Chaos Everywhere: We Are the World’s Income | Guest: Jack Fairweather | 8/29/19
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Our sponsor here for Spotlight is Overcomer.
I was happening to go through box office mojo, which is I like to do that on Mondays.
And you check through, hey, who was the big movie of the weekend?
Number three movie in America right now is Overcomer.
Very cool.
And by theater per screen, it's number two in America.
This is a story from the Kendrick brothers, who have all, you know, they've been doing great faith movies for a long time.
In 2015, they had Marroom, which was a huge hit as well.
This is a story about John Harrison, a guy who lives in a community that is kind of being destroyed because there is a big factory in town and it closes down everybody moves out of town there's chances at a state championship at basketball go down the tubes and Harrison is you know forced to coach the cross-country team, which is not something he's interested in or knows anything about.
And it only has one student who's actually on the team.
So this is not a powerhouse exactly, but the movie is, and it gives you all sorts of faith and humor and inspiration.
And it's about the idea of one person actually making a difference.
Something that in the increasing throes of collectivism is a novel concept, apparently, in America.
Overcomermovie.com.
Go there, see the trailer right now.
Overcomermovie.com.
Radio show here starts in just a second.
You know what I really love?
Now, it might sound like I actually hate this, but I don't.
You know what I really love is when AOC
lectures us about how great her generation is and how the older generation just really hasn't, you know, they're not willing to stand up.
And she doesn't mean to, you know, condemn or make anybody feel bad, but her generation really gets it because her generation understands what it takes to be a democracy.
Ah,
we begin there right now.
This is the Glenn Beck program.
Somewhere in America, within the sound of my voice, there is a man walking out to his car.
Behind him stands the factory where he has worked for the last three decades, its ramparts scraping the sky, its foundry noises blending in with one another.
Used to be that he didn't park so close.
Used to be that he wasn't the manager.
But time and hard work, the bricks that built the road to his frontier with the company, has paid off.
And although he wears the suit and tie now, one thing still anchors him to the place in his heart where he came from.
And that's his pair of Takovis boots.
You know, Takovis boots are made from the most exotic leathers available and they're handcrafted by world-class boot makers.
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It's really a great company.
Find your pair, walk your walk, at tocovis.com/slash beck.
That's t-e-c-o-v-a-s.com slash beck.
Tacovis, it's westernwear for your frontier.
Could we start, please, with the AOC video that she just made and released to
all of her followers,
and I mean that word exactly as it sounds, all of her followers on social media.
They're not afraid to have those conversations.
If anything, like I think they're profoundly courageous because they're willing to puncture taboos and conversation and have conversations that frankly older generations sometimes struggle to have.
Not everyone.
I don't want to pain everybody with a broader.
I'm feeling like this isn't a decision.
I think this new generation is connection.
Okay.
I think that,
but, anyways, I think this new generation is very profound and very strong and very brave because they're actually willing to go to the streets.
How about that?
Like, how about that?
Previous generations have just assumed that
government's got it.
Let me tell you something.
You are the government.
Like, as a democracy, we the people
you are, as a go, as a voter, and you are the government too.
Oh, as an older person, I didn't get that.
I've always thought that we weren't a democracy.
We are a republic.
Oh, that drives me out of my mind.
What have older generations ever done, though, Glenn, to defend freedom?
I know, I know.
We did nothing.
Nothing.
We did nothing.
And you know what?
They're willing to have those tough conversations in their safe space
as they tell everybody we can't say this word or or that word, they're courageous, they're willing to have those conversations.
No, they're not.
They cry.
You're hurting my feelings.
You're making somebody uncomfortable.
Oh my gosh, she drives me nuts.
Okay, you know,
I don't expect her to really understand this because she's a bartender that didn't pay attention at all to anything until she won a game show to become the candidate.
So, let me just explain a couple of things, not to her, because I don't care about her.
I just saw that on the Blaze news and I just couldn't take it.
But now that's out of my system, let me just tell you a couple of things.
This week is the ninth anniversary of Restoring Honor.
You know, Restoring Honor, where we had over 500,000 people march to Washington.
You know, that one.
Older generation, they don't get it.
They're not willing to stand up to their government.
Oh, by the way,
this September, I think, is the 10th anniversary of the March on Washington on 9-12.
Gee, when it was 9-12, 9-12, why 9-12?
Oh, oh, that's September 12th.
Oh, that's because
that's because this audience talked about how September 12th, we all stood together bravely, both Republicans and Democrats, in this democracy.
And we stood up and we held hands and we prayed together because we weren't going to be bowing to fear.
after somebody took our World Trade Center down.
That's what that was.
And then when the government got out of control and was just taxing us to death and telling us they wanted socialism, about a million people took to the streets.
But I wouldn't expect to know this, you to know this, AOC, because you know, what were you?
Eight when that happened?
By the way,
this week also marks the fourth anniversary
of our restoring unity rally in Birmingham.
And, you know, in case AOC just happens to, you know, care at all, that was the largest, not according to me, but according to the city of Birmingham, the largest civil rights march since Martin Luther King.
Remember that one?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Anyway, that kicked off the Nazarene Fund.
And I want to give you a quick update on that.
The Nazarene Fund has helped 53,000 people this year alone.
53,000 people.
Now we're into
some good things and some really dicey things.
Yesterday,
there's a
12-year-old Zinal.
He was a five-year ISIS slave.
Imagine 12.
Almost half his life was lived as a slave.
He was wounded in the Battle of, I guess it's Bohuz in Syria.
Yesterday, he finally got some life-saving surgery, and we're going to put some pictures up, and I'll tweet them out and Facebook them and put them on Glenbeck.com.
But he needed some surgery, and because of you, if you're a Nazarene Fund donor,
he is going to live, and
we're grateful.
He is very grateful for you.
This week also, the Nazarene Fund is providing transportation, security, food, and water to volunteers.
We, you know, we don't even think about this part of it, but the Sinjar massacre, ISIS buried people in a mass grave.
And so we are now helping them
dig those mass graves up and
identify their loved ones and then put them in a decent grave.
And mark that, we're identifying people with DNA testing, and they'll be buried with honor and reverence.
And in the name of God,
not a false God.
Also, Christians in Iraq and Syria still having a difficult time with both the remnants of ISIS and now we got a new one.
We have Iran because Iran is backing the militias and they are occupying now the 2,000-year-old Christian lands.
So most people are not returning to their lands.
We're still moving people out of the area because it is not safe for them.
Please, if you want to be involved in this, I mean, you know, maybe not, because you're probably, you know, you're probably not from AOC's generation, so you're probably not brave.
You don't know how to stand up.
You don't know how to do anything.
Can you lick a stamp and put a check?
in the mail, Grandpa?
Because I'm sure you don't know how to use the internet.
But let me just, if you want to help out, you want to be a part of it, maybe you could get somebody like AOC to teach you how to turn on your computer and go to www.now that's D-O-T.
That's not, that's a, it's a period, not D-O-T.
www.period.
We call it a dot.
The Nazarene Fund dot, that's a period again,
org, as in organization, but you don't have to say it all.
Okay, you just O-R-G.
By the way, next year is the 10th anniversary of Restoring Honor.
And I have,
before I came here, I'm at my ranch this week.
And
before I came up here, I had some...
meetings with some
some amazing amazing people
and
met with, I don't even know, 10 or 12 people I've led into this circle this week.
We are going to be announcing, hopefully soon,
another restoring
event.
This one, I think, is
going to be the most important.
Everyone I have brought into the circle
has kind of said, oh, you're going to do another restoring event?
And then I tell tell them what it is, and all of them have responded, oh, I'm in.
I'm in.
So please keep your calendar open at least for the next month or so before we announce what that will be and where it will be.
But we're going to announce it sooner rather than later because
it has
great significance.
That's coming next year.
All right.
I want to talk to you a little bit about chaos today, and I want to show you where the chaos is coming from.
We're going to talk a little bit about the political race here in America, a little bit about what's happening in Brexit, and then also our new slave masters, Apple and Google and Facebook.
What Apple let out of the bag yesterday.
Yes, it's a cat.
Cats should never be let out of bags.
It wasn't an actual cat
okay all right I guess that's just a phrase but anyway they
they let something slip and it should disturb every single American will it nah nah but you'll know about it and you'll know what to do about it in 60 seconds
Today is our our last in the series on the economy in hour number two two.
Today is a really good one.
Today I was going over the monologue and Rob, who is our engineer this week, I told him some facts in it and he said, what?
You do not want to miss next hour.
It's astonishing what we're going to talk about today on the economy.
And today is what the truth is.
and what we need to do.
All right.
American financing.
As I talk about the economy, I can't stress enough, it is time for you to batten down the hatches.
A storm is on the horizon.
It's like Florida, what you're doing right now,
you need to do that to your finances as well.
You need to make sure that you lower your debt as much as possible,
that you have some cash on hand, maybe some gold as well.
But the biggest thing you can do is get out of those big
credit card interest rates.
They're charging 18%.
That's insanity.
18%.
And that number is only going to go up.
When we have a real financial breakdown, that number is going to go through the roof.
If you are in
an adjustable mortgage, get out of that.
If you have anything over,
you know,
a 3% or a 4% mortgage, you might want to consider refinancing.
American Financing, I'm putting my money where my mouth is.
I'm doing this as well with American Financing as we speak.
AmericanFinancing.net.
It's AmericanFinancing.net.
Call 800-906-2440.
I trust these people.
I trust these people enough to do it for me.
800-906-2440.
American Financing.net.
American Financing Corporation, NMLS 182334, www.nmlsconsumeraccess.org.
We pause for 10 seconds, station ID.
So
yesterday, Boris Johnson
went to the Queen and said, Queenie baby, I'm wondering if we could suspend parliament for a few weeks.
And she said, oh, I don't know, Boris.
Kiss me, kiss me, kiss me.
And so then there was a lot of.
And she said, okay,
yes, I approve.
And everybody's making a big deal out of this, saying it's unprecedented.
It's a coup.
No, it's not.
They do this.
I don't know.
What was this thing called?
It's
poroguing.
Pieroguing.
They do this several times a year.
And what it means is
Parliament goes and they do the work of the people, but they don't meet and debate and everything else.
They don't do that.
They just go and get business done.
And they do it like two or three times a year.
Usually it's a week.
There is one time a year that it is three weeks.
What is he asking for?
Five?
And they're like, that's unheard of.
I can't believe the gall of him doing it's it's it's never historically ever anything like this ever happened yeah it happens every year and he's only asking for two more weeks and you know why because the labor the uh labor party is doing everything they can to make sure there is no brexit
And what he wants is nobody's going to negotiate with us when they know Parliament Parliament is working to screw it up.
So he's like, give me five weeks without you guys so that I can negotiate and see if we can get a better deal.
But just know that we're not, if we don't get a better deal, we're still leaving because the people voted for it.
And that's Labor's response.
Yeah, well, that was three years ago.
And it was a narrow margin.
So I don't know if we can say it's the will of the people anymore.
Oh my gosh, shut up.
So that's what this is.
Now, I told you before,
like 10 years ago, chaos is the operative word of the future and today now.
Chaos.
Anything that causes chaos,
you should look out for it.
Because chaos is going to play a role in everything from here on out.
What you're feeling, what most of us are feeling, is
chaos.
We may not describe it that way, but it is.
It's chaos in the Justice Department.
It's chaos in Congress, in the Oval Office.
It's chaos in our streets.
It's chaos in our neighborhoods.
It's chaos.
Brexit without any kind of a deal, that's chaotic.
So what's happening?
29% of London homeowners are panic selling their homes ahead of Brexit.
I mean, if you were ever thinking about, I mean, I don't know why you would, but if you were ever thinking about buying a house, you know, in London town, oh, it's fantastic.
You can get
at least, well, let me give it to you this way.
They are, prices are being cut now
at least by 10%.
About 11% of the listings have seen at least a $46,000 cut from their initial price just recently.
18% of homes
have seen at least a 10% drop ahead of the October 31st deadline.
And Sterling has lost about 10% of its value.
So you're going to get some, you know, you're getting some good deals.
Right, Lovey?
Oh, yes.
kiss me again, Boris.
I just love it.
Now,
some other chaos.
The Democratic candidates.
Christian Gillibrand has exited the presidential race.
And this is all I'm going to say on this.
She ran as a feminist
and she didn't meet the criteria.
And she's not, she says,
this is crazy.
You know, it's not very transparent, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
Of course not.
It's run by the Democrats.
You think you're going to...
Yeah, you know who's really transparent?
Communist and socialist.
They love when it comes to when it comes to elections.
Putin is so unbelievable with his transparency.
The most transparent election, I think, in the world, happening in Venezuela.
Yeah, oh, you bet.
Yeah.
So I just want to give this to you.
I want to read what came out of Politico.
This is the article, and they're like, hey, you know, she doesn't understand what happened.
And, you know, it's very confusing.
And so we've lost another one.
Well, do we not know what happened?
Listen to this.
Still, Gildibrand built a reputation as a creative campaigner who showed up at unconventional locales.
She bartended at Iowa's oldest gay bar.
She arm wrestled college students and appeared at a drag show in Des Moines.
Oh,
well, I think that sounds like just mainstream USA, doesn't it?
I mean, it seems like
that's where everybody's hanging out, right?
Sure.
Now, when we come back, Bernie Sanders has a plan to regulate all of your life.
And he's about nine points ahead of donald trump in if the election were held today and it was between the two of us so don't think this isn't coming along with eavesdropping
you're listening to glenn beck
wait until you hear this apple story internet's pretty uh wild and woolly these days uh it wasn't like that you know when it came when it came around the first time that's not what we thought it would be back then it was just kind of this cool little space where you get away from the world for a little while and now we practically live inside the internet.
Danger is starting to creep up everywhere.
But you don't have to worry about it.
You just have to change with the times.
Now that it's getting more dangerous, you need to move into a safer neighborhood.
And the safest neighborhood around is a VPN because no one knows your address.
I've got a story on this I'm going to tell in a few weeks, but we have to get past it.
But nobody knows your address.
And it is with a virtual private network using bank-grade encryption.
This is the safest way to be online.
Norton Secure VPN creates a secure tunnel for the information you send and receive online.
It keeps the prying eyes out
and secures your Wi-Fi connections.
Browse privately now with a Norton Secure VPN.
Protection starts at 333 a month.
It's norton.com/slash VPN.
Go to Glennbeck.com, get your tickets to Christmas Stories with Glenn Beck.
It's December 7th, Salt Lake City.
Get tickets while they're still there.
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That's simply safe.com/slash Glenn.
Welcome to the Glenn Beck program from the shadows of the everlasting hills.
That's not, I got a hole's not in the shadow of the everlasting hills.
Yeah, no, it is.
The shadow is cast a long way.
No.
We're in the
We're in the mountain west
today.
Welcome to it, Pat.
Thank you.
Oh, by the way, Pat,
just for you and Stu, let me explain.
This is a fishing shirt, okay?
This is a very expensive collage.
Are you going to be fishing during the show?
Thank you.
All I have up here is sport and mountain wear.
That's all I have.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
Well, it's not like you could have known you were doing television shows while you were there.
No,
my wife specifically said to me, I am not packing a bunch of clothes for you to drag up there
and
you have plenty of clothes up there.
And I'm like, okay, you sure?
And she's like, yeah, I don't have any clothes up here.
I mean, I've got all this stuff.
I don't have like
TV clothes.
In solidarity with you today, I'm wearing my riding pants.
And I got my polo stick outside.
Shut up.
It's ready to go.
Shut up.
All right.
All right.
I want to go a couple of things.
Pat, I got something great for you
coming up in just a second.
But first,
let me just go over what Apple apologized for yesterday.
I love this.
Yeah.
Apple was busted using human contractors and giving them access to listen to Siri customers.
You know, Siri is the digital assistant.
If you have an iPhone or an iPad or anything else,
they were given tapes to contractors and to Apple where they had recorded things, including sexual encounters.
And they said yesterday, you know, we realize that we haven't been fully living up to our high ideals.
And we apologize.
Oh, really?
Okay, we realize we just got caught, and now we need to do some
high ideals.
We have high ideals, and we just realized that we're violating some of those.
Really, by listening to people have sex, you think that's a
that was a close call for you?
You didn't realize you were violating the high ideals when you were listening to people?
Well, let me tell you something.
If people can't be more quiet during sex, they deserve it.
Right.
They deserve it.
Listen, here's what you need to do.
Here's what you need to to do my wife she doesn't she doesn't believe me on this i'm telling you uh and i you need to take your phone and plug it in in the bathroom or in uh you know wherever it is in the kitchen don't put it in your bedroom
All the real private conversations we have, we have in the bedroom.
We'll be laying there at night and we'll talk about the kids and everything else.
And we have real private conversations with the phone sitting right there.
Yep.
Don't do it.
Now, there's one more thing.
Part of the problem before you get to the other thing is that we just were so addicted to these devices, and I include myself in that, that
we're not willing to do without them, and we're not willing to make Apple pay for this by not by not buying our products because we're so
we're just completely reliant upon them now.
And a brave new world.
15 years ago, we did completely without them and we were totally fine.
But now
we're crack addicted.
And
I have said this so many times to my wife.
I've said, you know what?
Let's just leave the phones.
Leave the phone.
Can't.
Can't.
Can't.
Nope.
How did we live just 10 years ago?
I don't know.
You know, we were trying to watch something last night, and it was something educational.
You know, it was actually the evolution thing with David Galernter or however they said it.
Isn't that great?
Totally.
Galertner.
But that's not how they say it.
Did you notice that?
I know, I know.
Yeah.
Yeah, I did.
So do you know which way is right?
No, I just know that I've asked him in the past, and
we heard Galertner.
I've called him Galertner.
And he's never corrected.
I know he's never corrected me.
He never corrected me.
But anyway,
he completely says, okay, the Darwin theory is impossible.
It just didn't happen.
But anyway, we're watching this 57-minute thing.
Every 15 seconds, her phone went off.
Every 15 seconds, it's like, put your phone away
for half a minute.
But she wouldn't.
She couldn't.
You can't.
You have to,
if that signal goes off, you got to check it.
And it's like, it's Pavlov's dog.
Signal goes off, choke it.
I really truly believe that the main use for our pools, because everybody in Texas has a pool because it's a billion degrees, but you can't use it now because everybody's like, oh, is your pool heated?
No, I need it air conditioned.
I need it to run over ice as it is.
I mean, it's like you're getting into a pot of, if you feel like a lobster, you're like, am I being cooked in this?
Anyway, I think our main use for pools in the future will be just to throw phones and iPads and everything else into the pools.
Anyway,
here's the latest.
Now, this one's coming from Great Britain.
There is such an extensive
CCTV camera network.
We're watched all the time.
They have more than now
more except for China.
You're constantly being monitored.
Well, they've added a new technology.
to the CCTV cameras, which is fantastic.
They now have a new software program that is lip-reading technology.
So if you're just walking down the street and you're having a conversation, the government can read your lips and it can tell them if there's something bad that's about to happen.
Isn't that great?
Is that being employed now?
Or are they talking
putting that?
Now.
No, now.
And what do you think now?
I mean,
we're going to stand for that?
Are we going to
be okay with people?
And it will be okay with people here, too.
It will.
Yeah, it'll start there.
And
in two years, it'll be here.
And they'll, well, it's for your safety.
This way we'll be able to read the lips of terrorists who are plotting attacks, and we'll be able to head them off.
You know how coaches on the sidelines, they
cover their mouth?
Yes.
I'm surprised.
Yeah, someone definitely gave him that information.
No, no, no.
I do know that because some game
a few years back, somebody
was.
You're almost there.
Shut up.
You almost.
It's a fishing shirt.
No, it's true.
I mean, it's the same thing when they have mound visits and baseball games.
Like, they just put the gloves, the baseball for their mouth over their mouth, and then they have the whole conversation from behind the glove.
Everyone's going to be doing that, walking around now.
If this is the same thing,
that's what they're saying now in England:
if you want to make sure that it's private, when you're walking down the street, make sure that you're covering your mouth.
Wow.
So I'm going to do that now because I'm going to.
We're talking about things that really I don't want the government to know.
You know what I'm saying?
I guess privacy experts are also advising not to broadcast your conversations over national radio.
That's a new thing that they're recommending.
Oh, crap.
Are we on the radio every day?
When did that start?
Jeez.
So, Pat, I thought of you last night, and you're going to love this story.
Okay.
You're going to love this story.
It can be shown now for the first time
after a near-complete skull of some long name was found in Ethiopia.
It's an ape-like adult male, about five foot.
It weighed 100 pounds.
The upper jaw was just found
by one of the
chief scientists at the Cleveland Museum of Natural History.
And he said, I couldn't believe it when I spotted it.
It's a dream come true.
This is a game changer in our understanding of human evolution.
And apparently, this might be Piltdown Man.
And I know you love Piltdown Man.
I love Piltdown Man.
It's my favorite story of all time.
A 41-year hoax against science.
All I needed to say was Piltdown, man.
I don't know how to do it.
Here it comes, America.
What is Piltdown, man?
Don't encourage it.
Part orangutang, part human skull put together by some hoaxer, and scientists didn't know it for 40 years.
It's unbelievable.
It's unbelievable.
So when are we going to find that out about this 4 million-year-old skull?
It's going to be the same thing.
And this ties into what we were talking about with the David Glerdner thing, and there are two other scientists whose names I can't remember, but they were all saying
they were all saying the same way, they're very credible, very incredible.
But I know very credible, and I have no idea who they are.
And the one you do know who it is, you don't know how to pronounce his name, but we know he's at Yale, and we know he wears a glove because the Unibomber tried to kill him.
That much I do know, that much I know, and he's a nice guy, and we had him on the air.
Good guy, yeah.
And the interesting thing to me was, Galertner was saying, Yeah, Darwin, it's impossible, it didn't happen.
It's, you know,
now he is a guy who liked
it.
He loved it.
Elegance.
He said it was beautiful.
Yeah.
He said
Darwin's theory.
It was beautiful.
And
he doesn't necessarily subscribe to intelligent design.
I think he's willing to consider it, it seemed like.
But at one point, he almost dismissed it during the discussion between the three of them.
There was only one of them who was really into the intelligent design theory.
And I don't know what replaces Darwin if it's not God.
but
it's fascinating to me that after all this time, there are legitimate scientists who are saying,
no, this just didn't happen.
No, it's, you know,
it's not that, you know, if you really listen to that, I love, I'm so glad you watched that.
It's available at Glenbeck.com, by the way.
Everybody should watch it.
As I watched this,
it was such a nice,
it was such a logical takedown of
Darwin, and there was no
animosity.
There was no animosity toward Darwin at all.
It's not like they wanted to take him down.
It's just
said
they said he, yeah, and he wouldn't have known that, nor would have any scientist known that up until really the last 50 years.
It doesn't, you know, it's hard to explain the last 50 years, especially the last 20.
But once you get, once you have the scientific knowledge of the coding of the dna strands right you you know that it doesn't work and he you know darwin wouldn't have known any of that right because
right we have no way um so the math doesn't work and the biology doesn't work but as and he did say that they all three said that it would work uh only in small adjustments.
So in other words, the beak needs to be a little different or you need to have a little less fur.
That kind of stuff would change, but not from one species to another.
And if you watch the thing, it'll explain it to you, and it'll make a lot of sense.
It's kind of complicated, but when you watch it, I think
you understand it.
And
it's either at the beginning of the strand of the DNA, you have to have the beginning of whatever it's going to morph into,
or it'll be that thing already, and it will kill the previous organism, Or at the end, you add what it's going to morph into, and it kills it anyway.
So there's just no way for this to happen along the chain of DNA.
Yeah, if you're
making an elephant
and you've got a lion, when you have that first strand of DNA, it has all the bone structure and what the innards,
the size of the innards, what they have to be, et cetera, et cetera.
You don't just, well, for instance, like a horse and a cow, or what is the closest thing to a cow?
A cow has three stomachs, and
it has three stomachs for a really good reason.
Well, what it morphed out of,
you know, according to Darwin, wouldn't have three stomachs.
Right.
So you can't make a cow from that other because how
it wouldn't be you don't have like one stomach and then two stomachs, and now finally a third stomach, and there's a fourth growing someplace that we just haven't seen yet.
Yeah, it would kill the animal because the animal wouldn't work.
It's fascinating, it's really fascinating, yeah.
And it might sound like a jumbled mess because neither one of us are scientists, but when you watch it, they're so elegantly
aware of the authority,
right?
What is a scientist if not a doctor?
And I have to tell you, this show has won many, many awards.
We're known for our heavy science.
It's true.
Holy.
Don't forget art.
Yeah.
Well, and art.
Yeah.
Exactly right.
Thank you for saying that.
Even as an uneducated man, a man who doesn't have his doctorate,
you know,
you even get it.
Yeah, I do.
I do.
Thank you so much, Pat.
No, no.
Thank you.
Thank you.
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We have so many great things left for you in today's show.
Up next, our final installment on the economy.
This one,
this ain't your daddy's capitalism.
We'll go over it next.
Don't miss it.
It's full of great facts.
You're listening to Glenn Beck.
We're so glad that you're listening.
This is the 10th anniversary or the 9th anniversary of Restoring Honor and the 4th anniversary of
restoring
unity in Birmingham, Alabama.
And I'm glad you're with us this week.
We're talking about capitalism this week and what's really happening in our country with the economy.
Coming up in a second,
this isn't your daddy's capitalism.
And I want you to listen carefully, if you will.
Has a lot of stats in here that you need to share with your friends.
It has a lot of information that your friends really need to know because what we're talking about is truly the destruction of
every country in the world.
And you will understand that coming up in just a second.
It's time for America to step to the plate, but not with our military this time.
That's not the most powerful thing we have.
And you will come to really understand this in a completely different way in just a few minutes.
Stand by.
The fusion of entertainment and enlightenment.
All this week, we have been doing a series on the economy and telling you the facts of what is really happening.
Things you're just not going to hear on MSNBC or, I mean, sorry, CNBC.
You're not going to hear it on the Fox Business Network, even.
Nobody is talking to the average person.
And it is really, really important that you...
you know the facts because you're the one going to be paying the price today as our final chapter, this ain't your daddy's capitalism.
And today,
you're going to really truly understand how important it is that we do not let this country
slide into socialism.
The entire world, and as I will show you, this is not hyperbole.
The entire world is counting on us.
I'll explain in one minute.
This is the Glenbeck program.
You would think that as time has gone on, problems like identity theft would become a thing of the past.
We live in an age of phenomenal technology.
You know, with Apple announcing yesterday that, oh, you know, we've been listening to, literally, listening to people having sex, you know, on their on their phones.
And sorry, we're Apple and we should have higher standards.
Oh, you think so?
You would think as people could monitor everyone, find out, track everyone, you'd think that we would be more secure, but the opposite is true.
Cybercrime is rampant.
Identity theft is one of the most common ways that a person living in the 21st century can lose absolutely everything.
Pieces of your identity go out over the internet every day, all the time.
That is why I have lifelock.
I'm going to tell you a story
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So all week, we have been discussing the economy, how we got here, where we're headed, what's happening with China and the trade war, the blessing and the curse of a hundred years of credit expansion by the central banks, and how the progressive left and the progressive right
want to return the world to now hyperinflation and hyperspending by global governments with something called MMT, modern monetary theory.
It's toxic.
Today, I want to talk about where we need to go from here.
What we as individuals must realize, the choices that we have in front of us, and the consequences of not making the right choice.
And the consequences, truly, is global destruction.
Make no mistake, as you will understand in the next 20 minutes,
this is up to us.
This is once again, it has been left up to America to step up and save save the world from itself.
It's a role that we are familiar with, but usually that means we have to send our military someplace.
This does not include the military.
That is not our source of real power.
But
it should be
something we're familiar with.
The world always asks us to step up.
In 76, the British Empire ruled 35% of the world's population.
We were the first colony to break off from its parent stem in the history of the world.
And we set an example that cascaded into a series of independence movements that eventually freed more than 30 nations from the British rule.
So, yeah,
we really don't like colonialism.
It's why we don't take over parts of the world.
In 1917, the world was tearing itself apart over in Europe, World War I.
The might and industry of the U.S.
that brought peace and ended Imperial Germany and Austria's plans for European conquest
happened because, not because we sent over troops, but because we had industrial might.
Hitler's National Socialists,
the Emperor Hirohito, the Imperial Navy, had rolled over every single nation in their path by 1941 before we got in.
The Allies had known nothing but defeat.
After the U.S.
first attack against Japan, the Allies experienced nothing but victory.
In the aftermath of World War II, the USSR pounced on their neighbors' war fatigue and just rolled over European countries while we gave those countries back to the people.
They beat people into submission until about 1989.
Time after time, generation after generation,
it is the U.S.
that is called to live up to our mission statement.
A mission statement first proclaimed by a group of men.
Yeah, they were all white and they were all men.
They were really smart.
No one had ever uttered the words that had these men uttered and then put down on paper and announced to the world.
We recognize, protect, and defend individual liberty and freedom.
And you know what?
The world took us at our word for the first 150 years.
We know they did.
Because they kept asking for us to help them realize that dream.
And to prove it, we defeated despots, kings, fascist sociopaths, totalitarian empires,
Soviet dictatorship of the majority.
Every time we raised our banner, we destroyed the enemy before us, leaving the world more free, more fair, more just than what we found.
And today,
the world is in one very clear voice.
They They are calling on America again.
They are asking for our help.
We are already answering this call, but no one is talking about it.
And you don't notice it because you think,
as many politicians do, our might is in our military.
That's not our might.
They're asking us to play our familiar role to ensure the people of Earth do not slip back into slavery that we have fought fought to escape since the Enlightenment.
Once again, as you will come to understand in the next couple of minutes, America is the last best hope for mankind.
And if we fail this time, the world is swallowed by darkness.
People will say, I have not heard anyone ask.
They are begging for our leadership.
They're asking for America to step in and use their might and ingenuity to guide the world back to sanity.
It is as clear and as bold as any bat signal against the clouds.
Now, I'm not talking about what we hear from their pundits and their politicians.
No diplomatic posts have arrived, no new proposals for an alliance or Churchillian speeches saying, until in God's good time,
a new world with all of its power and its might steps for a old.
It's not coming that way.
Instead, if you read that in the headlines,
we're the world's pariah.
From Macron in France, our consumerism is destroying the planet.
Putin in Russia, we're imperialists bent on world domination.
Z in China, we're a bully.
Canada's Trudeau, we're the world's worst polluter.
In the global press, America is a cliché redneck, violent, misogynist, racist, xenophobic.
Public opinion polls of America taken abroad show us to be untrusted, despised, and feared.
We're rich, we're selfish, we're pompous, we're corrupt, we're uncaring.
We're too male, too white.
We have too many damn guns.
We're destroying the planet one smokestack and tailpipe at a time, and we don't seem to give a crap.
So where's the disconnect?
Glenn, that's what I hear.
You're telling me they're asking for help?
The world is teetering
right on the precipice of the abyss and they know it.
Their leaders are all doing the same game, but just like here in America, the people know it.
No, Putin's tanks tanks aren't rolling into Western Europe yet.
Z hasn't unleashed secretly embedded software hacks crashing global power grids yet.
Iran hasn't sent the Republican Guard racing across the desert to Israel yet.
North Korea isn't nuking Tokyo yet.
The world isn't facing annihilation by a military dictator.
This time, the enemy is more insidious than ever before.
This time,
the enemy
is us.
This time, the enemy is within our gates and within their gates.
This time, the enemy
is
the same power of corruption.
From Germany to Japan, Switzerland to Belgium, China to Brazil, Argentina to South Africa, the world is singing fast in quicksand, and that quicksand is of their own making.
And it's the usual suspects, it's the central banks, it's the politicians, and the signs are everywhere.
We talked about it all week.
The sign is in the data.
Global GDP, the total financial output for all nations, all together, sits at $80 trillion.
That means we take every dime that we've made, we put it in a giant heap, we have $80 trillion.
Global debt, public and private, sits at $190 trillion.
Now, that's not counting China's off-balance sheet of $50 trillion.
$190 trillion is our debt.
So global debt to GDP is 190%.
So for new, every new dollar created,
$1.90 is already owed.
And we hear this all the time.
We hear this all the time.
Now, everybody used to be concerned about debt.
Now, oh no, you know, debt is good.
I know there's a lot of debt, really big numbers, too big to comprehend, really.
So what?
Everything's fine.
No, here's what's new.
And here is where you hear the call for America to stand and rise to the occasion.
I'll tell you about it in one minute.
You know, there are two parts to buying a house, the fun part and the not-so-fun part.
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That's where the real estate agent usually comes in, so you don't have to worry much about that part.
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We hired a lot of agents since then, thousands of them coming from this audience, but they had to know that template, they had to have best practices.
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success, and can help you find the right home in the right neighborhood, go to realestate agentsitrust.com.
That's realestate agentsitrust.com.
10 seconds, station ID.
Glenn, nobody is calling on the United States to step in.
Nobody's depending on us.
We're so screwed up, we need socialism.
Okay, let me give you some facts that no one is talking about.
As of July 2019, 94% of global sovereign bond yield paid to investors across the entire planet was paid by the United States.
Let me break that down and what that means.
Global sovereign bond yields.
Those are sovereign bonds.
These are
you can invest in countries buying debt and everything else.
94%
was paid by the United States to these other countries.
As of 2019, 61%
of all triple-rated corporate bond yields paid investors is paid by U.S.
companies.
So, again, out of every $100 earned by investors all over the globe for investing in a government bond,
$94
are paid by the United States.
Six are paid by the rest of the world.
Let me ask you this.
If you knew that stat and you saw that these governments, for instance, I think it's Sweden.
Is it Sweden?
I think it's Sweden.
I just read today.
It's putting a trillion dollars into our bonds and stocks.
A trillion in U.S.
bonds and stocks.
That money has always been parked in Europe.
They've just taken it out of Europe and invested in the United States.
Why?
Because 94%,
94 cents on every dollar invested
is paid for by the United States investment.
61%
out of all of the corporate stocks across the globe, out of every $100 paid out on corporate stocks and bonds, $61
are paid by U.S.
companies.
This is a world desperate for help.
Remember, they're paying for all these programs too.
They got to make Social Security.
They need investments that are making money.
The world is crying out for our help.
They're just doing it in a different way.
They're just sending trillions of dollars into our economy because we're the only, literally the only ones performing.
That's them sending up the bat signal They're asking us to play our role to fire up the furnace of American industry invention finance technology They're not asking us for military nor should we send military anywhere.
It's not our business Our strongest force we have is our ingenuity and invention and industry.
We are literally the world's income if the united states goes down for every hundred dollars invested if we pay zero they only make six dollars
instead of a hundred
because the united states goes down they don't have the 94
they only have six and i i guarantee you that if the United States goes down, so does the rest of the world.
We are the world's income, the engine of American business, agriculture, manufacturing, e-commerce, banking, finance.
Our output is backstopping the entire world as it did after both world wars.
Let me give you some perspective.
America is only 5% of the world's population.
We're 25% of the world's GDP, but we are 94% of the payout on sovereign bonds.
That income,
that almost every other nation and government is relying on us to stabilize their own economies, to keep their union pensions afloat, to pay for their social security and their defense.
That's the real disconnect between what you see in the press and how they're voting with their wallets.
They can say whatever they want about the United States.
They're sending us trillions of dollars.
China and Russia say we're bullies, but both nations have trillions invested in U.S.
equities and real estate.
To Canada, we're the world's worst polluter, but 35% of their sovereign wealth fund is invested in the U.S.
To the EU, we're brash and uncouth, but their government and citizens are investing trillions in stocks and bonds.
And they have to
because we're the only engine that's working.
We can talk about all of our problems, but let's talk about us being the last engine on earth that's still turning over and starts.
Most nations now issue government bonds with negative interest rate.
Investing in Germany, Japan, France, Switzerland is a guaranteed loss.
That's not me just making that up.
It's in the paperwork.
Invest in us and you will lose money.
We guarantee it.
Wow.
How does your nation stay afloat?
And what do we have to do?
More in a second.
You're listening to Glenn Beck.
As summer is coming to a close, we're right around the corner from fall.
You can smell the pumpkin spice and the Yankee candles come out that smell like fir trees.
And then you get to shovel.
Shovel snow.
Scrape ice.
Oh, it's great.
If you're like a lot of Americans, you'll be traveling with your family this Thanksgiving.
What's going to be on your mind as you drive?
Is it Aunt Carol's stuffing?
Grandma Betty's turkey?
Now, probably, you're going to be thinking, oh, geez, are the roads even open?
Are they going to be clear?
My car better not break down.
We'll all freeze to death and I'll end up eating little Johnny.
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Glennbeck.com is where you get your tickets.
This time,
at this hour, all week, we have been talking about the economy.
And I urge you to go back and listen to hour number two each week to really get an understanding of what's going on.
Today is the final chapter, and
we're talking about what we need to do and how the world views us.
We are the only game in town.
Only game in town.
Most nations are issuing government bonds with negative interest.
You get a guaranteed loss if you invest in any other country country but this one.
And while stocks are up 400%
here in the United States since the 2008 financial crisis, globally, most stocks still sit 50 to 60% below the highs they saw in 2007.
They haven't even hit 2007 highs yet.
Our productivity per capita is steady.
Global productivity has declined.
Almost every nation on earth is massively invested in and reliant on the U.S.
economy.
For better or for worse, we're the world's reserve currency and the best investment in town.
And through their investment in us, they're telling us they need us to succeed.
If we don't, the world faces collapse and chaos and breadlines and civil wars, a repeat of the 30s and 40s.
And I don't know if you remember that, but that didn't go so well for most people.
So what makes us different?
How is it that generation after generation, crisis after crisis, the good old US of A seems to be able to pull ourselves together, fire up the factories, and get the job done?
And how do we pull ourselves back on the path to ensure this generation can play the role that we must play now?
What is the objective we need
to assign to ourselves?
Some people say, well, capitalism, we got to save capitalism.
Well, no, capitalism is not our objective.
If we do things right, free market capitalism will be the result of a successful mission.
It's not the mission itself.
So what's our mission statement?
Well, our founders wrote it down.
We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal.
They're endowed by their creator with certain inalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
That is our goal.
Capitalism is not our goal.
It's not the objective.
Fulfilling our mission statement is the objective, and capitalism is the result.
It's the natural outcome of a system of government that protects individual rights and ensures liberty and justice for all.
The economic system that results from that legal structure is capitalism, but that legal structure is faltering.
The reason so many people, especially millennials, think they dislike capitalism is because we broke capitalism.
Today, millennials and many people see capitalism merely as a shadow of what it should be.
What they really see when they say I hate capitalism, what they really mean is, I hate cronyism,
I hate favoritism, I hate monopolies, I see people who think they're above the law, and they are.
I see corruption, I see income inequality, and it doesn't make sense.
I see it, and so do you.
What I haven't seen
in many years, I've never seen it fully, but I saw it a lot better than it was.
I've never actually seen capitalism.
I've only seen the grotesque husk that we have made capitalism into, that we and our parents and our grandparents allowed it to become.
And here's how we broke it.
We broke it by trying to force it.
We wanted to shape it into a tool that we could use to accomplish money.
Make money, just money, money, money, money, money.
That's our goal.
That's not our goal.
Capitalism at its best is a service to people.
Okay, so it's not money.
We got to use it for social justice.
No.
What we did in the past is we chose industries and companies to
favor over others.
We said trucks over railroads, Edison over Tesla, oil over nuclear.
We stepped in to protect labor versus the corporations.
We trapped generations of Americans into labor unions and we drove American manufacturing and ingenuity overseas.
Through our regulation, we stifled innovation.
We wanted to make sure people didn't hurt themselves and take something that they shouldn't have.
So we, in doing so, created the drug war and now the opioid crisis.
We wanted to ensure that nobody's feelings got hurt and nobody said anything hateful online.
So, Google wrote net neutrality and passed it off as something that came out of Washington to protect us from companies like Google.
We wanted to protect the stock market from crashes and recessions, so we invented the Federal Reserve and gave them authority to manipulate our money as they saw fit.
We don't even know which banks these are.
What people see today when they look at the American economy is not capitalism.
Through progressivism, we married corporations to government, Google, Facebook, and Twitter.
They're merely the latest in a very long line of government-blessed monopolies, giving them control over our news, our data, our media, in order to protect us from fake news and offensive memes.
America, it is time right now to take a long look in the mirror.
The bat signal is up in the sky, and it's coming from all countries on earth.
Please, America, don't screw this up.
They're counting on us as they have always counted on us.
We should be going to the Hall of Justice and meeting like the superheroes Americans are.
Not the politicians, but regular people.
But we're stuck.
We're bound in chains of our own making.
We're fat, and we've forgotten how to light this engine.
We've forgot what the flame and the spark really is.
You know, when I was growing up,
one of my first cars was
an old Thunderbird.
It had a 429 in it.
And I remember you'd step on it once in a while to blow out all the carbon.
Well, you know,
we got to blow out all the carbon.
This engine is not running right.
And that carbon is corruption,
social justice, picking favorites, bailouts.
It's time for us to clean up the system.
Now, there's a role for the government to play in this.
We have the playbook for them to follow, but they're not.
Every member of Congress, the Supreme Court, President Trump, they all have a dusty copy of it somewhere on a shelf
in their office, but they don't take it seriously, even though they made their most sacred vow to protect and defend the Constitution of the United States.
The goal of that playbook is to realign our society to our mission statement.
And that is government's job.
Protect and defend the liberty of each individual.
Full stop.
Get the bad guys, no matter who they are, full stop.
Then get out of our way and we'll do the rest.
If we are to rise up and meet the challenge of helping the world right now right itself, we must start start with ourselves.
And the idea, the crazy idea that we would go to the failed policies of the past, the true failed policies of the past, of national socialism, of communism,
it's insanity.
No more favoritism for the elites.
No more special privileges for the big Silicon Valley donors writing their own regulations.
No more immunity from justice for corrupt politicians protected by the Washington machine and apparently what seems to be some sort of a shadow government that runs through the FBI.
We must reject the sickness that has infected the rest of the world, the lies that everyone keeps telling us of.
We should be more like Sweden, really?
Because Sweden is not a socialist.
When it was a socialist state, its growth of jobs was at zero.
They got to the point of collapse and changed.
They're not socialist.
Check them out on the Freedom Index.
I believe Swedes are more free in business than we are.
And if they are so great, why do they invest in our sovereign bonds?
We should copy the U.S., the UK healthcare system and free college.
Really?
Their health care system?
Why are they flying over here for surgery?
And why are they now just getting rid of free college because they can't afford it?
Well, free college in China.
Oh, yeah, really?
You know that the U.S.
produces 70% of the world's doctors' PhDs, including over half of the PhDs in China?
That we should model their system of education?
Stop using fossil fuels like Iceland did.
Really?
Because I remember
they had to be bailed out in 2002.
They collapsed.
They said, tweet us your new constitution ideas.
I don't think we follow Iceland.
If following the rest of the road down the path of chaos
or
socialism that has long been discredited in Europe,
if that's the best idea, we wouldn't be the last nation on earth with government bonds still paying out a profit.
We wouldn't have so much wealth invested by those people in our stock market.
we are the last great hope.
And I mean the last.
And when I say hope,
I mean if we fail,
if we don't protect the free market, if we don't clean ourselves up first and restore real justice and an actual free market, the world will plunge into darkness it has not seen in centuries.
The return of the free market,
the path,
the path to that return starts where it has always started
with America's mission statement
that we hold these truths self-evident.
And our Constitution
is built to protect that, protect the little guy and the big guy
equally.
I pray that America
can see this,
that will hear this,
and that they will realize
our strength is not our military.
Our strength must be our rule of law
and our mission mission statement.
From that, blessings flow.
All right, when your alarm goes off in your house,
police put it at the bottom of the 911 call because
they don't.
It's usually somebody's alarm went off by mistake, and so they don't take it seriously.
And that has them going, you know, and arriving at your house about 45 minutes later.
Now,
imagine this is a fire, and you have a choice between two fire departments.
First fire department, going to get to your house in 45 minutes.
That's good.
Maybe they'll be able to save most of the house.
Maybe everything will be lost.
But either way, that's the best they can do.
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You're listening to Glenn Beck.
Welcome to the Glenn Beck program.
You know, I've often said we're the floatiest piece of poop in the toilet bowl.
It has never been more clear
that, you know, what Churchill said was it's the worst.
Capitalism is the worst.
It just happens to be the best right now.
It's the best we've ever come up with.
And in Europe, this is what you need to brace for.
Chaos is bad.
Chaos is very bad.
If we are stable and the rest of the world is in chaos, it will be okay.
But we cannot be in chaos with the rest of the world.
And with
one of the Nordic countries, I can't remember which for sure, they took a trillion dollars out yesterday of their sovereign funds, which were dedicated to Europe sovereign funds.
So you take a trillion dollars away from the governments of Europe.
And where are they putting it?
They're placing it here because they can guarantee a return here.
They are guaranteed losses over in Europe.
So you're kind of stuck.
I mean, if you're taking the money out of Europe, you're going to hasten its demise, but at least your investment will be okay.
So maybe your country will be helped.
And all of these countries are doing this.
The money is flowing over here to the United States.
And anything that looks unstable hurts us.
So we need to stabilize.
We need to clean up our system.
But I think Europe is headed for catastrophe.
Another, you know, 1930s-style catastrophe.
And those countries will go into civil war.
There will be revolutions all around the world because people are going to start being hungry because they can't pay for all of the things they promised that they would pay for.
People are going to have to go back to work.
They're going to have to
do without their government health care.
And that's not going to go down well with people.
But that's the reality of things.
We must get our crap together so we don't go down the tube with everyone else, and socialism
will flush it.
Imagine getting rid of the free market in this country now.
Imagine what that will do:
it will tube our country overnight, which will tube the entire world.
You're listening to Glenn Beck.
We have Jack Fairweather coming up in a second.
He is the author of The Volunteer.
I'm really excited.
Oh, my gosh.
Have you read it yet?
No,
I'm adding it to my list, though.
This is, this is an amazing story.
I read this, I don't know, last month, and it is, you know, I mean,
it has
Nazis and heroes saving Jews.
I've read it.
You know,
I've read them.
This story is above and beyond almost any story from the era, though.
I've never heard anything like this.
And
this is one, a story that was erased because it was behind the Iron Curtain.
And so they just erased this guy.
And so it's a new story.
And this is one of the most,
I mean, spine-tingling
heroes that I've ever read about.
It's called The Volunteer, One Man and Underground Army and the Secret Mission to Destroy Auschwitz.
It's unbelievable.
Unbelievable.
Jack Fairweather is the author who's really kind of a hero himself.
We'll tell you about that coming up in a sec.
If you are looking for a book to read, I have
the book.
I read it last month, maybe three weeks ago.
And
not only could I not put it down, it's one of those stories that just stays with you.
And you've never heard this story.
It's true.
It's a history book.
It is the greatest
hero story I've ever read.
And it's a story that was suppressed by the Soviet Union, in fact, erased by the Soviet Union, and has come out sporadically in the last few years, bits and pieces.
Jack Fairweather has put it all together, and it is spellbinding.
It's called the volunteer.
Jack Fairweather, kind of a heroic figure himself, joins us in one minute.
This is the Glenbeck program.
Okay, if you've missed The Last Hour, make sure you go back to the podcast and listen to The Last Hour.
I've done a series all week on the economy and what's really going on.
And between China printing $50 trillion off the books
and Britain struggling internally to make its decision on Brexit,
I think it's Denmark or Sweden yesterday put a trillion dollars, took a trillion dollars out of their sovereign bond fund from Europe and put it into the United States.
There is real turmoil.
on the horizon and we all have to act rationally and and don't do anything to destabilize or rock the boat.
Yeah, right.
Like that's going to happen.
Here's what I would like to talk to you today: the price of gold is almost exactly what it was a century and a half ago.
That means at least part of your portfolio, 10% or so, should be invested in it.
Now, how could it be worth the same thing as 100 years ago, 150 years ago?
A $20 gold piece, you could walk into any store and you could buy the best suit.
Today, if you have that same $20 gold piece from the 1880s, you can go into a store and buy
a Canali suit or a Giorgio Armani suit and just use that $20 gold piece.
What's changed is not the purchasing power of gold,
the bogus currency that is supposed to represent gold.
So that's how
you don't lose money on gold.
If you buy it for an investment, talk to somebody else.
I'm not an investment guy.
If you are buying it as a hedge against insanity, that's what I do.
When the world starts going towards sanity, okay.
But right now, the star field is rolling rapidly towards insanity.
That is a stabilizing factor that I want to have at least part.
of my life invested in.
Visit goldline at goldline.com.
Call 866GoldLine.
It's not right for everybody, especially ask them how I buy it.
I buy it in a more expensive way,
and it has, you know, a historic meaning behind it.
You can talk to them about it.
Visit goldline.com.
Call them.
They're waiting for your call.
Do not, this is not an impulse buy.
I know you better than that.
Do your homework.
Ask them for the information.
Look around.
Really study it out.
And if you decide it's right for you, buy it from Goldline.
They've been in business over 50 years.
These these are the this is the rolls royce of gold dealers it's 866 goldline one eight six six goldline or goldline.com
Jack Fairweather is a graduate of Oxford University, correspondent for the Washington Post, Daily Telegraph.
He was the guy who was reporting from Baghdad, and he was their Persian Gulf Bureau chief.
While living in Baghdad as the Daily Telegraph's bureau chief,
Jack met his wife to be.
They lived in the house of Saddam Hussein's former perfume supplier alongside
other reporters.
The violence, as it escalated in Iraq, Jack was fortunate to survive a suicide bomb attack, a kidnapping attempt, almost daily mortar attacks around their house.
He was embedded with the Iraqi invasion.
It won him a British press award, which is the equivalent of the Pulitzer Prize.
And then he decided, I think, probably because of all that, you know what?
I think I'm just going to move to Vermont and write some books.
And I am so glad that he did.
He is a tremendous writer, researcher, and he has written my favorite book of the year so far called The Volunteer.
Jack Fairweather, welcome to the program.
Thanks for having me.
Sure.
So, Jack,
this story, I want you to take our audience
and
introduce them to this one man
you call the volunteer
and why we've never heard this story before.
It's extraordinary, isn't it?
So here is the guy.
He is...
38 years old.
He's a farmer in eastern Poland.
But for World War II and the Nazi invasion of his country, Poland, he probably would have spent his days farming with his wife and two kids.
The Nazis invaded.
Poland was plunged into this brutal occupation.
Auschwitz concentration camp is opened June 1940, a few months into the war.
And the resistance...
which this guy, Pelecki, joined, needed to find out what was happening in this camp.
There were rumors coming to Warsaw that it was this brutal, terrible location for the punishment of Polish nationals.
Plecki's name was put forward to volunteer for this mission, to volunteer for Auschwitz.
And that was a mission that he took in order to tell the world what was happening there.
The
incredible,
I mean, this story is just full of hair-raising moments.
First of all,
I talked to one of the righteous among the nations who saved a lot of Jews, and she said almost exactly
how you described this man.
I asked her, I said, I believe the tree of righteousness is planted in each of us.
What's the water?
How do we water that tree?
And she said, you misunderstand.
She said, the righteous didn't suddenly become righteous.
They just refused to go over the cliff with the rest of humanity.
So it's just being who you've always been.
This guy was not a heroic figure.
What in God's green earth made him become this hero?
That is
a great question.
And I think it
is exactly as
your friend, that survivor, told you.
He had a a way of holding to his moral compass when others lost theirs.
He had a deep faith.
He was a devout Catholic.
But I think more than that, he had this ability to trust others.
And that was an incredibly powerful tool for the resistance.
Because at that time, the Nazis were trying to destroy the bonds between people.
They were trying to break us down into racial and ethnic and religious categories in order to sort of pick off groups or pit them against each other.
And Paletsky rejected that so deeply, and he found a way to combat it by reaching out to the people around him and saying, I'm going to trust you with the secret of the underground.
I'm going to trust you with my life.
And they responded to that.
They responded to that idea that something greater than themselves could endure both in Warsaw during those first months of the occupation and then, most extraordinarily in Auschwitz.
So let me, before we get to Auschwitz,
he was not a nationalist and
there's a pull to nationalism when a country goes through what they were going through.
But when he gets into the underground, he and I can't remember the relationship, but the other guy that was with him was friend at first, wasn't he?
He kind of fell with a guy called Jan Vladokievich.
And
Jan wanted to take their group in a nationalist direction.
He wanted a political agenda.
And Palevsky, I mean, he was a conservative.
He was, as I mentioned, a Catholic, a man of sort of traditional values.
but he saw the dangers in going in that direction.
That was in some ways what the Nazis wanted them to do was to become,
you know, have this narrow ethnic vision of what Poland was.
And he
went behind his friends' back and broke his friendship in order to ensure that his group stayed open to all.
Because they were really starting to say, you know, the Jews kind of deserve it and everything else.
And he didn't feel that way.
So he is kind of trapped on this choice because
they need somebody to go into Auschwitz to volunteer to be rounded up, where the Nazis are rounding people up.
And when they round them up,
you have just as likely of a chance of being shot on the spot as you do going to Auschwitz.
And
he takes his time to decide when they're saying, you know, I think you're the right guy to go,
but you have to volunteer.
And
that must have been an excruciating
uh
uh decision for him but
he still didn't even know what auschwitz was at the time
that's right i mean he knew enough that walking into a german roundup was
exceedingly dangerous the underground had been tipped off that there would be a number of big roundups in warsaw with the idea of just seizing men and sending them to Auschwitz.
But it was also the case that during these roundups, there would be sort of random shootings by the Germans of those they captured.
It was extremely dangerous.
And Paletsky also had to think, of course, about his wife and two kids.
They had escaped from eastern Poland and been seized by the Soviet Union and found safety in a village outside.
If Paletzki was caught, they themselves would be subject to reprisals, arrests, possibly execution.
It was a huge decision, which was why one roundup went by without him doing anything as he dwelt on the risks.
And in the end, that sense of duty,
that sense of patriotism, really that sense, in fact, that he could do something, he believed in himself, he believed that he could create a resistance cell in Auschwitz,
pushed him into making that decision.
So
as he gets into Auschwitz, another point of the story that I have never heard anything like, I mean, it almost seems like, what was the name of that show?
Hogan's Heroes, at some point, where they've got a radio and everything else.
I've never heard this.
And the way you describe how they get the radio and how they wire the camp to be able to smuggle information out is insane.
Pileckski is one of the most extraordinary
solution-finding, creative, ingenious, devious men I think I have encountered.
I mean, the underground that he created in Auschwitz, within days, started creating within days of arriving in the camp, they were soon soon smuggling out reports, stole a radio to create their own station to broadcast news of the Nazi crime.
They were can you just can you can you take us through the
can can you just I'm gonna take a one-minute break and will you just take us through How they got the radio that that that night that they had to throw it out a window is is just nuts.
Could you take us through that?
Yes, indeed.
Okay.
We'll do that in hang on hang on.
We'll do that in one minute.
Let me take a a quick break, and then we'll be back.
This is a must-read.
It is so good.
You've never heard anything of this, and it has been, it was destroyed by the Soviets and hidden by the Soviets.
And Jack has put all of the pieces together and talked to survivors, and it's fantastic.
It's called the volunteer.
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We pause for 10 seconds, station ID.
We're talking to Jack Fairweather.
He's the author of The Volunteer, One Man, an Underground Army, and the Secret Mission to Destroy Auschwitz.
The main character, this is a true story.
He goes in, he volunteers to be arrested and to go into Auschwitz to try to set up an underground and to smuggle out information on what's going on.
Jack, first, before you get into the radio story, do you think he planned on spending so much time there?
Do you think
he thought he could get in and out a little faster than he did?
He did.
And I think he was stunned by the level of violence that he encountered upon arriving in the camp.
And I think he also realized that telling the story of what was happening there, informing the world, was the most important thing that he could be doing with
his time.
There was nowhere else that he could be that would have greater impact.
So you're a prisoner in Auschwitz.
I mean, I just, I wouldn't know how to judge who you could trust or not, but he's really good, and he gets people to trust him, and he trusts the right people.
And he says, the insane thing, we have to steal a radio and then put a little broadcast tower up so we can get this information out of the camp.
Explain how they did this.
Yeah, it's just an extraordinary
heist.
Palewski and a colleague of his learned that there were spare radio parts in the SS architect's office where the SS men were drawing up their plans for building gas chambers and other such ghastly things.
They had spare radio parts in that building.
So he arranged by paying some bribes to get transferred to that office where some of the inmates worked drafting the maps and designs.
And
one night, night, Paletsky and his friends stole the bits they needed from the radio room.
They
put them through a door,
through the window in the toilet, ran undercover, you know, with the guards sort of
patrolling on the road outside, ran
at night, ditched the radio, ran back into the room without anyone noticing, and then arranged for one of their friends
to collect the the radio and smuggle it back into the camp.
It was possibly one of the most dangerous activities.
Any moment that they were discovered, they would be shot and probably
every other prisoner in that building.
The way you tell this in the book of how they had to distract one guard who was within eyeshot of the cabinet of the radios and the bathroom door, and how they, one of them, had to keep him busy and distracted,
and then go in and have a reason to keep going into the bathroom.
And at the very end, when they threw it out on the window, there was a like some sort of crash or something outside.
I didn't know if it was related to that or not, but all the guards came to
kind of an alert, a state of an alert.
The guard that was being distracted heard it and thought it might be something from
the bathroom, and the guy was outside.
He had to go out of that bathroom window.
He had to clamor back in, and I mean, it was, I mean, it's the closest call ever.
It is, this is a fantastic story, Jack.
Those guys had nerves of steel, right?
I mean, how steel.
I imagine
the emotional
that most of us would be having to perform such a task.
So, Jack, this was hidden.
They did the sort of thing day in, day out.
This was hidden from
the world by the Soviet Union.
Did they destroy everything about this, or did they just keep it secret?
They destroyed
some of his writings.
They
locked away in the state archives one of the main reports that Poletsky wrote after escaping from their camp.
Why did they do that?
Why did they do that?
Polesky, at the end of the war, went back
to fight against the communist regime that the Soviet Union installed in Poland.
And I think, you know, for a lot of people, you know, 1945, War One,
victory parades, that was not not the case in poland um it was in fact
market escalation of violence millions of people displaced by the by stalin forces ethnic cleansing you know i tell you if you can if you can hang on i want to talk about the estate escape and a little bit of what he went through after its hair raising coming up to glenn back
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Hey, immediately following this broadcast today, it's about 25 minutes away.
I'm going to be taking phone calls.
I did it yesterday and I learned a lot.
This is a chance.
You know, we try to explain things and break them down, but there are times that I really need to listen to you because I need to hear what's happening
in your life.
What is...
What is what's happening with you, with work and finances?
Are you feeling a good economy, bad economy?
Are your neighbors...
Are you fighting with your neighbors like we are all supposed to think that everybody is fighting?
Because I don't see it.
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how do you feel about the election?
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I just want to hear from you.
Call us at 888-727-BECK.
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Right after the show, yeah.
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And we'll do it right after this program today.
888-727-BECK.
Okay, we're talking to Jack Fairweather.
He is the author of The Volunteer, a new book that came out, I think, last month or a couple of months ago.
I read it last month.
You are going to love this.
It's a story you've never heard about a remarkable, heroic, and brave beyond belief volunteer to be arrested and go into Auschwitz and
get information out.
to find out what they were doing in there.
Jack, you were saying a little while ago that
he couldn't believe the brutality.
It was beyond description.
And he starts to get this word out and he really thinks that
help is on the way.
At what point do you think he or did he kind of really lose hope?
Or was he kind of thinking that maybe somehow or another this news is not being transmitted.
It's not getting to the right people?
After
two years in the camp, a member of the underground headquarters in Warsaw is captured and brought to the camp and Pileckski tracks him down.
It's the first time he's had sort of direct contact with someone from the headquarters and they tell him that yes, they've gotten his reports and no action is coming.
His pleas to bomb the camp, to send forces to attack it,
had fallen on deaf ears both in Warsaw, in London and in DC.
And Paletzki had no doubt suspected this.
He'd been almost two years in the camp by this stage, but it was still a hammer blow to him.
And he responded in that
typically Paletsky style fashion by deciding, I've got to escape this camp no matter how dangerous it is
and I'm I'm going to go to Warsaw.
I'm going to go to the Allies and persuade them in person that they've got to attack and destroy Auschwitz.
And that was the genesis then of his extraordinary escape attempt.
Okay, so before we get to the escape attempt,
he is
the way you describe the information that is taken out and how it gets to the Allies and how England says,
we're not going to do this.
We're not going to do this mission.
And a lot of people in England are upset about it.
But they're saying, we're not going to do it because,
you know, this is that's a long range to get there.
We're we get lost as it is.
We have to have clear skies and everything else to go exactly right.
And that's a long, long flight that anything could happen.
And
as you describe it in the I've always been really pissed at the Allies,
particularly America, for not doing anything about it.
But for the first time reading your book, and maybe this was not your intent, I kind of understood
why they didn't do it.
It kind of made sense to me.
Still felt morally wrong, but I kind of understood.
Did you come away with that feeling?
Yeah,
it was my intention to try and show all sides of the story
and let readers reach their own judgment.
I think that was your feelings reflected mine ultimately, that
you understand the rationale for not attacking the camp, but at the same time you realize that the moral case for doing so, for making every possible effort to destroy Auschwitz, is overwhelming.
And it is an indictment on Allied leaders that they allowed their sort of the rationality of the moment to beat that absolute moral imperative to destroy Auschwitz that we recognize today.
Okay, so
when he plans his escape, first of all, how
much of this stuff that he was doing in the camp, I mean, because he was, I mean, he's, in a way, he almost was running the camp.
I mean, mean, he could be transferred anywhere he wanted to be.
I mean,
it was a place to wheel and deal.
How common was that in Auschwitz?
It was fairly uncommon.
Half of the
Polish prisoners who went to the camp died.
99% of Jewish prisoners who went to the camp died.
Poletski had a small advantage in that he and some of his early recruits were in the camp from the beginning, so they had time to work their way into slightly better jobs that increased their
chance of survival.
But still, you had to be always alert, you had to have remarkable resources of ingeniousness and you had to be lucky.
And Paletsky, I mean, for all of his talents as an underground operative, was also damn lucky
at times.
And
such, you know, he escaped the camp.
Two months later,
the camp leadership
was executed by the Germans
in the camp.
So he escaped in the nick of time.
So he had to convince himself.
Take us from
the escape starting at the hospital.
He had to convince somebody, like overnight, he had spent a lot of time convincing the Nazis and the guards that
he had to be in this position.
I have to work here, and that was saving his life.
But he made himself, you know, irreplaceable.
And then almost overnight, he had to convince them, no, I've got to go work on this crew to be able to actually escape.
So take us from like the hospital.
Right.
So
he was working in a job in the camp administration like some of the other prisoners
and he couldn't just sort of switch units from that position he had to first off fake illness to get into the hospital and once in the hospital he then had to reach out to the leader, the head prisoner who was running a detachment that worked in the camp bakery outside the camp.
This was going to be the place that he escaped from.
And he needed to become one of those inmate bakers.
And
he
just decided to go for it.
He checked out of a hospital,
even though that was illegal to do so.
He went to the capo and he had some stolen goodies, some sweet treats and other things to
to give
this
head prisoner who ran the squad and managed to persuade him that yes, he had permission to join.
He had then less than 24 hours to escape because at the next roll call they would discover that this guy had gone to the hospital and illegally checked himself out and illegally switched work assignment.
So when he left the camp gates for the night shift with the baker squad,
that was his one shot.
There was no going back.
And he arrived at that bakery for the night shift about 6 p.m., knowing that he had about five or six hours to work out how to escape from that room.
He had two other
co-escapers with him,
and they ended up having to force the door and
sprint away with the guard shooting after them
at about 2 a.m., just with the clock ticking down.
And
they made it.
They made it at least as far as the river.
But then, of course, that was just the beginning because he still had to escape from the immediate camp environs.
He had to then travel across 100 miles of Nazi-occupied Poland to reach a safe house.
And
it took him two weeks of just the most extraordinary hijinks and
close calls
to finally escape.
And
I'm sorry to interrupt.
When he escapes,
all three of them, well, I'm not going to wreck the book for you, but
when he escapes, at one point, he goes to the house that
has the man whose name he stole.
He was not under his name.
He took that guy's name and was in Auschwitz under his name.
Why did he go to that house?
I would think that that would be one of the first places that they would search if that's where, I mean, that's, I mean, he was later arrested, that guy was later arrested
and they found out, oh, it's a fake name.
It was just an extraordinary coincidence.
When he got to the safe house, Paletsky is a real testament to the man.
He didn't put his feet up and try and sort of
rest.
Within an hour of getting to that safe house, he was
saying,
take me to the local leader.
We've got to attack the camp right now.
And he was
taken to see the local commander.
The local commander was the man whose name he had been using in the camp for
two and a half years.
Just a crazy coincidence.
And Paletsky persuaded him of the need to attack the GAMP.
And
unfortunately,
the underground in Krakow, the nearest city,
did not believe Paletsky's story.
The real tells you something about that mood of paranoia in the country at the time, all the roundups and betrayals.
And they thought that Paletsky was a German spy.
So that forced Pelecki then to go to Warsaw to continue his efforts to win over the underground and persuade them to attack Auschwitz.
Jack, I am out of time, and I don't want to tell any more because, I mean,
the last part of the book, the last quarter of the book, is after Auschwitz, and it is just as hair-raising.
I just have to thank you so much for writing this, doing the research.
I mean, it had to be damn near impossible to do it, to find and track and find all these people that could tell the stories and find the records that still do exist.
But I think this is one of the most riveting,
empowering, and
important stories that I have heard in a long, long time.
Thank you, Jack.
Thanks, Grab.
Thank you for having me.
You bet.
Jack Fairweather.
You can find him at jackfairweather.com.
The name of the book is The Volunteer.
I haven't done it justice this hour.
I hope that it has piqued your interest, but
I have not done this book justice.
You need to read it.
It's the volunteer.
Back in just a second.
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This is the Glenbeck Program.
I said, well, we might build a barn.
Welcome to the Beck program.
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I had a woman call yesterday.
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Once I asked that question, I got it.
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