We’ll ALL Get COVID-19 | Guests: Charlie Kirk & Dr. Robert Epstein | 3/2/20

2h 3m
Glenn’s speech at CPAC drew heated reviews from Media Matters, but he dares anyone to actually fact-check it. At CPAC, Glenn saw President Trump’s speeches in a whole new light: Everything’s bulletproof, the audience is his only friend, and Netflix signed a deal with the wrong president. With Super Tuesday a day away, Joe Biden won South Carolina and Pete Buttigieg dropped out, but Biden/Buttigieg 2020 is still an option. Turning Point USA founder and president Charlie Kirk talks Bolshevik Bernie Sanders and President Trump the comedian. Glenn believes the coronavirus has been in the U.S. for a while and that it’s here to stay. And Dr. Robert Epstein discusses why he believes big tech will NOT allow Trump to win in November.
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Runtime: 2h 3m

Transcript

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Speaker 2 The fusion of entertainment and enlightenment.

Speaker 2 Oh my goodness. Looks like coronavirus.
Look, can I just say this about the coronavirus? It's already here.

Speaker 2 We're all going to get it at some point. All of us are going to get it.
And most of us are going to survive. And it's not just this.
We're going to get it because it's going to be around now forever.

Speaker 2 We are still fighting the flu pandemic of 1918. That flu that we get every single year is a knockoff of the Spanish flu of 1918 pandemic.
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Speaker 2 And everybody's like, oh my gosh, look, it's starting to be here. No, it's already been here.
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Speaker 2 So we all need to take a chill pill and relax. The one thing that we should be concerned about is the economy, the economic ramifications.
That's real.

Speaker 2 And that's going to hit the chickens are going to come home to roost. We have information on that today.

Speaker 2 We have Charlie Kirk joining us today. We're going to talk about Super Tuesday for tomorrow.
And

Speaker 2 I was at CPAC this weekend and I was

Speaker 2 just a few feet away from the president during his speech. And boy, do I have some behind the scenes observations

Speaker 2 that I can't wait to share with you. All coming up.
Begins in one minute.

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Speaker 2 So I don't know if you saw this, Stu, but Yahoo News and

Speaker 2 what's the other one? The Daily Beast.

Speaker 2 They've been just writing horrible stories about me at CPAC. And I really want to get into this because it's all from Media Matters.
That's all this is, is Media Matters.

Speaker 2 Trump ally cheered by Republicans for speech claiming Bernie Sanders' presidency would lead to another Holocaust. I think I did say that.
I think I did say that.

Speaker 2 Glenn Beck, a former news, Fox News pundit and an ally to Donald Trump. That's you.
Wow, that's the first time I've been called an ally. Donald Trump doesn't even call me an ally.

Speaker 2 Was cheered on by Republicans during a conference in which he claimed Bernie Sanders presidency would lead to another Holocaust. An incendiary speech full of false claims and misinformation.
Now,

Speaker 2 this is the way misinformation and disinformation spread.

Speaker 2 You write a piece for Yahoo News and you make the claim full of false claims and misinformation and then not go over any of those things.

Speaker 2 Not actually say what that really was and take the speech apart. I welcome you.
to try to do it, Yahoo News. Go ahead.

Speaker 3 I think the Yahoo News room is bustling at this point in the company's trajectory. So I don't know if they'll have time for that one.

Speaker 2 Yeah, I know.

Speaker 2 So,

Speaker 2 full of false claims and misinformation, delivered to the annual CPAC conference, Mr. Beck compared Sanders and his supporters to Bolsheviks.
Yes.

Speaker 2 Warning a violent revolution could or

Speaker 2 should the Democratic Socialist assume office.

Speaker 2 Yeah, just because that's what his supporters are saying. These are not grassroots groups of Democrats.

Speaker 2 They're Marxist revolutionaries who believe in nothing short of complete overthrow of the United States and destruction of the Constitution and the free market system, Beck told an audience of activists at the White House and White House officials at CPAC.

Speaker 2 And please let's stop calling them Bernie bros because they're not my brother.

Speaker 2 They're not something that is funny. They're Bernie Bolsheviks.
They're Bernie Brown shirts. That's what they are, he said, to cheers of support from the crowd.

Speaker 2 And their revolution will result in death and misery. Another

Speaker 2 Holo de Mor, another Holocaust, or whatever we call the next great socialist atrocity.

Speaker 2 mister Beck also suggested that mister Sanders' followers, who he falsely claimed are armed with pipe bombs, Molotov cocktails, and guns, are worse than the Nazis.

Speaker 2 No, I didn't say they were worse than the Nazis. I said

Speaker 2 they're that we have it worse than our grandparents did, because our grandparents in World World War II, it was clear what evil was.

Speaker 2 It was clear. And they took it seriously.
Now we're looking at Bernie Sanders and going, he's just funny. He's like Larry David.
And these are Bernie bros. And we're laughing at them.

Speaker 2 We weren't laughing at the Nazis. We're laughing at these Bolsheviks who are indeed

Speaker 2 arming themselves with pipe bombs and Molotov cocktails.

Speaker 2 Have you noticed Antifa?

Speaker 2 Have you seen any of their peaceful rallies?

Speaker 3 I will say, too, there was a lot of laughing about the Nazis before the Nazis turned into what we now know the Nazis were. When they were early on, they were very much jokes

Speaker 3 and were mocked all over the world,

Speaker 3 including by the United States and Britain and all the people who wound up taking them very seriously later on.

Speaker 2 Yes. So, anyway,

Speaker 2 I'm not worried about it. I just want to say to both the Daily Beast

Speaker 2 and Yahoo News, first of all, two stories isn't widely condemned. Okay.
It's you and Media Matters. Any story I have read was rip and read from Media Matters.
We know who they are.

Speaker 2 Second thing I want to say is

Speaker 2 tell me what the lies were.

Speaker 2 Tell me where they tell me the lies.

Speaker 3 So you actually said that if Bernie gets like that, there will be another Holocaust?

Speaker 2 No. Which is that a quote?

Speaker 3 Because that's what that made it sound like.

Speaker 2 I said, their socialist revolution. I said, these are revolutionaries.
And if they get into office,

Speaker 2 their

Speaker 2 Marxist revolution will lead to the destruction because what they're saying, and I'm not talking about Bernie Sanders saying this, I'm talking about all the people that are in his,

Speaker 2 I can't even say all, I shouldn't say that.

Speaker 2 Almost all of the people in his campaign and the ones that have been shown by Project Veritas,

Speaker 2 they are talking about a violent revolution. They are talking about gulags.
They are talking about killing 20 million people.

Speaker 3 They can't fact-check you on that, though, because that means they'd have to mention the Project Veritas thing, which they've all dutifully ignored.

Speaker 2 Ignored.

Speaker 3 Ignored. Which is great.
Right.

Speaker 3 And they've also ignored that they still work there.

Speaker 2 And they've also ignored all of the people who are currently paid highest level of the Bernie Sanders campaign that were over and they were consulting the former Communist Party of East Germany.

Speaker 2 I mean,

Speaker 2 they are with the communists all over Europe and they are consulting with them. So please, you haven't done your homework.
You don't know what you're talking about and that's giving you credit.

Speaker 2 I personally think you're for it.

Speaker 2 But I could be wrong. Let me tell you about, in fact, let me take a quick break early because I want to talk to you about what I discovered about Donald Trump.

Speaker 2 I'm sitting in the front row of CPAC while Donald Trump is giving his speech.

Speaker 2 And

Speaker 2 I see him and his speeches in an entirely different light. Now, I saw him in 2016 speak, and I saw him live, and it just wasn't the same as it is now.

Speaker 2 and i have learned so much from what i

Speaker 2 i think

Speaker 2 another door of understanding has opened up for me and i've looked i look at him and those speeches which i've always been like oh please don't no just stick to the script stick to the script i look at him entirely different

Speaker 2 After actually sitting and being there.

Speaker 2 Even if you don't like Donald Trump, you just want to understand Donald Trump, go to one of his rallies. You will understand him in a completely new way.

Speaker 2 It was fascinating. I have a lot to share.
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Speaker 2 All right.

Speaker 2 So let me talk to you a little bit about my experience

Speaker 2 at CPAC

Speaker 2 waiting for Donald Trump to speak. So I'm in there and I decide to stay and

Speaker 2 watch the speeches. And so I'm watching everybody speak.
Mark Levin was brilliant and funny, really funny.

Speaker 2 And

Speaker 2 pretty soon, the next guy up on the speak to speak is Donald Trump. And you know he's next because of two things.
First of all, you hear the helicopter, the blades beating over

Speaker 2 the convention center as he's landing on Marine 1.

Speaker 2 And

Speaker 2 then

Speaker 2 they go into like this 25-minute video piece and they take all the lights down. Now I'm sitting

Speaker 2 a little behind him. I'm just out of his peripheral vision.

Speaker 2 If he is giving a speech, and you imagine him sitting in the podium, I'm on the left-hand side, just out of his peripheral vision, just a little behind him.

Speaker 2 So, I'm seeing everything from behind, which was fascinating. So, as they're running this documentary, I swear to you, about 30 White House

Speaker 2 Secret Service staffers come out, and the first thing they do is they wheel out this big

Speaker 2 flight case, giant. It's like it has like 10 bodies in it.
And you're like, oh,

Speaker 2 I wonder who they're delivering. They open it up, and it's the podium.
And it's all put in this beautiful bag inside and all protected. And it takes two or three guys to lift it out of this case.

Speaker 2 And they wheel it up and they lock it into place.

Speaker 2 As I'm watching them assemble this, I for the first time realize that's a Kevlar podium. That podium is bulletproof.
And if you look at it,

Speaker 2 it covers the chest area of the president. You know, usually the cameras are a little higher up, so you're kind of looking down.
But if you're in the audience, it's covering his vital organs.

Speaker 2 And the reason why I realize this is I see how heavy it is, but I also see, for the very first time, when you see a president speak, notice that

Speaker 2 they'll have these little signs on the stage. And in this case, on each side of the podium, were these signs that just said CPAC 2020.

Speaker 2 And the Secret Service walk out with these, and I'm like, why are they putting up CPAC signs next to it? I mean, that's weird that they're doing it. Then I see the bulletproof shielding.

Speaker 2 that is wielded out. And they take these giant metal plates out.
It was really sad to watch this. They took these giant metal plates out of this case.
And they had to be, I don't know,

Speaker 2 probably

Speaker 2 four feet by three feet tall.

Speaker 2 And

Speaker 2 they have these legs that kind of go out so it sits flush with the stage. And then they take a wrench out and they lock them all in place on both sides of the podium.

Speaker 2 Then, the reason why you don't see them is because then they take this blue blanket or this blue, you know,

Speaker 2 I don't know, tablecloth, whatever they have for it, and they put it over that. And then they put the signs that would say, you know, Trump 2020, or in this case, CPAC 20,

Speaker 2 and they put them in front of that. So you just think it's signage.
But what's really sad is if you're looking from behind the podium, you realize the podium is bulletproof. And those signs are for

Speaker 2 shooter, gun.

Speaker 2 And somebody somebody comes and throws the president to the ground. And now he's behind a bulletproof shield.
It was bizarre.

Speaker 2 Took them about 25 minutes to assemble just the podium and everything else. The podium has like a little mini mic

Speaker 2 platform that pulls out, but I realized this platform

Speaker 2 is made for each president. It's not like they had one platform.

Speaker 2 It will be made for the height of the president.

Speaker 2 And so they had this little thing because Donald Trump is so tall. I think he's bigger than I am.

Speaker 2 And

Speaker 2 they pull out this little mini mic stepladder thing behind it so somebody can be the same height as the president.

Speaker 2 And there were two people that were checking the teleprompters, which were quite sophisticated as well. They were all electronically controlled on height and everything else.
It was amazing.

Speaker 2 And there's like 10 people just working on the teleprompters to put them up. One guy comes out and he's on the little stepladder thing that slides in and out of the podium.
And

Speaker 2 he stands up and he's looking in and helping them do it. Then he goes backstage as they're locking things into place.
He puts the little stepladder back in, slides underneath the podium.

Speaker 2 And another guy comes out, and I'm thinking this is the Trump stand-in because he's huge. He was a giant of a man.

Speaker 2 And he walked up and he just was looking at them and they were readjusting and everything else. Then Secret Service drops into place.

Speaker 2 Somebody comes out just like they did when I was in the oval with the president. They come out.

Speaker 2 The last thing that happens, and you know the president's walking into the room, the last thing that happens is they bring in a glass, like a very nice

Speaker 2 cut glass with the symbol of the president, the symbol of the seal on it, of water, an actual glass of ice water.

Speaker 2 And they set that underneath, not a bottle of water, they set that underneath the podium and then the little box.

Speaker 2 And the president has,

Speaker 2 at least at the White House, I don't know what this one was like, but

Speaker 2 when you're at the White House, you know the president's coming in because they put the water down.

Speaker 2 And then the Secret Service comes in and they put this little box down. And it's a box about, I don't know, four by four inches.
And

Speaker 2 it's a square, and it's about two, maybe three inches tall, made out of wood, beautiful. I'd love to have one for the museum.

Speaker 2 Beautiful, inlaid with the presidential seal in like gold or something on top, and a little red button.

Speaker 2 And that's the button when the president is in trouble, the president needs something or whatever. You push that, and

Speaker 2 you know, people are grappling down from the ceiling. So they do that.

Speaker 2 Then Lee Greenwood's God Bless the USA starts. Now,

Speaker 3 I know. I'm not familiar with this song.
How does it go?

Speaker 2 Shut up.

Speaker 2 So God bless the USA. And,

Speaker 2 you know, God bless Lee Greenwood. And I loved that song in the day.

Speaker 2 It's time to move on.

Speaker 2 But conservatives can't because that's the only Lee Greenwood is the only artist that is like, yeah, Republicans can use that song because no Democrat will ever use that that song.

Speaker 2 And so every Republican uses it because everything else they can't get the license to use.

Speaker 2 And so he comes out, and I want to tell you that my

Speaker 2 impression of his speeches,

Speaker 2 my

Speaker 2 respect for him as an in-control performer,

Speaker 2 my respect for what he

Speaker 2 does every day,

Speaker 2 and his calculation

Speaker 2 has gone up dramatically, dramatically.

Speaker 2 And it's just by watching him speak live. And I want to tell you about the whole experience.

Speaker 2 We're going to take a quick break and then I'm going to come back and I'll tell you about the whole experience of what I learned. But once you understand this about this president,

Speaker 2 you get it. Like doors start to unlock and you're like, that's why he's president of the United States.
This is why he's president of the United States.

Speaker 2 I had that, those lights turned on about halfway through. And I thought, if everyone could see him speak live and understand to look at it this way, they'd get it.

Speaker 2 Every member of the press, they'd get it.

Speaker 2 You're listening to Glenn Beck. So Greg lives in Hawaii and

Speaker 2 has an interesting experience with Relief Factor. Last year, his knee started to swell.
You know what, Greg? None of us want to hear it. You're living in Hawaii.

Speaker 2 Anyway, made climbing the stairs and walking distances almost impossible.

Speaker 2 And

Speaker 2 it came back to his hip, and then it started to go into shoulder pain, blah, blah, blah. He heard about Relief Factor, decided to try it out for himself.
Well, here's the interesting thing.

Speaker 2 Greg had been taking Relief Factor for three days, three,

Speaker 2 and he said, I started getting results. The knee stopped swelling, the back, the hips, the shoulder began to settle down.

Speaker 2 I am a person whose life has completely changed because of Relief Factor, but I didn't get results that fast. I mean, it took me a month to be able to get the results.

Speaker 2 Greg is living now his best life in Hawaii. Yeah, Greg,

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Speaker 3 Tonight on Stu Does America, we look at South Carolina and what happened and what it means for the future. Also, Andy No is on the program.
Go to Blazetv.com. He's the promo code Glenn.

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Speaker 2 Welcome to the Glenn Beck program. It is Monday.
I was at CPAC this weekend, and I understand the president more clearly than I think I ever have.

Speaker 2 And I have,

Speaker 2 I have

Speaker 2 missed

Speaker 2 his secret sauce, you know, and I think a lot of people are like this who like the president, but they're like, I wish he would stop tweeting.

Speaker 2 And I've come to this place to where I do wish he would stop tweeting, but I don't think we would be where we are in a good way if it wasn't for his tweeting.

Speaker 2 So I'm kind of torn on it because it's his tweets that draw, that expose everything.

Speaker 2 It drives the left so crazy that they don't know what to do. And so they just, they prove him right all the time.

Speaker 2 So while I would like to get rid of his Twitter feed, I would not like to get rid of his Twitter feed at the same time. I'm really torn on that.

Speaker 2 The other thing, like when I saw him at the State of the Union, That was a well-crafted speech. That was really good.
And he was very presidential.

Speaker 2 and if you remember right i said to him if he was that or i said to you that if he was that guy from now until 2020 he'd win

Speaker 2 not sure that i was right about that and here's why i haven't been to one of his rallies since 2016 and i went to one of his rallies but i went to his rally before he had

Speaker 2 the

Speaker 2 the seal on front and on the stage and before he had any track record. So, I didn't believe the things that he was saying he was going to do.

Speaker 2 I still don't believe everything, you know. He's like, and this is the greatest weather pattern in the history since the dinosaurs.

Speaker 2 I still don't, you know, I'm like, okay, I don't think so, but whatever. That's Donald Trump.

Speaker 2 Here's what I learned watching him:

Speaker 2 Donald Trump has mastered this thing and it's genuine I don't think it's calculated he has mastered this thing with his supporters that

Speaker 2 he's the president of the United States and yet he's not

Speaker 2 and what here's what I mean by that imagine the president of the United States is your best friend okay you grew up together

Speaker 2 And you would expect the president, you know, you would call him Mr. President.
And if you were in public, he might even say,

Speaker 2 don't call me, don't call me Mr. You know, I'm still, I'm still Bill.

Speaker 2 But people around him would go, please, when you're in public, please call him Mr. President.
And you probably would, because he's the president of the United States.

Speaker 2 But when you're in his living room above the, you know, White House and you're just the two of you, you'd be sitting on the couch and you'd be like, okay, let me tell you what I really, let me tell you what really happened.

Speaker 2 This is freaking crazy.

Speaker 2 here's what happened and he'd be watching stuff and you'd be like okay so what did you really think about the debate and he'd be like oh mini mike and he would be making fun of him that's who this president is on stage when he's in those rallies he's your buddy he's your best friend who happens to be president and he's Pulling the curtain back.

Speaker 2 I've heard people say it is the best entertainment in in America. I believe that to be true.
It is the best value. It's free.

Speaker 2 You're seeing one of the best shows I've ever seen.

Speaker 2 And here's another reason why. Not only is he genuine in those things,

Speaker 2 he is genuinely funny. When you see him in little clips,

Speaker 2 you don't get it. When you watch it on TV, it's not the same.

Speaker 2 But when you're sitting there and you're watching him,

Speaker 2 I have, I've known he was a good performer, but I have to tell you,

Speaker 2 I think he has some of the best comedic time.

Speaker 2 Netflix, they gave the, what was it, billion dollars or $100 million to the wrong president.

Speaker 2 They gave $100 million for Barack Obama to make a bunch of documentaries that nobody's going to watch.

Speaker 2 What I saw at CPAC was one of the best, and I say one of because I can think of two others that are on par. It was one of the best Netflix comedy specials I've ever seen.

Speaker 2 He has comedic timing unlike I've seen.

Speaker 2 And

Speaker 2 I thought

Speaker 2 that,

Speaker 2 I don't know. I just didn't give him enough credit.
to be

Speaker 2 that kind of performer. He was.
And and I know he was

Speaker 2 because the guy who was sitting next to me was like, he's looking at you, man.

Speaker 2 Because he would do something and it would be really, really funny. And he'd just kind of glance over and look at me and kind of smile like,

Speaker 2 I know what I'm doing. And I'm like, you do, brother.
You do.

Speaker 2 I mean, it was, it was impressive to watch him. I've never seen, and I chalk this, I chalked this up to arrogance.
I still think he's an arrogant guy however

Speaker 2 not sure that's the right word

Speaker 2 I've never seen anyone as comfortable in their own skin as him

Speaker 2 because I watched him walk off stage and I could see him walk off in the back okay

Speaker 2 and

Speaker 2 you know when I get off stage it's like

Speaker 2 Whew

Speaker 2 That was work. You know what I mean?

Speaker 2 That was not work for him. He walked off stage and there was no letdown.
There was no,

Speaker 2 okay, all right.

Speaker 2 It's him.

Speaker 2 And I watched him. I was close enough to really watch his body language.
The guy is more comfortable in his skin and who he is than anyone I think I've ever seen.

Speaker 2 It was remarkable, remarkable to watch. Remarkable.

Speaker 3 Yeah, that's why it works so well, right?

Speaker 2 Because it's in real.

Speaker 3 Like, people will, in a weird way, that's authenticity, right?

Speaker 2 Yeah, it is.

Speaker 2 And he's, he, you know,

Speaker 2 if you understand the mindset that the people who voted for him and the people who will vote for him are sick of being told one thing and then they do another.

Speaker 2 His speeches, when he's giving and he's going off the

Speaker 2 prompter,

Speaker 2 it was weird because watching him on television, you're like, stick to the prompter, stick to the prompter, stick to the prompter.

Speaker 2 But in

Speaker 2 live, that's not what you're going for. You don't care what he's saying on the prompter.
It's almost like an interlude.

Speaker 2 Because

Speaker 2 he wore, the guy sitting next to me said, this guy's in his 70s. I'm exhausted from the 90 minutes because, first of all, you feel like you're in Catholic Church.

Speaker 2 You're up and down and up and down and up and down. But it's genuine.

Speaker 2 It's not like the stupid

Speaker 2 State of the Union speech where it's like, oh, sit down, shut up. None of you mean it.
It's genuine. You're up and down and up and down and up and down.
And you're laughing so hard. And

Speaker 2 when he goes back to the speech, you're like, okay, I don't really have to pay attention here.

Speaker 2 And it's like he's coming out and he's just,

Speaker 2 Yeah,

Speaker 2 and then he just stops.

Speaker 2 And that's what everybody's coming for. They're not coming for the speech.
That's what Barack Obama missed. Barack Obama didn't have those crowds because he was an image of something.

Speaker 2 And he gave these beautiful speeches. But he wasn't real.
It wasn't, he didn't connect. You didn't want to hang out with Barack Obama.
And he didn't have anything.

Speaker 2 There's this air of discovery with this president to where

Speaker 2 you wanted someone who was consistent, who would blow the system up. And so he's telling you, okay, here's what I really did this weekend.
Oh, you know what? Really drove him nuts.

Speaker 2 It was really great.

Speaker 2 Figured out something else.

Speaker 2 And I know this to be true because of me.

Speaker 2 You can feel very alone doing these kinds of jobs. And there's lots of people that do these jobs and they'll feel very alone.
No one is more alone than the president of the United States. No one.

Speaker 2 Especially since no other president wants to talk to him. You know, they always say, at least I have, you know, I can talk to the other presidents, and they get together.

Speaker 2 Nobody's his buddy. No one.
And he is a legendarily small circle, even for a president.

Speaker 3 Correct.

Speaker 2 So that guy is alone.

Speaker 2 My friend said to me, I'm exhausted. And when he said that, I was looking at the president thinking,

Speaker 2 this guy could go another three hours. Now,

Speaker 2 genetically, there's something going on with him. He's very, he's not his age.
Okay. He's, he's in good genetic health, I think.

Speaker 2 So that goes for stamina. He sleeps like three hours a day.
There's something weird happening with him

Speaker 2 in a good way. I wish I had that.

Speaker 2 The thing, though, that I noticed because I'm like this and I know others,

Speaker 2 He's always surrounded by enemies. Always.

Speaker 2 When you and I see each other, you might get something out of the speech and you may be like, oh, that was fun, that was great. But I can guarantee you, I get more from you than you get from me.

Speaker 2 Because I get recharged.

Speaker 2 That's what's happening. The president is hanging out with his friends at those rallies.

Speaker 2 And he knows he's in a safe space with you. He knows that you're not going to turn on him.

Speaker 2 And

Speaker 2 he is getting recharged it's

Speaker 2 it's his you're his friend

Speaker 2 you're his friend and he's living in a pretty friendless world right now that's what's happening that's what's happening and that's what people are feeling that's why he's so loyal to you and you're so loyal to him because he's doing what he said

Speaker 2 He's letting you in on the secrets. He's letting you in and he's pulling the curtain back and he's like, everybody thinks they're all that.
They're not. I don't really care.

Speaker 2 That is huge for his fans, and you're giving that back to him.

Speaker 2 The guy, I think the guy's unstoppable. I really do.
I think he's unstoppable.

Speaker 3 In the election, you mean? In 2020?

Speaker 2 I hope, yeah. Yeah, if it's against Biden, it's over.
He took a pro poll and he's like, Let me just take a poll. He said, I did in South Carolina, and I'm not going to tell you the results.

Speaker 2 Who should I run about or run against? Then he was like, Buddha judge by who's what I'm going to say about

Speaker 2 Buddha Judge. I don't even know who he is or why he's running.
I mean, he went through all of them and he said, I'm only going to ask you about two people, Joe Biden and Bernie Sanders.

Speaker 2 He said, I want you to cheer if you think it would be the easiest to beat Joe Biden. It was a pretty good cheer.

Speaker 2 Now, those who think I should run against Bernie Sanders because you think he'd be the easiest to beat, and the place went nuts. And all I kept thinking was, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.

Speaker 3 Yeah, it's such an, we've had this conversation on the air a bunch of times of which one you'd root for.

Speaker 2 Yeah.

Speaker 3 And it's tough because I do understand the argument that Sanders is the guy because I think he would be maybe the easiest one to beat.

Speaker 2 Maybe, maybe.

Speaker 3 However, if you lose, the ramifications are considerably worse. Yeah.
And that's the thing that I keep coming back to is that like, you know, like coronavirus is a great example.

Speaker 3 I don't think that's going to turn into something that that changes the election but something like that that is completely out of the control of the president could change the election and make the other person win and if that other person is bernie sanders you've got a socialist president of the united states serious problem but i will tell you that i i um

Speaker 2 uh

Speaker 2 i think that it is interesting to see

Speaker 2 um the way the president dealt with all of these people over the weekend.

Speaker 2 And I really, I want to see if I can get CPAC to give me the video because

Speaker 2 I want to edit it into like a 25 or 30 minute comedy special because I think he was brilliant. Truly brilliant.

Speaker 2 If he was any other president, he would get an Emmy for these because they're TV specials. They really are.
He would get an Emmy for

Speaker 2 best comedic actor.

Speaker 2 I really underestimated

Speaker 2 his calculation and his skill. Really, truly brilliant.
Really brilliant. Okay.

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Speaker 1 You're listening to Glenn Beck.

Speaker 2 So the president said in his speech on Saturday at CPAC, you can't buy an election.

Speaker 2 And that is so true. So true.
Tom Steyer, who just dropped out this weekend,

Speaker 2 how much money did he spend?

Speaker 3 Roughly a quarter of a billion dollars. A quarter of a billion.

Speaker 2 Zero delegates? Zero. Nothing.
You can't buy it.

Speaker 2 Mini Mike, as the president calls him, Mike Bloomberg,

Speaker 2 there was a funny rant from the president on how he's just being ripped off by his campaign advisors. They're like, no, really, Mike, I think another 200 million, and we've got this thing locked up.

Speaker 2 But

Speaker 2 you just can't buy an election.

Speaker 2 And the other thing, I think everybody, including me, we need to stop with our predictions.

Speaker 2 Because

Speaker 2 just last week, Biden was like, ah, he's done.

Speaker 2 No, apparently not. Muda Judge, he's probably the guy to watch.
Nope, he's out.

Speaker 2 And Sanders, he could never get it.

Speaker 2 Looks like he might. There's no guessing.
I mean, when monkeys fly out of my butt, watch people's butts for flying monkeys because they may come out before Election Day.

Speaker 2 You're listening to Glenn Beck.

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Speaker 2 It was quite an amazing thing for Joe Biden, who everybody was counting as bring out your dad

Speaker 2 in South Carolina. And it has changed the game now.
Super Tuesday is back into play. We're going to give you all of our analysis of what happened, why it happened, Pete Buttigieg

Speaker 2 dropping out. Why did that happen? We'll tell you all about that, give you our analysis on it, and so much more, including our coronavirus update.
And a special guest, Dr.

Speaker 2 Robert Epstein, is coming up next hour in an interview you do not want to miss. We're doing a special on Wednesday.
Our Wednesday night special is on

Speaker 2 the

Speaker 2 throwing of this election by high-tech.

Speaker 2 And is your vote even safe? Does it count?

Speaker 2 Epstein is on with us. He says his latest article, why the Republicans cannot win.
No matter what anybody says, no matter who the candidates actually are, he says it's already in the bag.

Speaker 2 He's a Democrat who's trying to change this because he says the elections are being stolen by high tech. All that and more coming up.

Speaker 1 This is the Glenbeck program.

Speaker 2 So have you ever had just spectacularly good customer service? I mean, to the point where you just don't, you don't just notice it. You're captivated by it.

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It was just such a great experience from top to bottom. I love seeing those.

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Speaker 2 All right, so let's start with what happened in South Carolina. Stu, give me the stats.

Speaker 2 Joe Joe Biden hit a home run.

Speaker 3 He came in and actually showed up as a vice president. For eight years, you'd think maybe this wouldn't be such a big shocker, but he did finish

Speaker 3 fifth, fourth, and second.

Speaker 3 It was actually fourth, fifth, and second in order. Fifth place in New Hampshire.
I honestly could have thought he would have, it may have dropped out after that. It was so bad.

Speaker 3 However, kind of bounced back to a second place by 26 points, though, second place in Nevada, which is not a great showing by any means, but showed up enough to convince people in South Carolina he was viable.

Speaker 3 He won 48% of the vote in South Carolina to Sanders 20%. So a huge blowout.
There was a poll that came out on the last day

Speaker 3 right before South Carolina that had him up by 28 points exactly. But a lot of the polls had him up by double digits.
We talked about this all last week.

Speaker 3 If you listen to the show, you probably knew this was coming because we talked about it all last week. And we talked about it.

Speaker 2 We showed you how the polls were changing. At the beginning of the week, it was pretty close.
By the end of the week, it was the last poll I think I heard was up

Speaker 2 18 points.

Speaker 3 Yeah, there's one, I think, 20, one, 18, one of them 15, and one that actually hit 28 points. Exactly.
So he dominated the field.

Speaker 3 And as we talked about this leading up to South Carolina, there's basically two hurdles for Sanders to win this nomination. Hurdle number one was South Carolina.

Speaker 3 Does Joe Biden show up and win that state in a convincing fashion?

Speaker 2 If it would have been close, it wouldn't have changed anything. Right.

Speaker 3 It sets up Biden as a viable Sanders alternate.

Speaker 2 Which is crazy because two or three weeks ago, we were like, I mean, even Bill O'Reilly, who's been saying he's going to be the nominee, he's going to be the nominee. He's going to be the nominee.

Speaker 2 What was it, two weeks ago, we were talking to him, are like, you still think he's going to be the nominee? He's like, no, I think he's done. He may not be done.

Speaker 3 No, I think he's got the clearest path other than Sanders at this point, clearly.

Speaker 3 Then the next hurdle was if Biden were to fail, which he typically does, this is the third time he's run for president and the first state he's won in three runs.

Speaker 3 This is the first state he's ever won. Think about that for a second.
He's been running for president since 1988 and he's won one state. That being said,

Speaker 3 he was able to win that one state in convincing fashion.

Speaker 3 That leaves the Bloomberg question still kind of hanging out there because if Sanders were to have defeated Biden, really the only alternative with the resources to run against him and try to at least push this to a contested convention would have been Bloomberg.

Speaker 3 And Bloomberg killed himself with this, with his debate performances, because honestly, if he just didn't participate in those, I think Biden would have had a tougher time winning South Carolina.

Speaker 3 But people were like, okay, we have nobody else.

Speaker 2 We better go with Biden.

Speaker 3 And Biden now, I think, steps into that 1B sort of position. With Bloomberg still looming,

Speaker 3 the talk is if Bloomberg, if Biden can be strong on Super Tuesday, there's 14 states on Super Tuesday, he looks pretty good in some of them, he's going to win a lot of delegates.

Speaker 3 If he looks strong, Bloomberg may consider

Speaker 3 running more anti-Sanders ads and sort of trying to get help Biden in a way go to the nomination, just trying to take out Sanders more than anything else and then try to get it to a contested convention.

Speaker 3 Budajej stepping out of the race is completely tied to Biden's performance and viability as a

Speaker 3 quote-unquote moderate candidate, which he is, of course, not. None of these people are moderates.
However, Budajej stepping out is him playing the long game. You know, he's 38 years old.

Speaker 3 He realizes he, you know, you look at the way Super Tuesday looks and the rest of the field looks. He's running out of money.
He says, I'm not going to win this anyway.

Speaker 3 Here's a good time for me to step out and look like the better guy. I'm above this.
I want to help Biden win. This will set him up for future runs.
It'll set him up.

Speaker 3 I mean, it's not impossible he was promised the vice president.

Speaker 2 I don't think he was, but

Speaker 2 he was probably suggested that he'd be on a short list.

Speaker 3 Yes, I bet he's a finalist at the very least for that. And if not, he has a nice role in the administration if he wants it.

Speaker 3 You know, Biden Buttigieg makes a lot of sense for a lot of different reasons. The big weakness for Budige has been black voters.
Biden has no problem there.

Speaker 2 The big problem for

Speaker 2 Sanders, I mean, Biden, is young people,

Speaker 2 which he will appeal to a younger group.

Speaker 3 And white intellectual suburbs types.

Speaker 3 It's not Biden's strength either, and that is Buttigieg's strength. So, I mean, it actually does make sense.
Of course, you get the...

Speaker 3 Is there enough intersectionality there, right? We know the first gay vice presidential nominee gets some intersectionality points, but another white guy, is that okay for Democrats? I don't know.

Speaker 3 I honestly, at this point, I don't know. That might be a complete revolt, but he would be under the consideration.

Speaker 2 I love the fact that it's lunch bucket Joe

Speaker 2 and picnic blanket Pete.

Speaker 2 Yeah, well, I mean, you know what I mean?

Speaker 2 He'd come with the picnic blanket and the basket and everything.

Speaker 3 But that's what you do for vice president nominees a lot of times, right? Like, that's what's right. Why did Biden get the gig? Well,

Speaker 3 reportedly, in Obama's own words, was because of his gray hair. Because at the time, Obama was seen sort of like Budajeg is now.

Speaker 3 Not a lot of experience, very young, no foreign policy experience, really. So, what do you do? You bring in Biden, who's been around for a long time.
Correct. That makes a lot of sense.

Speaker 3 Here, I think, with Budajej, you have someone who can speak full sentences, which is nice. It's a nice alternative to Biden.
Right.

Speaker 2 Knows what a remote control is. Right.
You know, that's

Speaker 2 might even be able to say, okay, it's like a Betamax,

Speaker 2 but not.

Speaker 2 Not right.

Speaker 3 You know, and Buttigieg, I think, would do a good, he's not going to make a lot of mistakes.

Speaker 2 He is,

Speaker 3 he seems to know what he's doing, and this is a smart, strategic play, because even if he gets nothing out of this, he will be seen. Let's say Trump beats Biden in 2020.

Speaker 3 Your 2024 lead dog right now is probably Pete Buttigieg because of the fact that he's going to come out of here. Just like, you know,

Speaker 3 some candidates push it too far. Some candidates don't push it far enough.
Butajej is right in that sweet spot.

Speaker 3 He's still viable enough to make an argument that he should go on. And instead, he's giving that up in a sacrificial way to get out of the way so that Biden can win.

Speaker 3 If Biden does win, Buttigieg will be on that shortlist, I believe, for VP.

Speaker 2 So I want to go into some more of these, but I mean, would you say, remember, Clinton was called the comeback kid. So you can't call that a Biden.
I mean, I don't know.

Speaker 2 He's either the comeback fossil,

Speaker 2 he's not kid, you know, know, comeback antique. I don't know what it is, but

Speaker 2 he's come back in fashion all of a sudden. Would you say that this is

Speaker 2 a surprising

Speaker 2 comeback that

Speaker 2 might make him the front runner in the long term?

Speaker 3 Yes, I think after.

Speaker 3 I think he was fine after Iowa. The New Hampshire one was the one that was really shocking to me.

Speaker 2 I mean, fifth. Fifth place.
He was over.

Speaker 3 If he finished fourth, honestly, this wouldn't have surprised me. Fifth was so bad.
I thought he might just be like, screw this.

Speaker 2 I'm out.

Speaker 3 Me too. But, you know, he bounced back in Nevada a little bit.
And then this win, which, by the way, he was favored to win this from day one. Everybody knew he was the heavy favored in South Carolina.

Speaker 3 The polls started getting closer and closer after Sanders looked like he was taking the lead. And, you know, as we told you last week, it all turned around in a dramatic way.

Speaker 3 We were looking at polls of Sanders down by three or four for weeks.

Speaker 2 Yeah.

Speaker 3 And then all of a a sudden it was 10, 15, 20, 25.

Speaker 2 I think it's because people started looking at Sanders and going, this could happen. This might happen.
This is real.

Speaker 3 This is no more playtime. Right.

Speaker 2 This is like, he's a real socialist. He won't give up on, hey, Castro, nothing wrong with Castro.
I

Speaker 2 hate billionaires. Yeah, Castro had $9 billion in his bank account when he died.

Speaker 2 How did he make all that, Bernie? The same way you bought all your houses, taking it from the people.

Speaker 3 And he convinced people that, hey, he did finish finish in second, showed some strength.

Speaker 3 He had a debate performance where he could have, he could at least see competence from where he debated from on that last one. It was a distant.

Speaker 2 He had binoculars, but he could see competence.

Speaker 3 Kind of in the distance. It was blurry.

Speaker 2 Like Palin could see Russia from her house. There you go, from her house.
In the same sort of way. Yes.

Speaker 3 So he looked like, okay, maybe Biden is okay enough to get, to be able to hold on to some level of opposition.

Speaker 3 You know, Bernie Sanders, though, looks at this and says, hey, now all I got to do is deal with Joe Biden.

Speaker 2 Yeah. Now,

Speaker 2 I want to get to Klobuchar and I want to get to

Speaker 2 Elizabeth Warren

Speaker 2 and

Speaker 2 Super Tuesday, tomorrow. We'll get to that here in just a second.
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Speaker 2 Okay, so let me just give you my thoughts on things and then tell me where I'm wrong or expand on this. Pete Buddha Judge, I think it's very clear that a call could have gone out.

Speaker 2 I think the president is right when he says this shows Buddha Judge dropping out shows the Democrats are mobilizing to stop Bernie Sanders. Okay.
You agree with that? Fair, yes. Yeah.

Speaker 2 So Pete Budajudge, maybe he was promised a short list or whatever, but he's got a long career. It doesn't make sense for him to drop out unless

Speaker 2 you're playing a longer game or a different game.

Speaker 2 Warren is a Sanders fan. Why is she not dropping out?

Speaker 3 Good question. No one really knows.
She does have her home state

Speaker 3 coming up on Super Tuesday, Massachusetts, which she has a chance to do fairly well in, although most people do not believe she will win it.

Speaker 3 She may be looking at that in sort of the Rubio fashion, where once I lose my home state, okay, just a second.

Speaker 2 Could we please play the Elizabeth Warren theme here while we're talking about Elizabeth? I

Speaker 3 you want to make sure you have the yeah, all right, go ahead. Okay, so Elizabeth

Speaker 2 Go ahead.

Speaker 3 So Elizabeth Warren,

Speaker 3 if she was all about ideology, it would be very smart for her to drop out right now. Yes.

Speaker 3 But she does believe that she can get a decent amount of delegates through this.

Speaker 3 She could hit 15% in California, which would be very big for her. She can get some delegates tomorrow.

Speaker 3 So she's theoretically staying in for that reason.

Speaker 2 Is it possible that she thinks she can get enough delegates to help Bernie at the convention throw some of her delegates his way?

Speaker 3 Well, Elizabeth, it's possible. Elizabeth Warren seems to think that she can be seen as a bridge candidate between the party and Bernie Sanders.

Speaker 3 So let's just say it goes to a contested convention, which, I mean, 538 now, I believe, has it at almost 70% chance that we're going to a contested convention. This is getting to be a real time.

Speaker 2 70%.

Speaker 3 70% chance.

Speaker 3 But if that were to happen,

Speaker 3 Elizabeth Warren, for some reason, believes she can be this compromise candidate where she is party, she's enough and much in the establishment that the establishment folks would like her, but she's very similar to Bernie policy-wise, so the Bernie people will come along.

Speaker 3 There is no evidence that anyone thinks of her this way. In fact, she's tried this approach in several elections, and she's finished in fourth and fifth place every time she's tried it.

Speaker 3 So I don't know why she believes that, but she seems to think it. So it's possible that's the reason.

Speaker 2 All right, so let me go to Michael Bloomberg now.

Speaker 2 Because

Speaker 2 Michael Bloomberg,

Speaker 2 he just

Speaker 2 drives up in a little clown car and

Speaker 2 he's throwing out the very small, and he's got the little...

Speaker 3 If you saw Trump's impression of him from CPAC.

Speaker 2 It's hysterical. It was very funny.
Belly laugh, funny. Very funny.
All right, so Michael Bloomberg. Now, he's not doing well in the polls for Super Tuesday.

Speaker 2 He's not expected to win.

Speaker 3 He's not expected to win a lot of states, but he should win some delegates.

Speaker 3 His polling has gone down considerably since he showed up, since people started hearing from him. You know, once people saw him in his normal habitat,

Speaker 3 it was not pretty.

Speaker 2 Here is Michael Bloomberg in his natural habitat. Yeah.
And you look at him and you're like, oh my gosh, he's a monster. Yeah.

Speaker 3 It's like, oh, I want a, was it a koala bear? And you're like, oh, koala bears are adorable. And then you put one on your neck and it just starts scratching your eyeballs out.
Yeah, no,

Speaker 2 it's like the Coca-Cola polar bear. Oh, that's cute.
They're not drinking Coke. No.
They're killing baby seals and you if you get close enough.

Speaker 3 They're drinking your blood is what they're trying.

Speaker 3 So yeah, and so people don't like him. I believe this South Carolina win by Biden was impressive enough and

Speaker 3 Bloomberg has been unimpressive enough that you're going to see a lot of people who were seriously considering Bloomberg last week switch over to Biden on Super Tuesday. Correct.

Speaker 3 And it's going to make him the most viable

Speaker 3 alternative to Sanders.

Speaker 2 Now, do you think, because he really came out against Sanders, do you think that his money,

Speaker 2 that there's any thought on Bloomberg? Because Bloomberg is not getting that phone call from the DNC going, hey, Mike, you know, we all love each other.

Speaker 2 He does what he wants, and he doesn't care about them.

Speaker 3 He does, I think, legitimately not want Bernie Sanders to win. Sure.
So I think what his thought is he'll stay in the race. I can't imagine he's going to drop out

Speaker 3 unless Biden looked like he was running away with it.

Speaker 2 Not with a 70% chance of broken.

Speaker 2 I mean, he's just not going to. I mean, why? Why drop out?

Speaker 3 He can run another quarter of a billion dollars of ads.

Speaker 3 If they're targeted against Sanders and not necessarily pro-Bloomberg, that is a big deal because if it hurts Sanders enough to keep his percentages down or helps

Speaker 3 both Biden and Bloomberg get above 15%, if they're both doing that, even if they're splitting the delegates up, it's not that big of a deal.

Speaker 2 All right, now we have the Bernie Sanders update. Tell me about Bernie Sanders.

Speaker 3 Sanders got smoked. I mean, he got smoked in South Carolina.
Should have done a lot better.

Speaker 3 He's going to go through states on Super Tuesday where he's heavily favored, like California, which has the most delegates in the entire

Speaker 3 run. Massachusetts, he's probably going to win.
He's going to win Colorado and Utah easily.

Speaker 3 I think, and

Speaker 3 this is speculation, gun. I can only speculate, but I think he might win Vermont.
I think he might.

Speaker 2 Is he going to take Texas?

Speaker 3 He is a very good.

Speaker 2 The polling is insane.

Speaker 3 Polling tells you yes.

Speaker 3 I don't believe it, frankly,

Speaker 3 because the reason why the polling likes him so much is he did very well with Hispanics in Nevada.

Speaker 3 And polling all before South Carolina shows he's in the lead, though it's somewhat close.

Speaker 3 I think there's a good chance that the Bloomberg, who's showing up at 20% in a lot of these Texas polls, falls away and Biden is able to take it. You're listening to Glenn Beck.

Speaker 2 Two kinds of real estate agents out there, the kind that treat it almost like a hobby and the kind that just bust their butt because they actually care. Now, which one do you want representing you?

Speaker 2 The hassle of dealing with real estate agents, you don't have to worry about a free service now called realestate agentsitrust.com. This is not a company I represent.
This is my company.

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They really have worked out a system to be able to attract the most buyers.

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We'll help you find the best real estate agent, in our opinion, in your area. It's RealEstateAgents I Trust.com.
Real Estate Agents I

Speaker 3 As the Super Tuesday results come in, we're going to be doing the results live on Stu Does America and some extra coverage as well. Make sure to go to StuDoesAmerica.com and subscribe now.

Speaker 2 We welcome to the program, Mr. Charlie Kirk.
Charlie, you're on the Glenbeck program, the name of your book that is coming out, not that you don't know this, called

Speaker 2 The MAGA Doctrine, The Only Ideas That Will Win the Future. Welcome to the program, Charlie Kirk.
How are you, Charlie?

Speaker 4 It's an honor, Glenn. Thanks so much for having me.
Great to talk to you again.

Speaker 2 In case you don't know who Charlie is, he's founder and president of Turning Point USA, which is this phenomenal group that is spreading not only all over college campuses and high schools all over America, but literally all over the world.

Speaker 2 It is remarkable, Charlie, what you have put together.

Speaker 2 You know, I want to talk a little bit about the book, but I want to get into some specifics with you that are a little different. But let me first get your

Speaker 2 call on Super Tuesday and what happened in South Carolina.

Speaker 4 Yeah, it's fascinating, Glenn, and thanks so much for having me on. It's an honor to speak to you.

Speaker 4 Bloomberg might be one of the worst politicians I've ever seen in American history.

Speaker 4 And it's all about Bloomberg, in my opinion, what's happening right now, because I, like many others, believed he would at least have some form of charisma or

Speaker 2 capacity to connect to the audience.

Speaker 4 And it seems as if money can buy you a lot, but it cannot buy you charisma and it can't buy you connection.

Speaker 4 And so because of that, Biden, I guess, has become the default of the establishment pick. And it doesn't seem that anyone's excited to vote for Biden.

Speaker 4 It just kind of people are putting up their hands and saying, well, I guess we'll vote for him now. And so you're going to see a real collision course.
You're going to see Biden,

Speaker 4 who's very controllable by the establishment and very easy. He will do what he is told by the powers to be.
And then you have Bernie Sanders, who is a true revolutionary. He is a true Bolshevik.

Speaker 4 He believes in Rousseauian,

Speaker 4 Hegelian Marxism, which you have detailed so brilliantly in your books and has been so instructive to me. And it's on a collision course.

Speaker 4 And so the question is, will it go the way that it went in 2016 where Hillary used a lot of the power levers to eventually beat Bernie in some, let's just say, questionable ways? I have my doubts.

Speaker 4 I actually think that Bernie is better suited to defeat Joe Biden this go-around. But it's very obvious that the establishment is quite nervous that Bernie Sanders could be the nominee.

Speaker 4 I have a contrarian view, and I actually think Bernie would be harder to run up against than Joe Biden. Me too.
I think I'm in the minority opinion.

Speaker 2 Well, you were, You know, I listened to the president's speech this weekend where he said, you know, just a quick poll.

Speaker 2 Who thinks it'd be easier to win against Biden than who thinks it'd be easier to and Bernie?

Speaker 2 Everybody was just out of their minds saying that this was so great that he was going to run against Bernie. And I thought,

Speaker 2 I don't think so. I mean, Biden has no, there's no passion behind Biden, none.
That's right. And he plays the old school game.

Speaker 2 You don't know the game of the supporters, the passion, and you know, we've never seen a Bolshevik campaign for President of the United States. We have no idea what the president could be facing.

Speaker 2 That's right. And never underestimate how hard it is to run up against the generosity of promises that might never have to be fulfilled and probably won't be fulfilled.
It's very difficult. And

Speaker 2 it's rooted in divisive victimology, identity politics. And Senator Sanders does that quite well.

Speaker 2 And you and I both know, Glenn, that the culture has been tilted so far in the wrong direction towards the leftist, Marxist worldview that I think that they've been waiting for a candidate like this.

Speaker 4 And I do believe they would have a higher turnout. And I do believe that it would be difficult in certain states.
Now, do I think it's beatable? Of course it's beatable.

Speaker 4 But Joe Biden, he embodies the ruling class more so than any other candidate I could think of. And I would rather run against that.

Speaker 4 I would rather have President Trump ironically run as an outsider as an incumbent president one of the first times in American history.

Speaker 4 I would embrace that type of candidacy instead of trying to argue for the status quo, which I don't think that would be it against Bernie.

Speaker 2 No.

Speaker 2 It's really, I mean, it's, you know, for people who won't put Donald Trump signs in their yard,

Speaker 2 I'm going to start making signs that just says America versus socialism because that's what it is. And I think there are people who are like, I don't want to put a Donald Trump sign in my yard,

Speaker 2 but I think those people would put an America versus socialism sign in their yard.

Speaker 2 Because that's what this would be about.

Speaker 4 And

Speaker 4 that is a fight that I think we will win, thankfully, at this time in our country's history. And

Speaker 4 it should be a fire alarm and a wake-up call to every American. I get asked the question a lot, man.

Speaker 4 Go ahead and they say, how on earth is it possible that a candidate like Bernie can be getting this much traction? I say, have you visited a college campus?

Speaker 4 Have you seen what our government schools have been teaching these last couple decades? It flows downstream from culture.

Speaker 4 Andrew Breitbart told us that repeatedly, and he's been proven correct, that Bernie Sanders is just a byproduct.

Speaker 4 He's a William Jennings Bryan style Marxist.

Speaker 2 And you know what I mean by that,

Speaker 2 which is he's trying to use the worst instincts of what would be a populist movement mixed with Marxism, and it's not going away.

Speaker 4 I mean, in the coming years in American politics, you're going to see even more talented politicians. I mean, you look at Bernie, he's actually quite, he's not very talented.
He repeats himself a lot.

Speaker 4 He makes very fatal errors. And I think there's a very interesting thought exercise for you, Glenn.
Bernie's not an Alinskyite.

Speaker 4 Glenn, he's not an Alinskyite at all. Bernie is not an Alinskyite in the sense that he

Speaker 4 does not embrace the symbology or

Speaker 4 the history of the country he's trying to take over. Where Alinsky was very clear

Speaker 4 in saying that if you're trying to take over a country,

Speaker 4 do not attack the flag, do not attack the songs, do not attack the history. In fact, embrace them.
But a true radical disguise is to be someone who he isn't. And Obama did that so well.

Speaker 4 He was a true Alinskyite.

Speaker 4 I think Bernie is not. Bernie's a true,

Speaker 4 he almost rejects the doctrine of Alinsky, and so

Speaker 4 this should be a wake-up call for everyone listening, and it could be a fire alarm for a broken culture and for things to come.

Speaker 2 So I will tell you that

Speaker 2 I sat

Speaker 2 right behind the president in his speech this weekend, and I really watched him.

Speaker 2 And I learned a lot about his connection with

Speaker 2 people. He's running, you know, people used to say, well, he's like the guy at the end of the bar who just says things.
I don't think that's right.

Speaker 2 I think people, his supporters, see him as the president who's also their friend, who is now telling them and joking with them and like, this is crazy, right?

Speaker 2 And he'll be the president when he needs to be the president, but he's still on the outside and he's bringing the average person along with him. And it's kind of like they're in on it together.

Speaker 2 Does that make sense to you? That's such a profound point.

Speaker 4 Yeah, and I write about this in my book, The MAGA Doctrine. And I came to this realization.
I went to 10 Trump rallies in the course of 10 weeks when I wrote this book.

Speaker 4 And I did it kind of on just a total fact-finding mission, trying to do what journalists wouldn't do, and actually witness and see and learn.

Speaker 4 And what I realized is exactly the point that you put forward here, Glenn, which is

Speaker 4 President Trump does not just go to the rallies to fire up the base, which he does, but he goes to actually learn. Yes.

Speaker 4 He wants to see what's resonating with the people out there.

Speaker 4 He moves more around the podium than any politician I've ever seen.

Speaker 4 He'll do that famous kind of side view where he'll go and look in people's eyes and say something such as, I moved the embassy to Jerusalem.

Speaker 4 And he'll say, see the place erupt, and he'll say, okay, got it.

Speaker 2 Yep.

Speaker 4 They like that.

Speaker 2 Yeah, he does. He walks back from the podium and then he watches.

Speaker 2 It's phenomenal. He even said at one point,

Speaker 2 you know what? I'm going to have to ask that question more often.

Speaker 2 He was doing internal polling.

Speaker 4 Yes, and it goes both ways. And Glenn, I'm sure you noticed this, but at that speech, did you see anyone on their phone?

Speaker 2 No.

Speaker 4 Did you see anyone texting, besides taking pictures, of course, but did you see anyone doing the normal stuff you see during speeches? No. They are locked in and engaged.

Speaker 4 I mean, I have not seen people so focused on a speaker.

Speaker 4 And I saw this when I went to these rallies and I wrote this book in Wisconsin and in Florida and in Arizona, where I saw tens of thousands of people at full attention locked in on every word the president was saying not tweeting not responding their text messages and they oh I almost equate it to this was the president giving a shareholder report to the people that put him into office if you will as if the American people are the metaphorical board of directors that he believes he needs to continue to report back to and say here's how we're doing here's what you can do and I'm going to keep fighting for you.

Speaker 2 So here's how I read this. And I read it very similarly.
You know, his speeches, he'll have the speech written. So

Speaker 2 that's the shareholder report. But then it's almost as if he's your buddy, who's the president, and you're alone with him.
And he's like, let me tell you what else. I mean, this is crazy.

Speaker 2 You know what else happened this week? You know what else this person said or this person?

Speaker 2 And

Speaker 2 you're laughing and you're getting the inside scoop.

Speaker 2 so he's more of like your friend who's also the chairman of the board and you're in the shareholders meeting but then afterwards he's like let me give you the real scoop it's an amazing thing i i've totally missed unless you're there watching him i i that's exactly right and i believe that this is the best example we have in my lifetime and recent american political movements of what citizen government looks like because for example if the president comes to a Trump rally and he says something like, oh, what do you think about Medicare for all?

Speaker 4 People are upset and they're screaming. And you're like, okay, I don't like that.
Got it.

Speaker 2 So do you agree, Charlie, that

Speaker 2 because

Speaker 2 your book is really, really good. I'm not going to be able to get into everything.
I know we did a special with you Friday, the Friday night special. It's on Blaze TV, just under Glenn TV or GBTV.

Speaker 2 And look for last Friday's exclusive.

Speaker 2 It's about 45 minutes with Charlie on the book, and it's fascinating. You really have to hear it.

Speaker 2 But

Speaker 2 the loyalty comes from

Speaker 2 him listening to them

Speaker 2 and

Speaker 2 also he is, he's not going to betray because

Speaker 2 I really think he gets so much out of that audience.

Speaker 2 It's like the only time he feels safe, I think, which is odd, but it's the only time I think he feels safe to say what he really believes in a room where everybody's going to go, yeah, that's right.

Speaker 2 You know, it's like they're friends. And so he's not going to betray them because

Speaker 2 that's the only group of people he trusts.

Speaker 4 And for good reason. I mean, he feels far more comfortable in front of 10,000, 15,000, 50,000 middle-class Americans than at a D.C.
cocktail party

Speaker 4 concern about

Speaker 4 whatever is the new creme de la creme in D.C. That's a president I want.

Speaker 4 I want a president who wants to spend two hours at CPAC on a Saturday, the same week that he flew back 50 hours round trip from India to represent us abroad, the same week they negotiate the peace in Afghanistan and deals with what I call the China virus, not the coronavirus.

Speaker 4 But he spends two hours with 5,000 middle-class Americans at CPAC. That's special.

Speaker 4 And he got more out of it because after the speech, and I've been with him after speeches a couple times, and I just watch, and you know what he'll say?

Speaker 4 He's like, wow, they really love the fact I moved to the embassy. They really like that.
And then he internalizes it. And then

Speaker 4 that to him is reinforcement for what he's doing, but it's also instructive.

Speaker 2 He doesn't trust his advisors. And

Speaker 2 you really go over a lot of this in your book. He doesn't trust the

Speaker 2 advisors.

Speaker 2 The advisors that he trusts are either his family members or mainly the people.

Speaker 2 This is his advisory board meeting.

Speaker 4 That's exactly right.

Speaker 4 And from citizen the idea of citizen government goes all the way back to the Bible, of course, where the the idea of the individual being sovereign, but we look at who exactly is in charge of our country, we the people, it's all of us, the individuals.

Speaker 4 And the President recognizes that. And it's a de-emphasis on

Speaker 4 the intellectual,

Speaker 4 essentially the intellectual superiority of the ruling class, which I love.

Speaker 4 I absolutely love it, because I believe that the overemphasis on that in the last 30 years has actually contributed to the rise of progressivism.

Speaker 4 And you can say a lot about President Trump, but he has slowed the rise of progressivism more dramatically than any President because Reagan. And for that, he deserves phenomenal, phenomenal credit.

Speaker 2 The name of the book is the MAGA Doctrine,

Speaker 2 The Only Ideas That Will Win the Future by Charlie Kirk. It's available everywhere this week.
Get it now. If you'd like to hear more from Charlie,

Speaker 2 just you can follow him on Twitter. He's got a great podcast.

Speaker 2 Also, we have him for the Friday Night exclusive last Friday. It's available on Blaze TV.
Really, really fascinating discussion on the strengths and the weaknesses and

Speaker 2 how this election is going to come down with Donald Trump and Charlie Kirk. Thank you so much, Charlie.
Appreciate it. Thanks, Blenny.

Speaker 4 Really appreciate it. Thank you.

Speaker 2 There are people out there who know a lot about you. A spouse, a best friend, a sibling, Facebook, Google.
But what about all the cyber criminals? How many of them know you better than you think?

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Speaker 1 This is the Glenbeck program.

Speaker 2 Good news, the Dow is up 434 points today. That's a little refreshing.
We do have two deaths of the coronavirus now in the United States, but

Speaker 2 there's some new information that's showing this has probably been here for a while now.

Speaker 2 And I have my coronavirus update coming up for you. You don't want to miss that.
It happens every day in hour number three.

Speaker 2 Also, Dr. Epstein, who says

Speaker 2 tech has already selected a president.

Speaker 2 Hello, America. It is Monday, and our daily coronavirus update is coming up.
You don't want to miss this. We do it every day at this time.

Speaker 2 Plus, we post it now, front page of GlennBeck.com, so all of your coronavirus needs are found there on the website. We'll give you all of the information that you need, including a come on, guys,

Speaker 2 from

Speaker 2 our

Speaker 2 surgeon general this weekend, the head of CDC

Speaker 2 are saying, America, come on, relax on a couple of things. And I think some actual good news is coming out.

Speaker 2 It's not going to be interpreted by the press this way or anybody that wants you to freak out, but I think there's some really good news that is being misinterpreted. And I go there in one minute.

Speaker 1 This is the Glenbeck program.

Speaker 2 All right, so there are two parts of the coronavirus that you really need to understand. The first part is the actual medical side of it.
And on that, I have some good news.

Speaker 2 On the other side of it is the economic meltdown. Now, the Fed looks like they're going to come in and cut rates again on Wednesday.

Speaker 2 They're encouraging the entire globe, all of the central banks in the world, to do the same.

Speaker 2 This is going to

Speaker 2 antibiotics. You can use antibiotics, but if you overuse antibiotics, they become worthless.
It doesn't have any effect.

Speaker 2 I have a feeling that they cut rates and they cut them pretty dramatically here, if not this week, maybe in a couple of weeks.

Speaker 2 But I think you're going to see some Fed cuts, and I don't think it's going to actually do much for the economy.

Speaker 2 I think we are overusing these antibiotics right now, and that should cause some concern. Right now, the economic impact of coronavirus is not seen yet here in America, except for like the Dow.

Speaker 2 The Dow was down,

Speaker 2 what, in four days, 5,000 points, 6,000 points. That's remarkable.
Remarkable.

Speaker 2 If you look at the value of the dollar, the value of the dollar is going down because we're going to make more of them. If you look at the Dow, your 401k is down.

Speaker 2 If you have precious metals, if you have gold,

Speaker 2 you're way up. I mean, way, way up.

Speaker 2 That should disturb you.

Speaker 2 When the price of gold goes up, especially in a dramatic way, it means that the world is more unstable because the world always goes to gold when things look like a real crisis is at hand.

Speaker 2 Please understand

Speaker 2 the coronavirus is going to be with us for a very long time.

Speaker 2 And what we're looking at now is just the beginning of it. If we don't get a vaccine into people's hands by this time next year, we could have real, real economic downturns and troubles.

Speaker 2 And especially if Bernie Sanders looks like he might be the president, we could be in a depression quickly.

Speaker 2 I want you to call Goldline now and find out if gold or silver is right for you. Do it right now.
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Speaker 2 And just for speaking to somebody today about your portfolio, you're going to get a three-quarter ounce pure Bullion silver coin at no cost. Call today.
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Speaker 2 1-866-GoldLine or Goldline.com.

Speaker 2 All right, here are our daily stats for our coronavirus update. All numbers are

Speaker 2 locked into place by 5:30 a.m. Central Time.
So these are all as of 5:30 this morning. Total confirmed cases: 89,842.
That's up about 6,000 from Friday. Total confirmed dead, up 255 from Friday.

Speaker 2 18% of all active cases is steady, considered serious, meaning hospitalization, 5% of those require ICU treatment.

Speaker 2 That number is steady at 18%.

Speaker 2 The U.S. now has 88 confirmed cases and two deaths, both in Washington state.
The CDC website is now showing 472 total citizens have been tested, tested up from 445 last Friday.

Speaker 2 Now you're going to start to see the number of those infected in the United States go up and here's why

Speaker 2 because we're now testing for them.

Speaker 2 Remember the CDC website showing

Speaker 2 472 total citizens have been tested in the United States. 472 people.

Speaker 2 I believe that coronavirus has been around here for a while, but because our health care system is good,

Speaker 2 because

Speaker 2 we're not freaking out about it, it's being treated like the regular flu.

Speaker 2 As these tests now become more and more frequent, because today there are 54 labs now having testing capabilities here in the U.S., the CDC has certified 12 regional hospitals to perform their own direct testings as of this week.

Speaker 2 That's new. So now, if you're going to one of these big regional hospitals, you're going to get the testing done right away, and more and more hospitals are going to come online.

Speaker 2 That means you're going to find more and more people. For instance, we now have a fatality rate in the U.S.
of 2.5%.

Speaker 2 Well, that's really high.

Speaker 2 But that's because we think there are only 400, what is it? What did I say? 472 tests that have been done.

Speaker 2 So when you have 472 tests, how many of those have been confirmed and two people die? Well, how many people in the United States actually have it right now?

Speaker 2 I think you're going to see these numbers go through the roof.

Speaker 3 Yeah, I mean, because they think it's been just being passed around, for example, Washington state for weeks and weeks undetected.

Speaker 2 Yes. And so that should tell you it's not so bad here.
Right.

Speaker 3 And, you know, like a lot of people, they think, are having, they may be passing it without even getting sick at all, showing no symptoms whatsoever. Yeah.
Even after the incubation period is over.

Speaker 3 So, I mean, that being said,

Speaker 3 there's, in my opinion, no way this thing winds up anywhere near 2.5 or 2.3% fatality rate when this is over. I'll be stunned if it's above one.
But that being said, it's still a lot.

Speaker 3 I mean, when, you know, we talk about the flu itself, it's 0.1%

Speaker 3 that die. But when 30 million people get it every year, that number's a big number.

Speaker 2 So let me give you the stats. This is comparing the seasonal flu

Speaker 2 to COVID-19. And this is why governments are freaking out or taking aggressive action.

Speaker 2 This is versus the flu.

Speaker 2 The case fatality rate is currently 2.3% globally. In the United States, it's 2.5%.
But I don't believe that number because I don't think we know how many people have it.

Speaker 2 All right, so the fatality rate is 2.3 globally. The serious complication rate, meaning pneumonia and hospitalization, the common season flu, seasonal flu is 0.9%.

Speaker 2 This is at 18%.

Speaker 2 So 18%

Speaker 2 get pneumonia or have to go to the hospital. This is why it's so deadly for people who are older.

Speaker 2 Requiring an ICU,

Speaker 2 the common everyday flu is 0.25%.

Speaker 2 This is 5%.

Speaker 2 The rate of infection is 1.3%.

Speaker 2 The rate of infection or the R0

Speaker 2 score, which they give, smallpox, I think, is like a 15 million. It's very, very

Speaker 2 virile and spreadable. This is at 4.7.
That's a lot.

Speaker 2 Time that it survives on surfaces, the flu is 4 to five hours. COVID-19 is five to nine days.

Speaker 2 The incubation period, two to three days for the flu, five to fourteen days for COVID-19.

Speaker 2 Natural herd immunity, which is really important. The common flu has that.
So in other words, we all kind of have, we're all a little bit immune to it and the different strains might hurt us, etc.

Speaker 2 We don't have immunity towards this.

Speaker 2 The hospitalization per 1 million infections for the seasonal flu, it's 9,000. For COVID-19, it's 180,000 per million.
ICUs per 1 million infections,

Speaker 2 2,500 for the seasonal flu, 50,000 for COVID-19.

Speaker 2 And fatalities per 1 million infections, 1,000 for

Speaker 2 the seasonal flu, 23,000 for COVID-19 as it stands today. But again, I think that number will come down.

Speaker 3 And this is why, of course, you, of course, prepare for the worst-case scenario that this rate sort of continues. It means adding lots and lots of tests.
It means all sorts of different things.

Speaker 3 So you should prepare to be

Speaker 3 incredibly serious. We just, I think, rationally understand that it's not going to be as high as this, thankfully.
Yeah.

Speaker 2 You're going to be, look, we're going to be inconvenienced. And

Speaker 2 let me just. Let me just say this.

Speaker 2 I've been explaining it for the last few days to people like this, and they seem to connect with it. First, they freak out, and they think I'm saying to them, We're all gonna die.
I'm not saying that.

Speaker 2 Listen to me carefully. We're all gonna get this, all of us.
We're all gonna get COVID-19. Whether it's this month, next month, this year, next year, five years from now, we're all getting it.

Speaker 2 Just like we all will get the flu. Exactly right.
The flu, the pandemic of 1918, we are still passing around.

Speaker 2 The seasonal flu

Speaker 2 is

Speaker 2 part of that flu, the original flu from 1918. So we've all had the same flu of 1918.
We've all had it several times. Okay.
Incredible. It's incredible.
That virus was introduced in 1918.

Speaker 2 It was a pandemic.

Speaker 2 Well, we've all had it and we didn't die. The same is true.
This will be around most likely for the rest of our lives. COVID-19 is going to be added as a secondary flu now.

Speaker 2 So you'll get this flu, the seasonal flu of 1918, the Spanish flu, and you might get COVID-19. So there'll be two strains of flu.

Speaker 2 Now, if it's exactly the same as the flu, that just means we've doubled the amount of deaths every year. 65,000 people died last year for the common seasonal flu.

Speaker 3 And while we've been talking about COVID-19, 18,000 have died this year

Speaker 2 from it. So

Speaker 2 more people are dying from the seasonal flu than most likely will die from this flu. Okay.
But it's very virile and as far as spreadable.

Speaker 2 And if it mutates and we don't have any defense against it, it could be bad.

Speaker 3 It's just the unknowns, plus no treatments.

Speaker 2 But stop

Speaker 2 that I can't get it, I can't get it, I can't get it.

Speaker 2 You might already have it, and you might get it.

Speaker 2 And if it's this month, okay, that's probably going to be scary.

Speaker 2 But in time, we're all going to get it. We're all going to get it, and the world's not going to end.

Speaker 3 No, but I mean, you look at the seasonal flu, right?

Speaker 3 There are vaccines every year that vary somewhat in effectiveness, but

Speaker 3 about 50% of people get them, right?

Speaker 3 Which helps cut down the amount of deaths and helps cut down the spread of the flu.

Speaker 3 Think of the flu happening with no vaccine at all, which is what this could be. Correct.
You're going to see, so instead of 50% getting a vaccine beforehand, 0% get it.

Speaker 3 And then add on to that that there's four different medications that treat the seasonal flu. There are zero medications that treat this.
So you're going to

Speaker 2 be dicey. Right.

Speaker 2 Until we get our arms around it. It's going to be dicey.

Speaker 3 We know the flu sort of burns out in the summer months. We don't know that about

Speaker 3 coronavirus yet.

Speaker 2 If it doesn't. I believe it probably will, but we don't know.
If it doesn't,

Speaker 2 I worry about serious, much more serious economic impact.

Speaker 2 If we can get this thing to die down,

Speaker 2 then we at least have time to get the world back on its feet before it hits again.

Speaker 2 If it just even just slows down but does not stop as a seasonal flu does, that's going to be a a problem for the economy, and we're going to need to have a vaccine and some treatment for it pretty quickly.

Speaker 2 But this is not Ebola. It's not.
One last thing. Please stop wearing the stupid masks.
Okay? Stop wearing them.

Speaker 3 What if it's for fashion?

Speaker 2 If it's for fashion, then just stop being stupid.

Speaker 2 But it doesn't work. Okay.
It doesn't work. Even the N95, it has to be fitted to your face.
You know, now they're saying, if you have an N95, great, then wear a regular mask underneath that. Stop it.

Speaker 2 Stop it. Okay.

Speaker 2 You know, you should have had an N95 mask or an N100 mask long time ago, but in this particular case, it's not doing anything except stopping doctors where it's really bad from having something that they can put on and take off and dispose of because everybody's keeping them, you know, in their basements and in their bug out rooms.

Speaker 2 You don't need it. It doesn't work.
Okay. For you, it won't work and it's not necessary.

Speaker 2 Just wash your hands for two minutes, several times a day. Use antibacterial soap and stay informed.
And you can find all of this information.

Speaker 2 By the way, the CDC actually came out, the head of CDC, and said,

Speaker 2 Okay, enough with the masks. I mean, it was almost hysterical the way they dealt with it.
Please just stop.

Speaker 2 You can find all of this information now at glenbeck.com and here on the broadcast first thing in hour number three at this time every day on the radio program and on glenbeck.com.

Speaker 2 All right, we have

Speaker 2 a dear friend who or a man who's becoming a dear friend, I should say, Robert Epstein.

Speaker 2 He's a senior research psychologist and he's been doing work about Google and how Google and others are rigging the election in 2020.

Speaker 2 He said his new article is out, said, Republicans have to understand they cannot win because of the way things are being rigged. We're going to spend some time with him coming up in just a second.

Speaker 2 Now, Patriot Mobile, there is every chance this November.

Speaker 2 We as a country are going to have to pick between the current president, along with all his flaws and everything else, and a full-fledged communist.

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Now, you might say, I am absolutely pro-life. I'm staunchly, I'm right there.
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10 seconds, station ID.

Speaker 2 Okay.

Speaker 2 All right. I've only got about three minutes here with Dr.
Epstein, and then we'll have to take a break, and then we'll come back and have a real conversation. Doc, how do you want to set this up on

Speaker 2 what you think we're facing for

Speaker 2 the 2020 election?

Speaker 4 We're facing the end of democracy as we know it.

Speaker 2 Okay, all right. Well, that's a scary way of putting it.
I guess that's pretty blunt.

Speaker 2 And why do you say that?

Speaker 2 For people who don't know what you do, which we'll explain in a minute, why do you say that with such

Speaker 2 authority?

Speaker 4 Because I understand

Speaker 4 the mechanisms that are being used now to shift votes without people's knowledge and without leaving a paper trail.

Speaker 4 I just had someone write to me, former professor from the University of Minnesota, actually,

Speaker 4 he believes that that enormous win by Biden in South Carolina was actually engineered by Google.

Speaker 4 He believes that the enormous win by Biden in South Carolina was engineered by Google. And

Speaker 4 I don't know that, but

Speaker 4 I do know without any doubt that the big tech companies can shift 15 million votes in this upcoming election, and that's enough to basically sweep the country.

Speaker 4 And that isn't, from my perspective, that means the end of democracy because it means

Speaker 4 that all of the investigations that are ongoing against Google and some other companies will all be shut down.

Speaker 4 All of them.

Speaker 4 Investigations now by the FTC, the Department of Justice,

Speaker 4 Attorneys General, 51 of them, and Congress. And all of those investigations will be shut down.

Speaker 2 And you say that because

Speaker 2 they're in bed with the Democratic Party?

Speaker 4 Well, because

Speaker 4 they're supporting Democratic candidates.

Speaker 4 Democratic candidates are very much in the pocket of these companies.

Speaker 4 And they're not only making enormous donations, of course, and that more or less you can see, but behind the scenes, they're shifting votes.

Speaker 4 So they're giving something to Democrats that's worth more than gold.

Speaker 4 They're giving them gold and votes.

Speaker 2 All right. So

Speaker 2 when we come back, I want you to explain

Speaker 2 how they can manipulate people without them even knowing.

Speaker 2 How could they, and like you said, you don't know and you don't have evidence of this in South Carolina, but let's use that as an example since it's so recent. How could they have done that?

Speaker 2 Make that case and we're going to show you and ask for your help as an audience to help stop this. It needs to be stopped if you love

Speaker 2 actually being free. More in a minute.

Speaker 2 Taking seven months off from work to recover from an injury isn't an option for most people, and it certainly was not for Robin from Ohio. She works at a correctional agency and she's, you know,

Speaker 2 she's tough and she's not going to sit around the house for seven months and wait. Some people are more determined than others to get back to work and she was one of them.

Speaker 2 So she's listening to the show and she hears about Relief Factor.

Speaker 2 She broke her wrist and they said, you can't work for at least seven months. Well, her occupational therapist, when she comes in, she's starting taking Relief Factor.

Speaker 2 And her occupational therapist is like, well, the swelling is down and you're doing great.

Speaker 2 Much to the astonishment of everybody, she was able to return three months early. And she credits it to Relief Factor.

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Speaker 3 Go to Blazetv.com. Use the promo code Glenn for $10 off.
We're going to be doing live Super Tuesday coverage tomorrow. You're not going to want to miss.
You can get that on YouTube as well.

Speaker 2 This is the Glenn Beck program. What you're about to hear sounds a little nuts, quite honestly.

Speaker 2 It sounds like a movie. Sounds like it's something that couldn't happen.

Speaker 2 But let's remember, 20 years ago, watching television on your phone while your car was driving you home also was only in a movie. This is real.

Speaker 2 And the guy, the only guy that I know of that is really watching over is a guy who is author, editor, longtime psychology researcher, professor, distinguished scientist.

Speaker 2 He's the former editor-in-chief of Psychology Today, senior research psychologist at the American Institute for Behavioral Research and Technology, also the founder and director emeritus of the Cambridge Center for Behavioral Studies in Massachusetts.

Speaker 2 He has a Ph.D. in psychology from Harvard, author of 15 books.
This guy also voted for Hillary Clinton. He is not a guy who is saying, hey,

Speaker 2 you know, Donald Trump is the greatest and they're rigging it against.

Speaker 2 This is a guy who actually agrees with the Democratic policies much more than anything of Donald Trump, but he believes first and foremost in the Constitution and that every vote is actually heard and counted and not manipulated.

Speaker 2 I have tremendous respect for him. Dr.
Robert Epstein, explain.

Speaker 2 You write in your latest

Speaker 2 article. No matter which weak candidate the Democrats ultimately nominate, and even with Russia's help, President Donald Trump cannot win the 2020 election.

Speaker 2 For that matter, in races nationwide in which the projected winning margins are small, under 5% or so, Republicans in general are likely to lose.

Speaker 2 That is quite a statement.

Speaker 2 Back it up.

Speaker 4 Well, unfortunately,

Speaker 4 those statements are not only true, I'm actually understating

Speaker 4 the gravity of the problem.

Speaker 4 To understand what's happening here, you have to go back to

Speaker 4 what my Democrat friends call Armageddon Day. You call it Election Day

Speaker 4 2016, but they call it Armageddon Day.

Speaker 4 You have to go back to that day. You have to look at that

Speaker 4 one-hour video that leaked from Google right after the election in which Google's top executives are saying straight out, this is a disaster, this is a calamity, we're never going to let this happen again.

Speaker 4 You have to look at some of the whistleblowers who have since been fired by Google or have quit.

Speaker 4 And they are telling us that from that day forward, Google and to a lesser extent the other tech companies made a decision.

Speaker 4 We are going to use every single technique we have available to us to shift votes votes and make sure that Trump is not reelected. So that's all a matter of record.

Speaker 4 Now, also a matter of record is

Speaker 4 meticulous scientific research I've been doing since 2013 that shows the power that these companies have to shift votes. And I actually can calculate for each technique how many votes they can shift.

Speaker 4 So you asked, what are the techniques? What can they do? Well, the techniques are unbelievable. They've never existed before in human history.
I've been stumbling on them one by one,

Speaker 4 carefully studying them with

Speaker 4 tens of thousands of participants in multiple experiments in multiple countries.

Speaker 4 The techniques are unbelievable. So I can start with the first one I discovered, which is SEEEM, the search engine manipulation effect.

Speaker 4 This is simply the fact that if one candidate is favored over another in Google search results, which virtually everyone uses,

Speaker 4 that shifts votes to that candidate. And people can't see if there's any bias in search results.
Almost no one can see it. Correct.

Speaker 2 And there's no record of it.

Speaker 4 Yes, this is called internally at Google, these are called ephemeral experiences.

Speaker 4 We know this from a leak out of Google of emails to the Wall Street Journal in 2018, where one one Googler is saying to fellow Googlers, it's hard to say,

Speaker 4 how can we use ephemeral experiences to shift people's views on Trump's travel ban?

Speaker 4 So these are ephemeral experiences. Like

Speaker 4 you type in a search term, you get some search results.

Speaker 4 That information you're seeing on your screen is generated just for you, generated on the fly.

Speaker 4 It affects you because you're likely to click what's at the top, so it definitely has an impact on you, and it disappears, and it's gone forever, and it's not stored anywhere.

Speaker 4 So that's ephemeral experiences. It's a perfect kind of manipulation because no one can go back in time and figure out what you were shown.

Speaker 4 It's perfect. And that technique alone can easily shift more than 20% of undecided voters without their knowledge up to 80% in some demographic groups.
That was just my first discovery.

Speaker 4 That was way back in 2013.

Speaker 4 Since then, I've discovered about a dozen techniques like that, which are controlled entirely by these executives at these couple of companies,

Speaker 4 and you can't counteract what they're doing. It's not like a billboard.
You see, you put up your billboard, I put up my billboard. You buy your TV commercial, I buy my TV commercial.

Speaker 4 These techniques are nothing like that that because

Speaker 4 it's one thing if you want to buy some ads and post them on Facebook or something,

Speaker 4 then your competitor will do the same and so on. But what if Facebook itself,

Speaker 4 what if Google itself? What if the platforms want to support one candidate or one party? You cannot counteract what they're doing. Generally speaking, you can't even see what they're doing.

Speaker 2 Okay, so I remember as a kid, and

Speaker 2 you've talked about this. I remember as a kid, they said, they're editing films and movie theaters to make you drink Coca-Cola more.

Speaker 2 They're putting frames in

Speaker 2 that show

Speaker 2 an ice-cold Coke, and it makes you want to get up in the middle and go to the refreshment stand. Or Disney is putting in secret sex messages into the...

Speaker 2 That's nothing, nothing compared to this.

Speaker 4 That's right.

Speaker 4 That's called subliminal influence. And

Speaker 4 it's a real thing, but it's very, very, very tiny. It's so tiny that

Speaker 4 we've never even passed any laws in the United States to prohibit it. The UK does prohibit it, but we don't even prohibit it because, again, the evidence shows it has such a tiny effect.

Speaker 4 But the effects that I've discovered are humongous. For example, for example.

Speaker 4 There's one which I call DDE, which is a differential demographics effect.

Speaker 4 This is so simple.

Speaker 4 In 2018, on Election Day, Google posted a big message on its home page, which would have been seen on Election Day 500 million times by Americans.

Speaker 4 They replaced the word Google with the words, go vote,

Speaker 4 the vote reminder. And they got tremendous praise that day.
Look at that great thing, that great public service, you know, that Google is doing. That was not a public service.

Speaker 4 That was a vote manipulation. Because Google knows the demographics of the people who are going to see that.

Speaker 4 And they knew very precisely, I mean, down to the last digit, they knew exactly how many more Democrats would see that reminder than Republicans.

Speaker 4 If that reminder was seen by everyone that day, that would have given 800,000 more votes to Democrats than to Republicans.

Speaker 4 Search suggestions.

Speaker 4 I mean, mean, I could go on and on because we're actually we just opened up a line of research on a whole new manipulation, which is, I think, going to be bigger than all the others.

Speaker 2 Well, I know

Speaker 2 we're doing a special this Wednesday night, and you're going to be part of it.

Speaker 2 This Wednesday night, we're talking about the stealing of elections. How secure are our elections? Everybody's talking about Russia.
Forget about Russia. Forget about Russia.
How about this?

Speaker 2 This has a much bigger potential to really end

Speaker 2 democracy. And quite honestly,

Speaker 2 free will. You know, there's a debate and I see it happening in the circles of Silicon Valley and those kinds of people.
And they're now starting to debate what is free will?

Speaker 2 Is there anything like free will? Does it even exist? Or will it exist in the future? If you're right, Doctor, and I believe you are because you've backed it up with the evidence,

Speaker 2 you think you have free will, but you don't. You're actually being manipulated all the time.

Speaker 4 Well,

Speaker 4 yes,

Speaker 4 and here is a quote from a British economist who was a professor in the United States when he said this, back in 1957, a world of unseen dictatorship is conceivable still using the forms of democratic government.

Speaker 4 And that is what we're up against. And Eisenhower, 1961, in that famous speech of his, he warned not only about the rise of a military-industrial complex,

Speaker 4 he actually warned about the rise of a technological elite

Speaker 4 that could take control over public policy without people knowing. That's where we are now.
That's exactly what has happened.

Speaker 4 I mean, I have the numbers, I have the data, my work is meticulous in all respects.

Speaker 4 And as I say,

Speaker 4 we're just about to get numbers on a whole new technique that we've discovered. I'm telling you, this stuff is

Speaker 4 frightening. And the fact that mainstream media and that my friends, the Democrats, are pretty much ignoring what I'm saying.
Not all of them, but most of them are. That's outrageous.

Speaker 4 And that's because they're the ones benefiting at the moment from these manipulations.

Speaker 2 All right. So maybe we'll have you back tomorrow because I would like to hear about

Speaker 2 the new way in, if you will, on what you've discovered.

Speaker 2 But we also really want, I urge you,

Speaker 2 if you are thinking, you know what, I want to donate money, I want to help on something, this is probably the biggest thing that you could do to help preserve the Republic.

Speaker 2 And that is making sure these tech companies are held responsible. He's the only one doing this.
He needs to raise an awful lot of money. I want you to go to mygoogleresearch.com.

Speaker 2 If you have, I don't care if it's $5

Speaker 2 or $10,000.

Speaker 2 Please, please consider this as a donation.

Speaker 2 You go to mygoogleresearch.com. That's mygoogleresearch.com.

Speaker 2 And hopefully, we're going to have some breaking news for you on Wednesday about some of this research. But we really

Speaker 2 need your

Speaker 2 support, and he needs your support financially. Mygoogle research.com.

Speaker 2 We'll try to schedule in tomorrow and get some more detail from you tomorrow. Thank you so much.

Speaker 4 Thank you, Glenn. And by the way, I do consider you a friend.

Speaker 2 Thank you very much. I never want to presume.
Thanks.

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Speaker 1 You're listening to Glenn Beck.

Speaker 2 May I speak directly to our veterans for a minute? In 2001, we started something that became the longest war in our history, and that might have come to an end this past weekend.

Speaker 2 And if you're a veteran, I can't even presume how you're feeling right now. You answered the call.
You defended us in a foreign land while the rest of us were knocked on our butts in shell shock.

Speaker 2 You were there.

Speaker 2 You lost friends. Way too many friends.

Speaker 2 I don't know if you can go to war and not lose a piece of yourself, but because of you, you,

Speaker 2 I don't have to answer that question for me.

Speaker 2 I don't know what it's like to come back from a war. You do.

Speaker 2 Thank you for doing it.

Speaker 2 I know

Speaker 2 you never imagined making a peace deal with terrorists.

Speaker 2 You probably envisioned the same thing that I did, you know, September 2, 1945, as the Japanese penned their absolute surrender aboard the USS Missouri.

Speaker 2 We cannot repay you for what you've sacrificed and what you accomplished over the last two decades. What you did was right.

Speaker 2 It was exactly what we needed after 9-11, but what they asked you to do, rebuild a nation, that's not what you do.

Speaker 2 We just signed a peace deal with terrorists, and they're not going to honor that. I'm sure they're not.
Taliban knows it, but so do we.

Speaker 2 But we've come to a place where it's time to come home. We have to come home.

Speaker 2 You engaged the enemies of our country on their soil. You defeated them.
You shattered their ability to hit us like they did that fateful day 20 years ago.

Speaker 2 But it is time for them to govern themselves. We're not nation builders.
We shouldn't have asked you to do that.

Speaker 2 Our military, the most powerful the world has ever seen, you gave the Afghani people a chance. Well, that's all that we should ever promise, a chance.
It's up to them.

Speaker 2 Non-veterans, if you see somebody who's either returning from or has served in Afghanistan in the past, will you do me a favor? Shake their hand. It has been a very long two decades.
Thank you.

Speaker 1 This is the Glenbeck program.