Debate Free-for-All: The Last Warning | Guest: Dr. Wilfred Reilly | 2/20/20

2h 8m
The ninth Democratic debate was a first for Mike Bloomberg and possibly the last. Bernie was fuming when the competition hammered socialism using conservative arguments! And while Warren’s “fat broads and horse-faced lesbians” comment turned heads, she left out the "architect," the "gay," and the royal family from the full Bloomberg quote. California Gov. Gavin Newsom goes a step crazier, arguing that doctors should write prescriptions for housing. And 1776 Project co-founder Dr. Wilfred Reilly advocates that our nation is not defined by racist failures as the 1619 Project suggests, but by the opportunities we all have here. But the coronavirus may affect more than our health, and the worst outcome isn’t death.
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Runtime: 2h 8m

Transcript

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Speaker 5 You know what, Hillary?

Speaker 8 I think that's the first time the Democrats have even recognized publicly that they were the ones putting the kids in the cages.

Speaker 12 Right. Everyone seemed really kind of shocked by it.
It was a really awkward moment where people were kind of taking that in.

Speaker 13 Yeah, it was kind of like, wait, what?

Speaker 4 What happened?

Speaker 14 What were you doing?

Speaker 15 Thanks so much, Hillary.

Speaker 13 Appreciate it.

Speaker 13 We've got a lot to cover today.

Speaker 7 We're going to cover the

Speaker 18 debate.

Speaker 20 It was a free-for-all last night, and

Speaker 23 I don't think Bloomberg did real well,

Speaker 7 at least with the people who are voting in the primary.

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Speaker 50 The fusion of entertainment and enlightenment.

Speaker 51 This is the Glenbeck program.

Speaker 53 Wow.

Speaker 17 It was debate night.

Speaker 54 They are so desperate.

Speaker 23 They are so lost.

Speaker 38 It's why 538.com says no one is the front runner.

Speaker 59 That's what they have as odds of winning the nomination.

Speaker 60 Number one position is no one.

Speaker 13 What are the Democrats going to do?

Speaker 17 We're going to gleefully take you through the debate in audio in one minute.

Speaker 51 This is the Glenn Beck program.

Speaker 63 So George lives in Oregon.

Speaker 64 Sorry for that, George.

Speaker 42 He's a garbage man, which means he spends 10 hours a day sitting in a garbage truck with very limited movement.

Speaker 69 For the longest time, George's problem was that his right knee would

Speaker 42 swell up under these conditions, causing immense pain and stiffness.

Speaker 47 Now, he wasn't sure what he was going to do.

Speaker 73 I mean, he couldn't just quit his job.

Speaker 75 Thankfully, George has a radio in his truck.

Speaker 16 He heard about Relief Factory.

Speaker 76 He decided he'd give it a try.

Speaker 25 He was amazed to find that within a few weeks, the pain in his knee had become so manageable that he barely even noticed it anymore.

Speaker 15 George is back on the truck.

Speaker 78 He's enjoying his job, making his living.

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Speaker 46 That's relieffactor.com.

Speaker 46 Holy cow.

Speaker 17 So, Bloomberg makes his first appearance, and everybody is so desperate, they all have to take Bloomberg out.

Speaker 77 So, the guns, even from sweet little grandma Elizabeth Warren, who just doesn't like to say a bad word about anybody.

Speaker 45 She had some words saved up for him last night.

Speaker 25 Here's Bloomberg as he tries to make his case.

Speaker 49 Bloomberg makes his case.

Speaker 88 I'm a New Yorker.

Speaker 89 I know how to take on an arrogant con man like Donald Trump that comes from New York.

Speaker 89 I'm a mayor, or was a mayor. I know how to run a complicated city, the biggest, most diverse city in this country.
I'm a manager.

Speaker 89 I knew what to do after 9-11 and brought the city back back stronger than ever. And I'm a philanthropist who didn't inherit his money, but made his money.

Speaker 89 And I'm spending that money to get rid of Donald Trump, the worst president we have ever had. And if I can get that done, it will be a great contribution to America and to my kids.

Speaker 4 Wow, compelling, isn't it?

Speaker 10 You know, it's funny because he doesn't strike me as America's neighbor.

Speaker 93 I thought that was a mayor.

Speaker 9 I thought that was Rudy Giuliani that really brought the city together. He's the one that everybody looks at, not Michael Bloomberg.

Speaker 8 It was Bloomberg's night last night to be taken apart, and Elizabeth Warren had a lot to do with it.

Speaker 97 Listen to Warren, one billionaire for another.

Speaker 13 Do we have that?

Speaker 82 Can we, Sarah?

Speaker 100 I would like to talk about who we're running against. A billionaire who calls women fat broads and horse-faced lesbians.
And no, I'm not talking about Donald Trump. I'm talking about Mayor Bloomberg.

Speaker 100 Democrats are not going to win if we have a nominee who has a history of hiding his tax returns, of harassing women, and of supporting racist policies like redlining and stop and frisk.

Speaker 100 Look, I'll support whoever the Democratic nominee is, but understand this. Democrats take a huge risk if we just substitute one arrogant billionaire for another.

Speaker 8 You know, this kills me.

Speaker 7 First of all, she's right.

Speaker 83 One arrogant billionaire for another.

Speaker 11 One is actually kind of charming, and the other one is just an ass.

Speaker 105 But

Speaker 27 it kills me that they keep saying, I'll support whoever the nominee is.

Speaker 106 Are you kidding me?

Speaker 107 Do you see who's up on the stage with you?

Speaker 55 I mean, it's one thing if you're like, look, you know, it's Mitt Romney, it's George Bush, it's John McCain.

Speaker 73 They're all kind of the same.

Speaker 56 You know, I don't know if it's Ronald Reagan, Mussolini.

Speaker 57 I'll vote for whoever the people want.

Speaker 34 No, I don't think that's a good idea.

Speaker 29 Isn't the lesson here, though, that the Democrats, I mean, they're all pretty much the same?

Speaker 112 Yes.

Speaker 54 Yes.

Speaker 49 They just claim not to be.

Speaker 29 Varying levels of transparency on that, but they're all pretty much the same.

Speaker 5 So here's, this is, let me give you just the

Speaker 47 feeling of what really, if you didn't watch it, here's what you missed.

Speaker 114 Cut one audio, please.

Speaker 102 The Affordable Care Act, not blowing out. Let me just tell you.
I will tell you.

Speaker 102 You name-check three of them. Let me get Senator Sanders.

Speaker 102 You are.

Speaker 1 Go ahead, Senator Sanders.

Speaker 102 We'll get you in, Miss. All right.
We got a lot of people in here. We already got hits of viewers.

Speaker 115 Some.

Speaker 62 I mean,

Speaker 55 that is the chaos of the Democratic Party.

Speaker 86 Meanwhile, you had Donald Trump at a rally out in, I think it was California, wasn't it?

Speaker 73 And

Speaker 83 the people carried a World War II veteran on their shoulders into the arena.

Speaker 5 One makes you feel good about America.

Speaker 23 The other one just tears it apart.

Speaker 5 Which do you think Americans are going to vote for?

Speaker 63 I mean, Ronald, he has become Donald Trump because the Democrats are so nasty and angry and

Speaker 42 fighting and the,

Speaker 33 what is it, the Bernie Boys, which I think is just really a bad name for these guys.

Speaker 117 The Bernie Boys.

Speaker 4 The Bernie Bros or Bernie bros.

Speaker 34 It makes it sound like they're just, you know, oh, they're crazy boys.

Speaker 60 You know, boys will be boys. No.

Speaker 54 No, the Bernie bros are dangerous people.

Speaker 5 You've got, with what's happening on the

Speaker 32 left and with the Democrats,

Speaker 92 it makes Donald Trump look more optimistic, more like Ronald Reagan, more of the happy warrior than he ever has.

Speaker 63 They are just a group of nasty, angry, unhappy people.

Speaker 17 And I don't know why Buddha Judge is not doing better than

Speaker 27 he is, other than he's clearly not qualified.

Speaker 32 And the voting base, you know, you want to talk about homophobes.

Speaker 37 Did you hear anybody on the right have a problem with Donald Trump when he had,

Speaker 7 what's his name, Peter Thiel, speak at the Republican convention?

Speaker 29 Or the fact that I've heard a lot of problems with Donald Trump naming the first gay cabinet-level position member in American history, which is happening right now with Grinnell.

Speaker 132 They've seen new pissed off about that.

Speaker 124 Who even knows?

Speaker 17 Who even really knows that?

Speaker 59 Nobody's paying attention.

Speaker 5 Nobody's up in arms about that except the left.

Speaker 133 Left.

Speaker 49 Nobody is up in arms about that.

Speaker 68 But wait a minute.

Speaker 8 You've got a gay presidential candidate in Buddha Judge?

Speaker 4 Oh, dear God, no.

Speaker 107 Their own people are turning away from it.

Speaker 5 I mean, it is astounding.

Speaker 54 Now, here's Pete Buddhajudge last night.

Speaker 99 Listen to what he had to say.

Speaker 90 Most Americans don't see where they fit if they've got to choose between a socialist who thinks that capitalism is the root of all evil and a billionaire who thinks that money ought to be the root of all power.

Speaker 90 Let's put forward somebody who actually lives and works in a middle-class neighborhood in an industrial Midwestern city. Let's put forward somebody who's actually a Democrat.
Look.

Speaker 41 That's the line of the night.

Speaker 124 That's a good point.

Speaker 8 To me, that's the line of the night.

Speaker 109 Let's put forth an actual Democrat.

Speaker 5 It's the Democratic convention.

Speaker 125 It's the Democratic primary.

Speaker 119 You're running Bloomberg, who's whatever it is on a windy day.

Speaker 37 If the wind's blowing this direction, he's that.

Speaker 8 If he's on that way,

Speaker 5 he was a Republican just a few years ago.

Speaker 29 Basically, Charlie Christ.

Speaker 119 Yeah, he's just whatever he needs to be.

Speaker 107 And Bernie Sanders.

Speaker 111 And I got to stop calling him a socialist.

Speaker 117 He's not.

Speaker 73 He's a communist.

Speaker 5 He has never met a communist regime that he didn't like.

Speaker 44 Not one.

Speaker 56 Not one.

Speaker 29 He called communism, it was a low blow

Speaker 29 because Bloomberg said that last night. He went on about whether, you know, we've tried this before, right? Like we're not going to get rid of capitalism.

Speaker 133 We've tried the alternate.

Speaker 29 It's called communism.

Speaker 20 And everyone's like, oh,

Speaker 29 and then Bernie came out that the next question goes, by the way, you said he's called me a communist and that was a low blow.

Speaker 53 Why is it a low blow?

Speaker 135 I mean, like, I love this idea.

Speaker 29 You're a socialist and you think communism is a low low blow. Let's put them all in a larger category called Marxism.

Speaker 132 Right. You're a Marxist.

Speaker 53 How about that?

Speaker 5 And you know what? You know what's crazy? Is it shows that they are just playing on people's naivety.

Speaker 49 They don't, people don't understand that communism has actually never been done.

Speaker 118 The Soviet Union.

Speaker 40 And China, they claim to be communists, but that's not it.

Speaker 61 If you understand Marx, Marx says socialism is the road to communism.

Speaker 79 You don't get to communism until everybody's like, oh, you know what?

Speaker 41 I'm so happy.

Speaker 40 We don't need a stupid gulag anymore.

Speaker 61 We're all here and we're all just gonna share the wealth.

Speaker 125 Well, that's never happened, nor will it ever happen until Jesus comes and everybody says, you know what?

Speaker 49 I just love him so much.

Speaker 108 Here, take what you want of my stuff.

Speaker 128 That will never happen.

Speaker 98 Never.

Speaker 41 But that's what communism is. Communism gets this name of

Speaker 8 this bad name because you got to take it by force.

Speaker 42 You have gulags, you have indoctrination camps, all of that stuff.

Speaker 61 That, my friend, is socialism.

Speaker 5 That is what brings you to communism because the only way to do it is to kill all the people that like, no, you're not taking my stuff.

Speaker 127 No, I don't want to do that.

Speaker 22 Those people have to be re-educated or killed.

Speaker 40 Once you get rid of them, well, then you're fine.

Speaker 139 By the way,

Speaker 53 I'm a little more

Speaker 32 outspoken on Bernie today

Speaker 81 because we have a meeting after we finish our Wednesday night special.

Speaker 94 And we are already now a week into what's what's coming next Wednesday.

Speaker 141 And last night, I had a meeting, and again this morning, and I went over all of the audio and all of the video that we have for next week's Wednesday night special, which is on Bernie Sanders

Speaker 41 and his communist radical ties and the people in his campaign.

Speaker 42 This man is a danger.

Speaker 59 And I am so sick and tired of having people tell me when

Speaker 125 Jeremiah Wright's pupil was sitting in the in the White House and I said the guy's a Marxist the guy's a socialist oh how dare you you racist when I in 2004 when I warned the Democrats don't put Michael Moore in the presidential box because he is a socialist Marxist and you think you're using him but I'm telling you right now they're going to come back you are going to be so surprised.

Speaker 17 You're using them, right?

Speaker 49 They're using you, buddy, and they're going to eat you.

Speaker 133 I'm so sick and tired of being told, oh, that's just nonsense.

Speaker 145 It's not.

Speaker 69 It's very apparent now, isn't it?

Speaker 55 Listen, because this may be the last warning you get.

Speaker 30 Bernie Sanders has surrounded himself with very dangerous people.

Speaker 32 And you're going to meet all of them next Wednesday,

Speaker 55 there is a chance that Bernie Sanders actually gets the nomination.

Speaker 94 Now,

Speaker 127 I don't see that happening, and it will be a colossal disaster if he does for the Democrats.

Speaker 141 But it couldn't happen to a better group of people.

Speaker 30 However,

Speaker 78 If Bernie Sanders, if they try to engineer this, or even if somebody like Bloomberg gets that nomination,

Speaker 124 legitimately, Bernie Sanders and his Bernie bros will burn Milwaukee to the ground.

Speaker 41 These people are serious, Marxist, communist, radical anarchists.

Speaker 8 Last warning, America.

Speaker 42 You're about to put one of these guys in office.

Speaker 123 Last warning.

Speaker 32 More on the debate coming up in just a second.

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Speaker 118 Wouldn't eat it.

Speaker 103 Well, he's also not getting all of the probiotics and all of the things that are live in food that we need.

Speaker 78 once they freeze dry or once they

Speaker 136 cook it, it kills all of the good bacteria.

Speaker 134 So I started using Rough Greens at RoughGreens.com.

Speaker 45 My wife just got the report back from the vet because he went to the vet last week and she's like, what are you doing?

Speaker 138 He's like a different dog.

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Speaker 148 And she said, could I see the package of what you're putting on his food?

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Speaker 93 I think it really is.

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Speaker 81 Keep doing what you're doing.

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Speaker 11 Roughgreens, R-U-F-F, roughgreens.com slash Beck.

Speaker 47 Or you can call them right now at 833-Glenn33.

Speaker 11 That's 833-GLN33.

Speaker 117 We break for 10 seconds, station ID.

Speaker 141 You know, here's the

Speaker 117 Here's the problem with Buddha Judge.

Speaker 37 I mean, Buddha Judge, can I go to audio cut number 22, please?

Speaker 94 Buddha Judge has been lecturing people on Christianity for a while, and this one, I don't know how people in South Carolina took this.

Speaker 69 Cut 22, please.

Speaker 152 Then, I just can't imagine that that requires of you that you be anywhere near this president. Do you think it is impossible to be a Christian and support President Trump?

Speaker 154 Well, I'm not going to tell other Christians how to be Christians, but I will say I cannot find any compatibility between the way this president conducts himself and anything that I find in scripture.

Speaker 154 Now, I guess that's my interpretation, but I think that's a lot of people's interpretation, and that interpretation deserves a voice.

Speaker 156 Okay, okay, very good.

Speaker 120 Except the fact that a lot of people would find your lifestyle antithetical to what it's found in the Bible.

Speaker 113 I mean, you just Pete, you can't make this claim.

Speaker 67 You know, I just don't know how you would vote for him because the way he lives his life, I mean,

Speaker 26 you can't find that in the Bible.

Speaker 120 Well, you also can't find anything but stoning of homosexuality and stoning of homosexuals in the Bible, too.

Speaker 49 Old-timey, sure.

Speaker 124 Bad, yes.

Speaker 5 But it's not an endorsement.

Speaker 50 Nowhere in the Bible is there an endorsement of that.

Speaker 147 I mean, at best, you can say, well, Jesus never talked about it.

Speaker 143 Well, Jesus never talked about tweeting either.

Speaker 77 I mean,

Speaker 29 I just, it's a weird pitch from him.

Speaker 4 Why?

Speaker 29 I think he thinks that he's showing a friendliness to faith, his version of it. And because so many on stage show a seeming almost aggression against faith, this will...

Speaker 29 this will make him appeal to people in the middle who are like maybe conservative Democrats or maybe even, you know, liberal Republicans who might be faith-based and see, well, you know, everyone else seems to almost like despise faith.

Speaker 29 At least he's mentioning it. But I think it's almost the opposite because he seems like he's preaching to everybody else.

Speaker 4 Right.

Speaker 61 Exactly right.

Speaker 54 You can't pick and choose if you're going to use the Bible.

Speaker 47 You're going to say, well, I'm a Bible-believing person.

Speaker 69 It's like Donald Trump.

Speaker 86 It drove me nuts when he was like, yeah, you know, I love the two Corinthians.

Speaker 30 Stop, stop, stop, stop.

Speaker 159 Stop talking about it.

Speaker 156 Okay.

Speaker 32 But if you just want to say, look, I mean, you know, I try to live my life based on, you know, basic principles. Many of them were found in the Bible.

Speaker 161 And

Speaker 72 I don't know how to square his behavior.

Speaker 109 That's totally fine.

Speaker 5 But he gets into, we're in Bible country now.

Speaker 85 We're in Bible territory.

Speaker 22 You shouldn't go there.

Speaker 48 You shouldn't go there.

Speaker 45 Yeah. And it just, and look.

Speaker 69 Talk about principles of being a good person.

Speaker 52 Good.

Speaker 29 You're good. It's just hard to take preaching

Speaker 29 about faith and religion from a person who's also talking about nine-month abortions. Yes.
Like, this is a difficult sell.

Speaker 61 I'm going to kill a baby after they're born.

Speaker 56 No, no.

Speaker 40 I don't think you find that in the Bible.

Speaker 110 You know, very little material on that.

Speaker 29 Yeah.

Speaker 42 You just, and see, it's not even the whites that are at issue here on this.

Speaker 32 It would be the Bible-believing blacks in the black churches of South Carolina.

Speaker 104 They don't, one of the big things there is anti-homosexual.

Speaker 83 I mean, I know they're democratic

Speaker 29 polls that show, was it 41% of African-American voters might not be comfortable with a gay president?

Speaker 25 Exactly right.

Speaker 8 I mean, and those are Democratic voters.

Speaker 118 You've got to tone down the

Speaker 15 radical anti-homosexual attitude there in some of your voters.

Speaker 65 They're

Speaker 76 clearly bigoted against homosexuals. Nobody will say that.

Speaker 67 But that's what that group tends to believe.

Speaker 84 You're not going to win, Pete, by preaching Bible to them.

Speaker 51 You're listening to Glenn Beck.

Speaker 99 Ah, it's a sentimental relationship when you've had with your car, you know.

Speaker 80 Many years now, she's carried you through thick and thin, the good times and the bad.

Speaker 99 Yes, she was a good girl, but today her motor just gave up and quit on you.

Speaker 25 It's too expensive to repair, even though you wish she wasn't.

Speaker 105 So you cock your pistol and you aim it at the hood and you

Speaker 164 say thanks, girl, and you put her down.

Speaker 117 Unfortunately, that's not the way it works with engines and cars.

Speaker 45 Maybe horses, but not for cars.

Speaker 124 CarShield is the one that's saying, wait, wait, wait.

Speaker 117 It's not going to cost you too much money.

Speaker 134 Hey, hey, it's like horses.

Speaker 34 I think they always say, no, I can walk.

Speaker 111 I can walk.

Speaker 109 Sure, I broke the leg.

Speaker 157 Look at me.

Speaker 115 I can walk.

Speaker 73 The car is the same thing.

Speaker 49 You need it.

Speaker 141 And they can cover any repair that is covered with CarShield's policies.

Speaker 36 Easy.

Speaker 25 You don't have to ever write a check yourself and then wait for them to reimburse.

Speaker 134 They take care of all of it, they give you a car while yours is in the shop.

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And check out the coronavirus thing that Glenn did last night on the Wednesday night special.

Speaker 45 Wow, the coronavirus thing.

Speaker 52 That's what it was.

Speaker 7 This is the Glenbeck program.

Speaker 34 Pat, I don't know. It's like

Speaker 70 there's a spirit in your walk.

Speaker 124 You're just, you seem to

Speaker 118 sprint in here today.

Speaker 29 I just watched the greatest debate in human history.

Speaker 4 Really?

Speaker 86 Really? I love it.

Speaker 28 I love that last night.

Speaker 165 I mean, it's so painful to watch these debates, but when they went after each other with a lot of the things that we'd say about them,

Speaker 5 isn't that amazing?

Speaker 63 You can't beat that.

Speaker 61 Do you remember the teacher?

Speaker 117 Do you remember the teacher we made at Fox that said, what if Glenn Beck is right?

Speaker 25 I think

Speaker 73 we need a new teacher that just says, Glenn Beck was right.

Speaker 62 Yes.

Speaker 5 Because they're now finally saying that.

Speaker 165 The mask has come off.

Speaker 13 Oh, completely.

Speaker 128 They're now.

Speaker 112 I mean, you had a Democrat, if you can call him that, call the, quote, socialist what he really is, a communist.

Speaker 107 Yeah.

Speaker 54 On stage from the Democratic Party.

Speaker 165 And how much did he hate being called out for his three homes?

Speaker 29 Oh, my gosh.

Speaker 2 So good.

Speaker 165 The wonderful Marxist in the room has a summer home.

Speaker 4 No.

Speaker 166 Pardon me for having a summer home.

Speaker 4 No, he is. Yeah, we can't.

Speaker 133 Not with your rhetoric.

Speaker 116 We can't.

Speaker 133 A lot of people.

Speaker 54 A lot of people, a lot of people in

Speaker 17 Maine or New Hampshire, wherever Vermont,

Speaker 53 like a lot of people.

Speaker 30 Thousands have some people.

Speaker 33 Like a lot of people. Listen to it.

Speaker 134 Here's the actual quote.

Speaker 153 What a wonderful country we have. The best-known socialist in the country happens to be a millionaire with three houses.

Speaker 62 What I miss here.

Speaker 153 Well, you'll miss that I work in Washington, house watch. That's the first problem.
Live in Burlington, house to. That's good.
And like thousands of other Vermonters, I do have a summer camp.

Speaker 153 Forgive me for that. But where is your home?

Speaker 153 Which tax haven? New York, your home. New York City, thank you very much.

Speaker 52 And I pay all my taxes.

Speaker 92 Wait, he has a summer camp?

Speaker 62 Yeah,

Speaker 88 this is a summer home.

Speaker 167 It's a summer camp.

Speaker 166 Is that where he sends capitalists to be re-educated?

Speaker 111 Well, a summer camp sounds more gritty.

Speaker 4 Yeah, it sounds like it's a little cabin, a little tiny cabin.

Speaker 165 It sounds like it's a KOA campground.

Speaker 4 That's right.

Speaker 28 I didn't pull my RV out.

Speaker 29 Of course, we've seen the home, and it's a nice home.

Speaker 29 It's not a camp at all.

Speaker 4 It's a home.

Speaker 8 There's a new tent part of that house.

Speaker 29 Because people, I think rightly so, said Bloomberg did pretty poor in this debate, but I mean, he had some good moments. That's a good moment.

Speaker 133 He did great.

Speaker 21 He did great

Speaker 5 if it was a presidential

Speaker 13 general election.

Speaker 111 He's going after

Speaker 85 all the socialist Marxists in the Democratic Party.

Speaker 17 They're the only ones going out for these things.

Speaker 29 He seems to be the only one not embarrassed by capitalism. And look, there are a lot of Democratic voters who are not Bernie Sanders.

Speaker 29 You know, those people are going to, I think, look at some, some, the voters, not the candidates, the voters are going to look at that and say, well, at least somebody's saying, you know, like maybe we should be able to keep our own health care.

Speaker 106 Do you remember when they asked, anybody here, you know,

Speaker 47 like socialism or, you know, want to

Speaker 65 stick up for capitalism?

Speaker 29 Nobody. It was only Klobuchar, right?

Speaker 132 Klobuchar was. One.

Speaker 47 Raiser Raiserhand for capitalism.

Speaker 44 One.

Speaker 9 Boy, there seemed to be

Speaker 18 a lot of

Speaker 48 talk about socialism and capitalism.

Speaker 45 The audience last night,

Speaker 133 they weren't capitalists.

Speaker 165 No, do they stack that?

Speaker 48 No, these are just the.

Speaker 165 That's just amazing. Isn't it?

Speaker 79 It's amazing that so many...

Speaker 139 I mean, this is just the audience.

Speaker 165 So you would think rank and file Democrats, right, piling in to see this. And none of them applaud capitalism.

Speaker 55 None of them like capitalism. So

Speaker 25 let's play those.

Speaker 54 Could we play the

Speaker 141 cut 10, the weak applause for capitalism?

Speaker 171 I believe in capitalism, but I think the goal of someone in government,

Speaker 101 president of the United States, should be a check.

Speaker 69 One of them was Bloomberg, I think.

Speaker 4 I think so.

Speaker 62 He was like,

Speaker 49 I believe in capitalism.

Speaker 23 Yep.

Speaker 49 Wow.

Speaker 45 Amy, it is a good thing you brought your husband and Bloomberg was there.

Speaker 73 Now, listen to this.

Speaker 65 Bloomberg says throwing out capitalism would get Trump re-elected because communism doesn't work.

Speaker 124 Listen to this.

Speaker 43 Booze for capitalism.

Speaker 89 I can't think of ways that would make it easier for Donald Trump to get it re-elected than listening to this conversation.

Speaker 89 It's ridiculous.

Speaker 171 We're not going to throw out capitalism.

Speaker 89 We tried that. Other countries tried that.
It was called communism, and it just didn't work.

Speaker 4 Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa.

Speaker 166 You're stepping on my toes now.

Speaker 53 It worked great.

Speaker 55 You should have seen the chandeliers and the subways there in Russia.

Speaker 4 Beautiful.

Speaker 24 Beautiful.

Speaker 29 Again, I thought that was another pretty good moment for

Speaker 59 not in the primary.

Speaker 29 I don't know. I think, again, he's not trying to get Bernie voters, right? He's trying to get Biden voters.

Speaker 29 He's trying to get people who are like Klobuchar, Booge Edge, whatever this moderate lane supposedly is.

Speaker 29 And I think there's a good chunk of Democratic voters who want the big programs, who want gay marriage and all those sorts of things, but don't want capitalism destroyed.

Speaker 29 There is a contingency of Democratic voters who do that.

Speaker 92 None of them were there last night, but there is.

Speaker 4 They're not there.

Speaker 29 They did not show up for the night.

Speaker 165 I mean, you still hope that people in Middle America, right? Democrats in Nebraska still believe in the capitalist system.

Speaker 45 You would hope.

Speaker 4 Yeah, remember, I'm not sure it's true, though.

Speaker 13 I'm not. I don't see a lot of evidence of it.

Speaker 29 They did that whole test of what would you feel comfortable voting for. And, you know, there was gay president, Muslim president.
The least popular one on the entire thing was socialist.

Speaker 29 I mean, again, I think it's still a very naked word.

Speaker 166 No, no, no.

Speaker 172 74% were okay with it.

Speaker 165 Right? Is that not...

Speaker 83 No, not this poll Louise.

Speaker 165 It was 47% overall, but I believe 74% of Democrats would vote for a socialist.

Speaker 29 Well, let's just take that on its face, right? So 26% are not comfortable voting for them at all.

Speaker 29 That's enough to lead the pack in the field right now, if you get those people. Now, look, you still have to get some of the other people, too, to win the nomination at the end of the day.

Speaker 29 But with a divided field like that, he's the only one who seems brave enough to step out. And Klobuchar to some degree did this, but brave enough to stand up and just say, look, yeah, capitalism.

Speaker 132 It's hard to hide when he gets $64 billion.

Speaker 132 He has to hit it.

Speaker 29 It's difficult to hide, yeah.

Speaker 169 But even he has to apologize for his wealth by saying he's giving it all away.

Speaker 67 You're not giving it all away.

Speaker 104 What are you talking about?

Speaker 29 He signed the giving pledge, didn't he?

Speaker 151 Yeah, yeah, which is

Speaker 16 still Gates did this.

Speaker 29 One thing he's bad at is giving it away, apparently.

Speaker 29 And by the way, he's.

Speaker 119 He gives it away every time he buys a new house.

Speaker 135 No, he is.

Speaker 29 I mean, look, he's given a fortune to largely hardcore left-wing causes, including anti-gun causes

Speaker 29 that are far to the left of even where Bernie Sanders is. So this guy's no conservative.
He's no moderate.

Speaker 29 He just has the ability to actually say, hey, the entire economic system of this country shouldn't be torn down tomorrow.

Speaker 5 This is what's crazy. This is what's crazy.

Speaker 168 He,

Speaker 107 the Overton window, is in the Soviet Union

Speaker 5 to where Bloomberg looks like he's a moderate.

Speaker 29 Crazy.

Speaker 86 The guy is a totalitarian autocrat that is what he is he's an absolute extremist on the second amendment he's a

Speaker 50 climate change and have you noticed has anybody noticed how everyone is now starting to talk about everything in the constitution like you know we should re-examine that i mean you know maybe we should have term limits on uh on the uh on the supreme court you know and we should get rid of the electoral college and the second amendment doesn't work and maybe we should look at the first amendment this is the longest running constitution in the history of all mankind and it is producing the greatest period of freedom and wealth and health the world has ever seen and suddenly everybody's talking about maybe we should crack that thing open no

Speaker 41 no what do you say we return to the constitution what do you say we start using it from time to time you know we used to make fun of and i apologize we used to make fun of those people that carried the Pocket Constitution around with them.

Speaker 77 We're like, oh, he's got the Pocket Constitution.

Speaker 56 Why don't I read the Constitution?

Speaker 17 Yeah, okay, buddy.

Speaker 7 Thank you for carrying the Pocket Constitution around.

Speaker 97 Thank you.

Speaker 139 Thank you.

Speaker 22 They were right.

Speaker 54 They were right.

Speaker 5 We got so lost.

Speaker 157 And now we're to the point to.

Speaker 168 Okay.

Speaker 151 Sorry, I've just got so much processing in my head right now, and I'm so,

Speaker 95 I'm on the edge. Today is the day.

Speaker 9 Do I look bloated?

Speaker 173 Do I look bloated? I've been talking about that.

Speaker 4 Yeah, but that's been every day.

Speaker 150 I just thought that was

Speaker 150 normal.

Speaker 86 It's been typical.

Speaker 4 No, no, I think I'm cycling years.

Speaker 133 I think I'm cycling.

Speaker 62 Here's the thing.

Speaker 162 Here's the thing.

Speaker 54 How do you get people

Speaker 59 to buy in to

Speaker 63 Nazism,

Speaker 53 communism?

Speaker 115 How do you do it?

Speaker 32 Hitler said you got to create the biggest lies.

Speaker 23 The bigger the lie, the more easy it is.

Speaker 63 And it's the small ones that are hard. That never made sense to me.

Speaker 24 Well, let's see.

Speaker 8 How many Americans right now,

Speaker 5 especially the youth, where it always comes from, especially the youth, will say, yes, a man can have a baby.

Speaker 40 Yes, a man can have his period. No, he can't.

Speaker 5 If you're bleeding downstairs, go see a doctor.

Speaker 135 Okay?

Speaker 5 If you're a dude and every month you got blood shooting out of you, see a freaking doctor.

Speaker 62 Something's wrong.

Speaker 5 But how many people are willing to say that?

Speaker 49 If they can get you to say something that you know absolutely, positively cannot ever happen,

Speaker 41 that a man cannot have a baby.

Speaker 5 You could put a a baby in a man, but he ain't pushing it through his pee-pee.

Speaker 135 I don't know how you keep it alive.

Speaker 14 Thank you for using the technical term. Thank you.

Speaker 159 Thank you.

Speaker 105 I appreciate that.

Speaker 41 No man is menstruating today.

Speaker 54 And if you think so, you need to see a doctor as well.

Speaker 81 But how many of us have already accepted that lie?

Speaker 109 If they can get you to say that,

Speaker 5 or to be afraid to say,

Speaker 40 excuse me, dummy, no,

Speaker 109 if you are afraid to say that,

Speaker 5 they just got you to deny something you know absolutely positively, scientifically, no questions asked.

Speaker 55 You are now either staying silent or you are agreeing with it.

Speaker 67 And that's without putting the rat cage on your head.

Speaker 14 Exactly right.

Speaker 159 Like in 1984.

Speaker 30 What do you think they can do?

Speaker 54 So easy.

Speaker 18 What lies will you tell in your life if you're willing to go there first?

Speaker 117 all right sorry i'm cycling today i'm

Speaker 25 i'm what hey guys can have periods too

Speaker 4 can they

Speaker 13 no

Speaker 13 all right our sponsor this half hour is uh my patriot supply Emergencies seem to happen overnight.

Speaker 32 One minute, everything's running normally.

Speaker 18 The next minute, the whole world can go upside down.

Speaker 114 Let me ask you this.

Speaker 104 If the city you lived in were suddenly quarantined, God forbid this happens, but we are looking, if you watched the special last night, we are looking at the possibility of

Speaker 48 30 to 60% of the globe having the coronavirus.

Speaker 69 That's remarkable.

Speaker 43 What happens?

Speaker 11 when things start to break down.

Speaker 174 Let's say you're not even quarantined.

Speaker 8 What happens when this whole thing breaks down in China and you're not getting supplies on the shelves?

Speaker 122 Or if your town has to be quarantined?

Speaker 125 The stores close.

Speaker 33 Do you have food? Are you prepared?

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Speaker 66 You need to be prepared.

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Speaker 46 That's preparewithglen.com.

Speaker 4 Don't wait.

Speaker 51 You're listening to Glenn Beck.

Speaker 93 Could I go to audio cut number five, please?

Speaker 114 Sanders disowning a few supporters.

Speaker 24 Listen to this.

Speaker 90 We have over 10.6 million people on Twitter, and 99.9%

Speaker 90 of them are decent human beings, are working people, are people who believe in justice, compassion, and love.

Speaker 90 And if there are a few people who make ugly remarks, who attack trade union leaders, I disown those people. They are not part of our movement.

Speaker 24 Not true.

Speaker 99 And I will prove it to you next Wednesday on the Wednesday night special.

Speaker 123 Not true at all.

Speaker 65 I wish it were.

Speaker 36 I really do. I wish it were.

Speaker 119 We are headed for, I mean, Stu just said to me when we went into the commercial break, he said, this is astounding.

Speaker 117 And I said, it's like half the country has gone mad.

Speaker 161 And,

Speaker 94 you know, they think we've gone mad.

Speaker 130 And I don't know.

Speaker 103 maybe we have.

Speaker 73 I would just like to return to the Constitution.

Speaker 64 I'd like everybody to be free.

Speaker 150 I'd like you to live your life the way you want to live your life.

Speaker 33 Be who you are.

Speaker 81 Don't force me into anything.

Speaker 7 Stop with all of this,

Speaker 81 just all of this re-education and remapping of the entire world.

Speaker 86 I'm just tired of it.

Speaker 99 But I think the Democrats are running hard in that that direction.

Speaker 43 I hope that it will be a big loss for them.

Speaker 164 But here's the problem.

Speaker 74 Most of our kids don't know what America is.

Speaker 140 They don't know.

Speaker 16 I mean, you might remember what America was like before 9-11, but they certainly don't.

Speaker 123 And what they're learning in school is not what you learned in school.

Speaker 164 If you were lucky, if you were lucky, it might be two generations since real principles were actually taught in this country.

Speaker 2 And we've lost our way.

Speaker 117 And that's one reason why I'm doing Restoring the Covenant in Gettysburg this summer.

Speaker 11 It's a three-day event.

Speaker 93 It'll start on Friday afternoon.

Speaker 20 We've got,

Speaker 76 you know, speakers that are going to be coming, and they're going to be talking about, you know, Abraham Lincoln, the covenant, America.

Speaker 32 I hope Mike Lee is going to be there speaking a little bit on the Constitution and teaching about that.

Speaker 65 We're going to really go through all of it, and then we're just going to have the best Fourth of July you've ever seen that really truly celebrates America and teaches about what America is.

Speaker 81 It's an Independence Day celebration, not 4th of July.

Speaker 65 It just happens to be on the 4th of July in Gettysburg.

Speaker 117 Go to Glenbeck.com and look for Restoring the Covenant.

Speaker 78 Restoring the Covenant, the next in our restoring series in Gettysburg this weekend.

Speaker 84 You've got to make your reservations now.

Speaker 13 Find out all of the information at Glennbeck.com.

Speaker 51 You're listening to Glenn Beck.

Speaker 60 Every night, local police departments across America receive hundreds of calls from burglar alarms.

Speaker 92 And the vast majority of time, they have no idea whether that alarm is real. Is there really a crime going on or not? And the alarm company can't tell them.

Speaker 60 All they say is, you know, a motion sensor went off.

Speaker 92 Simply Safe Home home security however is different if there's a break-in simply safe uses real video evidence to give police an eyewitness account of the crime that means police dispatch up to 350 times faster than for a normal burglar alarm you get comprehensive protection outdoor cameras doorbells that alert you anyone approaching your home entry motion glass brake sensors 24 7 monitoring by live security professionals and you can set up the system you own yourself.

Speaker 60 No tools needed.

Speaker 61 It's SimplySafe.

Speaker 40 It's 50 cents a day without without a contract.

Speaker 175 Simplysafe.com slash Glenn.

Speaker 61 Go there today and get a free SimplySafe security camera, normally $100.

Speaker 143 Order today.

Speaker 54 You get it free.

Speaker 36 It'll help you capture that crucial evidence for the police and you'll get 350% faster dispatch.

Speaker 65 It's simply safe.com slash Glenn.

Speaker 103 Oh, thank you so much, Hillary.

Speaker 164 I can't wait for the next hour of the program.

Speaker 113 Because if you thought last hour was crazy on what the Democrats are saying,

Speaker 34 wait until you hear the next hour.

Speaker 138 It's fantastic.

Speaker 14 Welcome to the program.

Speaker 37 And, Stu, great show.

Speaker 9 You did a great show last night.

Speaker 87 Thank you.

Speaker 8 And you're doing tonight, you're talking about,

Speaker 104 what was it?

Speaker 105 I want to say the Constitution. It's not.

Speaker 45 It's the pardons in the Constitution.

Speaker 29 We did pardons last night.

Speaker 45 What was it last night? Yes.

Speaker 29 Tonight, we are going to do the chaos in the Democratic primary.

Speaker 24 Outright.

Speaker 29 Which is just, it's incredible.

Speaker 29 You know, here's these group of people who say they want a national national popular vote because the Electoral College is just like, it's set up for other things and it's too complicated.

Speaker 29 When they had a chance to design their own system from scratch and pick their nominee, what do they do?

Speaker 29 They came up with a pro, you know, you've got primaries, you've got caucuses, you've got delegates, you've got super delegates, you have statewide delegate equivalents,

Speaker 29 you have

Speaker 158 viability restrictions.

Speaker 29 You should see the math they have to do to try to figure this stuff out. It's embarrassing.

Speaker 45 And by the way, just so you know,

Speaker 48 Buddha Judge leads in delegates, but not the popular vote.

Speaker 14 I just want to pull it out.

Speaker 53 Shocking.

Speaker 53 The fusion of entertainment and enlightenment.

Speaker 84 Hello, America.

Speaker 87 If you missed the debate last night, well, here's what you missed.

Speaker 117 Could you please play audio cut number one

Speaker 45 from last night?

Speaker 30 This is

Speaker 39 really what it was all about.

Speaker 52 Let me not blow it out.

Speaker 52 I will.

Speaker 62 Name check three of them.

Speaker 52 Let me get Senator Sanders.

Speaker 14 Okay.

Speaker 1 Go ahead, Senator Sanders.

Speaker 87 It was absolute chaos last night.

Speaker 53 Hey.

Speaker 85 wow, that's weird.

Speaker 74 Chaos coming from a bunch of socialists, anarchists, Democrats?

Speaker 144 No.

Speaker 4 Details next.

Speaker 51 Is the Glenbeck program?

Speaker 60 All right, so there's dumb criminals out there.

Speaker 32 In fact, let me give you.

Speaker 104 I've been waiting to give you this story for a while.

Speaker 163 Florida man.

Speaker 15 You know, it's always, have you ever checked your Florida man birthday?

Speaker 4 Have you done that?

Speaker 163 Look up the date, just put in a Florida man,

Speaker 17 and then put your date.

Speaker 81 I think the day of my birthday, I get a Florida man eaten by a crocodile or something like that.

Speaker 76 But there's this whole service, a Florida Man, where you put your birthday in and you find out what a headline is on your birthday.

Speaker 39 Do you see it?

Speaker 29 Is it a specific site, or am I to have anything set to Google?

Speaker 134 No, I think it's a specific site, but

Speaker 133 I'll find out.

Speaker 124 I have to call my son.

Speaker 21 He did it to me the other day, and I'm like, you've got to be kidding me.

Speaker 38 Anyway, the story starts.

Speaker 5 A Florida man gets naked to escape to a DeLan store.

Speaker 87 Police found him running out of the store naked, and the officers shot him with a taser,

Speaker 94 only in Florida.

Speaker 7 Here's the problem:

Speaker 61 he was pinned to the ground

Speaker 103 and being held because ribeyes kept falling out of his pants.

Speaker 29 What was he going to use pants for?

Speaker 132 Right? You saw your ribeyes there.

Speaker 14 Right.

Speaker 34 And so the ribeyes were falling out of his pants, and they're like, hey, dude, are you stealing meat?

Speaker 71 He's like, I don't know what you're talking about.

Speaker 114 Were the ribeyes coming out of his pants?

Speaker 66 And so they wrestled him to the ground.

Speaker 79 He wiggled out of his clothes somehow or another, completely butt-naked

Speaker 16 and tasered by the police in the parking lot.

Speaker 42 Some days you just want to live in Florida.

Speaker 87 So we all know that criminals are stupid and they probably outnumber outnumber the smart criminals by a vast percentage.

Speaker 16 But on the other hand, even dub criminals don't want to get caught and will often avoid, for example, breaking into a home or into a store looking for ribeyes.

Speaker 22 Especially if it's during the day or if there's a burglar alarm.

Speaker 103 Two out of five houses in the United States have a security system.

Speaker 22 Two. So why bother with those two?

Speaker 156 Go for the three.

Speaker 74 When police talk to burglars and ask them why they picked a certain house it's usually just because they were in that area and that one didn't have a burglar alarm right now you can get simply safe state-of-the-art system and 24-hour round-the-clock monitoring not only easy to set up but they can set it up for you if you want that's affordable it's 50 cents a day 50 cents a day now you own the system

Speaker 25 and if you want the monitoring It's 50 cents a day.

Speaker 83 But when you see the price of the actual system, it will blow you away on how badly you've been ripped off your whole life if you ever had any other kind of security system.

Speaker 131 Because this is all state-of-the-art technology, and only SimplySafe has it.

Speaker 64 And SimplySafe is the only one also that will help capture crucial evidence for the police and get the police to dispatch a car to your house if there is some problem 350% faster at simplysafebeck.com.

Speaker 5 That's simply safebeck.com.

Speaker 2 Let me give you a couple of highlights.

Speaker 86 Just give you a look.

Speaker 20 One of the highlights here is Elizabeth Warren in last night's debate.

Speaker 100 I like to talk about who we're running against. A billionaire who calls women fat broads and horse-faced lesbians.
And no, I'm not talking about Donald Trump. I'm talking about Mayor Bloomberg.

Speaker 39 I loved that.

Speaker 29 I I loved that.

Speaker 104 She was awake last night. She was.
Elizabeth.

Speaker 76 She had

Speaker 76 the chamomile didn't put her to sleep

Speaker 66 before the debate.

Speaker 147 And she was the unity candidate.

Speaker 37 Remember, she's the one in all of the debates saying, I don't want to talk ill about anybody else.

Speaker 99 She went for his throat.

Speaker 29 It does seem like she gave up on that. Oh, yeah.
Because there was this idea that she was going to be the left-wing candidate. Bernie kind of took that back.

Speaker 29 She decided going into New Hampshire and Iowa that she would be the unity candidate. That failed miserably.
Now she's back to the fighter again.

Speaker 7 That's the new profile. So

Speaker 137 a billionaire who calls women fat broads and horse-faced lesbians.

Speaker 130 Now,

Speaker 71 she must be quoting, right?

Speaker 29 She'll just make that up.

Speaker 71 Couldn't make that up.

Speaker 29 I assumed, although I did not know the quote from Bloomberg on horse-faced lesbians.

Speaker 7 So I looked it up.

Speaker 29 Was she insulting lesbians? What? Why did she include lesbians in the quote?

Speaker 86 Because he...

Speaker 132 included lesbians. Well, he probably

Speaker 29 included other words, too. She didn't include those.

Speaker 48 Well, he did, and she should have.

Speaker 4 Really?

Speaker 8 I mean, to say a guy, a billionaire who calls fat women fat broads and horse-faced lesbians

Speaker 26 is not the whole quote.

Speaker 14 Do we have the whole quote?

Speaker 28 I have the whole quote.

Speaker 14 The whole quote.

Speaker 4 Can we hear the whole quote on the radio? No.

Speaker 28 The whole quote.

Speaker 95 I know. That would make it just too delicious.

Speaker 87 The whole quote comes from a book written by Eleanor Randolph entitled The Many Lives of Michael Bloomberg.

Speaker 36 It was released last year.

Speaker 95 And

Speaker 11 he was talking about the royal family in Great Britain.

Speaker 168 Okay.

Speaker 87 And he said, the British royal family, what a bunch of misfits.

Speaker 23 A gay,

Speaker 18 a gay,

Speaker 80 an architect, that horsey-faced lesbian, and a kid who gave up Koo Stark for some fat broad.

Speaker 29 There you go.

Speaker 58 this is like having your grandpa this is like having this is like running your grandfather and i don't even mean donald trump as your grand grand donald trump was the guy on the bar stool at the end of the bar who would just blurt things out okay this is your grandfather who you're like grandpa don't say those things right don't no no no no don't say those things out loud i mean this is The British royal family.

Speaker 10 What a bunch of misfits.

Speaker 55 A gay, an architect, that horsey-faced lesbian, and a kid who gave up Coustark for some fat broth.

Speaker 166 Unbelievable.

Speaker 29 I'm concerned, too. What does he have against architects?

Speaker 4 I don't know.

Speaker 4 It's a weird one, isn't it?

Speaker 62 And an architect.

Speaker 4 Yeah, these architects are all over the place.

Speaker 54 So I want to know who's the gay one.

Speaker 22 Who's the architect?

Speaker 120 Who's the horsey-faced lesbian?

Speaker 5 And who gave up Coo Stark for some fat broad?

Speaker 162 Now, isn't it

Speaker 29 Camilla? Camilla is the one I've heard other places also called the horseface.

Speaker 23 Is she a lesbian?

Speaker 29 She's married.

Speaker 95 She's married to...

Speaker 29 I don't know. I don't

Speaker 63 think so.

Speaker 85 But you're right.

Speaker 5 The one that sticks out here, one of these things just doesn't belong, is the architect.

Speaker 170 Yeah.

Speaker 57 What a bunch of misfits. There's an architect in that family.
These bastards designing facilities.

Speaker 166 I build my buildings without architects.

Speaker 53 I sketch them on napkins and they build them exactly like that.

Speaker 58 You build a building with an architect.

Speaker 55 Next thing you know, you'll be gay.

Speaker 168 What?

Speaker 4 These bastards looking at these load-bearing walls.

Speaker 4 Wait, what?

Speaker 30 I don't even understand.

Speaker 23 I understand all of them.

Speaker 55 I guess.

Speaker 5 I just don't get the architect one.

Speaker 133 You're right.

Speaker 57 Well, I draw my buildings on napkins.

Speaker 52 If they're squiggly lines, they build squiggly walls.

Speaker 57 That's how it works.

Speaker 55 You haven't seen the Seattle Music Center?

Speaker 59 That was me and a drunk night with a napkin.

Speaker 62 Just a weird attack.

Speaker 124 It really is.

Speaker 166 I don't.

Speaker 5 Fat broads, horsey-faced lesbians, a gay, a bunch of misfits, and an architect.

Speaker 55 It's like, you know what that is?

Speaker 59 That's Gilligan's Island, and the architect is Marianne.

Speaker 79 Like, how the hell did I get on?

Speaker 4 Why am I here?

Speaker 29 Although, a bunch of misfits and an architect is a solid band name. It really is.

Speaker 76 It would be good.

Speaker 53 That wouldn't be bad.

Speaker 32 You know, maybe we should remake Gilligan's Island with that.

Speaker 25 A gay, an architect, that horsey-faced lesbian,

Speaker 120 and the kid who gave up Coustark for some fat, broad.

Speaker 168 So weird.

Speaker 139 It just seems like such a random thing.

Speaker 76 It's like he's just, it's like, you're going to throw like actuary in next.

Speaker 4 It's like,

Speaker 4 and a garbage man.

Speaker 167 These actuaries.

Speaker 55 Next thing you'll know, salesman, you'll have somebody that worked at Home Depot.

Speaker 62 What the hell is wrong with these people?

Speaker 52 I don't understand it.

Speaker 29 That's an interesting one. And she didn't bring up the the architecture in her interview.

Speaker 52 She didn't.

Speaker 2 Well, she is pro-architect, I hear.

Speaker 83 Yeah. Oh, really? Yeah.

Speaker 4 That's how it is in her family.

Speaker 4 It is in her family.

Speaker 28 They have apparently no problem with architects.

Speaker 136 Here's how

Speaker 13 these are the people that you are now surrounding yourself around,

Speaker 7 Democrats.

Speaker 121 These are the people that you say our children should look up to.

Speaker 19 That,

Speaker 83 and I know, Donald Trump, I get it.

Speaker 81 Believe me, I get it.

Speaker 155 But that's a one-off.

Speaker 123 That's an anomaly.

Speaker 21 And that's a response, honestly, to all of the big government people who have not been listening.

Speaker 73 And I don't mean just the Democrats.

Speaker 48 I mean the Republicans, too.

Speaker 34 The reason why Donald Trump was elected was not because that's who we are.

Speaker 63 You know, that's not who we are.

Speaker 5 He's the first guy that was listening to America that said, yeah, you know what they're really sick of?

Speaker 6 They're really sick of,

Speaker 83 you know, you guys, all of this corruption, all of this backroom dealing, all of this, you know, oh, we're going to do it, and then you never do it.

Speaker 5 That's really

Speaker 78 why he was elected.

Speaker 63 If you don't get that now, you never will.

Speaker 113 But what you're putting up are people that are ideological.

Speaker 142 Well, they belong in the royal family.

Speaker 120 It's a group of misfits.

Speaker 137 And even Santa, in the end, he took that.

Speaker 70 Yeah, sure.

Speaker 134 You see the Christmas special.

Speaker 173 He's like, oh, okay.

Speaker 166 Charlie in the box.

Speaker 133 Get in. Why?

Speaker 53 Nobody wants a Charlie in the box.

Speaker 132 And he flies away.

Speaker 13 What you don't see is he dumps that bag in the middle of the ocean.

Speaker 105 Nobody wants the misfit toys.

Speaker 104 Nobody.

Speaker 85 A squirt gun that squirts jelly in the bottom of the ocean right now.

Speaker 122 That's where it's laying.

Speaker 164 That's your destiny with this group of misfits.

Speaker 108 And it's not just the people, it's the people that they are attracting.

Speaker 5 Listen to this.

Speaker 63 This is Joe Biden

Speaker 81 giving his

Speaker 125 final thoughts at the debate and being interrupted.

Speaker 91 Listen. I'm running because so many people are...

Speaker 91 Look at him. He's like, I don't know what it's continuing.

Speaker 171 Please give us a moment.

Speaker 91 We'll clear the room and let the...

Speaker 45 Congratulations, Democrats.

Speaker 37 Congratulations.

Speaker 56 I know I want our government run by these people.

Speaker 67 I can't imagine how great life will be when that's the way we deal with everything.

Speaker 29 It's on the way.

Speaker 2 It's on the way. It's on the way.

Speaker 29 It's on the way. It's being served on a silver platter right now by the Democratic Party, who, who, you know,

Speaker 29 if Sanders does what everyone is expecting him to do, and, you know, the overwhelming, you know, the odds seem to range between two-thirds and 80% chance he's going to win Nevada. He wins that.

Speaker 14 I mean, he is the overwhelming frontrunner.

Speaker 29 You saw Bloomberg last night. I mean, like, you know, Bloomberg was the, as you always point out, the unnamed Democrat, right? Or unnamed Republican.
He's the unnamed Democrat. He's sitting there.

Speaker 29 He's been running ads. He's never really been criticized.
He was kind of like this.

Speaker 4 He's the backup.

Speaker 32 He doesn't really know him outside of the image of the ads.

Speaker 41 Yeah.

Speaker 29 And now you've seen him, and this is who he is. This is who he's always been.
He's not a good candidate. He's not a good guy.

Speaker 29 He's got a lot of money, and that will help smooth over some of those edges, but he's not a good candidate. So who do you have? I mean, this gets passed.

Speaker 29 If Sanders wins the next couple states, which he could, he could, then, you know, it's his.

Speaker 169 It could be his. It's his or Bloomberg.

Speaker 29 And at that point, it's just him or Bloomberg. That's it.
Because Biden will be toast. Budigej will be toast.
These guys are getting going to be gone. And let me tell you something.

Speaker 55 Biden said last week, you know, we're going to win this thing.

Speaker 67 Quote, I'll be damned if we're going to lose this nomination.

Speaker 52 Yes, you will be.

Speaker 166 Right now, that's all I heard in my head when he said that was, yes, yes.

Speaker 167 if that's what you need to make it official, I'll see you in November.

Speaker 7 All right, our sponsor this half hour is Life Lock.

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Speaker 11 We break for 10 seconds.

Speaker 117 Station ID.

Speaker 117 Hey, is that Joe Biden?

Speaker 117 Hey, Joe.

Speaker 117 How are you doing, buddy?

Speaker 117 Looks like you lost the election.

Speaker 117 Guess you're damned.

Speaker 123 Hey,

Speaker 87 welcome to the Glenbeck program.

Speaker 13 So Klobuchar said last night during the debate, and I want to quote, I have an idea on how we can stop sexism on the internet.

Speaker 67 Just think of that statement alone.

Speaker 126 Okay? You're going to hire that person.

Speaker 5 who thinks that they can stop sexism or any ism on the internet.

Speaker 79 I have an idea of how we could stop sexism on the internet.

Speaker 63 We could nominate a woman for president of the United States.

Speaker 87 Oh my gosh.

Speaker 132 Yeah, that'll do it.

Speaker 144 Right?

Speaker 133 That took us.

Speaker 29 Just like

Speaker 169 Barack Obama stopped racism.

Speaker 53 Exactly right.

Speaker 119 It's really,

Speaker 34 that just was salve on a wound.

Speaker 5 Oh, yeah.

Speaker 164 You can't even see that scar anymore.

Speaker 4 Oh, my God. That is

Speaker 4 crazy.

Speaker 29 And she is not good. You know, it's interesting because you look at her on paper.
you know, she, her electoral record is really solid. I mean, she's outperformed Democrats in multiple election cycles.

Speaker 29 You know, Betto got all this attention for outperforming the average Democrat by a couple points.

Speaker 45 Hang on just a second.

Speaker 46 I just let's just take a second and just let's all just admire Betto's career and his career options right now.

Speaker 104 Guy couldn't even be an architect.

Speaker 53 Bunch of misfits. A gay, a bed-o,

Speaker 168 a horsey-faced.

Speaker 14 Spat brawl over the line by Blueberg.

Speaker 28 If he called him a bedo, that would be.

Speaker 95 How dare you?

Speaker 104 How dare you.

Speaker 29 Yeah, but it's interesting because she's really outperformed the Democrats who've run nationally by a large margin. And you see her performance in these things.
I just don't get it.

Speaker 29 I mean, I guess she's got a decent profile for a Democrat when it comes to centrist policies at some level.

Speaker 103 Everybody's cold in Minnesota.

Speaker 34 Yeah. They're not paying attention.
They're just like, I don't know.

Speaker 13 I'll throw the here, pull that lever.

Speaker 86 I got to get back into the car.

Speaker 57 It's freezing.

Speaker 169 Maybe that's it.

Speaker 29 It's an odd thing, though.

Speaker 118 She's so stilted and

Speaker 105 so

Speaker 29 like bumper sticker slogan-y.

Speaker 29 Everything she says, you can kind of hear her that she's said it into the mirror like 58 times before she walks out on stage.

Speaker 29 And, you know, I guess she had a good performance before New Hampshire and did well. I don't think she did so great last night.
Her and Pete Buttigieg apparently hate each other.

Speaker 29 Seems like they were about to punch each other in the face in the middle of the debate, which was a good thing.

Speaker 7 No, I think they were just going for they're both staking out the same territory.

Speaker 29 Yeah, it's weird. And yet again, who really gets a pass here is Bernie Sanders?

Speaker 29 I mean, Sanders, yeah, he had a little mix-up with Bloomberg, but everyone else on the stage seemed to be on his side for it. No one really takes shots at Sanders.

Speaker 29 He becomes the frontrunner because no one, and the same thing played out in the Republican primary in 2016, right?

Speaker 29 Like Cruz and Rubio and Kasich and all these other secondary candidates sat there and fought with each other for most of the time. And Trump's at like 40% being like, you guys are morons.

Speaker 29 And he cruises to the nomination.

Speaker 29 And it seems like Sanders is in that same position right now.

Speaker 40 Not quite as strong as have you changed.

Speaker 66 We haven't changed the board on the frontrunners.

Speaker 124 No.

Speaker 34 And I know it's not predictive because the frontrunners actually are Pete Buttigiege and Bernie Sanders, but I don't think Buttigiege is.

Speaker 29 Yeah, I think Sanders is probably the only frontrunner right now.

Speaker 5 i'd be anxious to see what happens the next few days after this primary it either killed him bloomberg it either killed him or made him

Speaker 115 don't you think

Speaker 29 usually debates don't have that big of an impact

Speaker 169 you can't have it could have killed him i mean i i it could have also made him if if there's not

Speaker 66 If the majority is looking for someone who can stand up and is tough with Donald Trump, blah, blah, blah, and they're looking for that fighter.

Speaker 68 Yeah.

Speaker 97 It could work.

Speaker 120 It might have worked, but he is so.

Speaker 29 I mean, he's. He's obviously not good.
How do you not have

Speaker 34 everything that they say Donald Trump is times 10?

Speaker 29 How do you not have an answer for the non-disclosure agreement back and forth? Oh, and the

Speaker 162 stop and frisk. How do you not have answers for these things?

Speaker 5 It was like stop and frisk.

Speaker 71 What was that again?

Speaker 13 I didn't like that.

Speaker 23 Everybody's doing that.

Speaker 32 And I did it too. And I sorry.

Speaker 133 It was bizarre.

Speaker 132 Very bizarre. Very bizarre.

Speaker 29 I mean, right now, you'd probably have Sanders as the frontrunner. In the secondary category of a shot, yeah, they've got a shot.
You'd still have, I think, Bloomberg, who's...

Speaker 94 I wouldn't put Biden there anymore.

Speaker 29 You might not. Although, again, Biden's polls have not fallen apart completely.

Speaker 82 Because they haven't. Remember the shoe store? They're shopping for new shoes?

Speaker 72 They got to walk out in the old pair of shoes.

Speaker 53 Well, that's what I mean.

Speaker 34 Keeping that old pair of shoe around just in case they have to walk in that.

Speaker 4 But again, Biden was terrible last time.

Speaker 168 I mean, he is, he just...

Speaker 4 Look, this is not going to happen.

Speaker 29 I don't see how, but he's

Speaker 29 polling is holding up enough that you can't take him out of the race yet. Who to judge who still leads in delegates should probably be in that category, too.

Speaker 13 Leads and delegates, but not in the popular vote. No.

Speaker 117 Oh, Democrats, how could you possibly let that happen?

Speaker 52 You're listening to Glenn Beck.

Speaker 176 American Financing, NMLS, 1-8-2-3-3-4, www.nmlsconsumeraccess.org.

Speaker 36 Owning and managing a home in a Trump economy continues to be much easier to do in, oh, I don't know, some of the previous years.

Speaker 164 The housing market right now, where you can buy a home that is $48,000 more expensive

Speaker 65 than a year ago,

Speaker 40 yet you're still going to pay the same in principle in interest.

Speaker 5 That's a 16% increase in your buying power.

Speaker 122 Not the price of the home, in your buying power.

Speaker 134 And that's because of lower interest rates.

Speaker 99 If you've been thinking about buying a home, now may be the best time you can do it.

Speaker 7 It's that affordable.

Speaker 164 If you're already in a mortgage or maybe you want to refinance, or get a better interest rate, or consolidate some of that debt and start working into a better financial position, you could save up to $1,000 or more.

Speaker 11 So call the mortgage consultants at American Financing.

Speaker 75 In 10 minutes, they can do the mortgage review for you and help you determine what the best course is.

Speaker 124 It's a small amount of time to spend on something that could have a profound effect on your financial life.

Speaker 11 It's American Financing.

Speaker 45 Call them now at 800-906-2440.

Speaker 11 800-906-2440. American Financing.net.

Speaker 29 You're not going to believe the disaster coming in Nevada. We go through that on Stu Does America tonight.
You can subscribe on YouTube and wherever you get your podcasts, rate, and review.

Speaker 73 I am waiting for the arrival of my Scottish assistant, Craig,

Speaker 25 because I want to know who the horsey-faced lesbian is in the royal family.

Speaker 99 And I know he'll know because he,

Speaker 24 like all Scots do, he loves the royal family.

Speaker 33 Oh, really? Loves the royal family.

Speaker 70 I didn't know that. Yo,

Speaker 16 loves them. Oh, that's good to hear.

Speaker 150 Yeah.

Speaker 29 Good to hear there's some unity there. I've heard so many bad things about Brexit.

Speaker 16 How many people are dying there from Brexit-related Brexit?

Speaker 45 Gonorrhea?

Speaker 4 Yeah.

Speaker 29 I mean, basically, they just unleashed all sorts of diseases. I think the coronavirus has to be tied to Brexit in some way.

Speaker 96 Well,

Speaker 14 it wouldn't be surprising. No.

Speaker 28 It wouldn't be surprising.

Speaker 29 Brexit or net neutrality.

Speaker 25 Do you know that they actually were saying, the media over there was actually saying

Speaker 92 that super gonorrhea,

Speaker 37 that's what they're terminating, super gonorrhea.

Speaker 29 Is that a really bad superhero?

Speaker 14 I don't know. I'm super gonorrhea.

Speaker 68 Super gonorrhea would be going around

Speaker 149 because

Speaker 150 of Brexit.

Speaker 68 And so far, we don't have any cases of super gonorrhea being reported, but it's only a matter of time, still.

Speaker 133 Oh, I'm sure. Yeah, it's only a matter of

Speaker 75 healthcare and housing can no longer be divorced, says Governor Gavin Newsom of California.

Speaker 138 Let me just, before I get into this story, let me just say, Californians, run for your freaking lives.

Speaker 87 Things in California, you think they can't get worse?

Speaker 52 Oh, they're about to.

Speaker 7 He said, what's more fundamental to a person's well-being than a roof over their head?

Speaker 74 Doctors, this is in his state of the state address, doctors should be able to write prescriptions for housing the same way they do for insulin and antibiotics.

Speaker 10 Here he is. Listen.

Speaker 177 Healthcare and housing can no longer be divorced. After all, what's more fundamental to a person's well-being than a roof over their head?

Speaker 177 Doctors, doctors should be able to write prescriptions for housing the same way they do for insulin and antibiotics.

Speaker 168 Yeah.

Speaker 18 There you go.

Speaker 87 Californians, they love it.

Speaker 14 Yeah.

Speaker 178 Why not?

Speaker 70 Why not? Why not? Why not?

Speaker 123 Why not?

Speaker 178 That's

Speaker 177 that's the aim of CalAIM.

Speaker 21 That's the the aim of CalAIM.

Speaker 32 Yeah, so Medi-Cal, this is a reform of Medi-Cal.

Speaker 21 It's called CalAim.

Speaker 87 And it's backed now by a $695 million budget request to make this a reality so doctors can prescribe a home to you.

Speaker 156 I wonder if they could...

Speaker 96 Could they prescribe like a yacht?

Speaker 29 That's always good for your well-being.

Speaker 124 It is.

Speaker 34 I mean, can you think of something better than, Doc, you know what would really take me out of these dumps?

Speaker 45 Is a yacht.

Speaker 33 A really big super yacht.

Speaker 92 Big, big, big, big, big one.

Speaker 29 I feel like most people who are on yachts are happy.

Speaker 156 Right? That's the way I believe.

Speaker 104 That's the way I test it.

Speaker 42 Yeah.

Speaker 5 You know, they say money can't buy you happiness.

Speaker 49 Well, but it can buy a yacht.

Speaker 26 And you got $695 million sitting there. And take it from Bill Gates.

Speaker 164 Just take it. Take it.

Speaker 29 Just take it. At some point, he's made enough money.
Right.

Speaker 118 And he didn't build that.

Speaker 83 No.

Speaker 11 Microsoft, that Windows, he stole that.

Speaker 29 That was a great part of the debate last night where Bloomberg was saying, you know, look, I've made a lot of money, built this great company, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.

Speaker 29 And the big comeback from Elizabeth Warren was, I think it was, was it Warren or Sanders? I don't know. Get them confused.
But they said, look, this is...

Speaker 29 Maybe your employees had something to do with that too.

Speaker 29 Well, yeah, that's you get compensated for the work that you do towards that goal.

Speaker 162 Yes, that's how employment works, actually.

Speaker 73 Yeah, but Bernie Sanders, he's demanding that the workers are on the board.

Speaker 144 Yeah.

Speaker 95 So they have.

Speaker 115 Okay.

Speaker 40 Okay, that's not. I just don't know if you know this.

Speaker 63 That's not the way this works.

Speaker 30 No. That's not the way this.

Speaker 157 That's a communist system.

Speaker 48 Sure.

Speaker 22 Sure.

Speaker 47 And it works.

Speaker 37 Have you ever driven a Zill?

Speaker 35 Nobody has because they suck.

Speaker 29 And also because the subways had such a nice chandeliers, they didn't want to drive.

Speaker 4 Right. Right.

Speaker 166 I mean,

Speaker 25 what in any communist country has been taken that you go oh well i mean sure they suck at everything else but i mean besides torture rooms death chambers

Speaker 34 concentration camps what is it that the soviets or any communist country has given the world that you're like oh well you got to give them this

Speaker 4 go ahead

Speaker 29 Invasions.

Speaker 29 A lot of invasions. Invasion.
Imprisonment.

Speaker 34 Yeah, that's the death camp thing, the concentration camps.

Speaker 48 True.

Speaker 4 Got that.

Speaker 8 Got one thing that was good.

Speaker 11 Vodka.

Speaker 159 Lots of vodka.

Speaker 160 They've had that forever.

Speaker 29 That's true. But they produced it while they were also communist.

Speaker 7 It got worse.

Speaker 147 Yeah, but they also made babies.

Speaker 53 I mean, it's true.

Speaker 34 It's not a communist thing.

Speaker 99 You know what?

Speaker 114 Melania Trump.

Speaker 5 She does come from a communist country.

Speaker 79 She does.

Speaker 29 She was born in

Speaker 30 Slovenia.

Speaker 34 Now, I don't know if that's something that they're going to want to give communists credit for.

Speaker 144 Oh, probably not. Well, they might.
I don't know.

Speaker 41 There's one thing the communists made that

Speaker 175 turned out pretty nice.

Speaker 29 The largest nuclear weapon ever tested.

Speaker 169 Zarbamba. Okay.

Speaker 115 Mm-hmm.

Speaker 39 Zarbamba. Zarbamba.

Speaker 29 Yeah. Oh, my gosh.
Have you ever seen the footage of it?

Speaker 73 No.

Speaker 104 You've got to see this. No.

Speaker 29 It's like.

Speaker 30 Oh, God.

Speaker 124 I got to get it.

Speaker 124 Somebody pull it up so we can see it on the screen.

Speaker 29 It's so big. I mean, it was like, they just, they dropped it on some island.

Speaker 29 It was a lot bigger.

Speaker 5 Okay, so I think that fits into the category of death.

Speaker 173 Yeah.

Speaker 29 It was 50 megatons of TNT equivalent. 50 megatons.
It was a 60,000-pound bomb.

Speaker 29 It was by far the largest ever tested.

Speaker 14 Is this a hydrogen bomb or just a regular bomb?

Speaker 29 It was. It was a nuclear weapon.
It was, let's see, the most powerful nuclear weapon ever created.

Speaker 29 Tested on October 30th, 1961, as an experimental verification of calculation principles and multi-stage thermonuclear weapon designs. It remains the most powerful human-made explosive ever detonated.

Speaker 29 They dropped it over

Speaker 29 an island. The detonation was secret, but shockingly was detected.

Speaker 4 What? I didn't hear anything.

Speaker 14 What? What are you talking about?

Speaker 55 That flash in the sky.

Speaker 38 Somebody was taking a picture or something.

Speaker 96 What?

Speaker 5 He's blind from it?

Speaker 7 Very powerful flash bulb.

Speaker 42 Yeah, it was very, I mean,

Speaker 29 it was very, very, very large. And

Speaker 29 it created some issues over time, but it was

Speaker 29 much, much larger than any other

Speaker 29 test.

Speaker 29 Or certainly that were actually dropped on anybody.

Speaker 29 It was a big deal. But again, they gave us that.
They gave us some super great footage.

Speaker 25 Well, they're also giving Bernie Sanders a problem because Bernie Sanders said last night in the debate that,

Speaker 147 you know, his people are good people.

Speaker 9 His people are good people.

Speaker 84 And those attack

Speaker 73 from Bernie supporters, you know, the Bernie bros,

Speaker 103 they're not, he says they're Russians.

Speaker 25 He says those are Russian bots.

Speaker 71 And Russians that are posing as his supporters.

Speaker 163 I got news for you, Bernie.

Speaker 131 Anybody

Speaker 48 in Russia that would like to destroy America is rooting for you, dude.

Speaker 73 I mean, this is everything they ever predicted.

Speaker 134 This is it.

Speaker 34 Marx, I think was it Marx or Lenin that came out and said,

Speaker 124 this is how it ends.

Speaker 111 America will have the iconic capitalist,

Speaker 147 the flashy, you know, I think he said grotesque capitalist.

Speaker 21 And he will become in charge, and it will be so horrible for the masses.

Speaker 53 That hasn't worked out so far, that they will reject him.

Speaker 99 And the next person that will be voted in will be a communist.

Speaker 4 Wow,

Speaker 132 it's quite a prediction.

Speaker 133 It's quite a prediction.

Speaker 29 Here's the details on this: October 31st, 1961. The blast 3,000 times as strong as the bomb used on Hiroshima.

Speaker 162 3,000 times.

Speaker 34 But it's only 3,000 times.

Speaker 29 It broke windows 560 miles away.

Speaker 88 500.

Speaker 53 And did they expect not to have anybody notice this?

Speaker 169 I guess not.

Speaker 29 The flash of light from the blast was visible up to 620 miles away. Oh my gosh.
The tests had a yield between 50 and 58 megatons, twice the size of the second largest nuclear blast.

Speaker 29 A bomb of this size would create a fireball 6.4 square miles.

Speaker 29 And would be able to give humans third-degree burns within 4,080 square miles of the bombs epicenter.

Speaker 168 Holy crap.

Speaker 136 What?

Speaker 169 That's a bomb right there.

Speaker 29 That is a bomb. See, communists.

Speaker 8 How do we get the bad name for the bombs?

Speaker 30 Well, we did drop them on the kill cities

Speaker 4 who was part of the bomb.

Speaker 4 Yeah, all right.

Speaker 168 Okay.

Speaker 166 You want to get that technicality.

Speaker 53 Yeah.

Speaker 62 Yes.

Speaker 133 That might be what they did it on an island.

Speaker 76 Yeah, there weren't people.

Speaker 3 There. You sure?

Speaker 166 No, you know what? No, I'm not with the Soviets.

Speaker 168 No, I'm not. Okay.

Speaker 55 All right.

Speaker 97 So there's every chance this November we as a country are going to have to pick between our current president with all of his flaws and everything else and a full-fledged communist.

Speaker 138 You're going to need to vote because your contribution matters sometimes more than you know.

Speaker 103 You can't control where your money is going all the time.

Speaker 83 But when you can, you should.

Speaker 33 Right now, if you are with any of these major cell companies, Most of them have far-left extremists on the board of directors, and and they are funneling money into things like Planned Parenthood, anti-Second Amendment, really anti-First Amendment kind of stuff.

Speaker 137 And enough is enough.

Speaker 113 You have a choice.

Speaker 7 I so want Patriot Mobile to make a commercial where

Speaker 73 the guy is just standing there and he's canceling his subscription and he's signing up for Patriot Mobile because they're funding abortion.

Speaker 156 And all he just says is, hey, Verizon, ATT, Sprint, all you guys.

Speaker 41 Can you hear me now?

Speaker 5 Can you hear me now?

Speaker 80 I don't want any of that stuff.

Speaker 6 And I finally have a choice.

Speaker 65 Let them hear your voice.

Speaker 8 Crystal clear, same great reception.

Speaker 103 You're going to have the same coverage that you had.

Speaker 36 Really, really good customer call service.

Speaker 81 And you'll get a free gift when you open a new line, free activation when you use the offer code BECK.

Speaker 74 It's patriotmobile.com/slash back.

Speaker 46 That's patriotmobile.com/slash back.

Speaker 51 You're listening to Glenn Beck.

Speaker 28 So

Speaker 104 I'm a little upset at my assistant Craig, who is

Speaker 155 he's a Royal Marine.

Speaker 155 He's a Royal Marine.

Speaker 170 Okay?

Speaker 34 And he's protected the Queen.

Speaker 55 He has all of the Queen's collector plates.

Speaker 118 As all Scots do, he loves the Royal Family.

Speaker 124 And I asked him, okay,

Speaker 25 here's the quote that Elizabeth Warren was giving, you know, throwing out there so everybody knew who Michael Bloomberg was.

Speaker 8 And she said, you know, we don't need a billionaire who calls women fat broads and horse-faced lesbians.

Speaker 104 Okay, that's quite a quote.

Speaker 55 So I looked it up.

Speaker 23 It actually comes from a book quoting Bloomberg talking about the British royal family.

Speaker 10 What a bunch of misfits.

Speaker 21 I'm quoting.

Speaker 120 A gay, an architect, a horsey-faced lesbian, and a kid who gave up Koo Stark for some fat broad.

Speaker 71 Okay, so

Speaker 95 the gay apparently, and I said the gay, using his language, the gay apparently is Lord Lord Mountbatten, which sounds like a bad porno name, doesn't it?

Speaker 50 Wait until Lord Mountbatten gets here.

Speaker 137 The kid who gave up Koo Stark for some fat broad apparently is Prince Andrew.

Speaker 122 That's your slam on Prince Andrew?

Speaker 5 It wasn't a fat broad, it was like a 14-year-old girl.

Speaker 28 What are you talking about?

Speaker 35 He's flying over the world with Jeffrey Everstein, and he's like, well, the person he's currently with is overweight.

Speaker 30 That's his biggest guy.

Speaker 6 Yeah, he's molesting children.

Speaker 53 I don't know if you know that.

Speaker 23 It might be a bigger problem.

Speaker 43 It's a better wreck.

Speaker 25 We don't know who the architect is, so I need somebody who actually has all of the collector plates because he apparently is missing some of them.

Speaker 58 The architect, who in the and how, why why is that in there?

Speaker 25 And the horsey-faced lesbian.

Speaker 7 As Craig pointed out, everyone in the royal family has the face of a horse.

Speaker 73 So it doesn't narrow it down. I guess who just need a lesbian?

Speaker 162 Prince Richard is an architect, seems like.

Speaker 97 Prince Richard.

Speaker 121 Who even knows Prince Richard?

Speaker 5 What does he have against Prince Richard?

Speaker 121 Who is Prince Richard?

Speaker 143 Have you ever heard of him, Craig?

Speaker 39 Duke of Gloucester.

Speaker 46 Duke of Gloucester.

Speaker 52 Ooh.

Speaker 29 I don't know anything about him.

Speaker 7 Why would Bloomberg target that guy?

Speaker 4 The only thing I really

Speaker 173 off.

Speaker 133 That's a weird thing.

Speaker 29 And the only thing I you have

Speaker 29 Rachel from Suits. That's the only one I care about.
And I want her to get divorced so she comes back on Suits.

Speaker 75 I want them to relaunch the show.

Speaker 33 There's a lot of people rooting for a divorce there.

Speaker 29 It does seem like the entire royal family might be in that camp at this point. They don't seem to be fans.

Speaker 6 So has that changed your opinion on her?

Speaker 23 She's apparently

Speaker 4 diabolical.

Speaker 29 Oh, I think this is just us finishing the Revolutionary War. Okay, good.
Because we went through at the beginning.

Speaker 29 We did this whole thing with a God Our Independence, but you know what we didn't do was end the royal family. Now we finally can.

Speaker 23 This is the. So this is our way of gently beheading them.

Speaker 29 I wouldn't say it that way.

Speaker 25 Well, that's what you mean.

Speaker 144 No, I mean there's in your heart.

Speaker 110 There's going to be no more.

Speaker 20 That's what America is hearing.

Speaker 29 That's not what America was hearing. Well, they heard it from you, so I guess they'd hear it.

Speaker 8 America, did you not hear guillotine the rich? They can't answer.

Speaker 149 I can hear them.

Speaker 52 I bet you can.

Speaker 29 There's a lot of voices going on in there, isn't there?

Speaker 29 Same like Michael Bloomberg.

Speaker 64 They're like, call him an architect.

Speaker 101 He's like, all right, if I'm alive, okay.

Speaker 53 That is a weird story.

Speaker 29 I mean, the entire storyline of the past couple of years with the Democrats can be summarized with one observation, which is they don't have any candidates.

Speaker 29 So all of these weird, erratic actions they've taken from the impeachment effort with like one phone call and no information, this is because a party that is confident in their candidates just wins the election.

Speaker 116 It's crazy.

Speaker 3 They can't do it.

Speaker 29 So they're doing all these weird, crazy actions.

Speaker 5 And they ran everybody.

Speaker 29 I mean, they had this entire field. They didn't have one good president.

Speaker 6 I mean, I'm surprised they didn't.

Speaker 80 They didn't run Mr.

Speaker 34 Jefferson, who lives across the street from me.

Speaker 56 He's the one liberal in the neighborhood.

Speaker 40 I'm surprised he he hasn't run.

Speaker 80 Because I think they've run everyone in the Democratic Party.

Speaker 104 Everybody else.

Speaker 29 I mean, we have an entire,

Speaker 169 you know, three full columns of dropped out candidates.

Speaker 29 I mean, three, six, nine, twelve, fifteen, eighteen, twenty-one, twenty-three, twenty-four that have dropped out.

Speaker 159 And nothing.

Speaker 97 And nothing. And they have nothing.

Speaker 29 Again, like these are not, none of them are separating themselves. The only guy is an 80-year-old socialist.

Speaker 55 He could be dead by the end.

Speaker 62 He had a heart attack two months ago.

Speaker 135 I know.

Speaker 132 He could drop dead of a heart attack.

Speaker 137 And you know who they're all talking about having as their vice presidential nominee?

Speaker 97 Oh, Stacey Abrams.

Speaker 116 Stacey Abrams.

Speaker 158 Who is famous for losing?

Speaker 173 It's crazy.

Speaker 42 It is absolutely nuts.

Speaker 143 Welcome to America 2020.

Speaker 13 Back in a minute.

Speaker 51 You're listening to Glenn Beck.

Speaker 9 We really have to talk about that.

Speaker 103 I have a feeling that

Speaker 33 Blagovich

Speaker 104 was on that list because of Roger Stone.

Speaker 105 You know, I think Donald Trump is going to

Speaker 83 have him

Speaker 33 released or pardon him

Speaker 52 or commute the sentence.

Speaker 16 He should do that if he's going to.

Speaker 114 He should do that on his last day in office in six years,

Speaker 25 which might be too late for Roger Stone, but at least after the election if he's going to do it, because I don't think it would be very popular to do it.

Speaker 161 And

Speaker 122 really unconstitutional, as Stu points out.

Speaker 68 Not a good idea for the president.

Speaker 45 But we'll see what happens. They're sentencing him now.

Speaker 32 Coming up in a second, we have the 1776

Speaker 9 project.

Speaker 86 Have you heard of that?

Speaker 151 Have you heard of 1691 project?

Speaker 45 Coming up next.

Speaker 174 The fusion of entertainment and enlightenment.

Speaker 141 There is a New York Times podcast called the 1619 Project, and it's all about Jamestown.

Speaker 114 And they are trying to make it sound like that is the founding of America.

Speaker 84 And the founding of America was based on racism and slavery. We did not start in Jamestown.
Cannibalism happened in Jamestown.

Speaker 16 Jamestown is a lesson to America, but apparently one that, you know, the New York Times really kind of missed out on.

Speaker 80 Is it 1619?

Speaker 83 Is it 1620 in Plymouth with the Pilgrims?

Speaker 10 Or 1776?

Speaker 26 We have a professor, and I love this,

Speaker 11 a tenured track professor political science, scientist at Kentucky State University.

Speaker 60 If you're just on the track to be tenured, you should not appear on the Glenbeck program.

Speaker 8 I'm just, I'm just saying.

Speaker 13 We have him coming up next.

Speaker 36 He has started the 1776 project that you need to know about in one minute.

Speaker 51 This is the Glenbeck program.

Speaker 92 So today's product merit word of mouth is the online review.

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Speaker 79 Let me go right to Dr.

Speaker 13 Wilford Riley, professor at Kentucky State University, author of the book Taboo, and a guy who started the 1776 project that he's he's going to talk to us about uh today doctor welcome to the program thanks for having me on sure now normally you would give me the professional courtesy of calling me doctor as well seeing that i worked hard just as hard as you for my doctorate but i

Speaker 83 are you uh are you also a doctor i am a doctor uh i'm a doctor of humanities which means i can operate on people's feet i think um

Speaker 178 oral surgery pardon me i said on their minds maybe

Speaker 13 Well, I mean, I don't think we have to have this professional squabble about it now.

Speaker 18 Doctor,

Speaker 26 I want to thank you for coming on the show.

Speaker 7 Thank you for

Speaker 141 what you're doing.

Speaker 161 And

Speaker 93 tell me why you got involved in trying to set the record straight from the 1619 project.

Speaker 178 Sure. I will say I'm one of the founders of the 1776 project, but there are a large number of pretty elite people involved.

Speaker 178 Bob Woodson, really at the Woodson Center, is the guy that brought our group together.

Speaker 178 I mean, you've got Glenn Lowry, legendary economist, Talib Starks, the organizer, Carol Swain, John Sibley Butler, pretty impressive lineup up. Coleman Hughes, the editor at Quillette.

Speaker 178 But the idea of the 1776 project, I mean, it is a nonpartisan, oh, I'd say for most of us, center-right at least,

Speaker 178 black-led response to the New York Times 1619 project. And the 1619 project,

Speaker 178 your intro on this is pretty much did on point. This is is an idea.
This is a series of editorials that became a business initiative.

Speaker 178 That the USA began in slavery and that really the thing that defines the country the most or the thing that makes the country unique is the fact that we had historical slavery here.

Speaker 178 And 1776 is a response to that. I mean, we point out, and an initiative on its own.
So we point out a number of things. First of all, almost all societies had slavery until the 18th century.

Speaker 178 If everyone was guilty of evil and the USA today is unique, it was not the evil that made us unique.

Speaker 178 So we point out some of the flaws in the 1619 narrative, and there are many, like the claim that the Revolutionary War was fought so that America could keep slaves. That's absolute nonsense.

Speaker 82 Crazy.

Speaker 178 Yeah, that's one of the Gordon Wood, who's the country's probably leading Revolutionary War historian, has really taken that apart, where he points out that that ignores everything that actually led to the war.

Speaker 178 Taxation without representation, French and Indian war debt, I mean, armed battles in the streets, the Boston Massacre, that's all pushed aside.

Speaker 71 Right.

Speaker 56 And it also dismisses the first original draft of the Declaration of Independence in Jefferson's own handwriting, where one of the last usurpation is a paragraph that is passionate against slavery.

Speaker 62 Where's that?

Speaker 178 Yeah, I mean, I think so a one-sided narrative is a bad narrative.

Speaker 178 I mean, an obvious point is that for literally as long as we had slavery in the USA, there was a powerful anti-slavery movement led by white and black people of goodwill, from Frederick Douglass to John Brown, that won, we don't have slaves in the USA.

Speaker 178 We haven't had slaves since 1865. I've never had a slave or been one, and neither has anyone else who's currently alive who was born in this country.
So these are the sort of things that we point out.

Speaker 178 And in contrast to the narrative of 1619, which is that racism still defines, the racism of 300 years ago still defines exactly what America is today, we have a pretty simple thesis which is that the United States of America is a flawed but very good society it's simply not that difficult to make it here and almost anyone can given hard work and personal responsibility People regularly come to the USA from countries where cars are a bit of a luxury item like Ethiopia and Vietnam and go on to outperform both black and white native-born Americans.

Speaker 178 So there's absolutely no reason we should expect less of middle-class black people or Appalachian white ones for that matter than we do of recent immigrants from Botswana or the Philippines.

Speaker 178 That's crazy, and that is a form of racism.

Speaker 22 So, this is

Speaker 24 go ahead. Go ahead.

Speaker 178 Oh, no, no, we're responding. 1619, although it presents as purely academic, is to some extent a business initiative.
I mean, they have a curriculum designed with the Pulitzer Center and so on.

Speaker 178 So, many of us, including me, have fairly elite business backgrounds, and we're responding across a range of avenues. I mean, curricula, media like this, so on down the line.

Speaker 178 I mean, the narrative can't go unchallenged that the USA is not the world's best country, but rather it's most evil. That just doesn't make any sense at Periclin.

Speaker 14 Well, they are already

Speaker 10 creeping into our schools

Speaker 25 and they're taking this at face value.

Speaker 25 I heard an ad for the podcast from the New York Times, and they said, you know, and there are some disagreements, but that's what we do best, is try to get people to talk and find the truth.

Speaker 74 No, you have taken a theory that is flawed from the beginning, and you've merchandised it, marketed it, and now it's being taught in some schools around the country.

Speaker 40 It is, it is, it's really dangerous to teach this kind of nonsense.

Speaker 94 And I can't thank you enough for

Speaker 22 actually

Speaker 174 following through and not just talking about it, but getting the curricula changed in schools to make sure we're teaching the truth.

Speaker 178 Yeah, and in the book you mentioned, A Taboo, The Ten Facts You Can't Talk About recently came out with Regnery.

Speaker 178 This is something that I talk talk about, and it's kind of the invasion at a level below what most people recognize of certain ideas into the American mainstream.

Speaker 178 So, I frankly don't think most people know what their kids are learning in school.

Speaker 28 They don't.

Speaker 178 Yeah, this is very important. I would actually, a statement for the parents out there, look at it.

Speaker 178 There are specific things like what sex education is being taught, what American history is being taught, that any thinking father or mother should ask their child's school district about.

Speaker 178 I'm in, yeah, I recently observed this with some of my own younger relatives, and it's pretty striking. At any rate, so the response to 1619, I mean, thank you for the compliment.

Speaker 178 One thing I would emphasize is that nobody, obviously not you, obviously not me, is arguing that slavery was good.

Speaker 178 What we're saying, yeah, it's not, it's ridiculous, doesn't even need to be said, but what we're saying is a series of empirical points. One, American slavery was not historically unique.

Speaker 178 Every other country, including the many civilized black nations of Africa, had a form of slavery that was as bad or worse until quite recently.

Speaker 178 Two, we don't think that slavery was the defining feature of the USA. We don't think it's what made America unique.

Speaker 178 With no disrespect for that southern culture, the South was a bit of a backwater before the Civil War, and that's why they lost.

Speaker 178 And a big reason for that was the reliance on this sort of feudal surf agriculture.

Speaker 178 And third, finally, we do not believe, we do not believe that after 155 years of abolition, and by the way, 53 years of affirmative action, Asians or middle-class blacks or Jewish Americans, Cubans, members of any other minority are still oppressed.

Speaker 178 That's a meaningless term.

Speaker 178 So it's important that this be responded to with a real curriculum that says, yes, the USA is not perfect because only God is perfect, but these are the advantages that we have over other societies.

Speaker 178 And to some extent, these are the advantages where they exist that they have over us. And this is why we exist as the country we are today.

Speaker 178 And that doesn't trace back to racial quarrels 300 years ago most of the time.

Speaker 10 Do you address the

Speaker 15 fact that more slaves went to Brazil

Speaker 103 or that

Speaker 25 Mexico is given the status of beating the United States to abolishing slavery, but they said we'll stop it in 100 years?

Speaker 11 I mean, that's not the abolishment of slavery.

Speaker 74 You know, we had to do it through civil war, but they could declare anything they want, but that wasn't the abolishment of slavery.

Speaker 178 Yeah, we discuss all this. I mean, one point I want to make, and I don't mean to be glib here, but history sucked for almost everyone.

Speaker 178 If you're talking about Irishmen, Japanese, Americans, women couldn't vote until 1920. So, yes, absolutely slavery existed in almost all societies.

Speaker 178 I'm not attempting to apologize for the white slave trade of blacks, but

Speaker 178 it's worth noting that there was also a black slave trade of whites, or at least a Moorish one. I mean, the Barbary slave trade and inspired the verse Shores of Triple E in the Marine Corps hymn.

Speaker 178 This went on from 1600 to 1800.

Speaker 178 The powerful Muslim nations of North Africa, when they fought the white states of southern Europe, would take everyone they captured, quote-unquote, surgically modify them and make them into slaves and serfs.

Speaker 178 Serfdom itself, that idea that you're a peasant just pushing a sulky plow for most of your life, that existed in Russia and most of Europe, southern France, until 1866.

Speaker 178 So if you're going to say that people were unfree in America, you have to say also in context that people were unfree almost everywhere in the world.

Speaker 178 The West did not begin the institution of slavery, but I will say that though it took too long and it took hard fights, it is modern Western culture that eliminated slavery globally.

Speaker 178 No other culture, including the proud black and Moorish states many of my ancestors came from, even thought about doing this until the modern abolitionist movement began in England and the USA.

Speaker 178 So we have our sins, but we also have our virtues, and it's silly to focus only on our sins, especially given that we live here. We're insulting our own society when we do so.

Speaker 120 So,

Speaker 11 here's the thing that I think most Americans just want.

Speaker 16 I don't care if we hear about the bad things.

Speaker 73 I think we need to know about all of the bad things that America did, or we won't learn and change.

Speaker 11 So, we have to learn about those things.

Speaker 63 But, perspective, man, perspective, and look at it in the context of the day.

Speaker 42 Look at what everyone else was doing and understand

Speaker 5 that, you know, it's an ebb and flow sometimes we're better sometimes we're worse i mean at the time that we're fighting against uh communism and nazism in the 1940s we're also throwing japanese americans into concentration camps i mean he it it's it's both it's both just like humans we're both good and bad as individuals and it's that constant battle between those two forces inside of us that shows in the end who you are.

Speaker 10 Were you generally moving forward, or were you somebody that was fighting for evil the whole time?

Speaker 10 Yeah, I think that's well put.

Speaker 178 My old martial arts sensei phrase it is every human being has a back and a front. And I think that's roughly accurate.

Speaker 178 When you're looking at the presentation of a man or of a human being, of course, you want a warts and all portrayal, which is a very famous description of an actual picture.

Speaker 178 But what I think you very often get from the activist left in the USA is an almost all-warts view of the country and a warts-free view of other rival societies.

Speaker 178 It's simply idiotic to spend hours and hours fulminating about the fact that the USA at one point had slavery and then go on to praise, say, China or the civilized nations of Africa or the Arab world.

Speaker 178 Much of the Arab world has slavery today. I know.

Speaker 73 There's more slaves today than there was during the entire Western slave trade combined, all of those years.

Speaker 146 So,

Speaker 97 Doctor, tell me how the average person can access this information or can, you know, play a role at all in helping you with this battle.

Speaker 178 Sure, yeah, and thanks for asking. I mean, we're all fairly easy to find.
I'm Will Fred Riley, W-I-L-F-R-E-D-R-E-I-L-L-Y online, Facebook, Twitter.

Speaker 178 You've mentioned hate crime, hoax, and taboo, the books I've written. I'm one of many people.
Bob Woodson is the original initiator of the project.

Speaker 178 If you Google Woodson Center, they'll be more than glad to accept donations to 1776 or to their overall work.

Speaker 178 And of course, we have a professional website that just went live while they were still uploading headshots and so on. It's 1776 Unites.

Speaker 178 I believe that would be dot com because we are equipped to receive donations. But if you Google 1776 Unites, it'll be the first hit.

Speaker 114 Unites with an S. With an S?

Speaker 124 Unites?

Speaker 178 Yes, 1776 Units. U-N-I-T-E-S.
That is. That is correct.
And yeah, we're more than glad to accept outreach again. Wilfred Riley, we've got Glenn Lowry on the project, John Sibley Butler, Carol Swain.

Speaker 178 I mean, many of these are names you will have heard.

Speaker 178 Coleman Hughes over at Quillette is handling a lot of media and social media. So we thought this is a fairly impressive group of people.

Speaker 178 Some of us had met for lunches before, it's just black people in the business community.

Speaker 178 And the idea was, well, we really need to respond to this because this is nonsense and it's going to increase racial tensions in a way that's not good for black people or just as importantly for our white countrymen.

Speaker 178 And I think we responded effectively.

Speaker 20 Thank you so much, Doctor.

Speaker 9 I appreciate it.

Speaker 25 The 1776 project is 1776unites.com.

Speaker 141 And, you know, they have people like the New York Times and big, big, big lefties supporting all of this real corrupt knowledge.

Speaker 99 We have to pool our money together and do all that we can to help set the record straight.

Speaker 25 If you can help, 1776unites.com.

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Speaker 124 10 seconds, station ID.

Speaker 16 These are the guys we should have at the Restoring the Covenant event. We should have them come in and maybe they could do a lecture series for the weekend.

Speaker 8 I mean,

Speaker 121 this is

Speaker 8 so corrosive, this 1619 project that the New York Times did.

Speaker 164 It's just absolutely corrosive. Yeah,

Speaker 29 I was very much targeting the 1619 project to try to pass them on the podcast list. And I got to number 11 and they were number 10.

Speaker 19 I could never quite squeak in front of them.

Speaker 14 This has

Speaker 48 America. This has been

Speaker 7 a real problem.

Speaker 81 This is spreading like wildfire.

Speaker 104 It is.

Speaker 29 It's a big thing. And, you know, it's sort of like a.

Speaker 79 We've seen this happen.

Speaker 29 And I was going to say, I don't want to compare them, but I kind of do.

Speaker 29 When you have like the

Speaker 29 down that road, like the Holocaust denial type of thing. Yeah.

Speaker 29 What you see is you see an entire industry pop up of people who are supposedly historians who will go out and prove, quote unquote, that X, Y, and Z didn't happen.

Speaker 29 It wasn't as big a deal as you thought. And what it does is it creates a academic

Speaker 29 sounding backstory for their point of view.

Speaker 29 And of course, obviously, like

Speaker 29 the 1619 project is

Speaker 29 much more mainstream than this, but but what happens is someone who kind of believes maybe in some of the Holocaust denial stuff goes online and starts reading the stuff and it sounds really official and it's backed up by X, Y, and Z organization or whatever, and it gets an air of credibility.

Speaker 29 And the 1619 project, obviously there are differences here, but it is incredibly misleading. It is

Speaker 70 wrong.

Speaker 83 Wrong.

Speaker 25 America didn't start in 1619.

Speaker 11 We weren't based in slavery.

Speaker 164 That's not what the war was about.

Speaker 81 None of it.

Speaker 42 None of it.

Speaker 11 May I just recommend the best thing you can do for your kids this year, and I mean this sincerely, is bring them to the

Speaker 83 Restoring the Covenant event in Gettysburg the weekend of July 4th.

Speaker 131 This is something that we're doing to A, restore the covenant, which I'll explain at a later date if you need to know, or you can read about it on the website.

Speaker 7 But it really is a chance to gather together and celebrate America. We're bringing truckloads of stuff for our museum.

Speaker 93 We'll have a pop-up museum of the best stuff and the worst stuff about America.

Speaker 48 And we're going to have the pop-up museum.

Speaker 7 We're going to have speakers for the three-day period.

Speaker 64 We're going to have a great, great fireworks.

Speaker 40 I'm actually meeting with a composer today.

Speaker 93 We have an Emmy Award-winning, Oscar-nominated composer that is working with me for the next few days to do entirely different for this fireworks show.

Speaker 38 Get your information and get a place at Restoring the Covenant in Gettysburg.

Speaker 76 Go to Glennbeck.com.

Speaker 66 July fourth weekend, RestoringTheCovenant, Glennbeck.com.

Speaker 46 Glenn Beck.

Speaker 11 All right, let's talk about securing your future against uncertainty.

Speaker 7 Please be careful with your fiscal house. Do your homework.

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Speaker 29 Tonight on Stu Does America. We look at the chaos in Nevada that is about to hit us all.
Go to stewdoesamerica.com for all the links to platforms.

Speaker 68 Welcome to the Glenbeck program.

Speaker 9 So glad that you're here.

Speaker 37 On a personal note,

Speaker 8 you know, if you've been following my family at all,

Speaker 103 Mary has had

Speaker 105 brain surgery here a couple of weeks ago, and there's some big decisions that she has to make.

Speaker 20 And they won't give us odds on anything because it's the brain.

Speaker 19 They, quite honestly, don't know what they're doing.

Speaker 103 They're doing their best and they're working miracles.

Speaker 16 But, you know, we're so far away from understanding what really happens that they can't really give us odds.

Speaker 105 And we have some huge decisions that only she can make.

Speaker 161 And

Speaker 105 our church this Sunday is

Speaker 77 fasting for her.

Speaker 151 And I would ask if you would just keep her and the family in your prayers.

Speaker 33 I sure would appreciate it.

Speaker 23 Well, last night we did our special on the coronavirus.

Speaker 49 You know, there's a couple of things that are really disturbing.

Speaker 122 One is,

Speaker 25 do you know how much, do you know how many, what is the percentage, Stu, that you think we get from China when it comes to antibiotics?

Speaker 115 Well,

Speaker 29 I have heard this the last couple of weeks.

Speaker 103 It is.

Speaker 29 Yeah, as you guys have been going over and preparing for this, it's stunningly high. It's something like 90% or 80%?

Speaker 4 No.

Speaker 83 No.

Speaker 99 No, India, India is bad.

Speaker 81 India gets 80%

Speaker 103 of their

Speaker 105 raw materials to make their medicine, okay, from China.

Speaker 164 And they're screwed right now.

Speaker 129 And

Speaker 45 we're not that stupid.

Speaker 14 We're more stupid.

Speaker 42 90, I think it's 97.9%

Speaker 28 of all of our antibiotics finished

Speaker 47 come from China.

Speaker 26 We don't make them at all.

Speaker 42 It's not like they're sending us the raw materials.

Speaker 47 We don't make any of our antibiotics.

Speaker 73 China does.

Speaker 28 When it comes to our other medicine, we're just like India.

Speaker 69 We get 80% of all of the raw materials from China.

Speaker 81 That is a suicidal idea and something that we've talked about on this program back years, years ago, 10, 15 years ago.

Speaker 81 This was a, this was a, it began with a Clinton initiative to make sure that all vaccines were affordable.

Speaker 5 Well, you can't make all vaccines affordable.

Speaker 126 Some of them are for rare disorders.

Speaker 37 And so we wanted to do that. And so, what did the pharmaceutical companies do?

Speaker 28 They said, well, we're not going to make them then.

Speaker 30 And so we started shipping off all of our vaccine work over to China.

Speaker 28 And now all of our antibiotics are made in China.

Speaker 5 So you know,

Speaker 121 those

Speaker 164 clinics or laboratories are all closed right now.

Speaker 71 They're closed.

Speaker 40 Hope they open them soon.

Speaker 114 Antibiotics in India have already seen a 70% increase in price just in the last few weeks because they're running out.

Speaker 25 Craziness is going on.

Speaker 82 And I urge you to watch the special.

Speaker 37 It's on demand right now.

Speaker 32 Just go to theblazetv.com Glenn.

Speaker 73 If you're not a subscriber, put in the promo code Glenn.

Speaker 81 But if you are, just go and look at

Speaker 32 the website.

Speaker 83 Go to Glenn TV.

Speaker 34 It's the Wednesday night special under Glenn TV.

Speaker 103 The date is, you know, obviously last night.

Speaker 96 And it is everything you need to know about the coronavirus and how big governments kill blazetv.com.

Speaker 87 Blazetv.com.

Speaker 8 Now, Stu, what's the worst thing that you could think of that could happen to you with the coronavirus?

Speaker 7 What's the worst?

Speaker 28 What's your nightmare for you personally?

Speaker 162 Death, I would say.

Speaker 159 Okay, that's what I thought.

Speaker 7 Yeah, that would be. That's what I thought.

Speaker 30 Death.

Speaker 96 Grueling, coughing, horrible.

Speaker 21 Not the Ebola, but death.

Speaker 169 Yeah.

Speaker 115 Okay.

Speaker 66 Let me give you a new let me give you a new story.

Speaker 26 You might change your mind. From the University of Minnesota, Minnesota, studies show COVID-19 likely has multiple infection routes.

Speaker 34 As the COVID-19 outbreak grows in China and abroad, new studies attempt to answer on how the virus is shed and the range of clinical outcomes, with two studies indicating that shedding, therefore the transmission, likely occurs via multiple routes.

Speaker 5 Now remember, you think being a patient and dying is the worst.

Speaker 29 Yeah, that's the worst thing I can think of.

Speaker 8 Currently, testing for and confirmation of infection with COVID-19 is conducted via oral swabs.

Speaker 63 But a study published in Emerging Microbes and Infections, Chinese scientists report evidence of

Speaker 142 the oral anal fecal transmission route.

Speaker 179 Hospitalized patients are now receiving not only oral, but up to three anal swabs a day.

Speaker 34 Now, I'm thinking to myself,

Speaker 28 let me die.

Speaker 124 Let me just die.

Speaker 34 You're going to stick something at me three times a day?

Speaker 99 Yeah.

Speaker 8 Study conducted in Wuhan, China, so you know it's got to be tender.

Speaker 34 Samples collected from 178 patients in the hospital.

Speaker 87 Study authors found blah, blah, blah, that the viral nucleotide was in the anal swabs or blood when it was not detected in oral swabs.

Speaker 97 Now, here's the thing.

Speaker 43 Now, I'm, well, I am a doctor.

Speaker 5 I am a doctor. So I can speak with profound authority.

Speaker 58 Clarity. By the way, did you?

Speaker 95 He wasn't joking about that.

Speaker 29 He did not seem like he was into your joke about how you had the equal academic standards as he did.

Speaker 4 No.

Speaker 131 No.

Speaker 29 He hadn't really achieved as much as him.

Speaker 7 Well, that's what he thought.

Speaker 132 Yeah.

Speaker 62 That's what he thought.

Speaker 25 He thought, you know, when I said to him, you know, I worked just as hard as you for my doctorate.

Speaker 96 And then when he found out it was doctorate of humanity he looked down on it like no you didn't you just showed up you flew into a city you stood on stage they put something around your neck and said hello doctor right

Speaker 14 isn't that what he did

Speaker 116 pretty much anyway uh

Speaker 46 so so here's the um here's the the part and i am a doctor But they showed the timing of positive swabs had changed.

Speaker 109 On the first day of illness, 80% of oral swabs were positive in a small group of patients.

Speaker 96 But by day five, 75% of anal swabs were positive for COVID-19.

Speaker 8 And only 50% of the oral swabs were still positive in the same patients with the confirmed COVID-19.

Speaker 26 So if you just do at the beginning, they swab your mouth and it's by your mouth.

Speaker 4 Okay?

Speaker 49 By the end, they can swab your mouth.

Speaker 111 And they don't find it in the mouth, but they do find it in your butt.

Speaker 157 Look isn't that kind of the way?

Speaker 34 I mean, if I had a salad,

Speaker 74 you know, I first find it in the mouth. You know, I swab for blue cheese.

Speaker 34 I just had a salad. I'm like, yeah,

Speaker 124 he's got a salad.

Speaker 34 You're not going to find it in my butt right away.

Speaker 5 You know, I come from the salad bar.

Speaker 111 You swab my butt. You're not going to find any dressing.

Speaker 34 Now, I'm speaking academically here as a doctor.

Speaker 29 Yeah, you're over my head here with the technical details.

Speaker 132 I can't follow you. Really?

Speaker 55 Is this too deep?

Speaker 59 Yeah, you know,

Speaker 115 yes.

Speaker 29 That's exactly what it is.

Speaker 35 That's exactly it.

Speaker 14 Okay, all right.

Speaker 74 Let me give you a couple of clips here from

Speaker 34 the special last night.

Speaker 37 Here's the clip on the mortality rate.

Speaker 175 Coronavirus has a mortality rate of 2.3.

Speaker 143 That means for every thousand people, about 23 get it.

Speaker 140 Okay.

Speaker 113 Regular flu is 0.1.

Speaker 143 Every thousand people that get the flu, one

Speaker 90 will die.

Speaker 83 Now consider that scientists are saying that if this does become a pandemic, 30 to 60 percent of the population could get the virus.

Speaker 96 So if you look at those possible numbers, the low estimate is 30 million people dead.

Speaker 26 So now the question.

Speaker 117 Do we know enough about this virus?

Speaker 26 What are the Chinese not telling us?

Speaker 138 sections on what the Chinese are not telling us are truly terrifying.

Speaker 163 The

Speaker 122 part of how they are keeping things quiet and what they're doing to their own people equally terrifying.

Speaker 74 That's why we took a different

Speaker 105 slant on this.

Speaker 32 You know, you can read all about, you know, you get a runny nose, you get fever, blah, blah, blah.

Speaker 45 That's how you check it.

Speaker 34 Wash your hands.

Speaker 17 Don't swab anybody else's butt, I guess.

Speaker 55 You know, don't swap spit.

Speaker 49 Don't touch anybody's eye.

Speaker 8 That's the kind of stuff that, you know, you need to know and you can find out anywhere.

Speaker 54 What we tried to show you is

Speaker 72 it is

Speaker 5 a crisis that always brings big government.

Speaker 26 And big government always brings death.

Speaker 123 China currently has just done their Patriot Act.

Speaker 87 They've just enacted new laws that allow them to do even more surveillance on their people.

Speaker 33 I don't know how you can do more surveillance on people, but they now have the right to completely surveil you, take you for any reason, put you in a camp, all of it in the name of health.

Speaker 11 Well, this we learned through the Patriot Act.

Speaker 79 It doesn't end well.

Speaker 96 We are now going into a time where if this impacts our economy the way the experts say it might

Speaker 69 or probably will,

Speaker 120 Donald Trump could lose this because let's just take the medicine.

Speaker 5 If they continue to continue to be closed in their laboratories,

Speaker 172 just the laboratories, forget about the stock market, just health.

Speaker 161 And now

Speaker 87 an antibiotic is rare.

Speaker 63 We're not making it.

Speaker 46 We don't have it.

Speaker 10 You can't buy it.

Speaker 6 Or if you buy it, it's really expensive.

Speaker 49 Who's going to be the candidate that is most appealing?

Speaker 74 The one that is saying free, universal health care? The one that says, we've got a problem and it's this capitalist system that drove these drug manufacturing out because they were all greedy?

Speaker 63 When the truth is, it was the

Speaker 6 socialists that were trying to do fairness that drove all of these people out because there's no way they could afford it.

Speaker 5 And you wouldn't get it anyway if you had a socialist system

Speaker 10 because the government couldn't afford it, just like you're seeing elsewhere, including in China.

Speaker 74 That's the kind of health care you want, go for it.

Speaker 56 I don't.

Speaker 128 But who wins?

Speaker 5 A big government socialist or a capitalist?

Speaker 19 This is the tact we took last night, and it's so critical.

Speaker 81 At the end of the episode, I talked to you about some ethical questions that we have to answer now.

Speaker 122 And the biggest one, in my opinion, was one tucked in between all of these ethical questions, and that is:

Speaker 26 what rights am I willing to give up

Speaker 122 for the good of everyone else there's a medical emergency okay am I willing to quarantine myself am I willing to do that okay yeah

Speaker 43 but also

Speaker 145 what rights am I willing to take away or have or just stand by silently as the government takes away rights from others

Speaker 123 But not me?

Speaker 150 Say you're Japanese, 1941.

Speaker 97 If those two things are different, if I'm not willing to do it myself,

Speaker 98 and I'm willing to do more on other people, you got a problem.

Speaker 37 But we have to know where those lines are right now as a people.

Speaker 114 Because once fear or hunger or lack of medicine or chaos happens, it's too late to have those logical discussions because the decision will be made and everyone will say i don't know i don't know what they're doing i think it's wrong but what am i going to do about it the time to think about these things is right now find it at blazetv.com it's the wednesday night special under glenn tv

Speaker 95 all right emergencies seem to happen overnight one minute everything's running normally the next next thing you know the whole world is upside down and that's the way this coronavirus could be that's why i urge you to go to my patriot supply right now.

Speaker 65 They're running a special for the next four weeks at preparewithglenn.com.

Speaker 113 You can get 45% off a two-week emergency food kit.

Speaker 147 Two weeks could make the difference.

Speaker 34 You know, if we're, God forbid, I just don't think this is going to happen, but I don't know.

Speaker 151 You're quarantined, quarantined for two weeks.

Speaker 72 How much food do you have?

Speaker 14 What are you going to eat?

Speaker 21 Where are you going to go?

Speaker 113 What grocery store is going to be open?

Speaker 8 Right now, they are shipping these out.

Speaker 26 This is breakfast, lunch, and dinner for one person for two weeks.

Speaker 34 And they are running at full capacity right now, 24 or 7.

Speaker 8 Trust trying to keep up with the demand.

Speaker 34 Get your order in soon.

Speaker 27 Get it in right now.

Speaker 10 If you do it before, what is it, four weeks or until supplies run out?

Speaker 119 You can get it at 45% off.

Speaker 74 Do it now while supplies last at preparewickglenn.com.

Speaker 122 That's preparewickglen.com.

Speaker 122 This is the Glenbeck program.

Speaker 34 88-727-BECK is our number.

Speaker 13 Tomorrow is Friday.

Speaker 46 We're going to take a lot of phone calls tomorrow.

Speaker 34 Bill O'Reilly will join us tomorrow, and it looks like we are going to miss the Roger Stone sentence.

Speaker 103 He is being sentenced now, possibly eight years in prison.

Speaker 114 I think the president is going to pardon him.

Speaker 29 Or commute his sentence at some point. He should wait till after the election, though.

Speaker 11 This really hurt him.

Speaker 68 And, you know,

Speaker 27 as you pointed out earlier,

Speaker 105 constitutionally,

Speaker 157 the one person the president can't pardon are the people who committed a crime on his behalf.

Speaker 97 Right.

Speaker 150 And obviously, he'd have an argument that that's not what happened.

Speaker 29 But George Mason was like, we can't get the king. They're giving king powers to the president.
We shouldn't do this. This is nuts.
People are going to start

Speaker 29 pardoning people for treason on their behalf. They can change all the laws.
They can do all sorts of things. We can't do this.
And Madison's was like, look,

Speaker 29 that's why I got impeachment. They can impeach them if they think it's BS.

Speaker 29 You know, if they abuse it, that's what they can do it for. If someone goes out and they have people committing crimes on their behalf and they could keep pardoning them, they can just go and impeach.

Speaker 29 Now, of course, you've already seen the impeachment thing go through, but this was the specific thing.

Speaker 29 And look, one shred of evidence or not, you're going to hear Nancy Pelosi bringing up all of these comments from that era if he does it.

Speaker 29 Usually people wait till after the election.

Speaker 144 Donald Trump doesn't seem to be all that interesting.

Speaker 17 They usually don't even wait till after the election, they usually do it on their last day in office.

Speaker 95 Yeah, so eight years, you know, another uh, maybe five or six for uh this president.

Speaker 9 But we shall see, we shall see.

Speaker 51 You're listening to Glenn Beck.