Glenn.
Is the government going to hold a gun to the sanitation workers' head and say, go to work today?
Like, if I know we're on the side where they say, okay, they're essential employees, so we're not going to stop them from working.
But are they going to come around to the side where they're going to force them to work?
This is the best of the Glenn Beck program.
Tonight's show at 9 p.m.
Eastern Time is all about one thing, the facts.
No hyperbole, no politics, no opinion.
Basically, the exact opposite of you're getting from everywhere else in the majority of Washington regarding the
did I almost say Wuhan virus?
Oh, I can't wait to explain that one tonight.
We're going to explore what's happening in our economy.
How is this all playing out with just the facts?
You'll have a new understanding of what we're facing and what we're dealing with tonight.
Also on the program, I have
Syrah Madad.
Now, she is a doctor and a senior director of System Special Pathogens Program for New York Health and Hospitals.
You might know her because she's featured in the Netflix documentary Pandemics.
I don't know if you've seen How to Prevent an Outbreak.
The timing on that one was extraordinary, but she is somebody who went out and fought Ebola and all of these others.
She's like a little, I think a little nuts where she's like, you know what?
Just got to go out there and do it.
And she lives for this stuff.
She's taking precious time away from fighting this virus to bring the latest facts and answer your questions.
If you have a question you'd like her to answer something about this you don't understand or you haven't heard anybody address, please send your question to hashtag gbjust the facts.
Just tweet it with the hashtag GBJustTheFacts.
And we'll be live tonight at 9 p.m.
Eastern, Blazetv.com, Blazetv YouTube, and Pluto TV.
Now on Pluto TV, and of course, always available on demand for our subscribers at blazetv.com slash Glenn.
Subscribe now.
And you'll get all of our archives, including all of the history things that you can watch with your family, all of the specials that we've done.
Really good stuff to binge watch.
Just the facts is the hashtag.
That's the name of the show tonight, coronavirus, just the facts.
Tonight, 9 p.m., blazetv.com slash Glenn.
Use the promo code Glenn.
All right, I want to introduce you to somebody.
I saw this,
what, I think yesterday, an honor student at the University of Nevada, Reno created something after her mom mentioned that she should call all of the elderly neighbors to see if they needed anything during the pandemic.
So Jade Powell decided, yeah, we can do something.
So, she started a GoFundMe page now because this is just
taken, really taken off.
By the way, I just got a note about the earthquake in
Utah.
Please, if you experienced that, I'd like to hear from you.
Just call us 888-727-BCK.
Let me get an update.
It was almost a six on the Richter scale.
It was a 5.7 on the Richter scale.
So, Jade decided she was going to get some friends and she started with the girls in her sorority and they started buying groceries for the elderly people around their neighborhood and it is spread all across the country now.
She joins us.
Her organization she just started is called Shopping Angels.
Hi, Jade.
How are you?
I'm doing great.
How are you doing?
I'm very good.
So tell me what you, what you now have.
I know this started with just a group of your friends, but what has it turned into?
It's been overwhelming.
We have had interest in starting local branches of shopping angels in all four corners of the country, literally Washington, Maine, Florida, or just a few of the states.
We have somebody in Hawaii starting stuff.
We've got interest in Canada and even New Zealand.
So it's been really, really overwhelming, but awesome to see how how the communities have come together to try and make something for the community that is most at risk for getting sick because of the outbreak
okay so now what do you what do you do exactly if let's say you want to volunteer what do you do what are you volunteering for
so what is most common is the the clients will contact me directly with like a shopping list of up to 10 items and
they also give me their address and then I will pair them with a volunteer that's in their area.
So once I find a volunteer that is in their area, I text them and I ask them, hey, are you able to pick this order up?
And then usually they say yes and they will go to the store and try to pick up the items that are on this list.
And then they purchase them at first out of pocket and then they go and meet up with the client outside of their home.
And then the client just pays for the groceries themselves.
They don't pay for any delivery fees or any,
you know, they don't pay for the time that we spend going to different stores or anything like that.
And how many volunteers do you have?
Do you have any idea yet?
So we're still trying to organize
nationwide volunteers.
So we've actually created email addresses for
every state in the U.S.
and we have gotten some help from some companies in starting a form stack.
So, we now are able to accept up to 100,000 people at a time.
So, we're still trying to get the exact number nationwide.
But I know we have about 100 volunteers between Reno and Las Vegas, and we do have some in the smaller cities like Laughlin and Gardnerville.
So,
how do people contact you if
an elderly person needs help and needs somebody to go to the grocery store?
how do they find you?
Or how do you find them?
Yeah, so there's the form stack that you can sign up to volunteer for.
You can also use to request assistance.
So it's a really easy link.
It's on our Facebook page.
And you just click on it and it asks for your basic information, like your name and your address and your contact info.
And then it asks you to choose whether you're trying to volunteer or request assistance.
And so that's how we're getting some of the requests right now.
Or you can email your local state email and just say, you know, this is our situation.
We really need some help.
And then the state coordinator, we're still trying to get every state a coordinator, but the state coordinator will then reach out to you in regards to trying to find a volunteer to pick up your order or try to help you out.
Jade, thank you so much.
I just wanted to give you a shout out.
I just think what you're doing is really, really great.
You're an an honor student.
You want to be a nurse, do you not?
Or a doctor?
Where are you going after this?
Yeah, I'm a pre-med student, so I'm hoping to go to medical school in a couple years.
Great, great.
Well, good for you.
Sounds like you have your heart in the right place.
Jade Powell, and the Facebook address is facebook.com slash shopping angels NV for Nevada, shopping angels NV.
Thanks so much, Jade.
They're trying to, by the way, they're trying to raise
30 grand on their GoFundMe page.
Just go to GoFundMe under the name Shopping Angels.
They're trying to raise 30 grand.
I think we can help them with that.
If you would like to donate to the people trying to help people that just cannot get out, anybody over 60 or they have a weakened immune system, that's who they're trying to help.
Facebook.com/slash shopping angels NV or go to their GoFundMe page right now.
This is what a free free market does.
And this is the spirit of America that we have always had.
That whether anybody knows it or not, this is the free market.
You don't have to wait around for the government.
And this is so critically important because this is the kind of stuff that we are now talking about flushing down the toilet.
Anybody that says, oh, you know what, we got to get, we just have to have universal single-payer health care and we got to get rid of all these private companies and we should nationalize all these companies.
No, that kills this spirit.