Boris Johnson’s Blowout Victory | Guests: Daniel Hannan, Bill O’Reilly & Cam Edwards | 12/13/19
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Appreciate it.
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The fusion of entertainment and enlightenment.
Hello, Americans.
It's Friday.
Glad you're here, especially for today, because you're going to enjoy this.
We have Daniel Hannan on in a few minutes from London.
There was a story from New York Magazine that American leftists believed that Corbin,
his inevitable victory, would be their model.
I'm here to tell you, it is the model.
What happened yesterday is going to happen here in America.
We'll go there in one minute.
This is the Glenbeck program.
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Yeah.
Yeah, the one that you're going to play with the volume muted after he goes to bed.
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Hello.
Ho-ho-ho.
Welcome to the program.
Hello.
Hello, Stu.
Mr.
Beck, how are you?
Well, I appreciate you calling me, Mr.
Beck.
I prefer Dr.
Beck.
Dr.
Beck, how are you?
I mean, I worked very hard for that.
Yeah, you showed up in an event to get that title, didn't you?
I did.
But it was in Virginia, and I wasn't living in Virginia at the time.
I had to fly.
I had to sit there and listen to speeches of people graduating that I didn't really care because I didn't know.
I didn't go to school with them.
Nope.
And then I got to listen to somebody going blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
And he's a doctor.
And I'm like, of course I am.
Give me the certificate so I can start doing some foot surgery.
You can do some doctoring.
Right.
Right.
Exactly right.
That's what you know what the most important thing to me in the world is, Glenn?
What is that?
Licensing.
Licensing.
That's how you prove your value in the society.
As a doctor, I'd have to agree with you.
Right.
As a Kentucky colonel, I would have to agree with you.
That's right.
You're also a colonel, aren't you?
I'm a colonel.
Dr.
Colonel.
I'm a colonel doctor.
I'm actually a reverend.
Oh my gosh.
I am Reverend Dr.
Colonel Beck.
I want that from here on out.
That's how you address me.
Not Mr.
Beck.
It's Reverend Dr.
Colonel Beck.
So if you call 888-727-BECK, you don't have to put the Reverend Colonel Dr.
Beck in the phone number.
No, but you think it.
While you're dialing it.
You should think it.
And then when you call up and Glenn answers and says, you know, Bill, you're on the air.
Reverend Colonel Dr.
Beck, how are you today?
Yeah, and it's that order, too.
Reverend God is first.
The hard work I did on
my doctorate.
And then a little bit of Kentucky.
So it's Reverend Dr.
Colonel or Reverend Colonel Doctor?
No, it's Reverend Dr.
Colonel.
Okay.
Okay, you got it?
Reverend Dr.
Colonel Beck.
Reverend Dr.
Colonel Beck.
This is easy.
From here on out.
In fact, I might be changing Glenn Beck.com to that, Reverend Dr.
Colonel Beck.com.
Someone's out there registering that right now.
Probably someone from Media Matters.
All right.
So, you know, licensing is important, and I think it's important.
I mean, if you're a hairdresser,
God forbid you try to do anybody's hair without a license.
You know what I mean?
If you are a painter of some sort, God forbid you paint somebody's house without a license.
Right.
And I would throw another one in there.
Let's just say you wanted to stay alive.
Yeah, you have to have a license.
Right.
Right.
Because you don't have the right to defend yourself.
Of course not.
Of course not.
You have to make sure you have a license.
Correct.
And that's where this is really important.
Yes.
And we learned this story in Illinois recently where a woman was in her car and was attacked.
by her ex.
Now, what do you do when you're attacked by your ex?
I guess you could just let him kill you.
I think that's option one.
Well, wait a minute, wait, wait, wait.
Are you licensed?
Well, see, this is the issue.
Okay,
because if you have a license, you could do his hair.
You could paint his nails.
You could paint his nails.
There's all sorts of things.
You could give him a massage.
Right.
Yeah.
So you have to have a license, and that's what really lets you know what you can do.
Right.
What is your value as a human being?
Correct.
The government should tell us with a certificate.
Correct.
Exactly right.
here's the thing.
Her thought was, maybe I should try to stop this person trying to murder me.
Well, now, that's an
interesting thought,
but obviously that's not enough information on the story.
She took out a firearm
and decided to use it to stop him from killing her.
Now, it was a legally owned firearm.
Yes.
Okay, so that's part of it.
She had a license to own it.
Oh, she knew.
Yeah, she was totally licensed to to own it.
The problem, however, she didn't have a license to use it.
She didn't have a license to carry it.
Now, there's a huge difference.
Was she carrying it or is it in her car?
She had it in her car.
Now, in her car, some states.
You can have it.
Like Texas, for example, you don't need a concealed carry to keep it in your car.
However, in Illinois,
that's a different story.
You know, probably in Illinois, it's a lot like New York and New Jersey, where you have to keep the gun in the glove box, but all the bullets in the trunk.
That's right, which is really helpful in these situations.
Oh, my gosh.
In this situation, somebody comes and trying to kill you in your car.
You're like, hang on just a second.
I've got my firearm.
I just need a second to get out to my trunk, get the box of bullets, load the gun, and then can we pick it up from there?
Yeah.
Now, one minor issue here.
Of course, now look, this is good.
An attacker, she's able to fend off the attacker.
Police come, and they put the attacker in jail.
And that's good.
That's good stuff.
I mean, you know, look, he's an attacker.
Now, obviously, they had to talk to her too because she did break a rule.
She didn't have a concealed carry license.
And she was able to sure utilize her God-given right to defend herself and her constitutional right to bear arms to do so.
However, you know, she didn't have that license.
So obviously, she had to go to jail too.
Well, that's only common sense.
It's only common sense.
That you'd put the woman who was just almost murdered by her ex in jail.
And now he went to jail and had a $10,000 bond.
Oh, my gosh.
For trying to kill her.
For trying to kill her.
$10,000 bond.
$10,000 bond.
Pretty hard to raise.
He probably is still in jail.
Oh, no, he was able to raise the bond.
He was out.
Okay, he's out of jail.
He's out.
He's out of jail.
There's a little bit of a
wrinkle.
A wrinkle.
Here in the story.
Hang on.
Let me see if I can iron the wrinkle out.
Ah, there it is.
There it is.
Okay, good.
I got it.
She's also in jail, and her bond is $75,000, and she can't pay it.
$7,500?
$75,000.
$75,000.
Well, she's a dangerous individual.
She used a a gun.
She used a gun, and she used it without a license.
That's like talking into a hairdresser and just somebody saying, now,
let me cut your hair.
And they don't have a license.
Yeah.
You know what I'm saying?
Right.
You can't have that.
You can't have that.
Scissors are sharp.
They're very sharp.
If you don't have a license, who knows?
Are you running with them?
You might be running with them.
Who has never gone to school
and taken the test?
Exactly.
The government can't.
You just can't run around like that.
Thankfully, the government and the state of Illinois has protected us against this dangerous woman
and kept her in jail.
So,
hey, men and women are exactly alike.
There's no difference between their size, their weight, there's nothing.
No.
He may have been identifying that day as a woman.
And if there was any difference, some people would suggest that the gun is the great equalizer.
No, but there's no difference between
women should not have the right to.
I mean, that's not cool.
No, and you know what?
Neither should men.
No one should be able to defend themselves.
You should just let what happens to you happen to you.
Yeah.
Unless the government decides to license you to change that outcome.
And in this case, they did not.
So she's in jail and he's free.
The guy who is beating the crap out of his ex is free, running around, free to beat up anybody else he wants to.
But she's in jail.
But she's in jail, protected.
Yes.
Protected from him.
Right.
Right.
For maybe 20 years.
This is for her own good.
Yeah.
Amen to that, brother.
I feel like.
May I say, as a reverend,
also a Dr.
Dr.
Colonel, but the reverend part, may I say, give me an amen.
Amen.
Amen.
Amen, Reverend Dr.
Colonel.
Thus endeth the lesson, saith the Lord.
You know what's crazy about this?
Is,
well, everything.
So let's just leave it at that.
It's all crazy.
Does she have a GoFundMe page?
That's a good question.
I don't know the answer to that.
Let's make one for her.
Oh, yeah.
If she needs $75,000, I think this audience can come up with that pretty quickly.
By the way, do you know who
Dr.
Rechtenwald?
Yeah.
Michael Rechtenwald.
Sure.
Is he a colonel or
a resident?
Just a doctor?
Just a doctor.
It's embarrassing.
It really is.
It really is embarrassing.
Anyway, so he's a friend of ours who has been
just hammered.
He lost his job at NYU
because he, he, I mean, he was on the left side.
And then he was like, this is crazy.
What's happening right now is crazy.
So he's lost his job.
He can't get another job anywhere.
He's looking for another teaching job at some university that might take him.
Please, if you work at a university, please
look into him.
Can you go to GoFundMe and see if Michael Rechtenwald is up there?
Sure.
I would love to.
He is.
Reverend Dr.
Colonel.
He is a, thank you.
He is, I think he's about to lose his house and everything else.
Really?
Yeah.
He's written a book, and if you can just buy his book, that would be helpful.
But
he is really having a hard time because,
you know, I think there are some bad guys on the right that would love to pay him lots of money.
And he's taking pretty much any job he can get right now.
And he doesn't, he's, you know, he's working for piecemeal.
But here's a guy guy who his whole life has been turned upside down, and all of his networks, all of his friends, everything
is now gone.
Do you see him on the site?
Yeah, we want to make sure that we can confirm it's the right.
It is.
It is.
Well, you don't know what I'm looking at.
Well, let me see it.
You know what?
No.
I'm a reverend doctor.
I demand you see it.
The colonel in me says see it.
It's a $5,000 goal.
Is that right?
No.
There's another one that's
15.
I didn't just blurt this out.
I think there's another one that's a 15.
Why don't we look into this instead and give some lead time?
You know what?
You know, on something like that, where we're going to raise it.
This is the kind of incompetence I ask for a scalpel, and my number one nurse,
that's me,
hands me a hammer.
This is the kind of incompetence that this hospital will not put up with another day.
You should know if you're listening on radio, I am dressed in a sexy nurse outfit.
And that's that has nothing to do with this particular segment.
I just like it.
You know, it's comfy.
But I am dressed that way just to keep the visual going.
Yeah, no, I think it's very nice.
It's professional.
Thank you.
It's professional for, you know, for what we do.
And I, and I, I do have to tell you, I will miss it, but you are on suspension as of about two hours and 40 minutes for two days.
You have a two-day suspension.
I don't want to see you again in this operating room
after this show ends.
I don't want to see you in here again until Monday morning.
Well, I hope hope after next week you don't suspend me for multiple weeks because that would be really bad.
I would hate that.
I won't.
No, do.
Please do.
All right, let me tell you about our sponsor this half hour.
It goes right to the woman who, you know, doesn't have a license.
And look, I'm for you've got to have a license if you're carrying a gun, but in a special circumstance where
you think your husband's going to kill you and you don't have a state that's handing out concealed carry permits.
I'm doing the same thing she did.
If I was her, I'd do the same thing.
Now, listen, the USCCA is there to help people, and it's there to help the concealed carry
defenders, if you will, all around the country.
Because as Stu said, she's now has a bail of $75,000.
Plus, her life is upside down for three years.
Her life, she's now have to hire attorneys.
This will be in court for years.
Are you prepared for that if you have to defend yourself?
That's what the U.S.
Concealed Care Association does.
You need to seize the day and you need to grab on to your rights.
As we found out from the IG report, the Fourth Amendment is gone.
Literally, it is gone.
What are we doing?
We're eating away at the First Amendment.
We're eating away at the Second Amendment.
The Fourth Amendment is gone.
You need the first and second.
Otherwise, everything else is gone.
Please help the U.S.
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We break now for 10 seconds.
Station ID.
Oh, still, still, still, still, still.
Still.
Still, still, still.
As a doctor,
as a reverend, as a colonel, I have to tell you that
all three of those professionals that live deep inside of me, also a
Marconi award-winning broadcaster.
I think I could say that as well.
So all of those people, is that why?
All of those people live inside of me.
So you see the movie split?
Anyway.
So I was celebrating and I couldn't stop watching the BBC yesterday.
Oh, that was satisfying.
Wasn't it?
It really is.
I mean,
there was a thought that a really,
really bad guy could get in charge of England.
Jeremy Corbin, who is
absolute anti-Semite.
This one really fits these days, pals around with terrorists.
That one from the old Sarah Palin days 100% fits Jeremy Corbin.
He makes Bernie Sanders look like George Washington.
It's true.
He really does.
Because he does not like freedom.
He does not like Great Britain.
He loves the former Soviet Union.
I mean, he is a very bad guy.
Very bad guy.
It seems like.
Shockingly, the U.K.
kind of figured that one out.
Britain figured that out.
And they
gave an gigantic win to Boris Johnson and the Conservatives
in a way, to the level that they didn't even expect.
Conservatives didn't even expect to win at this level.
It is bigger than Margaret Thatcher
and about the size of Winston Churchill in World War II.
And he was pretty popular after that.
You know, you're like,
got that Hitler thing right?
Yeah, I think we should go with him.
Yeah.
I think that's good.
They lost the left lost seats that have been held since like 1930.
I saw one that was 84 years.
It had been held by Labor, the Labor Party, which is, you know, essentially their left.
And,
you know, conservatives over there now have it.
And Boris Johnson, I mean, he's great.
He really
comes off as sort of aloof and a little silly, and his hair is messed up.
And he's kind of a goofball.
By design, I think.
But in reality, he's
incredibly smart.
Disarming.
He comes out
before he walks out in public.
He musses up his hair.
I mean,
he's much more calculated.
You know, Donald Trump is just like, hey,
he just goes for it.
He just pulls the six shooters out as he feels.
Corbin is
really, really, really an intellectual
and is more of a show.
I mean, Trump is a show too,
but Johnson, I think, knows when he's
mussing up his hair.
Sure.
And, you know, a lot of this went around Brexit.
And it's an interesting thing here because
half the country voted for Brexit.
Half of it voted against.
It's a pretty close vote.
But Brexit won out and it was supposed to go through.
It's been three years now where we've been waiting for this to happen.
And the government has done everything it could to screw this up and stop it.
And it's interesting that a lot of people who voted to stay, remain voters,
came around and voted for the Conservative Party because they said, you know, this is ridiculous.
Like, I don't even want to, I don't even, I didn't even want Brexit.
I voted against it.
But what you're doing here is you're not even honoring our vote.
Like, I lost and I'm willing to lose because we do, but we need to honor the things that went on here.
I heard a Labor Party member yesterday, and I just thought, hmm.
Hmm, I wonder what's going to happen here in America next
election.
But he was saying, you can't do this.
You can't, and this goes to the GOP as well.
Hello, Obamacare.
You can't ask people to vote, let them vote, and then just overturn it and just say, we're not doing any of those things.
Any parallels to the United States you can think of right now?
None.
It's like, you know, you guys lost.
Trump won.
I understand
you
wanted a different result there.
You got a chance to do it in 2020.
We're in the middle of an election.
Go out there, and if you think he's been a bad president, defeat him.
Well,
I just love this from New York magazine: the idea that many people on the left here in America were looking at Corbyn and saying, Yeah, you know, what's going to happen in Great Britain is going to be a precursor to what's coming.
And today I'm like, uh-huh, it is.
You're exactly right.
He was so far out of the mainstream, and he was pushing for the things that people felt were unfair and wrong.
People that that voted for labor before, they saw this, and one of the labor leaders said, you can't ignore democracy.
You can't ignore the people.
Now, this was a labor leader.
This is what's happening with the media and with the left, that they are just, they think that they are in the majority and they are not in the majority.
And the Democratic Party's learning something.
They're terrified by this result because
this is essentially, if you think about it from our perspective, if Boris Johnson is Trump, Jeremy Corbyn is there, Elizabeth Warren is their Bernie Sanders.
And so the Democrats today are trying to say, wait a minute, we can't run somebody like that because the same thing is going to happen to us that happened to Labor in the UK.
You can't run someone so incredibly extreme, and it's going to rise, I think,
the momentum behind some of these more moderate quote-unquote candidates, which, by the way, are not moderate at all, but the ones they are saying are moderate.
This is the Glenbeck program.
X-Chair.
Did you get one yet?
Now,
I'm not asking you as much as I'm really kind of trying to sear this in my memory because I think of this every day around this time when I tell you X-Chair makes a great Christmas gift.
And I hear my wife's voice, that's what I read every Christmas.
And so I have to do, I must please write this down.
Order the X-Chair for Tanya today, or I'm a dead man.
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It's been a decade since we first talked to Daniel Hannon
from Great Britain and his desire to take Britain
out of the EU.
We talk to him next.
Bill O'Reilly.
Bill O'Reilly is coming up in just a second.
Stand by for that.
You're listening to the Reverend Dr.
Colonel Beck program.
And
I take all of those titles seriously.
All of them.
And you should too.
So
we have Daniel Hannon coming on.
We're trying to connect with him now on an overseas transatlantic cable connection.
We had him on 10 years ago
after he gave this great speech in the EU where he's like basically saying,
Europe, England, you should fire me.
I don't want this job anymore.
We shouldn't be here.
And it was such a compelling speech.
And then, what, three years ago, we had him on.
We're like, congratulations.
You did it.
You did it.
And he was like, yeah, well,
we think so, but they tend to be a little sticky.
And now we're having him on after the second referendum.
And this was just this a full election.
And Boris Johnson swept.
And you can give the credit to Boris Johnson, but really it's Daniel Hannon.
This is his movement.
The Brexit movement is his.
Now, there's two sides of this.
Daniel Hannon is the guy who really...
We should talk to him about this.
There's this great show on, I think it was
Amazon where,
who's, what's his name, Cumberbun?
Benedict Cumberbatch?
Yes.
He played.
Who was it?
It wasn't Hannon.
No, Hannan was in
portrayed in the movie.
I think it was, I thought it was like a Showtime or HBO show originally.
I think Called Brexit.
Called Brexit, yeah.
And
I don't know any of the
politics over there, but it seemed pretty fair and good.
And they portrayed Daniel.
Daniel Hannan really well.
Really well.
And in fact,
at least, I mean, I'm sure for him there may have been issues with it, but generally speaking, it was one of those.
It looked pretty good.
Yeah.
They actually treated him with respect.
Hang on just a second.
Daniel's on the phone.
Daniel Hannon.
Hey, Glenn, how are you?
Very good.
Congratulations, sir.
For a second time.
Thank you.
Well, no, don't congratulate me.
Congratulate the country that can still hold its head high having rejected Marxism and anti-Semitism.
I mean, it is crazy.
It is crazy.
I heard one of the Labour Party leaders yesterday say, you know, you just can't go against democracy.
You can't just not listen to the people.
I'm like, huh, what an idea.
Maybe we should think about that here in the United States.
I actually think you have just unerringly put your finger on what the single biggest sentiment behind this vote was.
You know, we voted to leave the European Union three years ago.
We voted to leave in bigger numbers than British people have ever voted for anything.
And I think a lot of the kind of pro-Brussels elite thought we didn't mean it.
Thought that it was a kind of a joke and that if they, you know, that if they hected us and lectured us, we would do as we were told by our bettors.
And I'm very glad that I live in a stubborn, stiff-necked country where people just don't react like that.
And if I'm not mistaken, there were people that voted to stay in the EU last time that were voting this time saying, you know what?
No, you've you've got to listen to the people.
Is that true?
Yes.
I mean, I think
we all anecdotally know people like that.
We all have friends and neighbors in that category, and the figures bear it out.
This was a pro-democracy vote.
And it was also, I think it's really important to stress this,
it's a remarkably kind of mainstream and moderate vote.
Because
although his opponents have tried rather unconvincingly to paint Boris Johnson as some kind of fringe or far-right figure, he's actually very much in the political centre.
The only way you can call him extreme is if you regard Brexit as extreme, if you're calling a majority of the electorate extreme.
In other words, if you think that it's extreme for any country to want to live under its own laws and its own institutions, you know, something that the rest of the world takes for granted.
So the real extremists here were the
socialist revolutionaries on the other side, and the country politely said no to them.
Because he is really more of a populist.
I mean, he kind of goes where the people are, does he not?
Well, I mean,
so Boris is
politically very much in the mainstream.
His character is very large.
He has a very florid and colourful way with words.
He has a brilliant intellect, but his politics are fairly traditional, conservative politics.
Jeremy Corbyn, who is a much more kind of normal kind of guy in terms of his background and
his appearance and so on, is absolutely from outside the mainstream, something we've never really had,
an unapologetic Marxist leading one of the mainstream.
Right.
He's a Marxist.
He's a
virile anti-Semitic figure.
It seems to really hate Great Britain and what it stood for
forever, going way, way back with him.
I don't think think he personally, I want to be as fair as I can, I don't think he personally is anti-Semitic, but he is so self-righteous that he could not acknowledge or accept that his party had a problem with anti-Semitism, which comes out of this bizarre alliance between the extreme left and the Islamic jihadi types.
And because he's so convinced that we're the lefties, we're the good guys, he just couldn't bring himself to accept that the problem existed.
So who is, boy, that's very gracious of you to say that about him.
How much of this was
about him as well,
as the British people saying,
we don't want what he is selling beyond Brexit?
Yeah.
I think that was a very large part of it.
Britain is unusual in two respects compared to Europe politically.
In modern times, we have never had an anti-Semitic party anywhere near power.
Of course, we have had individual anti-Semites down the years, just as you have, just as every other country in the world has.
But they've never before infiltrated one of the major parties.
That is new and was outside our experience.
Second, and again, this is very different from almost every country in Europe, we never had any significant Communist Party.
There was never any parliamentary movement that was Marxist in its orientation until now.
And those two things came together in the last couple of years under this Labour leadership.
And, you know, I'm
in a country which deep down is a commonsensical, level-headed,
fair-minded country, just thought, you know what?
That is not the kind of people we are.
So I'm very glad that we've kept our record intact as a country that has nothing to do either with anti-Semitic conspiracy theories or with revolutionary solutions.
What should Washington and those in our parties here take as the lesson for America?
Well,
people are wiser than their leaders, and people
want
representatives, legislators and elected representatives, who remember that they are servants and not rulers.
When we voted leave, you know,
it wasn't in a spirit of light banter.
We really meant it.
And
for three years, we've been told by our supposed intellectual elites that we didn't understand what we were voting for, we got it wrong, and so on.
And we can see, first of all, that all of their predictions of disaster have conspicuously failed to be able to.
I mean the the British pound
the pound sterling and the straight line up
beating the dollar the minute the BBC said, looks like it's going to be the Conservatives in a landslide.
I mean it was straight line up.
Right.
And that proves something which up until now I was only able to argue, but I can now point as the rest of us can
to some evidence, which is that the real problem holding back our economy and holding back, saying,
We've done okay, but we could be doing even better, was not Brexit.
It was fear of a Corbyn-led government.
And now that that fear has been removed, I think that there will be a flood of pent-up investment into the UK economy because businesses that were holding back, not, you know, do you open a restaurant, you buy a house, do you, you know, no one wanted to make those decisions as long as there was a prospect of a communist prime minister who was prepared to expropriate private assets.
And now that that has been removed, I think the UK economy is now poised to take off.
Are you going to actually leave by the end of January?
Yes.
2020.
To be absolutely clear, I guess, fair point.
Yes, we will leave at
11 p.m.
6 p.m.
Eastern Standard Time on the 31st of January.
Daniel, the two main factors here, at least from the outsider perspective, are Jeremy Corbyn's an extremist, and the British people wanted to say, you know, democracy counts.
We know this vote happened and we need to honor it.
If you had to give a kind of a split, what was the bigger factor there?
Very, I mean, you're quite right.
Those were the two the two main factors.
And they're they're very linked because, you know, the refusal to acknowledge democracy kind of confirmed all the negatives people had about, well, hang on, is this a party that would ever
behave constitutionally.
There's one third factor, though, in this, which I think is only fair to nod at, which is the personal popularity of Boris Johnson and his ability to connect with voters in seats that had a...
cultural, hereditary, or tribal affiliation with Labor,
which almost made it impossible for them to look at a Conservative candidate because of all the connotations that they've grown up with.
And Boris has swept all of that away.
And
the whole electoral map looks different now.
We had a better vote for the Conservative Party than we've had since Margaret Thatcher at her height.
Is he Thatcher, or is he more like Churchill?
I mean,
he is politically much more within the Churchill tradition of sort of, you know, moderate patriotic Toryism.
You probably know that Boris wrote a book about
one of my favorite books.
Right.
It was written off by a lot of the critics who sneered at it.
And what they said was: Boris has kind of refashioned the great wartime leader into a prop in his own drama.
So Churchill, who emerges from the pages of his book, is this right-wing journalist and witty after-dinner speaker who is kind of cruelly overlooked by the party elites until the moment of crisis.
Now,
I actually don't think that criticism is entirely fair.
Boris is not comparing himself to Churchill, but I think it is probably true that he was inspired by elements of Churchill's story, and in particular, by the way in which the great man put all of the kind of
the boozing and
the unseriousness and the silly friends behind him and rose to the occasion.
And I think he very much sees this as his moment to rise to the occasion.
All right, so speaking of silly friends behind him, if you were in America, you were wondering when you heard him speak last night why Elmo and a weird Darth Vader was standing behind him and why you allowed Elmo to take his head off.
Isn't it just glorious?
Isn't democracy just the most wonderful thing?
What?
It was like when you are the sitting prime minister, you've got to go and defend your constituency against challenges by Elmo and Lord Buckethead.
I just
what a fantastic reminder, in practice as well as in theory, that we are all equal before the law and that the politician is the servant of the law.
So, quickly, can you tell us, was that Elmo and who was the guy in the bucket?
We've had a tradition here going back about 50 or 60 years that a number of eccentric and choke candidates
stand against the main party leaders in their constituencies when there is a general election.
Shut up.
And
yeah, yeah.
And one, in fact, there is a party, the guy with the guy you're calling Darth Vader,
who's changed his name by default to Lord Buckethead, is the leader of quite an old party in Britain that began in the early 60s called the official monster raving loony party.
And it has contested every by-election, and its leader has stood against the incumbent Prime Minister at every election since the mid-60s.
So they are they're actually older than our Liberal Democrat party.
Unbelievable.
Unbelievable.
One last question.
The Scottish National Party did very well.
And it's funny because the people were like, hey, democracy means something and
we want Brexit.
Well,
that's really the message of the Scottish National Party.
And I think it's been the same one since Mel Gibson put blue paint on his face.
Leave us alone.
We don't want a queen.
What's going to happen with that?
And how's Boris going to be able to.
With the difference, of course, that when
that was put to a referendum, unlike with Brexit, it was defeated.
Oh, it was.
So
why did the National Party go do so well in Scotland?
Well, this is interesting.
So a lot of their voters are, in fact, against independence for Scotland, but they vote for the Scottish National Party as a way of
maximising Scotland's weight in the Union, if you like, where
sending a message to London that they need to be taken seriously.
It's a very common thing.
You get it in other places where there's a separatist feeling.
I can't see there being another referendum in the short run, because we had one five years ago, and everyone said that that was it, and it was going to be it for a lifetime, and so on.
But I do think that we need to acknowledge the advance
in the elections of the Scottish National Party.
And it seems to me that
the fairest thing to all sides, given that Scotland voted to stay in the UK, but not by a huge margin in 2014, the fairest thing would be to try and come up with some compromise where there is more devolution for Scotland, including tax-raising powers, fiscal autonomy,
stops short of actually having separate embassies and so on, which I think is what the vast majority of people in Scotland say they want.
Daniel, fiscal autonomy, but not complete breakaway.
Daniel Hannon, I have literally 10 seconds and I'm being screamed out of my ear.
10 seconds.
Does this mean, does this push France closer to Brexit themselves or not?
I just need a yes or no question from
an answer.
I don't think with France, I think the next country to go will probably be the Netherlands.
God bless you.
Thank you very much.
Daniel Hannon, our friend from
the EU, he's the
ambassador of the EU or the representative or whatever.
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You're listening to Glenn Beck.
Welcome to the program.
Mr.
Bill O'Reilly is coming up next.
Which...
Oh, do you think Bill has a few things to say about the IG report?
About the media?
Oh, Chuck Todd, man.
The
latest from Chuck Todd on Meet the Press is just outrageous.
He's comparing the impeachment trial to the O.J.
Simpson trial.
Except he's got it backwards.
He's got it backwards.
Who's making this all about the glove?
The conservatives or the media?
This is the Glenbeck program.
Boy, there is a really sad story.
We have Bill O'Reilly coming up in just a second.
There is a really sad story about Greta Thurnberg that is out.
Her crisis of meaning.
She is one of the saddest figures, I think,
in public today.
How dare you
exactly right.
Uh, apparently, she had an eating disorder, she was depressed, she had no friends, she hated school by her own telling of the story.
Yeah, it's so sad, and then she found climate justice, and that's her whole life.
The meeting,
she said, the entire meaning of her life.
She's now, it's, it's cured her, she's now better.
And it's like when you put all your faith in something like that, eventually it fails you, right?
I mean, eventually she realizes she's not going to die in a fiery flood in two years.
And then what?
Then your meaning's gone too.
I mean,
this is really a case of really bad parents, I think.
I mean, as a parent, I would be saying, honey, go outside and play for a little while.
You know, let's have some perspective.
You can't make your whole life about this.
Your life has meaning besides this.
It's really a sad story.
We'll hope to share it with you coming up in a little while.
And Bill O'Reilly is next.
The fusion of entertainment and enlightenment.
This has been one of the craziest weeks in American news in my life because the evidence is becoming so clear.
The Constitution has been so violated.
The Fourth Amendment does not exist anymore, at least for the FBI.
They want to get you on charges.
They want to phone tap you.
If they'll do this to the President of the United States, what chance do you have against this government?
Outrage that should be heard from coast to coast from the liberals, the Democrats, the Independents, the Conservatives, the Republicans.
Everyone should be sitting straight up and saying, Wait a minute, wait a minute, what's going on?
Did the media do anything about it?
The media barely even covered it.
And wall-to-wall coverage of the impeachment vote,
Bill O'Reilly is going to unload in one minute.
minute.
This is the Glenbeck program.
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I'm going to start with this.
Bill O'Reilly, welcome to the program.
What is the biggest story of the week, in your opinion?
I'm on now.
It's my turn.
It's your turn, yes.
Excellent.
Excellent.
Welcome.
The biggest story that I took out of all the chaos this week, there were actually two very important stories for Americans that have implications going forward.
The first one is that it is clear to me that the FBI was out of control.
So the most powerful investigative agency in the world, not just in the country,
was basically running a bunko scheme.
Remember those old detective shows?
The jackwhip bunko scheme.
And it is clear, there's no
denying it
that they
basically colluded, love that word.
Where did I hear that before?
Colluded?
The FBI colluded
to get,
with quotes around get, Donald Trump.
So before and after the 2016 election.
That's the big, big story that all Americans should be very unsettled about.
Go ahead, your follow-up question.
So, my son said to me, now he's 15, and we were talking about it.
He said, Dad, what happened with the FBI?
And I told him, and
he sat there for just 30 seconds, and he said, well, the real question is, and I was shocked to hear this come out of his mouth,
who organized that?
Who was at the top of that?
Who allowed that to happen?
Who was calling the shots on this?
Yeah, a couple couple of weeks ago, I don't know whether you remember.
Stu may remember, but he might have been off because Stu's off a lot.
I told you about a case
street group called the Bonner Group.
Do you remember that?
I do remember that.
I do remember.
Okay.
So Americans don't know anything about this because it'll never be reported on in the media.
So every morning there is a conference call
that comes out of this group.
They have have offices.
And they are basically attached to the Democratic Party, but far more than that, they are adherents of the secular progressive movement funded by George Soros.
Now, as soon as you mention Soros, then you're a paranoid nut or you're anti-Semitic or, you know, you know what the media does.
All right, but this is a true story.
So everybody in Washington who works in all of the agencies and all of the departments know about this crew.
And they know that this crew, they're activists and they tried to advance agendas.
And the agenda, of course, in 2016 was
keep Donald Trump out of the overall office, right?
That was the agenda of the Bonner group.
Before that, it was destroy Fox News.
And the reason I know about this is I got caught up in this.
All right, they hurt me.
So that's how I know so much about them because we put our investigators and found out.
But anyway, the sole agenda in 2016 was hurt Donald Trump.
Get him.
And in those
in that campaign, James Comey and McCabe, who McCabe's wife, you'll remember, ran for Congress as a Democrat in Virginia.
They're in that circle.
They know.
all these people and they know what comes out.
So early on, and I don't believe that it was
explicit, I don't believe Comey and McCabe had a meeting because they're way too smart for that, and told their agents, led by Peter Strzok, the infamous mistress guy with the text, get Trump, and that's our policy.
That's not what they do.
It's implied.
Implied.
And when the opening came from the bar conversation, in London between Papadopoulos and the Australian guy, that was the opening that the FBI needed.
Aha.
Now we have a legitimate way to go in and try to surveil the Trump campaign because we believe they're dirty.
It's like, you know, they know who all the organized crime people are.
They know they sell narcotics, but they need an opening to get in and tap them.
This was the opening.
And then from there, it cascaded into illegality.
where they made stuff up, they falsified texts between the CIA and the FBI.
They do all kinds of things to get the FISA warrant.
That's what happened.
So let me ask you this.
Why did Horowitz, the IG, come out with this, I think the headline is Mamby-Pamby?
Because he calls them inaccuracies.
But listening to his testimony, he knows those aren't inaccuracies.
He knows that is
a forgery,
set up,
lying outright to the FISA court.
He knows knows that.
Why was the language?
You and I, and this is absolutely true,
and Beck and O'Reilly are
two of the few who have pointed out that Horowitz was disingenuous, word of the day,
in his testimony.
And the reason he was is he doesn't want to be attacked by the Washington Post,
which is uber powerful in D.C.
But Horowitz did tell you what you just raised.
He did say that, but he said it in such an oblique way that you'd have to be right into that swap to know.
He said there was never an explanation for the FBI's conduct.
Now what he should have said was,
in all my years of being in the Justice Department, I have never seen anything like this, and it strains credulity, another word of the day, to think that it was was an accident, to think that these mistakes, all 17 of them, were accidents, just bad judgment.
It's not only impossible to have 17 or 19 mistakes all fall in the one direction.
The actions of changing
an email and reversing it, you know, cutting out language.
The FBI is referred.
He's referred and he will be charged.
Right.
He will be charged.
All right.
That FBI agent who did that.
Now, did he do it on his own?
Again, why would an FBI agent put his whole career and life at stake?
For one.
Why?
Why?
It doesn't make any sense.
No.
So, Michael.
None of this makes any sense.
But what your audience has to understand is that this Horowitz, powerful man, Inspector General of the Justice Department, did not want to put himself
at risk by telling the American people what really happened.
So he did the dance.
He told you, but he didn't really say it.
The dance is what they all do.
Okay, this is it's getting frightening because as Ben Sasse said, he said, I was ashamed that I have to sit two people down from Mike Lee because I've had this argument for four years and I believe in the FISA system.
I believe in the FBI.
And he said, I told Mike for five years this doesn't happen.
And he said, now I have to hear this, that it is happening.
And it's happening in a case where they knew this would get sunlight.
They knew this would be seen.
So if they're doing this now,
what does the average American have in store with a FISA court?
I mean, Mike Lee came out and said...
I don't think that they knew they were going to get caught because the press covers for them.
So you got to understand the big picture.
The only way you get caught doing corrupt activities at the federal government level is if the press uncovers it.
Because the watchdogs aren't going to do it.
You saw Harwick.
He's not Elliott Ness.
All right?
So when you have the press in the tank,
whatever harms Donald Trump is good, and we don't really care whether you break the law to do it.
This is the American press.
All right.
The FBI, they didn't fear exposure.
Who's going to expose them?
So
this is so terrifying.
You know, Mike Lee is not going to be available.
Mike is the right word.
Mike Lee said we should suspend all FISA courts until we know exactly what's going on.
I.G.
Horowitz said that they are conducting
an investigation in all of the FISA warrants.
But this should terrify people.
And it goes so far beyond Donald Trump and Nancy Pelosi and Adam Schiff.
This is a, this is, the Fourth Amendment does not exist today in America.
But, but I don't, I'm not buying into that the whole system,
the FISA court system, what keeps you.
We should remind your audience.
The reason this was put into place was to protect Americans from foreign terrorists coming here and blowing us up.
All That's the reason that this was put into place during Bush the Younger's administration, to give the federal agencies, FBI, CIA, NSA, more latitude to surveil people who might harm us.
But Bill, this is the same kind of thing that Schiff was doing when he went into the SCIF and said, hey, I'm going to do these three phone numbers.
Well, those were the...
Well, that's ATT.
But ATT could have said no, and Schiff would have lost in court.
That's AT ⁇ T.
And who does AT ⁇ T own?
CNN.
Okay, so
what's happened here is corruption, number one.
But I believe the corruption was directed by James Comey and Andrew McCabe.
And I believe they will be indicted when the Justice Department wraps up its investigation, Durham.
But between now and Durham bar putting people in handcuffs, which will probably be in July,
okay, you're going to see attacks on both Barr and Durham like you've never seen by the press,
which wants to harm Donald Trump.
All of this, and I don't even know if Trump knows it, I think he does, is going to help
him get reelected, Donald Trump.
Because even the dimmest of Americans know the fix was in.
All of this stuff was contrived.
It was based on nothing but getting President Trump.
And when you have an apparatus, a federal apparatus devoted to getting a president,
that's corruption beyond anything that we've seen.
Okay, I'm going to take a quick break.
We're with Bill O'Reilly from billo'reilly.com.
You can watch his show and get all of his
get all of his opinions every day at billorilly.com.
I want to pause here because I want to come back and ask you about what do you think the Senate is going to do?
How are they going to investigate?
Because people do belong in handcuffs and people need to pay a high price because if not, we have a banana republic right now.
There's a banana republic that is happening.
And if we don't get control of this, we all lose our freedom.
And we'll go to that in just a second.
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We have 10 seconds.
Station ID.
All right, so Bill, what is the...
I saw a story just a few minutes ago that it looks like Lindsey Graham's not going to call any witnesses for the impeachment trial.
I think they're just going to just dismiss this,
which I guess would be a good legal way to do it because, you know, as Mike Lee said, when you've won the case, sit down and shut up.
However, I think that's really bad for the country because we have to expose all of this.
You know, it's a very hard call.
I understand that
if the Republicans put on a trial in the Senate, the Democratic Party will be embarrassed.
You'd have a lot of court fights.
They'd subpoena Schiff, he'd say no.
They'd subpoena Biden.
He'd say no.
Then they'd go to court, and it goes on and on and on and on.
But I think the strategy that Mitch McConnell, and you have to assume Donald Trump is involved with this,
I think what they have
done is looked at the polls.
And the polls, which are push polls, which means that Quitty Biak and Monmouth and all of these polling agencies, they wanted a certain outlook.
And what they wanted was that the majority of Americans want President Trump removed from office.
But it didn't turn out that way in both polls.
Even though if you look at the methodology, which of course billorilly.com does for every poll, you see far more Democrats polled than Republicans, which in a case like this is not fair.
But even then,
only 45% of the respondents want him removed because of this stuff.
So that McConnell and Trump basically say, we won.
And we can use this to demonize the Democratic Party.
Yeah, we might get a little bit more in a trial, but we have enough now.
I mean, Joe Biden himself, even though he's come up in the Democratic polls, I mean, my God.
they can just bludgeon him with this Ukraine stuff.
And so I think that's a strategy, and that was the decision that was made.
So is any of the actual corruption in Ukraine with the Democratic Party, Barack Obama, and what is happening with our State Department and what is happening with our FDI and Justice Department, is that going to be exposed and
corrected?
Because I don't see that happening
unless Donald Trump has a trial trial in the Senate with a Supreme Court justice, and Donald Trump is tweeting all the time, I'm going to sit in the gallery and I might just blurt things out
because then people will watch it and they will see it.
I don't think Trump has ever sat in a gallery in his life.
I know, I know, I know.
Look, the only chance that
we, the people,
have of really knowing the extent of the corruption in the 2016 election is John Durham.
That's it.
Now, Barr is a pretty feisty guy, the Attorney General.
He
has made it quite clear that he is appalled by the corruption in the American press and the corruption in the Democratic Party.
Is he a partisan?
Yes, he is.
Is he a Trump supporter?
No doubt about it.
But he has power now.
And that's why you saw
Stedman.
I mean, I mean, the former Attorney General.
He doesn't doesn't look exactly like Oprah's boyfriend either.
He does, kind of, yes.
Come out yesterday and attack him.
And as I said, you're going to see Barr.
But Barr can take this investigation anywhere he wants to take it.
So what Barr himself believes it was massive corruption in Ukraine in 2016, that'll find its way into the final Justice Department report.
But that's really the only hope.
I don't like it.
I don't like it.
Unless you go over there, Jack, learn how to speak Ukrainian and
shake them out.
I would like to.
Tell me what happened over here.
I would like to, and we're working on that.
I just,
I tremble for my country, to quote Thomas Jefferson.
This is so corrupt and so
unjust on what's happening right now, and the ramifications are so big.
It must be exposed.
And I think Donald Trump is the only one that can make that happen because he knows how to draw a crowd.
But somebody's got to do it the right way.
More with Bill O'Reilly in a second.
You're listening to Glenn Beck.
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Coming up, more with Bill O'Reilly.
And by the way, you can get more Bill O'Reilly every day at billo'reilly.com.
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There is something big happening in Virginia, and we have Cam Edwards, who has been a
Second Amendment guy forever.
He's the host of 40 Acres and a Fuel
and a Fool.
He's part of the Blaze podcast network.
He's coming up, and we're going to talk a little bit about what's going on in Virginia coming up in just a little while.
Bill O'Reilly is with us now from billorilly.com.
Bill, let me go across the water here for a second.
I think there is a real lesson to be learned from Brexit and from this vote.
It was really a referendum of do the politicians have to listen to the people or not.
I tweeted yesterday.
Do you know I tweet back?
Did you know that?
No, I didn't.
Man, I missed it.
I have to full disclosure, I have no idea how to do that, but
I have people that tweet and my
Corgi, my Corgi Holly, the tarot dog, has 3,265,000 Twitter followers.
Wow.
So yesterday, I tweeted that the election in Britain
may
forebode
bad tidings for the Democratic Party here.
And the reason is that there's not a lot of difference between Boris Johnson and Donald Trump.
I agree.
There's not a lot of difference.
Neither one is a
rational politician.
They are both emotional men.
They both are populists.
And Johnson kicked some serious
Labor Party butt over there.
Right.
And there's not a lot of difference between the extreme on the left here and the extreme on the left of the Labor Party there.
Well, I think they're communists over there.
I mean,
Jeremy Corbyn, I mean, my God.
But
the real takeaway for Americans who really don't care what happens in the British Isles, most of us,
is that there comes a point where the folks, the regular folks, not the ideologues, not the really politically involved people, but just the people,
they reach a point where they go enough.
And I think
the Democratic Party, and I believe that the chieftains know this,
are seeing that happen now.
Enough of Adam Schiff, enough of Nancy Pelosi, enough of Gerald Nadler, enough of the fawning press, the corrupt press, CNN's ratings that rock, and it's amazing.
These are the biggest stories, and they have three-year lows and ratings.
That's a repudiation of the outfit, all right?
And I think that's where we're getting.
Now,
if Donald Trump would be astute, he could harness this,
but instead he attacks a 16-year-old girl girl out of Sweden who wants it to be cooler.
Yeah, you know, I'm saying to myself, no,
no,
this is not where you should be focusing.
That is the difference between Boris Johnson and Donald Trump.
Boris Johnson is much more calculated in his moves.
I don't know that.
Boris Johnson is brawling outside a pub, so I'm not sure that's accurate.
But as far as Donald Trump is concerned, I mean, why, why?
Don't take your eye off the corruption.
I agree.
You know, you can win the election.
Did I tell you I had supper with Trump?
Yes.
Okay.
Too many times.
I don't want to be redundant or repetitive on the Grand College.
Trump's fuller program.
And in that supper, I basically said, and
I would say this to Barack Obama or to anybody.
I said, look,
if you want to win, all you have to do is say one simple thing.
You may not like me, but do you really want them?
That's it.
That's all.
And most Americans, I believe, at this point in history say, no, we don't want them.
We don't want the New York Times.
We don't want Me Too.
We don't want all of this PC crap where you can't can't say anything.
We don't want it.
And therefore, we'll vote for the guy who opposes it.
That's what it's going to come down to.
So the media is, I mean, Chuck Todd on Meet the Press and then MSNBC and CNN, you know, not really covering
the Horowitz testimony and the reaction to the Horowitz testimony.
It is, I've never seen anything.
I am willing now to say that the press,
on the whole, is an enemy of the Constitution of America.
They are a danger and a detriment to our basic Bill of Rights.
But let's get more specific, Beck.
All right, than the press and the media, we can demonize them all day long.
And just so your audience knows, in the opening of the Horowitz Report, the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, Lindsey Graham, gave a statement.
MSNBC, which is run by NBC News,
which is run by Comcast, refused to take Lindsey Graham's statement.
However, when the minority ranking member, Diane Feinstein,
MSNBC took it.
Now, that's unheard of for a news agency.
Correct.
But that comes from Comcast.
Now, the most important soundbite in the last two weeks from a politician was Michael Bloomberg,
who told the CBS Morning News that,
hey, yes, I ordered my news agency not to cover me or any of the Democrats running for president, while at the same time gave them the green light to hammer Donald Trump as much as possible.
And the woman on CBS said, well, that doesn't seem right.
And Bloomberg looked at her and said, I sign the checks.
And if you accept my checks, there are restrictions on what you do.
That was the most important soundbite that anybody could digest.
Bloomberg basically telling the American people,
I am going to control the news flow in my agency, and that's what they do in every other agency.
So you're saying it's important.
You're saying it's important because he actually is telling the truth?
He's telling the truth, and the corporations are dictating the coverage.
Not
what's his name, on Meet the Press,
not Jake Tapper.
These people are taking orders.
All right?
They are ordered to do things.
And sometimes it's explicit, and sometimes it's implicit.
But they are not going to go against their corporate masters who sign their checks.
So
there's a new,
well, it's not new.
They're calling everything now, including the Horowitz stuff,
a conspiracy theory.
Yes, right-wing conspiracy, absolutely.
But you know what?
It's not getting any traction.
It's not.
And that's the good news.
I don't want, you know, it's Christmas time, and I have a plug I need to make bread.
I got it, I got it.
But it's Christmas time, and it's goodwill toward men, and I don't want people to be depressed.
The turnaround is coming, and the turning around is not political, it's cultural.
People are starting to understand that their rights are being threatened.
On a number of different levels, we talked about the Faisal Warrants.
You've talked about the Second Amendment.
I do that on billoreilly.com all the time.
We've talked about the First Amendment freedom of speech.
Okay.
People are starting to say, you know what, this totalitarian left that is on display during every Democratic debate,
this is a threat to me and my family.
Economically, it's a threat.
Socially, it's a threat.
And my basic freedoms would be eroded if these people get power.
That turnaround, all right, is here.
Now, again, you're not going to see it reported.
You're not going to hear it.
But
I have an advantage in life, Beck, because everybody knows me.
About 50% of people know you.
But everybody knows me.
All right?
So wherever I go, people engage.
And because I'm 6'4, 215, they're not nasty because, you know, this is an Irish guy who knows what he's going to do.
They're nice, but they ask questions and then they offer opinions.
And almost 100% of them, I've had enough of this.
I have had enough.
And again, Trump may blow it.
He may not understand
the winds.
Well, this is what I wanted to ask because it goes right to that.
I think he has the clearest path to victory since Reagan and Mondale.
However, he could blow it.
And
what people are saying is that his paranoia is increasing, et cetera, et cetera, which you would understand.
You just had dinner with him.
You didn't see it because you just had dinner with him.
Not true.
I don't know if it's true or not, but I didn't see it.
All right.
And believe me, I've known a man for 30 years, so I can put him into perspective.
He was the same,
although he is very well aware that he's president of the United States, so I can't just go, hey, you pinhead, you know, like I could when he wasn't.
Sure.
You can't.
But he was essentially the same
when I was speaking to him alone as he had been when I went to the Yankee game with him and the Knick game with him way back.
I didn't see him
facial ticks or any, I didn't.
And I, you know, look, the man is under unbelievable pressure.
Never seen anything like that.
Incredible.
Right.
Yeah.
But that night, it was a three-hour dinner, Beck.
I was trying, I was looking away.
I got to get out of here.
I mean, but it was the White House.
My God.
You know, it's such a magnificent, majestic place.
And I was lucky to be invited.
But no, I don't see him as
being anything other than he has been.
But the lack of discipline in his presentation on Twitter, at the rallies, going after the 16-year-old girl from Sweden, that could derail the whole thing.
I agree.
I agree.
Bill O'Reilly, thank you so much.
What do you have on billoilly.com and for Christmas?
Well,
I want to tell you we have had an unbelievable year on billorilly.com, and a lot of that is thanks to Beck, because I'm on every Friday with Beck, and the word gets out.
So we're going to have the best election coverage next to Beck.
He'll have the best.
I'll have second best.
I have to say that, or he'll cut me off.
Unbelievable.
This is as humble as he gets.
Yeah, if you want signed copies of the United States of Trump, which are great stocking stuffers, this is the last roundup here on BillO'Reilly.com because we want to get them to you before Christmas.
Book is a fabulous success.
Thank you again.
A lot of it's for you and Stu.
Yep.
I know you guys like the book and I really appreciate it.
So I just wanted to plug that and
wish you guys.
Are you going to be here next Friday or are we going to chat?
Are you gone?
I am going to be here next Friday.
All right.
So I'll make myself available to you, Beck.
Well, that's big of you.
I will.
You'll take that free hour of advertising.
I have to say, I thought our discussion today was one of the best.
It was mediocre.
Yes, it's one of the best.
no what
bill i know was one of the best dude didn't say it a blank and word no i just let you go
just listen thank you so much god bless we'll talk to you next week bill o'reilly from billorilly.com
uh so here we are looking over a very uncertain future as we uh we we try to make decisions on going forward you want to buy that home or not you'd be risking a lot but you know nobody ever succeeded in life without taking some risks.
Can I get some good advice from somebody who's not trying to sell me something?
Yes, AmericanFinancing.net.
I want to tell you a quick true story about American Financing.
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they were going to buy a new home and they were buying it from, I think, a builder.
And they were offered these terms and they called American Financing and they said, so American Financing, what kind of deal?
They said, we can get you a good deal.
And then they found out, wait, you're buying a house.
Can you get the funding through the builder?
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Let's check.
So they checked, found out, and they called American Financing back and they said, okay, here's what you ask for because you'll get, because the builder just wants this thing off his books.
So they'll get you a really good loan.
Now, if you can't get X, Y, and Z, you come back to us, we'll get it.
But you'll get a really good deal from the builder builder because they're motivated.
Who does business like that?
Who does?
That's great.
This is like Miracle on 34th Street.
These people really are.
If we can't do it, if you can get a better deal at, you know, at
what was it?
Not Macy's and Macy's and
what was the other one in Miracle 34th Street?
Yeah.
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This is the Glenbeck program.
Oh, you're kidding me.
Just looking at, you know, we're so close to Christmas.
And quite honestly, I think we're all kind of just there, aren't we?
Aren't we coasting just until the holiday?
By the way, we're a Judeo-Christian nation.
We should be able to have the Jewish and the Christian holidays.
I'm just saying, as a nation, it's important.
We would work like five days a year if that happened.
And I'm all for it.
Anyway,
Jumanji is opening tonight.
Jumanji, the next level, Glenn.
Not just Jumanji.
I love Jumanji.
I'm in love with Iraq.
He runs for 2024.
Between him and Nikki Haley, I don't know.
Man, Kanye.
I mean, you got to go to January.
I know there.
I don't know
between the other two.
I mean, I really like The Rock.
You don't know any of his policies, but I don't know any of his policies.
Is that important anymore?
Nope.
I don't know.
Not at all.
Not at all.
That's out this weekend.
I'm really interested to see Richard Jewell from Clin Eastwood, which I think looks really, really good.
So do you remember covering that?
Yeah, it was before
watching the cover.
Yeah, I remember covering it and thinking, this is crazy.
What's happening?
And I don't really remember how it all ended oh this is the thing this is like basically my favorite genre of movies which is dramatic tellings of recent historical events I don't know why I love these things every time they come out I want to see it but I can't look at any of the coverage on it because I don't want to relearn the story I want to I want it to be revealed in the movie and then I can go back and see where they you know took artistic license here and there but I don't want to like go back and know the whole story before I go well the press is very upset about it and I can't wait to read one of the reviews to you because their hypocrisy
is
stunning.
Just stunning.
All right, we're going to talk about the Second Amendment and this big movement that is now happening in Virginia coming up in just a second.
You're listening to Glenn Beck.
We have Gavin Edwards on in just a minute.
This guy's incredible.
He has written nine New York Times best-selling books.
He's written for every magazine.
But this is what I like.
He Moonlights is a game designer, photographer, and a demolition derby driver.
I've actually thought about doing demolition derby driving.
Really have.
Because we have it, you know, up
in Idaho, where it's a small little town of 500 people.
Every summer they do a demolition derby.
And
I want to enter.
I want a car that I can enter.
But I've never talked to a demolition derby driver before, so I don't know if it's like.
Is that like suicidal?
I don't think, I doubt it's suicidal, but I don't know that that's necessarily what we want to spend this entire interview talking about.
Oh, I'm sorry.
Are you a doctor?
Well, no.
Okay.
Are you a reverend?
No, I'm not.
Are you a Kentucky Colonel?
No, I'm not.
Is your name on the show?
No, it's me.
Who are you again?
Because I don't.
I'm the Reverend Dr.
Colonel Glenn Beck.
That's my favorite.
And this is the Reverend Dr.
Colonel Glenn Beck program.
You do sound important.
Thank you.
Sap.
Sound keyword.
The fusion
of entertainment and enlightenment.
You know, I only have one real memory of Mr.
Rogers' neighborhood, and that is I'm 16 years old.
My dad happens to come home early one day from work, and I'm sitting at three o'clock.
We had four channels, ABC, NBC, CBS, and PBS.
And Mr.
Rogers was on, and everything else was a soap opera, and I just sitting on the couch eating some, I don't know, cornflakes or something.
And my dad comes in and he stops and he sees me and he looks at the TV and he watches it for a second and then he looks at me puzzled and then he looks back at the TV and he says, What the hell are you watching and what is wrong with you?
16 is a little out of the demo.
No, but it was one of those things where you just were surfing.
You had four channels and you're like, I'm just going to eat a bowl of cereal.
I watch this.
My dad, rightly at 16, was like, turn the TV, turn the TV off.
Mr.
Rogers now is an icon, an absolute icon.
The question is,
why and why now?
We have the author of Kindness and Wonder, Why Mr.
Rogers Matters Now More Than Ever, Gavin Edwards, in one minute.
This is the Glenbag program.
Also, I don't think there's any relation.
Cam Edwards is going to be talking to us about the Second Amendment sanctuary cities in about 30 minutes.
What's going on in Virginia is not getting any coverage, but it's a very big deal.
All right.
i'm sorry stu i know you're a vegan my daughter is a vegan but i love meat and here's the
apologize to me for for eating meat you can do what you want well i also raise my own cows and then i kill them
well i know the process
i am aware of it so but i kill them nicely i mean it's
i don't know if there's a nice way to kill anyway killing them softly
With this song, that's what I'm doing.
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This is one of my favorite resumes of all time.
New York Times best-selling author of nine books, including The Tao of Bill Murray, Last Night at the Viper Room, the successful Excuse Me While I Kiss This Guy series of misheard lyric collections, longtime contributor Rolling Stone.
He's written for the New York Times, Wired, Billboard Details, and GQ.
And has moonlighted as a game designer, photographer, and a demolition derby driver.
I love this guy.
Lives in North Carolina, in Charlotte.
Welcome to the program.
Gavin Edwards, how are you, sir?
I'm very well.
How about yourself, sir?
I'm very good.
So,
Mr.
Rogers,
he is, he has always been an amazing man.
Anybody who ever paid attention to him,
he's been an amazing man.
Now he's gone, and
he is an icon, an absolute icon, surpasses anything Sesame Street ever did.
This is the guy that you look at and go, that doesn't exist.
Why is he suddenly so popular and everywhere?
Well, I think there's two reasons.
One is he was the real deal.
Mr.
Rogers would have still been a lot of good in the world if like offstage he was driving fast cars and chomping cigars.
Like if that show would have still helped people.
But everyone knows that like he was that authentic guy.
Like if he was out
and he saw a kid on the edge of a room where he was having lunch like looking distressed, he would get up from his meal, he would walk over, get down on one knee and talk to that kid and make sure that kid was okay.
So that was what it was about.
So, Gavin, at this point in our history, I don't think that guy could exist because everyone would go, I think there's something wrong with that guy.
There's something wrong with him.
You know, people said there's something wrong with that guy when he came out.
Like, there's people who said, you know, sort of like
people would get cheesed off.
They would take...
his patience with kids not as perverse necessarily, but kind of as an insult.
You know, there was this guy in a Chicago newspaper who wrote, you know, any self-respecting father just wants to punch Mr.
Rogers in the nose.
So,
you know, like it really like challenges people.
Like they take
his gentleness and his caring to be sort of like an implicit, why aren't you doing better?
Which is not what he's trying for.
But, you know, if it does, in fact, challenge you to do better, to tap into your inner Mr.
Rogers, then, you know, like you're going to be better off.
Like I have found, you know, just like watching the show once a day and you know, sort of like saying to myself now and then, hey, you know, sort of like, can I be a little more patient with people?
Can I listen better?
Can I get in touch with these very basic messages that he taught me when I was a kid that I've like forgot about and put away?
Like, it improves my life.
But he wasn't, I mean, he wasn't like Sesame Street.
He wasn't a runaway smash.
Was he?
Well, I mean, Sesame Street got even bigger, even faster, but he was, in fact, you know, sort of like he took off.
That, you know, it was a show that started off on like a, you know, sort of like local public television in Pittsburgh, and then it went to other cities, and they would, pretty soon they would just be getting thousands of fan letters when there was early on when they didn't necessarily have enough budget to do the show.
You know, sort of they found out that, you know, sort of like mothers in like different areas were just like going door to door, raising money for the show.
And they would show up in like Boston, Chicago, and Los Angeles and say, oh, like, Mr.
Rogers is making a personal appearance.
And the stations would be overwhelmed because thousands and thousands of families would show up.
So pretty quickly, you know, sort of even if he's not on adults radar, kids connected with him.
They're like, oh, this is the guy who cares about me and is looking at me and telling me that, you know, sort of like he's happy that I'm there and I made today special.
And that's just something magical.
So you look at him and the way he spoke
was just
very different.
And you'll hear people say, don't talk to your kids as if they're, you know, morons.
Now, I know
he was going for a
younger audience, obviously.
But
was that tone that he spoke to the kids about, is that the way he always
was
with adults?
That's the natural cadence.
That's the way he was with adults.
And you can see, if you've seen the new movie with Tom Hanks, like, who does in many ways a very nice job, but you can see he's fighting to slow down his natural speech pattern.
It's not how most people speak, but that was what he did.
And he was very comfortable with silence.
He would take out the radio in his car because, you know, he just wanted to be alone with his thoughts.
One of my favorite sequences on the show ever was just he fills up a fish tank with water.
It's about three minutes.
Not much happens, but just like, you know, he's just hanging out with the kids and the camera, and, you know, sort of like, we're just going to be here and watch the fish tank fill up.
He is
obviously very mentally healthy individual that likes silence.
Very few people like and can handle silence.
Nobody,
nobody who is
You know, nobody who is struggling with things will take the radio out of their car.
Yeah.
I mean, the term in your business is dead air.
You know, sort of like, and if you think about it, you know, sort of like that's obviously a judgment.
It's not, you know, sort of quiet time or like contemplative time.
Dead air.
You know, like people say that's death when, you know, there's not something filling every second.
So,
who owns the rights to Mr.
Rogers?
Does his family still own it?
There's a non-profit foundation which
now does the show
Daniel Tigers Navy.
Okay, so
somebody is paying somebody for all of these
portrayals of him and everything else.
Because I'm wondering,
it's almost so far out of the blue, and maybe that's why it's so successful because he's the anti-today.
Or was it kind of like, you know, it's a wonderful life.
Oh, there's no copyright on this.
We just play this all the time.
People are really, really responding uh to this.
And you can see just in the last couple of years, and I think, you know, like whoever you are or like uh, you know, like uh however you feel about like sort of politics in the world, you can see things are getting louder and they're getting like nastier and cruder.
And you like look at reality television, you look at how people interact with each other.
And it just feels like in our lifetimes, it you know, like the dial keeps going up and there's just more hostility in the air than there used to be.
And so, I think people just like crave Mr.
Rogers.
It's like a glass of cold water that
you say, oh, it doesn't have to be like this all the time.
I can actually, you know, even if I don't control the mass culture, I can control what's going on in my family and in my neighborhood and how I react to people.
And that's, I think, why there's so much interest in him and like renewed love for him in the last couple of years.
So,
he's a pendulum swing that we hope will catch on, bigger than just going to see him at the movies or reading about him in your book.
He's a pendulum swing that we're, we hopefully will go.
No.
You know, and
sometimes pendulums swing not just because of like one big apocalypse, but because lots of people decide to push just a little in the same direction.
You know, sort of if more people just like take a moment to, you know, sort of like be kind, to, you know, sort of like slow down and like listen to their kid and stuff.
Like, we got to go, we we gotta go we gotta go right then you know like that's to the good do you think that show could exist today
it barely was able to exist then like it was this weird fluky thing that you know sort of like he got into public television
you know sort of at just the right time when they had you know sort of like hours that needed to be filled and he had these gifts of you know sort of like he would have been a puppeteer and he
wrote the music himself and he knew all these things He knew how to do a show.
But, you know, and just
because, like, well, there's nothing else.
It's that or dead air.
So I don't think you could ever get that show on the air right now.
But I do think that somebody like him could come on, and he was such a natural communicator.
He would find a medium, and he would still find a way to connect with people.
Any explanation on the name Mr.
McFeely?
Ah,
so that is actually, you know, sometimes people raise their eyebrow and it's like, is that a double entendre thing?
Well, I mean, it's not, I mean, it's a kids' show.
The guy is really soft-spoken, and the mailman who comes in and talks to the kids from time to time is Mr.
McFeely.
It's one of those things, like, when you look at Michael Jackson and you're like, keep it in the closet.
Maybe we should have thought about that.
He was telling us something.
So, McFeely was Fred Rogers' middle name, but more importantly, it was the name of his grandfather, grandfather McFeely, who, you know, sort of, one of the reasons like Fred had such a connection with kids
was that he had kind of an unhappy childhood.
He grew up in privilege, but he was chubby, he was asthmatic, he was awkward, you know, he was sort of just kind of like shy and in many ways unhappy.
But somebody who just really showed him like love a lot of the time was his grandfather, who would encourage him, you know, like, hey, you want to go have an adventure?
Go like climb these stone walls on the farm, go do that.
It's going to be okay if you rip your pants.
And he was the person who told him, you know, sort of, you made today special just by being here.
And that was something that meant so much to Fred when he was a kid and something that he was able to pass on to kids.
So when he needed to name, and like it was a tribute to his grandfather.
So what's his family like?
Did he have children?
What are they like today?
So he married his college sweetheart, Joanne Rogers, a concert pianist,
who, you know, sort of like
they've apparently had
great good times together.
She is
sort of like a good human being, but less patient than Fred Rogers, because who is as patient as Fred Rogers?
Yeah, yeah, nobody.
So she'll talk about like, oh, you know, sort of like
I was out at, you know, like getting the car fixed and the guy was just like no good at all.
I don't even think he knew what he was doing.
And he would say, well, maybe he was having a bad day.
And I'm like, I don't care about his bad day.
What about me?
So,
and they had two boys
who,
you know, sort of are basically private people.
They're not particularly in the public eye, but they do an interview now and then in tribute to their dad.
And decent people, I mean, it seemed to work.
Was he there for them?
Yeah, I mean, he was
what people say is that he was like a very loving, attentive father and, you know, sort of like in some ways even training to be a father all his life.
He was not very good at disciplining them.
You know, sort of like, you know, he was very good at communicating,
but he found it hard to be the authoritarian, and that turned out to be
mom's job in that household.
Gavin, thank you so much.
Great talking to you.
You can follow Gavin Edwards.
I've enjoyed it.
Me too.
Mr.
Gavin Edwards is where you can follow him.
The name of the book is Kindness and Wonder, Mr.
Rogers.
It is well worth your time to read.
And I have not seen the movie.
I saw the documentary.
I think I saw half of the documentary.
And I haven't seen the movie yet, but I want to.
And he is somebody that we should all be looking toward right now.
Because if we could just listen to each other, be a little kinder,
maybe the world would be full of a little bit more wonder that we would notice.
Thank you so much, Gavin.
Appreciate it.
Thank you, Clem.
I really appreciate it.
You bet.
Gratitude.
Let's talk a little bit about gratitude.
People who are filled with gratitude are happier in their life.
That is the capacity to feel, you know what, I didn't do this on my own.
And that's the thing I like about Mike Lindell.
Mike Lindell is the owner of My Pillow, and he knows he didn't do this on his own.
And he screwed up his life so badly at the beginning of his life.
We have to have him on as a podcast.
We have to have him on.
He is fascinating.
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And thank you from Mike Lindell.
We pause for 10-second station ID.
Holy cow, we have had a jam-packed show today.
We just finished with one Gavin Edwards.
Now we're going to Cam Edwards in just a few minutes.
He's going to be telling us about what's going on in Virginia, and it is remarkable.
And what's even more remarkable to me is this is something I have never even seen, even during the Tea Party.
This is bigger than the Tea Party movement, what's happening in Virginia, the sanctuary cities.
The people are turning out in droves to stand up for the Second Amendment.
And, you you know, obvious reasons, the media is not really covering it.
We also had Daniel Hannon on earlier today.
If you missed a minute of the show today, you've missed a lot.
Make sure you listen to our podcast.
It's available anywhere.
You get your podcast.
Also, tomorrow's podcast is an interview with Dave Rubin, is it not?
I think I think it is, yeah.
So don't miss it, podcast.
Daniel Hannon was on today.
We talked a little bit about Brexit and what happened
in England with the vote against Labor, and it was a bludgeoning for the Labor Party.
And a lot of people here
on the left were looking at England and saying, ah, this is really going to be what it's going to be like for us in America.
And if Donald Trump plays his cards right, I think that's exactly what's going to happen here in America.
Have you been following this sort of back and forth between the Senate and the President where they're talking about how this investigation is going to go forward?
And what Mitch McConnell seems to be saying is basically they're letting the president
take the lead here.
What do you want to do?
They should.
Yeah, I mean, it's a little weird.
I mean, supposedly, this is a vote on whether he's going to be impeached or not.
So normally you would
be impeached.
I mean, they just voted for the articles of conviction.
Yes, they did.
It's out of committee.
And so now it's got to go to the floor, and next week they will vote for impeachment.
So he will be impeached.
The trial means will he be convicted and removed from office.
So McConnell's basically saying, you know,
he's trying to, I would say, lose the argument against the Senate that you might make, for example,
if they come out and just get this over with quickly and don't go into all this depth.
He's trying to say, look, we're following the president's lead.
If he wants to do this, fine.
If he doesn't, fine.
If he wants to call witnesses, fine.
If he doesn't, fine.
That's the argument from the Senate.
And the left is saying, wait a minute, you can't let the guy who's in trial design the trial.
You can't.
So what you're telling me is the Republicans are shirking their responsibility constitutionally in the Senate.
They are mealy-mouthed.
They are spineless individuals who will just go along.
That does seem to be the case.
However,
I agree with that.
I'm shocked.
I'm just shocked.
At the very least, they shouldn't be publicly saying that.
I mean, I don't think it's a good idea to let the person
design the process.
They should do what they think is right.
Right.
And, you know, but I think what they're trying to say is basically win over Trump supporters so they don't get blamed if Trump decides, well, I want to get this over with right now.
He's trying to diffuse the argument to Trump supporters who are saying, wait, I want a big trial.
I want this investigated.
And the president might say and decide, I don't want to go through all this.
Let's get it over with and get on with the election.
So what you're saying is the Republicans are only playing politics, not actually.
Yes, but like
if it's the president's decision, you know, what do people say?
I know.
I know.
That the Republicans should grow a spine and do the right thing.
That's what I said two weeks ago, and I'll continue to say.
Back in just a second.
Just try to frustrate you, Stu.
Thank you.
And it worked.
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Welcome to the program.
Mr.
Cam Edwards, who's part of the podcast, the Blaze podcast network.
We're glad you're here.
Cam
has been a First Amendment
rights guy for ever since I can remember
and has his podcast about it.
And I really want to talk to him, Second Amendment, and I really want to talk to him about what's happening in Virginia and this movement in Virginia that is really getting very little attention in in the mainstream, and that is the sanctuary cities movement.
Cam, the way I view this, now I haven't been there, so I haven't seen it.
I don't know if you have, but I think this is more powerful
than the Tea Party turnouts that were happening, even at its zenith.
You know, Lynn, I think that you're right.
And thanks so much for having me on the program.
And we now have 91 localities in Virginia, most of which are counties, that have adopted these Second Amendment Sanctuary Resolutions.
And I have been to to about eight of these county board of supervisors meetings where the resolutions have been discussed, and I've never seen anything like this.
I mean, you have thousands of Virginians who are showing up with their neighbors, with their friends, with their family to urge these supervisors to pass a measure that says we don't plan on spending any county funds enforcing unconstitutional gun control laws.
And you say, you know, this has got more energy than the Tea Party movement.
I think it has at least as much energy.
And this is so hyper-local.
This is, you know, not a top-down movement that it really is incredible to see.
So what is the state of Virginia doing?
What are the Democrats doing?
First of all, is this a right versus left issue or is this bipartisan, these turnouts?
You know, I think it is largely a right versus left, but I do know that there are Democrats who are showing up and Democrats who are voting in support of these resolutions, particularly in rural Virginia.
I think it's a pro-gun-anti-gun split, honestly.
And the Democrats in the state, quite frankly, they're flipping out.
They don't know what to do.
Congressman Donald McEachin, who represents Virginia's fourth congressional district, talked about how Governor Northam should send out the National Guard to enforce these new gun control laws in counties that refuse to
enforce gun bans or magazine bans.
Governor Northam has promised that there will be some sort of unspecified consequences for counties that do not capitulate.
But so far,
you know, that doesn't seem to be having any effect on the movement whatsoever.
So what do you suppose the people of Virginia will do
if they send out the National Guard to enforce something that is, I mean, it kills me.
You know, sanctuary cities are known as cities that are breaking the law and saying and defying the law.
This one is saying, no, no, no, it's a Bill of Rights issue, and we're standing by the Bill of Rights and the Constitution and not letting you in.
What do the Democrats think would happen
if they enforce it
with some sort of National Guard?
I guess they assumed that folks would comply, but I just don't see that happening.
There are so many county sheriffs.
We're now seeing Commonwealth attorneys, which are local prosecutors in Virginia, that are also saying, you know what, we're not going to go out and we're not going to arrest anybody for having a 20-round magazine or we're not going to go out and seize anybody's guns.
And ultimately, I think that's what this comes down to.
The governor and these anti-gun lawmakers can put these laws on the books, but they've taught us, Glenn, how to resist over the last few years.
And we're taking pages from their playbook.
We're doing exactly what they've done.
You know, even in the state of Virginia, there was a Commonwealth attorney earlier this year in Portsmouth, Virginia, who announced that she would be dismissing every misdemeanor marijuana case that was brought to her office.
And Governor Northam didn't complain.
He didn't threaten her with sanctions or said that there would be consequences for her ignoring state law.
So why would it be any different if we're talking about
not enforcing, quite frankly, a lot of these laws are unenforceable anyway, but not enforcing universal background checks or not enforcing a magazine ban?
I just don't see the difference there.
And I think the Democrats have kind of painted themselves into a corner.
Look, everybody says that, you know, we have to have universal background checks.
I don't understand this.
It's the most popular thing you can say as a Democrat.
It's popular with the Republicans, the Independents, and Democrats.
Cam, we have those, don't we?
We have those.
We've got background checks on every retail sale of a firearm.
And what they want to do is they want to expand that to private transfers, even between family and friends.
So So even though, you know, I think you and I met for the first time back in 2003,
it would be illegal for me to even loan you a firearm if you came to visit me in Virginia.
It's absolutely absurd.
And, you know, Glenn, as far as the practical effects go, it sounds good on paper.
It polls really well.
But if you look at states where these laws have been put on the books, Colorado, for example, passed their Universal Background Check Law in 2013, violent crime is up more than 25%
in the state of Colorado since that background check law was put on the books.
So if this is about public safety, it doesn't work.
If it's about targeting legal gun owners, and I think that's what it's really about, then that's enough for these gun control advocates to push it.
So if the governor decides to call out the National Guard, which I ⁇ do you think that's realistic?
That's even a realistic?
I don't.
Okay.
I don't.
I would be shocked.
I think it's much more likely that the government would ⁇ or that the governor would try to use the Virginia State Police, that the Attorney General would maybe use his office to come in and prosecute in counties and take cases
that the Commonwealth's attorney or not.
But I would be shocked and
really, really bitterly disappointed if the governor actually tried to do something like send out the National Guard.
And I think that would fail, by the way.
I think that, you know, again, the National Guard is made up in Virginia of Virginians.
And I don't think those members of the National Guard are any more enthusiastic about enforcing these gun control laws than the county sheriffs and a lot of local cops that are.
I mean, this is something that people have talked about for a long time.
You know, if the Army was ever turned against the American people, would they shoot?
This is even harder to believe because, as you said, those are Virginians, and they would be enforcing a law on Virginians.
And most of those people are probably Second Amendment right people.
And I just, I mean, that's a big test
to lose, especially.
It is.
But again, like I said, I think they've painted themselves into a corner here.
I mean, even if you get into prosecuting individuals for violating these new gun laws that they want to put on the books,
there were, I think it was Rockingham County, there were about 3,000 people who crammed into a high school gymnasium and about another 3,000 who couldn't fit who were outside the other night.
I'm looking at that and I'm thinking, you know, are any of those people,
if they serve in a jury pool, are they going to convict their neighbor?
Are they going to convict the person who owns the hardware store that they visit on on a weekly basis?
I don't think that they will.
And so whether it's through, you know, a jury nullification, whether it's through the Second Amendment sanctuary resolutions, whether it's through the discretion that law enforcement already has, I just don't see a way for these gun control laws to be fully enforced across the state of Virginia.
I think they're going to be enforced in deep blue areas.
I think we're going to see exactly what we've seen in places like New York State, for example, after they passed the SAFE Act.
The majority of prosecutions under that gun control package take place in two boroughs of New York City, the Bronx and Brooklyn.
And the vast majority of people who are prosecuted are young black men with no violent criminal history who are sent to prison for three and a half years for simply possessing a farm without a license.
And I think it's going to be young minority men in low-income neighborhoods who are primarily going to be impacted by these gun control laws in Virginia.
And I don't know that that's the legacy that, you know, Governor Blackface Northam really wants to leave.
Cam, have you heard the case in Illinois of the woman who is trying to
defend herself?
She was in her car.
She had a gun.
She was licensed to have a gun, not licensed to carry, but she had it in her glove box.
Her ex comes, is threatening her life, trying to get into the car, trying to hurt her.
She takes her gun out.
She shoots.
He gets, what was it, a $10,000 bail?
She has a $75,000 bail.
Where is the common sense here?
There is none, unfortunately.
And yeah, I'm very familiar with this story.
I've actually learned a couple of additional pieces of information, including the fact that this guy apparently has been convicted of battering this woman in the past on a couple of occasions.
I did learn that the woman was able to bond out, thankfully, so she's back out.
But again, it's absolutely egregious that the state of Illinois and the state's attorney in Illinois would look at this case and decide that this woman who acted in self-defense, and police say she acted acted in self-defense, that this woman should face a higher bond than the guy who beat her in her car.
It's
the holiday, and I just want you to know we're praying for you and Miss E.
How's she doing?
She's doing okay.
She's enjoying the holidays right now.
She's actually not on any form of treatment at the moment.
She was in a clinical trial for her non-small cell lung cancer, but she had some side effects, so she had to get off of it.
So her oncologist said, you know, look, let's take a couple months.
Let's see if any clinical trials open up.
And she's got an appointment next week, and
hopefully she'll be back getting some treatment soon.
But her spirits are good.
She's in the Christmas spirit.
She's busy
knitting and crocheting little corny goat critters that she's putting up for sale in her Etsy shop.
And
we're just trying to enjoy the holidays.
We're trying to make every day count.
How are you holding up?
For the most part, I'm good.
I appreciate you asking.
You know, it's my job to be her rock.
So
I let her, you know, put all of that on me.
And then occasionally I'll, you know, wander outside.
Thankfully, we live on 40 acres, and my neighbors can't hear when I yell and scream at the moon or the sun or the clouds.
And I get it out of my system, and I go back, and
I do what I can to, again, make sure that
her every day is as good as it can be.
Cam, you're a good man.
Say hi to Miss E for us and blessings this holiday season.
Thank you so much.
Thank you, Glenn.
Thank you soon.
Cam Edwards, BearingArms.com.
He is also 40 Acres and a Fool, which is a podcast on the Blaze podcast network.
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This is the Glenbeck program.
Thank you so much for joining us.
Mr.
Stu McGreer has joined us.
Mr.
McGeer?
Mm-hmm.
Yes, yes, Glenn.
Mr.
Dr.
Colonel Master,
say it right.
If you're going to say it, say it right, man.
I only ask for a modicum of respect.
You've worked hard for these titles.
I have.
Dr.
Colonel.
No.
Reverend
Reverend.
Reverend Colonel Dr.
Reverend Dr.
Colonel.
Reverend Dr.
Colonel Beck.
How dare you?
I am a Reverend of the Church of Universal Life, Modesto, California.
I am a Doctor of Humanities, Liberty University.
And I am a Kentucky Colonel.
Like Colonel Sanders.
That's a real thing.
Kentucky Colonel.
And is that just from because your appearance, you look like Colonel Sanders?
No, you don't have to look like Colonel Sanders to get it.
You have to be given that by the governor of the great state of Texas, of
Kentucky.
And that happened years ago in the 80s.
I was made a Kentucky colonel.
Really, were you?
Yes, I was.
Did you look like Colonel Sanders?
No, I didn't, and you can shut up now.
But again, you can say it politely to me.
Reverend Dr.
Colonel Sanders Beck.
Okay, let's just play a little bit from Cuomo getting slapped down by the
former Attorney General
about the coverage of CNN.
But first, I want to remind you what Comey had said just a couple of days ago, last Saturday, about the FISA process.
Listen.
I have total confidence that the FISA process was followed and that the entire case was handled in a thoughtful, responsible way by DOJ and the FBI.
I think the notion that FISA was abused here is nonsense.
It's nonsense.
Well, that's not what the Inspector General found.
He found that it was incredibly
flawed and disturbing to all Americans is what he felt everyone should view this as.
Here is a former AG for the Bush administration on CNN's prime time with Cuomo.
Listen to this.
In terms of logic of thought and argument.
Why this insistence on denying what was pretty well established through the testimony by respectable people about what happened here and why it happened?
Why isn't the stronger argument for Republicans, look, what he did was not textbook.
Maybe that's because he's not a politician.
It was even wrong in some ways.
But they got the aid.
He never got any dirt on the Bidens.
The election is safe.
How can this be worthy of impeachment or removal from office?
Why deny everything?
That is.
There's a lot more going on than just denying everything.
Number one, they're making the points that you made.
Number two, there is still, I think, some legitimate question about whether what was happening at Burisma, which was a crooked operation, as a great deal of the Ukraine is,
didn't warrant some taking a look.
Except to keep it away from the absurd, the country's watching this right now.
It's about what is the standard of behavior.
You have the Republicans pointing the finger at the left and saying, you guys are just purely political.
You hate the president.
That's gratuitous because the person who uses hate, ananimus, is our president.
But they haven't made any good faith effort to do any oversight as the constitutional demands as a duty they took an oath to uphold.
They've just been his defense counsel.
Bravo for him, but bad for the process.
Why not at least own what's obvious?
What is the proper standard?
This is an impeachment proceeding.
Yes.
You don't remove somebody from office for not meeting the proper standard, for not displaying those qualities of mind, character, and temperament that are appropriate to a president.
I mean, I don't.
Cuomo is so, they see the world through a funhouse mirror.
They're not reflecting reality at all.
We are saying those things.
You're listening to Glenn Beck.